Episodes Nearest to February 23, 1825: 1 through 25 of 25
- Gooch on Slaveholding
February 23, 1825
HENRICO, Virginia
African-Americans, Government, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn response to John Floyd (whom had written him in correspondence just six days prior), C.W. Gooch wrote a letter in the winter of 1825 on the issue of slaveholding in Virginia and the South. Gooch believed that the subject of slaveholding states rights' was not getting enough attention from southern politicians. Throughout the letter Gooch argued against the intrusive interference of our northern...
- A Missionary's View of the Choctaw Nation in 1825
February 15, 1825
INDIAN LANDS, Mississippi
Native-Americans, Church/Religious-ActivityIn February of 1825 the Western Recorder published an extract from a letter describing the current state of the Choctaw Indians. The missionary L.S. Williams wrote the letter in December of 1824 after having lived with the Choctaw for almost eight years. He wrote that the human nature he saw in the Choctaw nation was lower than any he had previously witnessed. He regarded the Indians as ignorant,...
- The Murder that Shocked Fairfax
March 22, 1825
FAIRFAX, Virginia
Crime/Violence, Health/DeathWilliam Simpson, a prominent slave trader who resided in Fairfax County, was murdered in Centreville, Virginia. He was brutally shot in the head with a pistol and stabbed. He was also robbed of a reported 1600. The notes were from the Bank of Virginia. His body was found dumped near a road. According to witnesses, Simpson and the man later revealed as his murderer, William F. Hoose, spent two days...
- Christian Women and Fashion
April, 1825
SUFFOLK, Massachusetts
Church/Religious-Activity, WomenIn an 1825 essay entitled "The Female Character," a Dr. Springs wrote "a Christian woman ought to be distinguishable by her simplicity." The desire for simplicity was a common trend seen in many Christian communities in the early to mid 1800's. For many, clothing choice reflected how a woman was viewed by her society. In early American Christian towns men wanted their wives and daughters to...
- Creek Attack
May 25, 1825
BALDWIN, Georgia
Crime/Violence, Native-Americans, WarIn late April 1825, with the murder of William McIntosh and his brother Samuel Hawkins fresh on his mind, Benjamin Hawkins carefully rode his horses back towards his hometown of Montgomery, Georgia, in the fear of suffering a similar fate on his brother. Suddenly, he came upon a party of twenty Creek Indians within ten short steps of their horses. Frightened, a cousin of Hawkins? abruptly fired...
- Reverend L. D. Dewey Writes to Support Colonization
June, 1825 to 1825
BALTIMORE, Maryland
Slavery, Race RelationsAs the Reverend L. D. Dewey wrote to Reverend W. M'Kenney from Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, he reflected upon his observations from the African colony he had just visited. The letter he produced in June 1825 portrayed sentiments expressed throughout the nation at the time on African colonization. He described the colony of Haiti in the most positive light, depicting the colony as a haven...
- Affairs of the Creek Indians
June 21, 1825
BALDWIN, Georgia
Crime/Violence, Native-Americans, Race-Relations, WarFew men had the leadership skills of General William McIntosh. His illustrious military career included leading the Creeks against the British in the War of 1812, defeating the Upper Creek Indians against their Lower Creek foes in the Creek Civil War, and heading a national police force to continue the fight against the Upper Creeks. Yet, these military conquests also created many enemies, especially...
- The Marquis de Lafayette Visits Norfolk and Portsmouth, Virginia
October 19, 1824 to October 27, 1824
NORFOLK CITY, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Economy, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WarAlthough a Frenchmen, the Marquis de Lafayette was a man dear to the hearts of many Americans in the early nineteenth century. He led American troops into battle during the Revolution, had sustained a wound at the Battle of Brandywine, and was instrumental in encouraging the participation of the French forces in the siege of Yorktown which led to the surrender of the British in 1781. Lafayette was...
- Marriage as an Institution in the Antebellum South
1825
HANOVER, Virginia
Church/Religious-Activity, WomenHelen Lane and Arthur S. Johns requested the presence of John Ambler and his family to their Tuesday morning wedding in the area of Louisa and Hanover counties. The bride's family sent out the invitation and they requested that the Ambler family attend the wedding. The ceremony was scheduled for Tuesday morning at nine am.
Weddings traditionally took place within the community and then...
- The Birth of the Petersburg Benevolent Mechanics Association
1825
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Economy, EducationA cold January day in 1825, 32 Petersburg men gathered in a Petersburg Tavern with the future on their minds. The skilled merchants of Petersburg formed the Benevolent Mechanics Association. They were made up of a variety of skilled craftsmen which included tailors, blacksmiths, watchmakers, bookbinders, tanners, and more. The first initiative of the Association was purchasing a library for apprentices...
- Plantation Women
1825
FELICIANA, Louisiana
WomenLife on a plantation during the nineteenth century has been dramatized by the movies today to show a picturesque world. In reality, it could be a very harsh world to live in where the profits were not always as high as expected and tragedies often occurred. Caroline Merrick remembered a very early childhood that was fraught with such tragedy. At an early age on a plantation in Louisiana, her mother...
- Ghost Story: The Strange Case of the McChesney Household
1825
AUGUSTA, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryIt was 1825, and strange happenings were occurring around the house of Dr. John McChesney in Augusta County, Virginia. According to the Annals of Augusta County, a historical record of the County, it all had started when Maria, one of Dr. McChesney's enslaved children, came to dinner one night very much frightened, apparently having been chased by an old woman with her head tied up....
- Transportation of US Mail Between Baltimore and Philadelphia
1825
BALTIMORE, Maryland
Government, Migration/TransportationOn January 29th, 1825, Postmaster General John McLean wrote a letter to Henry Clay, Speaker of the House of Representatives, explaining the horrible traveling conditions that had to be endured to carry the mail between Baltimore, Maryland, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. McLean discussed the horrendous traveling circumstances during the winter and spring seasons when crossing the different rivers...
- Robbery in Jackson
September 11, 1824 to September 12, 1824
INDIAN LANDS, Tennessee
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryAlthough Jackson was one of the largest cities in Tennessee, it was not one of the most dangerous. However, in September 1824, two little boys from a well-known family in the area, the Joshua Haskell's family, were accosted by a runaway slave on their way to school. He first spoke to them then grabbed their dinner-basket. Fortunately, he let them leave and the two little boys managed to arrive...
- The Impact of Illness
August 22, 1825
RICHMOND, Virginia
Health/DeathWhen Nancy Carr, the grand-niece of Thomas Jefferson, wrote to her good friend Elizabeth Coatler, of Spotsylvania, on August 22, 1825, the tone of her writing was a somber one. Carr had just returned from nursing her cousin, Maria, who was sick with a fever. The threats of illness and death were prominent in her words. At this time, the term "fever" was used to describe almost every kind of dangerous...
- Liberation of Slaves and Colonization in Liberia in 1825
September 3, 1825
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania
Slavery, African-AmericansIn 1825, Christian groups and colonization societies in America advocated for freed African Americans to colonize land in Liberia as an alternative to emancipate slaves in America. Religious groups expressed their sentiments in publication including the Christian Register, which published an article in an issued dated September 3, 1825. The article argued for the transportation of slaves to...
- Annabella Porter Sells Cotton to Joseph Gammill
June 21, 1824 to September 21, 1824
MORGAN, Georgia
Agriculture, Economy, WomenDuring the summer of 1824, Annabella Porter sold seven bales of cotton to Joseph Gammill. She grew the cotton on her and her husband's plantation, Poplar Grove in Morgan County. The bales sold in two different bundles. The first totaled 1,399 lbs and the second added to 1,012 lbs, and Gammill paid 184.96 and 105.63, respectively. Mrs. Porter also subtracted on several charges because she paid...
- Crop Diversity in Agricultural Virginia
July 31, 1824
RICHMOND, Virginia
Agriculture, Economy"You wish to know how the Virginians live" wrote L.W. Howe to his brother John, of Enfield, Massachusetts on July 31, 1824. In meeting his brother's request, L.W. certainly provided an extensive account of the principal facets of life in the state of Virginia. Not only did he recount that the preferred beverage of the state was Whiskey, but he was mystified by the details of cooking...
- Daniel Raymond and Anti-Slavery Maryland
September 24, 1825
BALTIMORE, Maryland
Anti-slavery, MarylandIn Maryland in 1825, an anti-slavery candidate emerged from the city of Baltimore named Daniel Raymond. Seeking a position in the Maryland General Assembly, Raymond was highly publicized in the anti-slavery circles in Maryland. One such publication, the Genius of Universal Emancipation and Baltimore Courier touted Raymond’s disdain for slavery and his support of gradual emancipation....
- The Backcountry of Central Mississippi
October 16, 1825
MADISON, Mississippi
Agriculture, Health/DeathIn a letter to his brother, Dr. Philip Klipstein the postmaster of New Baltimore Virginia, Elijah Thomhill recounted the perils of Mississippi living: Times now are very sickly, ie it was in the latter part of the summer but it is now getting more healthy. I have had a spell of the ague and fever. John also has been sick- George has been sick with the bilibious(?) fever and been well almost ever...
- The Election of 1824 in the Seminole Nation
1824
Florida, Florida
Government, Politics, Native-Americans, Race-RelationsAfter the First Seminole War and the United States' acquisition of Florida, the U.S. Government encouraged the self-governance of the Seminoles as a united tribe. As 1823 turned to 1824, Neamathla was the head chief of the Seminole Nation. This would not last, however. By July, he had been removed by the United States because of growing tension between him and the governor of the Florida territory,...
- Henry Clay's 1824 Speech
1824
NELSON, Virginia
Economy, PoliticsFloyd L. Whitehead saved an article that reviews Henry Clay's 1824 speech. Clay spoke on a major economic issue that began to drive the North and South further and further apart in the eras leading up to the Civil War - the tariff. Henry Clay argued in favor of the Tariff of 1824. He declared that the Union had diminished exports of native produce, the depressed state of our foreign navigation,...
- A Petition on Behalf of a Slave Named Royal
1824
RICHLAND, South Carolina
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Government, SlaverySeveral citizens of upstate South Carolina approached the state assembly with a petition concerning a runaway slave of special concern to the region. Several years earlier a South Carolina citizen by the name of George Ford had been murdered by a slave named Joe (also called Forest) owned by a Mr. Carroll of Richland County. Both Mr. Ford's relatives, as well as the state, offered more than...
- A New Route to New Orleans
October 24, 1825
HINDS, Mississippi
Government, Migration/TransportationIn late October of 1825, Secretary of War James Barbour wrote from Washington to the governor of Mississippi soliciting his help. Two military surveyors were to examine a new route from Rock Fish Gap in the Shenandoah Mountains of Virginia through Knoxville, Tennessee and down through the state of Mississippi on towards New Orleans. These men, Captain Poupin, a topographer and engineer and his...
- Methods of Shipment and Transportation throughout the South
November 21, 1825
ADAMS, Mississippi
Migration/TransportationThe country is new, timber plenty, cheep, convenient; and consequentially we have, on good terms, the best materials for building bridges and causeways stated the author of a Mississippi newspaper article. People began settling throughout the east coast, transforming transportation into an extremely important part of life. Consequently, as the economy began to bloom, items needed to be brought to...