Episodes Nearest to April 1, 1829 to April 30, 1829: 1 through 25 of 25
- Formation of Nashville and Davidson County Temperance Society
April, 1829
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Church/Religious-ActivityMany prominent Nashvillians, including Phillip Lindsley, William Hume, and Robert Whyte, formed The Nashville and Davidson County Temperance Society. This society was formed as an auxiliary to the American Temperance Society. The American Temperance Society grew rapidly during this time period and many new auxiliaries appeared. The spread of a national temperance society reveals the growing importance...
- The Alabama State Intelligencer established
April 10, 1829
TUSCALOOSA, Alabama
Arts/Leisure, Education, Urban-Life/BoosterismIn Alabama's new capital of Tuscaloosa, the Alabama State Intelligencer was established on April 10th, 1829. This event was important not only for being the founding of a new paper, but this event also marked the growing role of Tuscaloosa in Alabama. In fact, the capital had recently been moved from Cahaba to Tuscaloosa and in 1829 the legislature met for the first time in the new capital (Alabama:...
- The Emigration of the Creek Indians is reported in Cherokee Phoenix and Indians' Advocate
April 22, 1829
INDIAN LANDS, Georgia
Migration/Transportation, Race-RelationsThe Creeks had begun to emigrate in larger numbers in 1829 largely due to the expiration of the annuities that had been paid their nation. In 1820, the Creeks were being paid 25,000, but 22,000 was set to expire in 1829. The Creeks that did emigrate settled in the area of Muskogee County, Oklahoma. In typical U.S. style, 300 US troops were positioned near the peaceful emigrants (Phoenix).<br...
- Patty Cannon captured
March, 1829 to April, 1829
SUSSEX, Delaware
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, SlaveryFrom 1800-1830 Patty Cannon and other members of her family ran the most notorious slave trading gang in Southern History. Cannon's house straddled the Maryland-Delaware border, and from this base she and her gang would look around for free or enslaved blacks, kidnap them, and then sell them into slavery to Deep South Plantations. This formidable woman, who was notorious for her strength and...
- Meteor Strikes near Forsyth, Georgia
May 9, 1829
JONES, Georgia
EducationOn May 9th, a wonderful phenomenon' occurred outside of Forsyth, Georgia. A rock of 36 pounds appeared out of a clear sky and crashed into the ground with tremendous noise.' The rock's' impact was heard up to 80 miles away and it sunk two feet into the ground. The rock smelled of sulphur and appeared to have been in the fire.' The Cherokee Phoenix and...
- Slave's freedom paid for because of his talent as a preacher
May, 1829
MONTGOMERY, Alabama
Church/Religious-Activity, Race-Relations, Urban-Life/BoosterismIn 1829, a group of church goers and pastors from the Alabama Baptist Association pooled together 625 to purchase John Blackwell's slave Caesar. Caesar had become known around the Montgomery area as a magnificent preacher, and upon gaining his freedom went on to preach to numerous black, white, and mixed congregations. When his audiences became over excited he would reportedly say, When your...
- St. Louis branch of National Bank opens
May, 1829
ST LOUIS, Missouri
EconomyBy 1829, the National Bank had spread to Missouri, which was currently on the frontier of westward expansion. Unfortunately, the bank was closed down 3 years later when Jackson did not renew the bank's charter. The establishment of a national bank was an important step in the formation of a stable economy on the frontier (McCandless 95).<br /><br />The Frontier was not the only place...
- Elizabeth Ricord Opens Female Seminary in Upstate New York
May, 1829 to 1829
ONTARIO, New York
Civil Society, Politics, Church/Religious-Activity, Women's Seminaries, women's education, EducationIn May, 1829, the Geneva Female Seminary opened for its first school year with only about 15 students. It continued to grow and develop under the leadership of Elizabeth Ricord, the founder and principal of the school, and six years later, enrolled over 120 students. During the early American republic period, hundreds of female academies sprang up throughout the nation in both cities and the countryside,...
- Penitentiary law of 1829 passed by Governor Carroll
January, 1829 to April, 1829
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Crime/Violence, Urban-Life/BoosterismWhen Governor Carroll passed this new Penitentiary Law,' many considered it to be truly revolutionary. This law completely transformed punishment in the state of Tennessee. For example, whipping posts, stocks, and cropping were abolished. Instead of being put to death for many crimes, hard labor in a penitentiary was now the punishment. Another key component of the law was the formation...
- House of Representatives drafts bill for the relief of James Monroe
February 25, 1829
Washington City, District of Columbia
Urban-Life/BoosterismWhen a memorial of the citizens of Albemarle County, Virginia asked Congress to reconsider James Monroe's claims to reimbursement a Select Committee was formed. The Select committee did indeed find that the U.S. Government was indeed indebted to Monroe for his considerable and patriotic loans to the government during the War of 1812. The bill (No. 436) resolved to give the late president the...
- A Clever Child Escapes Flogging
February 11, 1829
FREDERICK, Maryland
EducationA well-prepared young man demonstrated ingenuity and intelligence when his father presented him with the threat of flogging. The boy's father was a lieutenant in the US Army, a native of Frederick County, Maryland. Being a lieutenant meant that he was somewhat strict, but all he wanted was the best for his son. When the boy displeased his father, the father examined the cause of his misconduct...
- Twenty Dollar Reward for Return of Slave
February 3, 1829
HENRICO, Virginia
African-Americans, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn February of 1829, WM. F. Wickham put out a notice in the Richmond Enquirer of a twenty dollar reward for the return to him of his slave Cyrus. He described Cyrus as a dark mulatto, between 25 and 30 years of age, rather below ordinary height, prominent cheek bones... He also said that Cyrus had a large scar under one of his eyes, and that he owned a new suit of brown cloth... and a striped...
- Tobacco Sales
February 3, 1829
HENRICO, Virginia
AgricultureIn February of 1829, a salesman named H.B. Montague posted an ad in the Richmond Enquirer advertising his services as a middleman in the sales of tobacco. Montague had taken out the official license to do this, which cost him sixty dollars. He also went into detail on his past doings in this realm, recalling how he began this enterprise when no one else would, and incurred losses at first, but he...
- Debts Against the Estate
1829
ST JOHNS, Florida
SlaveryFrancis Pellicer had six heirs to his estate. In his will he divided his estate between his children. Dividing one's property up in a will was very common in the antebellum south. Most plantation owners, if not all, wrote up some sort of will to divide their estate up so their children and widow could have some type of inheritance. Slaves and property, such as land, were two types of things...
- Zephaniah Kingsley and His Treatise on a Patriarchal Society
1829
Florida, Florida
Zephaniah Kingsley, Argument for Slavery in FloridaZephaniah Kingsley was a plantation owner on Fort George Island, now Jacksonville, FL. In his "Treatise of Patriarchal, or Co-operative System of Society", Kingsley spoke of the use of slaves in southern states as the only answer to agricultural production because the white people of the region were not created to work within the area. He used the argument...
- Patriarchal Slave System: How it worked
1829
RICHMOND, Virginia
Zephaniah Kingsley, Slavery, Patriarchy
”Patriarchy is a system where males are the head of the family and have all the rights of decision-making,”a system that has persisted for many years in American History. Patriarchy was not only used in government bodies, but it was also used in determining a slave child’s fate. In A Treatise on the Patriarchal or Co-Operative System of Society a humble servant by the name of Z. Kingsley... - Philosophy of Education through the Lens of Catharine E. Beecher
1829
HARTFORD, Connecticut
Roles of Women, women's educationDuring the early nineteenth century, women became the center of the family—nurturing and educating their children. Catharine E. Beecher’s essay, Suggestions Respecting Improvements in Education, became relevant as she characterized a woman’s role as the teacher and caretaker of the household. In her essay, she connected a woman’s domestic life with education, and provided...
- A Trying Voyage
January 27, 1829
TERRITORY, Territory
African-Americans, Health/Death, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, SlaverySunday morning, January 27, 1829... a joyful thankfulness filled our hearts, for we were entering the land of promise. Mary Wightman Helm had good reason to rejoice after a most difficult journey to Texas. Helm related that the trip usually took a bearable seven days, but left without a breeze in the unpredictable Gulf of Mexico, her voyage took an astonishing 31 days. The ship only carried provisions...
- Kentucky's Senate passes joint resolution to colonize free people of color'
January, 1829
FRANKLIN, Kentucky
African-Americans, Migration/Transportation, Race-RelationsIn January, the Cherokee Phoenix and Indians' Advocate reported the outcome of the Kentucky State Senate's Joint Resolution. There were only three dissenting votes against these two measures. The first measure urged Kentucky's statesmen in Washington to endeavor Congress to appropriate money and aid, so far is consistent with the Constitution of the United States, in colonizing...
- A Clash of Views over Indian Removal
August 12, 1829 to August 13, 1829
TALBOT, Maryland
Government, Politics, Migration/Transportation, Native-AmericansThe Republican Star and General Advertiser of Easton, Maryland published an article on August 12, 1829 regarding Indian removal. The Easton article responded to the essay written by William Penn published in The National Intelligencer of Washington on July 17, 1829. Penn's essay discussed the need to exterminate the Indians in order to allow for expansion into the West. The...
- Louden County addresses Virginia Convention of 1829-1830
October, 1829
LOUDOUN, Virginia
LawIn a broadside addressing the Memorialists and other members of the Virginia Reframing Convention of 1829, the Memorial of the non-freeholders and freeholders of the county of Loudoun' beseeched the assembly to reframe or amend the constitution of Virginia so as to allow all free men the right to vote. The invoked images of their forefathers rising up to fight the injustice of taxation...
- Richmond and Baltimore Union Line of Stages and Steamboats
October 20, 1829
HENRICO, Virginia
Migration/TransportationThe proprietors of the Richmond and Baltimore Union Line of Stages and Steamboats by Tappahannock placed a notice in the Richmond Enquirer in October of 1829 with the intent of informing the public of the on-going operation of their line of service. The posting boasted of the best of coaches and horses, the experienced drivers, and the best accommodations. Good roads and no nighttime land travel...
- Hints On Female Education
October 1, 1828
RICHLAND, South Carolina
Education, WomenIn the words of Dr. Elias Marks, "Intellectual cultivation leads to a knowledge and systematic performance of our duties." Thus, he concluded in his work title "Hints on Female Education," a woman's mind must be cultivated in order for her to perform her duties as a wife and mother to her greatest ability. The work also coincided with an outline for a female educational institution near Columbia,...
- A Polite Education
September 18, 1828
CHATHAM, Georgia
Arts/Leisure, Economy, Education, WomenEducation for women in the Antebellum South played a key role in defining and regulating social status. Many Southerners did not see education as a way to enlighten women, but rather to refine and polish them, and make them more suitable for marriage. In the Argus newspaper, published in Savannah, Georgia, an advertisement appeared in September of 1828. It announced Mr. Phillips's new school...
- Louisiana's Ripe Climate
November 18, 1829
FELICIANA, Louisiana
EconomyIn a letter to his friend Richard Harlan, John Audubon related the beauty of his surroundings in Louisiana. Audubon followed his passion and sailed up the Mississippi, intent to paint all the birds of North America. The land in Louisiana teemed with life and gave Audubon plenty of subjects to base his paintings off of. Audubon recognized the richness of the terrain in Louisiana, a feature that had...