Episodes Nearest to December 16, 1835 to December 17, 1835: 1 through 25 of 25
- Catholicism's Impact on Religion and Politics in St. Louis
December 17, 1835
ST LOUIS, Missouri
Church/Religious-Activity, Government, PoliticsWhile American historians often focus on the millions of immigrants that moved through Ellis Island, many of these same people traveled west and ended up in St. Louis. The city became a locus of immigrant activity, both religious and cultural. However, negative changes often accompanied positive ones with the large influx of immigrants. The greater influence of Catholicism, the dominant immigrant...
- Fire Destroys Wall Street
December 16, 1835 to December 17, 1835
NEW YORK, New York
Urban Society, Urban-Life/Boosterism, Health/DeathIn the evening hours of Wednesday, December 16, 1835, smoke billowed above the downtown Manhattan skyline. At the time, no one knew exactly where the sparks had ignited and the fire begun, but by Thursday afternoon, the flames had engulfed approximately seventeen square blocks on and surrounding Wall Street. An article in the magazine The Albion indicated that by Thursday evening between 700 and...
- Clay's Grief
December 25, 1835
Washington City, District of Columbia
Health/Death, Government, Urban-Life/BoosterismChristmas day, 1835, was a most miserable day for Henry Clay. One moment he was laughing and joking with friends; then his life changed drastically. He received a letter from home. Upon opening it, he fell directly to the ground, as if he had been shot. The first words he managed to utter, Every tie to life is broken He had received new of his daughter's death. Although he became more composed...
- Sugar Plantations
December 28, 1835
ASCENSION, Louisiana
African-Americans, Economy, SlaveryDuring the nineteenth century Louisiana was one of the country's largest producers of sugar. The sugar plantations contributed to the American economy and although they were not always the wealthiest of ventures, the proved to be objects of mystique to travelers passing through southern Louisiana.
One such visitor to Louisiana was William Gray Fairfax of Virginia. Gray was on his way...
- Frederick Douglass escapes
January 1, 1836
BALTIMORE, Maryland
African-Americans, SlaveryIn Chapter XIX of Frederick Douglass's My Bondage My Freedom, he talked about how he was fed up with not being a free man and began to devise a plan to escape. At this point in Douglass's life he worked for Mr. Freeland, and even though he considered him a friend, the idea of being enslaved his entire life gave Frederick the drive to escape. It was the beginning of 1836, and Fredrick...
- John Dewery in Prison
January 7, 1836
CLARKE, Alabama
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Law, Migration/Transportation, SlaveryJohn Dewery, a bright mulatto...nineteen or twenty years old, found himself in a precarious situation. As he was sitting in the Clark County Jail in Alabama on January 7, 1836, the Mobile Commercial Register published an announcement about his capture and arrest as an escaped slave. This was problematic because he swore in vain that he was a freed person. Nevertheless, the paper reported that if...
- Raleigh State of the Art
November 16, 1835
WAKE, North Carolina
Health/Death, WomenThe Raleigh Theatre was the grandest in the land. After attending the grand-opening, all the men and women of the city agreed that they had never seen their own theatre surpassed in beauty and style. The curtain drapery over the hollow wooden windows and stage doors was fitted with precision, and the walls were no longer glum and drab but instead featured variegated colors trimmed in gold. The...
- The Call for Prohibition by Missouri Temperance Society
January 21, 1836
ST LOUIS, Missouri
Health/Death, Urban-Life/BoosterismThough a large religious presence existed in Missouri, its inhabitants succumbed to a great number of vices, including alcohol abuse amongst men. The widespread alcohol abuse in St. Louis, the gateway to the West, caused many that passed through the city to comment on the wicked city containing an excessive number of deists and infidels. Some cited alcohol abuse as a result of the growing population...
- Alexander Campbell and John Thomas Debate Reimmersion
February, 1836
BROOKE, Virginia
Church/Religious-ActivityAs Alexander Campbell promoted his restoration movement, one of his colleagues questioned him on the issue of baptism. In 1836, he entered into a debate with Dr. John Thomas in the Millennial Harbinger, Campbell's own religious journal. At first, their ideas corresponded well with one another, as they both required immersion to attain salvation. Their concurrence did not last long,...
- Easter Hudson Becomes a Member of the Brushy Creek Baptist Church
October, 1835
GREENVILLE, South Carolina
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Race-Relations, SlaveryEaster Hudson appeared in the Brushy Creek Baptist Church records as early as 1831, but she became a member of the church on October of 1835. Easter, along with six other black members were listed with the surname of Hudson and were present in the new members list of 1835.There were two white members named Millie and Albert J. Hudson that also became members of this Baptist church at the same time....
- The Republic of Texas declares independence from Mexico
March 2, 1836
SlaveryDelegates from 57 Texas communities met at Washington-on-the-Brazos in March of 1836 to draft a declaration of independence from Mexico. This formal separation from the Mexican government came about five months after war broke out in October of 1835. The language of the document written by Tennessean George C. Childress reflected a growing concern over Santa Anna's centralistic, militaristic...
- Christianity as a Justification for Slavery
September 29, 1835
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Race-Relations, Slavery, Urban-Life/BoosterismSlave owners had many justifications for why holding people in bondage was acceptable. From the idea that African Americans were a lesser race who needed taking care of by white patriarchs to the economic justification, slave owners were always trying to find new ways to dispute those who disagreed with their choice to hold others in captivity. Charleston slave holders were no exception in attempting...
- Dilue Harris's Experience in the Runaway Scrape
March, 1836
TERRITORY, Territory
Health/Death, Migration/Transportation, WarThe Alamo had fallen and Sam Houston decided that it was time. On March 11, 1836, Houston ordered Texas families to retreat across the Colorado River in order to escape the Mexican army. Dilue Harris, a young white girl, packed up her belongings and left her home with her family. They began to encounter trouble when they attempted to cross the Trinity River. The water level of the river and the...
- The Observer's Slave Clothing Debate
September 17, 1835
ST LOUIS, Missouri
African-Americans, Slavery, Urban-Life/BoosterismElijah Lovejoy, a staunch abolitionist living in Missouri, published and owned the St. Louis Observer. As part of his weekly papers, Lovejoy printed national and international news on a variety of subjects, most frequently the debate on slavery. Lovejoy printed one of these hotly debated articles on September 17, 1835, when Asa A. Stone's editorial article on the clothing condition of slaves...
- Foreign Goods are Southern Delights
September 11, 1835
HENRICO, Virginia
Arts/LeisureElite southerners adorned themselves in European imports as a means of showing ones status. Using the term, planter aristocracy James and Dorothy Volo explored elite antebellum planters and their perceptions of heritage and prestige. According to the Volos', Americans prized every connection to European nobility and believed that old American families should receive the same prestige as those...
- Anti-Abolitionists are Antagonized in The Herald
August 31, 1835
ONTARIO, New York
Economy, Politics, Slavery, AbolitionWhen residents of Geneva, New York acquired their daily copy of the Herald on August 31, 1835 they had no idea they were about to read a prophetic vision of the United States’ future. After acknowledging an anti-abolition meeting that had taken place in the town just a few days prior, the anonymous author of the front-page article went on to denounce the meeting as foolish and to predict...
- Alexander Campbell's Movement Grows
April, 1836
BROOKE, Virginia
Church/Religious-ActivityBy the time the Millennial Harbinger hit the presses for its April 1836 issue, the movement begun by its editor, Alexander Campbell, had grown so substantially that it began to challenge other Christian denominations. D.S. Burnet, a writer for the Millennial Harbinger, exclaimed the growth of the restoration movement of primitive Christianity. He explained that ever since its founding,...
- The Gentlemen Here Are Very Polite. What about the women?
July 21, 1835
FAUQUIER, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WomenMs. Mary Peace of Philadelphia made a point to express her views on the society of Warrenton, Virginia, in a letter she wrote during her visit there to her brother, Master Washington Peace. She noted that the the gentlemen here are very polite and offer their horses and attendance to the women. However, Mary did not develop as fond of an opinion for Warrenton's women. She expressed a specific...
- Creek Indians burn the town of Roanoke, Georgia
May 15, 1836
INDIAN LANDS, Georgia
Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, WarIn May of 1836, a long simmering conflict between whites and Creek Indians in Alabama and Georgia finally erupted. President Jackson's destruction of the Bank of the United States had resulted in uncontrolled speculation, and frontier people were clamoring for more land. This was in spite of the 1832 Treaty of Cusseta, which stipulated that individual Creeks be given a parcel of 320 acres...
- Violence in Mississippi
July 15, 1835
MADISON, Mississippi
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsIn the summer of 1835, violence swept through the Mississippi landscape. A Mississippi man's letters include harrowing murders, vigilante activity and a purported slave insurrection. Rattled by the violence, the Mississippian, James Carlson, in a letter to his former schoolmate, Virginian Robert Whitehead, detailed the events with fear and warning. Lawless men brutally murdered a mutual friend...
- Slave Sale Comes in Many Forms
May 20, 1836
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
African-Americans, Economy, Race-Relations, Slaveryohn Stapleton, an English attorney, handled the affairs of several Charleston properties included in the estate of Mrs. Hannah Bull. He managed the sale of her slaves, cattle, hogs, sheep and other effects of Mrs. Bull's properties after her death. In a letter to Higham, Fife & Co. dated May 20, 1836, Stapleton detailed the sale of several slaves and included the titles. As the attorney, the...
- An Unpredictable Mail System
July 14, 1835
RICHMOND, Georgia
Government, Politics, Migration/TransportationJames L. Stratton was traveling through the South on business in 1835. While stopped in Augusta, Georgia, he wrote to his wife Eliza at their home in Philadelphia. In his letter he complained of the many difficulties he faced during his trip. In particular, he was frustrated that he had not been receiving letters from her. He reported that he had expected to receive a letter from her while in Monroe,...
- House of Representatives passes the first gag rule on slavery
May 26, 1836
Washington City, District of Columbia
SlaveryFirst introduced to the House floor by South Carolina's James Henry Hammond, the gag rule was a radical measure designed to completely eliminate debate dealing with abolition. Traditionally, representatives received and tabled antislavery prayers, or buried them in committee; the gag rule, however, prevented even this formality from taking place. This was not a spontaneous development, but...
- Jabez Jackson and Defense of Union
July 7, 1835
BALDWIN, Georgia
Government, Law, PoliticsAfter the resignation of James M. Wayne from the United States House of Representatives, the Jacksonian Party of Georgia desired a strong unionist to represent the Milledgeville Congressional District in Congress. On July 6, 1835, a convention of Union Party delegates nominated Jabez Jackson to fill this void. Jabez Jackson himself wrote to the Central Committee of the Union Party of Milledgeville...
- Female Education
July 6, 1835
BIBB, Georgia
Education, WomenOn July 6, 1835, the Georgia Telegraph published an editorial from the June edition of the Knickerbocker in regards to the brooding controversy about whether or not women should be educated. After heartily endorsing the editorial, the Telegraph ran the entirety of the article.
The Knickerbocker began by reviewing the failure of male education and, thus, the necessity...