Episodes Nearest to June 23, 1842: 1 through 25 of 25
- A Letter to Congress
June 23, 1842
JEFFERSON, Louisiana
Agriculture, EconomySeveral planters and sugar manufacturers from Jefferson Parish joined with citizens from parishes across the state of Louisiana in signing and sending a letter to the United States Congress pleading for increases in tariffs on imported sugar. Stating that the Tariff of 1832 had caused the agricultural, commercial, and manufacturing interests of Louisiana's sugar industry to become paralyzed,...
- Samuel Whitall's Correspondence with Mr. J. A. Washington
June 16, 1842
FAIRFAX, Virginia
Health/Death, WomenSamuel Whitall was the overseer on the Mt. Vernon plantation, owned by the brother of President George Washington, Master John Augustine Washington. Mr. Whitall lived on a portion of the plantation known as Union Farm, and had daily correspondence with Master Washington about the state of the plantation. This included anything from daily proceedings, like crop production, to more serious matters,...
- Charles Dickens and the Women of Lowell, Massachusetts
1842
MIDDLESEX, Massachusetts
Industrial Revolution, Cotton Mills, Charles Dickens, Lowell, women's rightsHe said he wasn’t going to compare the textile factories at Lowell, Massachusetts, to the ones in his home country of England, but how could he not? After all, Charles Dickens would make it his life’s work to critique the deplorable working conditions that his fellow countrymen had to suffer through on a daily basis. “The contrast would be a strong one,” Dickens wrote in comparing Lowell...
- The Supreme Court Takes a Stance on Fugitive Slavery and States Rights
1842
YORK, Pennsylvania
Prigg v Pennsylvania, federal power, state rights, Fugitive Slave Act, Civil WarIn 1837, attorney Edward Prigg was commissioned on behalf of Margaret Ashmore to recapture and bring Margaret Morgan from Pennsylvania back to Maryland. Morgan had lived in virtual freedom, but was never formally emancipated by the Ashmore family. In accordance with Pennsylvania’s Law of 1826, Prigg took Morgan before a county justice for a hearing at which the justice declined cognizance of the...
- Improving Schools in Augusta County, Virginia
July 28, 1842
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Education, Urban-Life/BoosterismPride was the driving force of Augusta County, Virginia- pride and patriotism not only for the country, but for the county as well. Augustan citizens therefore became quite disgruntled when one of the adjoining counties earned the venerable title, Athens of the Valley due to the assiduous efforts it made to improve its county's schools. One agitated Augusta resident in particular took it upon...
- Slaves Drown While Fishing
August 1, 1842
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
African-Americans, Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, Health/Death, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, Slavery, Urban-Life/BoosterismOn a blustery summer day, August 1, 1842, a fishing boat in which five slaves were traveling was swamped and capsized. Because of the nature of the gale that had blown ashore that blustery Charleston day, all five were presumed dead. The slaves were: Jefferson and George, property of Mr. J. Jeannerett, Ned of Mr. Mellichamp, William of Mrs. C. Macbeth, and a slave boy, Issac, of Mrs. Hughes. Although...
- Professor Morse's Electric Telegraph - A review of the operation of the technology as well as the impact it had on the control and difusion of information.
August, 1842
Washington City, District of Columbia
Telecommunication, Telegraph, Diffusion of InformationAlfred Vail waited for the message to arrive on the wire. His superior, Mr. Morse, had prepared the paper, and was about to send the message from the Supreme Court in Washington D.C.
The demonstration that was about to be undertaken was one that would introduce to America the ability to send a message via the new electrical telegraph. In August 1842, the Tribune described the operation...
- White Interference with the Slave System
August 19, 1842
CLARKE, Georgia
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn August 1842, J. H. Arnold of Walton County, Georgia placed an announcement in the Athens Southern Banner offering a 50 reward to anyone who found his runaway slave. In most ways this ad was like any other runaway slave reward announcements. It reflected the basic ideology of slavery that the slave was property that rightfully belonged to its owner and should be returned if found. In this particular...
- Gopher John
April 18, 1842
HILLSBOROUGH, Florida
African-Americans, Native-Americans, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarOfficially, Gopher John was Major General McCall's interpreter, but during those long and informal nights on the Florida frontier, John was also his cook and friend. He was someone to talk to, and he cooked a yellow perch dish that really would have done honor to your cuisine at home. McCall and John were deep in the Florida wilderness, surrounding a fire in Wahoo Swamp, and the Major General...
- The Attempted Murder of William Goyens
August 27, 1842 to August 28, 1842
TERRITORY, Territory
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryThere was a knock on the door of Adolphus Sterne's office. The townsmen that entered requested that Sterne issue a warrant for the arrest of William Simons. They informed Sterne that Simons had tried to kill a free African American blacksmith named William Goyens. Sterne did as the men asked and then did not hear about Goyens or Simons for the rest of the evening. The next day Sterne learned...
- The Blackwells Immigrate to Missouri
April, 1842
COOPER, Missouri
Migration/Transportation"The times here are very hard" wrote James Henry Edmonds to his mother-in-law, Elizabeth Blackwell, in April 1842. James and his wife, Betsey Blackwell, had moved to Cooper County, Missouri in the late 1830s from Virginia, with Octavia, Betsey's sister, and her husband. James' letter in 1842 was one of several written by him, Betsey, and Octavia to the rest of the Blackwell family, who remained...
- “Few of you are wise enough, and good enough to be trusted with liberty.”
September 11, 1842
Washington City, District of Columbia
Abolitionism, african americans, ReligionUpon entering the vibrant city of Georgetown and embarking upon a new career path as a teacher, Miss Caroline Healey Dall found herself at once confronted with questions she relied upon her religious convictions to answer. In her diary, Caroline documented her day-to-day life and travels, as well as her dreams, passions, and concerns. After the Panic of 1837 left her father bankrupt, Caroline...
- The Loss of a Steamboat
September, 1842
ADAMS, Mississippi
Agriculture, Economy, Migration/TransportationIn September 1842, the Vicksburg, a steamboat, was headed for New Orleans. On board were 145 bales of John A. Quitman's cotton. However, only 17 of the bales actually reached New Orleans as expected. The Vicksburg had an accident, and one hundred and twenty eight of Quitman's bales were unaccounted for. An accident such as this would have been very bad news for any southern...
- Inheriting Property
September 22, 1842
ORLEANS, Louisiana
African-Americans, Economy, Migration/Transportation, Native-Americans, Slavery, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WarBy the 1840s, it was clear to most Americans that the United States existed on a fair bit of land. This vast space stretched westward, father than many imaginations even reached. Word trickled back east of rich soil and bountiful harvests, but also of great hardships. Thousands of Native Americans perished on the over 2000 mile long Trail of Tears in 1838.
It was in this context that O.G....
- Death of the Respectable Adam Grove
February 24, 1842
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Agriculture, Church/Religious-Activity, Health/Death, Race-Relations, SlaveryShermariah Church, the Presbyterian Church of Augusta County, Virginia lost a valuable member of their congregation when Mr. Adam Grove died suddenly and unexpectedly on February 24, 1842. Mr. Grove's spirituality transcended Shermariah into the educational realm in that he served as a professor of religion for 20 years. His religious beliefs manifested themselves in his charitable nature. He...
- B.F. Porter's Gin House
February 21, 1842
TUSCALOOSA, Alabama
Arts/Leisure, Crime/Violence, EconomyB.F. Porter was an important individual around Tuscaloosa County, Alabama. Not only was he a practicing lawyer, but he owned a large crop of cotton and produced valuable gin. However, someone apparently had a problem with his extracurricular activities. On February 21, 1842, the Mobile Commercial Register reported that Mr. Porter's gin house, along with his entire cotton crop, went up in flames...
- Tempering the Temperance Movement
February 19, 1842
WASHINGTON, North Carolina
Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, Education, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe Newbern Spectator published several articles about the new temperance movements starting up in New York, in Ireland, and in the Newbern area. It was a crusade for self-improvement and the industrial work ethic. One man from nearby Washington, N.C., only identified as 'A Free Drinker,' felt he had to speak up. In a letter to the editor, the writer reminded the reading public...
- Eugene Davis' Appeal for Temperance
October 23, 1842 to 1842
ALBEMARLE, Virginia
Church/Religious-Activity, Politics, WomenOn October 23, 1842, Eugene Davis wrote a draft of a speech advocating temperance in Albemarle County. While in the North many cities had embraced the temperance movement, in the South, country counties like Albemarle led the way for social and moral reform. Evangelical congregations and women in particular expected the temperance movement to solve common social vices and fashion a society rooted...
- Impromptu Balls: They Could Have Danced All Night
January 7, 1842 to January 9, 1842
WEST FELICIANA, Louisiana
Arts/LeisureOn January 7, 1842, Bennet Barrow went to town to get supplies in his Cab. When he left the cab, two friends, Amanda and Miss Crab of Tennessee, jumped in it and went off without Bonnets only to return one hour later from a nearby swamp. Amused, Barrow got in, turned the cab around, driving his friends to visit a Mrs. Wade. There he met up with six other friends. After piling his friends into two...
- Senator Lewis F. Linn and the Environmental Movement
January 17, 1843
ST LOUIS, Missouri
Economy, Politics, Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/BoosterismRegarded by his contemporaries as one of the first mercantile environmentalists, Missouri Senator Lewis Linn attracted much attention during his life. As a doctor early in his life, Linn had seen thousands of cases of dysentery, malaria and other diseases that resulted from life along the Mississippi river. In low-water seasons, the outbreak of diseases increased as blockages in the river forced...
- Singleton Mercer's Murder of Mahlon Heberton
February 6, 1843 to February 10, 1843
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania
Singleton Mercer, Sarah Mercer, The Monks of Monk Hall, George Lippard, The Quaker City, Mahlon Heberton, William WarrenSingleton Mercer was the face of a sensationalized American news story that took place in Philadelphia. Singleton’s sister, Sarah, was lured to a brothel by Mahlon Heberton, and then raped at gunpoint. When his 16-year-old sister was raped by 24-year-old Heberton, who had promised her marriage before casting her off, Singleton Mercer first attempted to kill Sarah, and then killed Heberton, on...
- Dispute with Slave Trader
October, 1841
ADAMS, Mississippi
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn 1841, R. Ballard, a slave trader who owned property in Mississippi, brought a Federal suit against Henry Turner, claiming the Turner owed him 6,300 dollars. The bill was the remainder owed for forty-two slaves that Ballard had sold to Turner in 1835. Unfortunately for Ballard, Turner was quite unhappy with his purchase. He returned seven of the slaves to Ballard, declaring that they were either...
- The Murder and Trial of Singleton Mercer
February 10, 1843 to April 14, 1843
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania
Insanity Defense, George Lippard, Singleton Mercer, Heberton, Sarah Mercer, John Finch, The Monks of Monk Hall, The Quaker City, Murder, PhiladelphiaOn 10 February 1843 Singleton Mercer shot and killed Mahlon Hutchinson Heberton aboard the ferry John Finch. Public sympathy for Mercer was high and just over a month later, on 28 March, Mercer was acquitted of the charges on the grounds of insanity— a relatively new and controversial defense. The defense was controversial because the murder was one of revenge. Heberton, often described as handsome...
- Poor Whites in the Low Country
March 31, 1843
GEORGETOWN, South Carolina
Agriculture, Economy, Politics, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarEdmund Ruffin, a Virginian planter, was constantly observing his surroundings as he journeyed from the Santee River to the Waccamaw River. Making his way through a swampy pine barren, Ruffin found little trace of any cultivation or civilized inhabitation. The few people in the area raised cattle and, since their animals grazed on the open land, the concept of property ownership was completely foreign...
- Agricultural Change in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
July 21, 1841 to October 15, 1841
BRISTOL, Massachusetts
Wheaton, accounting records, mid-nineteenth century, AgricultureLaban Morey Wheaton kept records of all his economic transactions while he lived in Norton, Massachusetts, in the mid-nineteenth century, and the year 1841 was no exception. Between July and October of this year, Wheaton made a number of transactions with a man, Sumner Blandin. Looking at the records reveals that Blandin came to Wheaton about once a week, usually to get cash instead of food or goods....