Episodes Nearest to January 8, 1845: 1 through 25 of 25
- Runaway Slaves in Ohio
January 8, 1845
HAMILTON, Ohio
Slavery, fugitive slaveMore often than not, Ohio citizens showed no signs of guilt for the part they played in helping fugitive slaves. A Cincinnati newspaper editor bristled at the suggestion that his fellow Ohioans had deliberately committed crimes. "We have seen no evidence of it," he wrote in 1845. "We are not aware that any of them entered the slave States for the sake of helping off slaves. Being in those states,...
- The Louisiana Constitution of 1845
January 14, 1845
ORLEANS, Louisiana
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Economy, Education, Race-Relations, SlaveryBy 1845, the public mind of Louisiana had decided that the state's current constitution, constructed in 1812, was too outmoded and contained too prominent elements of an aristocratic mindset. The Jacksonian idea of equal ability of all' and the Democratic Party's characterization of the common man' was pervasive, while the wealthy landowners and aristocrats still in...
- E.W. Hubard Advises his Nephew on Gentlemanly Ways
February 9, 1845
BUCKINGHAM, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Education, Urban-Life/BoosterismOn February 9, 1845, E.W. Hubard of Washington, D.C. wrote a letter to his nephew, James L. Hubard, of Buckingham County, Virginia. James was a young man at the time, still in the formative stages of his life, and it appears that he and his uncle corresponded regularly about education, family life, and women in central and northern Virginia. E.W. began the letter by acknowledging his receipt of...
- Mississippi Congressman Calls for the Annexation of Texas
February 20, 1845
Washington City, District of Columbia
Economy, Government, Law, Migration/TransportationIn 1845, the national debate over the annexation of the young country of Texas into the Union was in full swing. Politicians stood on either side of the debate, effectively representing their constituents in the matter. John Henderson, a Congressman from Mississippi, gave a speech to Congress on February 20, 1845, in which he outlined all of the reasons why the Union should annex Texas. As Congress...
- Influential Use of the Phrase Manifest Destiny'
February 27, 1845
Washington City, District of Columbia
Church/Religious-Activity, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarThe phrase manifest destiny originated in 1844 with a journalist in New York named John O'Sullivan in his magazine called the Democratic Review, in reference to the annexation of Texas. Manifest destiny is the idea that it was God's will that the United States expand throughout the whole of the continent (though not by force) to spread liberty and democracy. O'Sullivan's...
- Massachusetts Judge Driven from South Carolina
November, 1844
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
African-Americans, Economy, Race-Relations, SlaveryThe people of Charleston were not above standing up for what they believed in, even at the expense appearing rude and overzealous. Judge Samuel Hoar of Concord, Massachusetts, and his daughter, Elizabeth, traveled to Charleston in November of 1844. Their intentions were not known when the trip was announced; however, soon after they arrived, it became clear that the Massachusetts judge had come...
- Florida Admitted as the 27th State
March 3, 1845
LEON, Florida
Race-Relations, SlaveryThe presidential approval of Florida's entering the Union as a (slave) state occurred on the last day of Tyler's administration. The news reached Tallahassee five days later, and Governor Branch was officially notified ten days later. Tallahassee was filled with raucous celebration, including ringing bells, cannon reports, bonfires, and general merriment. The governor held a large reception...
- Augusta, Georgia City Council Officially Endorses Henry Cumming's Proposal to Build the Augusta Canal
March 15, 1845
RICHMOND, Georgia
Economy, WarDuring the 1840s, Augusta, Georgia and the whole South were affected when cotton prices fell, causing an economic depression. In response, Henry Cumming conceived, promoted, and oversaw construction of the Augusta Canal, which rescued Augusta from this depression. The aim of the canal was to provide drinking water to the city, power to factories, and a new means of transportation on canal craft....
- Dental Surgery in the 1840s
October 31, 1844
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
Health/DeathA dental surgeon by the name of Peter J. Cairnes placed an ad in The Republican convincing the readers of the merits of dental surgery. Dr. Cairnes urges the public to start taking care of their children's teeth starting anywhere between the ages of seven and nine. Dr. Cairnes also offered a reduced rate for any slave owner or tobacco factory owner whose slave was in need of a tooth extraction....
- A Relaxing Trip down the Bayou
March 22, 1845
JEFFERSON, Louisiana
Arts/Leisure, Migration/Transportation, SlaveryLisa Rhinelander and her brother George, of New Orleans, were traveling along with some friends to a house party at a plantation on the Barataria Canal. They first traveled by railroad, then steamboat, until arriving at a point twenty miles down the river from the home they were to visit. It looked as though they had a long row ahead f them. But it turned out that their host had sent slaves to pull...
- Van Buren for a Second Term
October 20, 1844
DINWIDDIE, Virginia
PoliticsOn the morning of Tuesday October 20, 1840, The American Statesman newspaper of Petersburg, Virginia ran an article on the merits of President Martin Van Buren, who was then running for a second term as President. The article openly endorsed Van Buren's candidacy for President to the newspaper's readership and the greater Petersburg community by refuting the claims of the popular...
- In the Clutches of Slavery
April 10, 1845
NASSAU, Florida
florida slave history, triangle slave tradeIn the Clutches of Slavery
As time went on and the distribution of slaves increased it became much easier to buy slaves. The fact that labor could be bought for pennies was perfect for land owners in the New World. There were many ways that people could buy and sell their slaves. For many, purchases came right from the ships, these ships were coming up from the Caribbean. The process of slavery...
- An Explosive Accident
October 3, 1844
ANNE ARUNDEL, Maryland
Arts/Leisure, EconomyDuring the early eighteenth century, the northern portion of the Anne Arundel County developed an economy not based on agriculture, but on iron ore. Iron ore became the staple of the area and was crucial in the development of a regional transportation center. The reliance on tobacco, Anne Arundel's traditional major cash crop, lessened through the nineteenth century allowing for blacksmithing...
- The Romance of Love Letters between Albemarle and Richmond, Virginia
August 26, 1844 to October 30, 1844
ALBEMARLE, Virginia
Migration/Transportation, WomenDuring the late summer and fall of 1844, B. Johnson Barbour and Caroline H. Watson had little else on their minds than what the next post would bring as they anticipated November 7 - the day when they would finally be united as husband and wife. The distance that separated the young couple heightened their anticipation, for Caroline lived in Richmond while Barbour lived in the rural county of Albemarle,...
- Southern Baptist Convention Formed by 293 Representatives of Churches in the Southeastern U.S.
May 8, 1845 to May 12, 1845
RICHMOND, Georgia
Agriculture, Church/Religious-Activity, Education, SlaveryIn 1845, a group of Southern Baptists broke away from the Triennial Convention and the American Baptist Home Mission Society (ABHMS) due to differences on the slavery issue. This particular group of Southern Baptists did not oppose slavery, as the Triennial Convention and the ABHMS had begun to do. The Baptist Board, situated in Boston, in November of 1844, adopted certain resolutions, one of...
- Frederick Douglass Publishes Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave
May 28, 1845
BALTIMORE, Maryland
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Education, Race-Relations, SlaveryFrederick Douglass (1817-1895) grew up as a slave on a plantation in Maryland; he was the son of a white man. After 20 years of living in the horrible, violent conditions of the institution of slavery, Douglass escaped to the North. He became educated and one of the most prominent and outspoken abolitionists. This book is a narration of his life, with a preface written by another strong abolitionist,...
- Death of Former President Andrew Jackson
June 8, 1845
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Health/Death, Race-Relations, WarAndrew Jackson, otherwise known as Old Hickory' and a man of the people', was the 7th President of the United States, and the first to hail from a state other than Virginia or Massachusetts. Born in a backwoods area in the Carolinas, Jackson served during the American Revolution and eventually ended up as a lawyer in Tennessee. His later distinguished military career included...
- True American, the Emancipationist Newspaper, Founded
June, 1845
FAYETTE, Kentucky
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn June of 1845, the True American abolitionist newspaper was founded. Its editor, Cassius Marcellus Clay, was an outspoken abolitionist from the South (a Whig from Kentucky). His arguments against slavery usually were primarily economic in nature, thus appealing to the self-interests of farmers and small slaveholders that, at the time, were feeling the effects of severe economic depression...
- A Family Reels from a Death in Southwest Virginia
July 19, 1844
SMYTH, Virginia
Health/DeathOn July 19, 1844, William King, Jr. reported sad news to his sister Sarah C. King of Abingdon, Virginia. Their younger brother had died. Sarah had visited just a few weeks prior to the death. Everything was fine then in the town of Saltville, Virginia. Life had been pleasant when she visited her family. After all, she did not get to see them often since her marriage. Several weeks later, her family's...
- Jacob Enders Buries a Slave Child
1845
FLUVANNA, Virginia
African-Americans, Health/Death, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn 1845 Jacob Enders, an undertaker employed by Dr. Marcus B. Buck of Fluvanna County, Virginia, constructed a coffin, dug a grave, and buried an African American child for the total fee of two dollars and seventy-five cents. This receipt of service is included in a collection of other receipts and letters; a doctor's bill from one John Thomson, dated December 29, 1840 and a letter from Buck's...
- Lunsford Lane Finds Freedom
1845
WAKE, North Carolina
African-Americans, Government, Race-Relations, SlaveryLunsford Lane, a former slave, confidently declared in his autobiography, "I strove to keep self-possessed and employed in my mind day and night planning how I might be FREE." Lunsford Lane was born a slave in Raleigh, North Carolina and self-published an autobiography in 1845 recounting his experiences in slavery and his determination to buy his and his family's freedom. Lane was born and...
- The Other Side of The Slave Trade
1845
ALCHUA, Florida
Slave Trade, SlaveryA letter from Geo B. Matthew to Lord Stanley in 1845 gives us a unique insight into the way in which the slave trade was operated. Matthew gives reports of ships with "Colored" crews that have been wrecked and the crews were sold into slavery. The letter also shows us a comparison between slaves in the United States, as compared to other parts in the world.
As opposed to obtaining slaves...
- Marriage in Margaret Fuller's "Woman in the Nineteenth Century"
1845
NEW YORK, New York
Women, Urban SocietyDuring the nineteenth century, one female author stood out as a voice for women during a time when many were not acknowledged. Margaret Fuller wrote “Woman in the Nineteenth Century” and spoke with a voice for every woman who lived during the nineteenth century. In particular, Fuller had an especially critical view toward marriage. She explained that the idea of marriage “has been inculcated...
- Henry Clay publishes the Alabama Letters
July 1, 1844 to July 27, 1844
TUSCALOOSA, Alabama
SlaveryThe issue of Texas Annexation in 1844 proved quite harmful to the running candidate. Although, initially careful of what stance to openly announce on the issue of Texas, Clay publicized his negative feelings on the issue of Texas annexing the United States. Due to the second party system in 1844, which allowed for party loyalty to switch regardless of self-interest, Clay now feared the consequences...
- Charles Hudson Speaks Against the Annexation of Texas
January 20, 1845 to December 29, 1845
Washington City, District of Columbia
Politics, Crime/Violence, Economy, Law, Slavery, Urban Life/BoosterismIn the fierce debate over the annexation of Texas, Charles Hudson, took the floor of the House of Representatives in hopes of preventing the admission of Texas to the Union. A Whig member of the House of Representatives, representing Massachusetts, as well as a Universalist minister, Hudson emphasized the selfish motives of the Southern advocates for annexation.
The admission of Texas to...