Episodes Nearest to October 8, 1846: 1 through 25 of 25
- Sam Forwood's Fatherly Advice
October 8, 1846
CLARKE, Alabama
Agriculture, Health/Death, Economy, EducationOn October 8, 1846, in Clark County, Alabama, Sam Forwood wrote a letter to his sixteen-year-old son, William Stump Forwood, who was living in Maryland with his grandmother for schooling.Young William had been questioning what occupation he should pursue, and his father had several points of advice. Sam advised his son to pursue the profession of medicine. As Sam explained it, becoming a doctor...
- Bad Medicine and the use of Galvanism in the Cameron Plantation letters at Stagville
October, 1846 to 1846
ORANGE, North Carolina
Galvanism, slavery,, plantation, slavesThere is numerous life situations featured in the letters of the Cameron Plantation. The focus of interest here is the life of the enslaved people as seen through the eyes of the Cameron family. Of course because of this we must interpret based on what we see in the letters. There are real human issues. These include affection, sickness, disease, travel, and home life just to name a few. The goal...
- Slave Owner Uses Modern Medicine to Treat Malaria
September 21, 1846 to September 26, 1846
ORANGE, North Carolina
Science/Technology, Medicine, SlaveryIn late September 1846 several slaves from the Fairntosh plantation in Durham, North Carolina fell sick with malaria. Their owner, planter Paul Cameron, tells his father Duncan how he provided medicine for his sick slaves as well as the traditional herbs and teas.
“Since that time we have a great deal of chill and fever at the mill quarter in [unintelligible] I have made the...
- The Good Slave
October 28, 1846
GREENE, Alabama
Slavery, Antebellum America, PaternalismSlavery is anathema, but it was not always so. It was quite possible for well-meaning and rational people to practice and defend the “peculiar institution.” Slaveholders sustained themselves with the firm conviction that they were doing right by the poor, benighted souls in their charge. In this way, masters could claim they were compassionate angels of mercy--providing discipline, moral...
- A Country Wedding in 1846
November, 1846
ORLEANS, Louisiana
Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, WomenOne November afternoon, Eliza Moore Chinn McHatten Ripley and her brother Dick set off for a farm not too far outside of their home in New Orleans. This short journey became a longer one as transportation troubles and creek flooding slowed them down. Eventually, Eliza and Dick found a place to stay over for a night before continuing on their way the following morning.
They finally reached...
- The 50 Dollar Reward for Harry the Runaway
December 12, 1846
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryOn December 12, 1846, Landon Harrison ran a wanted advertisement in The Nashville Daily Union. Months later, on Saturday, March 27, 1847, the Daily Union continued to run the advertisement. One of the slaves on Harrison?s plantation ran away, and Harrison entered a wanted ad in hopes of having him found and returned as soon as possible. In order to ensure the slaves safe return, master's...
- A Bitter Winter
November 4, 1846 to January, 1847
TERRITORY, Territory
Crime/Violence, Health/Death, Migration/Transportation, Native-Americans, WomenThe winter of 1846 was physically, emotionally and mentally draining for twenty year-old Mary Ann Graves, a member of the group of emigrants now infamously known as the Donner Party. As one of the survivors of this horrible episode in history, she wrote a letter to Levi Fosdick on May 22 of the following spring recounting her experiences. Her concluding remark was "I have told the bad news, and...
- A Volunteer's Story
July, 1846
ANNE ARUNDEL, Maryland
Diplomacy/International, Health/Death, Politics, WarJoseph McNeir was a volunteer soldier during the Mexican American War. McNeir had maintained correspondence with his family throughout his time in service. The letters often discussed the life that Joseph McNeir lived during his service as well as how many volunteers were there to serve. McNeir gave intimate details of how the war was going, the expected daily events, and where the soldiers were...
- A Woman's Dominance in Marital Relations
July 14, 1846
NORFOLK CITY, Virginia
WomenHoratio B. Bucktrout, the preacher in charge of Norfolk's M.E. Church South, wrote to Jordan Powell of Baltimore regarding issues that arose from the death of Powell's brother. In a letter addressed July 14, 1846, Bucktrout revealed that Godfrey Powell had just died, and a woman claiming to be his wife was attempting to claim his estate. Bucktrout wanted to know if this woman truly was Powell's...
- The Price of Slavery
January 2, 1847
DARLINGTON, South Carolina
Prices, African-Americans, SlaveryTo a group of slaves about to be sold to a new owner, the future is uncertain. Their new home may promise decent food and board, or it may mean the separation from their closest family members, abusive overseers, and grueling work that drives them to the brink of death. This is what thirteen slaves faced when they were sold on January 2, 1847 by John D. McCullough to Samuel W. Evans. The document...
- Retrocession of Alexandria from Washington, D.C. to Become Part of Virginia
July 9, 1846
FAIRFAX, Virginia
SlaveryOn July 9 Alexandria retroceded,' or returned as a formal part of Virginia after being ceded from the state to create a portion of Washington, D.C. in the year 1790. Alexandria was home to a flourishing slave trade at this time, and Southern congressmen wanted to protect it in the face of growing pressure from Northern abolitionists to ban slavery in the nation's capital. Upon the...
- Blood in the Streets
January 7, 1847
Washington City, District of Columbia
Crime/Violence, Government, Law, Politics, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WarContrary to popular belief, the Civil War was not an instantaneous outbreak of violence. The years leading up to the affair were full of bargains, compromises, and violent encounters that transcended both racial and societal lines. On January 7, 1847, many newspapers distributed articles focusing on the ongoing war with Mexico. The dispute increased social and political unrest back east, and the...
- African Americans Drinking during Church Service
1846
CULPEPER, Virginia
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryThe white population of Culpeper County, Virginia was dismayed when their church services were inexcusably disrupted by the boisterous activities of some African Americans. As a petition to the State Legislature, drafted by a number of the county's white citizens in 1846, states, their worshipping services are of late so interrupted by drinking, particularly by Negroes on the Sabbath, that they...
- A Murderous Education
1846
ADAMS, Mississippi
Education, GovernmentAround 1846, the students of Centenary College decided to take a stand. Fifty-three of the pupils signed a petition for the removal of a professor from their institute of higher education. In adding their names to the list, the students accused Professor Jones of, participating in ... the shooting of the boys Unfortunately, the petition gave no further explanation of the alleged incident. However,...
- Construction Begins on Fort Zachary Taylor in Key West, Florida
July 1, 1846
MONROE, Florida
WarThe first federal building to be constructed on Key West, which is the southern-most point of the United States, Fort Taylor was begun in July of 1846. The fort was built in order to protect the natural harbor of Key West and was named for General Zachary Taylor, who was commander of American forces in the Mexican-American War which had also begun that year. Although the fort was all but destroyed...
- Jabez Smith hired to oversee construction of a factory along the Augusta Canal
January, 1847
RICHMOND, Georgia
Economy, Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe factory eventually constructed by Smith along the canal played a key role in both stimulating the local economy and eventually in the Civil War. The canal and rail connections found in Augusta made it ideal for wartime industry like the production of gun powder. In fact the canal attracted such a broad array of war time industries during the Civil War that the citizens of Augusta began to...
- Maryland's Desire to Establish a Decision
January 21, 1847
PRINCE GEORGES, Maryland
Race-Relations, SlaveryThe abolitionist movement began as a peaceful movement in the eyes of Marylanders, however, as they approached the goal of emancipation, many citizens question what their respective states would be like without the admittance of slavery. The question of whether of not Maryland was truly a southern state. According to Richard Walsh and William Lloyd Fox's History of Maryland, the free...
- A Coming Together of the Races
January 22, 1847
WASHINGTON, Tennessee
African-Americans, Arts/Leisure, Race-RelationsOn January 22 1847, a peculiar event took place at the Jonesborough hatter shop. On this occasion, whites and blacks of the town congregated for what was known as a Negro Party. Together, members of both races cast aside racial differences in order to celebrate the coming of the New Year. Every guest, despite their race, took part in the festivities which included feasting and dancing. The merriment...
- Hundreds of Mormons in Honolulu en Route to California
June 20, 1846
TERRITORY, Territory
Utah, Hawaii, Migration, MormonsIt was June 20th, 1846, when the ship Brooklyn arrived in Honolulu, Oahu. Its passengers were hundreds of Mormon immigrants en route to California from New York led by a man named Samuel Brannan. The people of Hawaii were intrigued and confused by these new people, especially such a vast amount. The unknown elements were filled in by a history of the Mormon religion and its people.
The...
- Whigs: Nationalism & Publication
June 1, 1846
Washington City, District of Columbia, NEW YORK, New York
Political Parties, Government, PoliticsAlthough the Whig Party was already in trouble by the late 1840s, they remained vocal on a host of issues through print publications, such as The American Whig Review. One particular article of interest was written in June of 1846 and dealt with “Supply and demand,” which the author believed “must ever be the governing rule of prices.” The article also discussed how speculation...
- John C. Calhoun aids in defeating the Ten Regiment Bill
February, 1847
Washington City, District of Columbia
WarIn his run for the presidency John C. Calhoun opposed the Ten Regiment Bill proposed by the Polk administration to bolster the army to continue the fight against the Mexicans. The ten regiment bill called for increased funding to raise and outfit an additional ten regiments to fight Santa Anna's troops in the Mexican American War. Congress intended this funding to last until the end of the...
- Savannah Reverend Addresses Religious Conditions of Slaves
May, 1846
CHATHAM, Georgia
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Race-Relations, SlaveryReverend Dexter Clapp of Savannah, Georgia got word of a question put forth in a newspaper, presumably by a Northerner, about the religious condition of slaves in the South. Clapp felt compelled to write a letter to the editor discussing his opinion on the matter. He stated that much of what he had to say was probably not known in the North, but was common knowledge in the South, or at least in...
- Wilmot Proviso defeated by the Senate for the final time
March 3, 1847
Washington City, District of Columbia
SlaveryPassed for a second time by the House on March 3, 1847, but eventually rejected by the senate again. Despite its failure to pass, the Proviso raised serious constitutional and political questions as to the acceptability of slavery. The Wilmot Proviso, attached as an amendment to an appropriations bill, essentially aimed to prevent slavery from occurring in any territory ceded from Mexico after...
- New Orleans Courts report thousands of whites recently jailed for vagrancy
1847 to May 2, 1847
ORLEANS, Louisiana
Crime/Violence, Urban-Life/BoosterismAs of May 2, 1847 the New Orleans Court Recorder reported that thousands of whites had been sentenced to the workhouse for acts of vagrancy. Often times the courts handed down these sentences without proof, trial, or opportunity to appeal. The fate of these vagrants represents a common occurrence throughout the South. Around this time period in South Carolina the leadership sold vagrants into...
- W.B. Shapard's Very Desirable and Beautiful Farm
March 4, 1847
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Agriculture, SlaveryThe heading above W.B. Shapard's Richland Creek estate advertisement boldly read: That very desirable and Beautiful Farm. Shapard first ran the advertisement in Nashville on March 4, 1847, and by Saturday, March 27, 1847 it ran again in the classifieds of The Daily Union. Shapard wanted to sell his estate, and vividly described every aspect of it in his advertisement. The estate was not merely...