Episodes Nearest to April 1, 1848 to April 30, 1848: 1 through 25 of 25
- Maintaining a Gender Hierarchy
April, 1848 to 1848
MIDDLESEX, Massachusetts
working women, Lowell, hierarchyEliza Jane Cate was an unmarried woman who worked in the Lowell mills for several years and contributed a great number of moralistic essays to the New England Offering during the late 1840’s. Although Cates essays in the Offering were fictional, Cate presented realistic morals and views based on her experiences in the Lowell factories. She begins her essay “Duties and Rights of Mill Girls”...
- New Cotton Factory
April 12, 1848
RANDOLPH, North Carolina
Agriculture, Economy, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe burgeoning village of Franklinville boasted its new cotton factory in 1848. Sitting on the banks of the Deep River, the new Island Ford Manufacturing Company directly faced the Randolph Manufacturing Company. In less than a year the handsome three-story building sprang up with capital of 14,000, and the company began by running 528 spindles. It is no surprise that the local paper enthusiastically...
- A Reflection on the Ongoing War with Mexico
March 4, 1848
Washington City, District of Columbia
Health/Death, Government, Law, Migration/Transportation, WarDaniel Webster, leading American statesmen and established Whig Senator during the antebellum period, sent a letter discussing the war with Mexico to his dear son on March 4, 1848. He expressed his disgust for the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and its architect, Nicholas Trist. This letter comes near the end of Webster's career, and the letter revealed that fatigue from a long career in politics...
- Hawkins, the Horse Thief
February 29, 1848
ROCKBRIDGE, Virginia
Crime/Violence, Health/Death, Government, LawOn Thursday, February 29, 1849, The Valley Star of Lexington, Virginia reported that the infamous horse thief, Hawkins, while in jail, slit his own throat with a straight razor. The guards allowed the inmates razors and stood outside the cells as the prisoners shaved. According to the article, Hawkins turned to the guard, said, Good-bye, and promptly slit his throat. Being near at hand, we ran to...
- Antebellum Abortion
February 21, 1848
JEFFERSON, Mississippi
African-Americans, Health/Death, Race-Relations, Slavery, WomenIn modern society, it is commonly accepted as a rule of the profession that doctors remain cool and detached from their patients in order to provide them with the best medical care possible, unobstructed by emotional thoughts, feelings, or actions. The diary of Dr. Walter Wade proved that even in the mid-nineteenth century that this concept was not a foreign one. A large percentage of his journal...
- A English tourist documents his travels from Liverpool, England to New York.
June, 1848
KINGS, New York
Transportation/Migration, Crime/Violence, Economy, Law, Slavery, Urban Life/BoosterismIn 1848, Archibald Prentice composed “A tour in the United States” during his journey from Liverpool, England to New York. In his letters, Prentice recorded observations of his experiences throughout his tour of America.
During his stay in the Astor House in New York, Prentice wrote about what he observed after touring Brooklyn. He was particularly fascinated by the working man of America....
- Zachary Taylor Grapples With the Wilmot Proviso
1848
SUFFOLK, Massachusetts
Politics, Slavery, LawAs soon as the Mexican War ended and the Mexican Cession granted the United States even more land for the nation, a common contemporary issue posed the question: would these new territories be free soil or allow slavery? David Wilmot, a Democratic representative from Pennsylvania at the time, added a proposal of how to settle the slavery question once and for all, known as the Wilmot Proviso. The...
- The Scarcity of Salt
January 25, 1848
JASPER, Georgia
Agriculture, Economy, Migration/TransportationIn 1848 Walker I. Brookes sent a letter to his father from his plantation in Jasper and Jones counties, Georgia. In the letter he discussed many problems he was facing on the plantation. The troubles he wrote about included having to postpone planting, having to buy animals and having to deal with a fire in a field that burned a fence. He began the letter by discussing a delivery of materials by...
- Plantation Owner Seeks Compensation From Incompetent Overseer
June 22, 1848 to August 9, 1848
HOUSTON, Georgia
Agriculture, LawOn June 22, 1848, plantation owner John Powers filed a petition against his overseer, William Ingram, in the Inferior Court of Houston, Georgia. Powers sought reimbursement for financial losses resulting from the overseer's poor and irresponsible work, asserting that half of his cotton and corn crop was lost due to bad management, want of industry and misconduct of the defendant. His plantation...
- The Black Enchanter
January 15, 1848
MIDDLESEX, Massachusetts
Blackface, Minstrel Show“The Black Enchanter…” functions as the comic relief in a play titled John-Donkey’s Prize Plays. This actor was one of many white actors in a black face minstrel show in the period before the Civil War. This black character is portraying the “court jester” of this time period, entertaining white people in old torn clothes with his over exaggeration of black features: broken...
- Abraham Lincoln’s view on James K. Polk and Mexican Territory
January 12, 1848
Washington City, District of Columbia
Abraham Lincoln, Mexican Territory, James K. Polk, Mexican-American WarOn January 12, 1848 Abraham Lincoln, a Whig congressman from Illinois, gave a speech questioning the Mexican-American war that he believed was “unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced.” A month earlier Lincoln, as a freshman member of the House of Representatives, introduced the “Spot Resolutions” that asked President Polk to submit evidence that the initial cause and the first battle...
- African-American Traveler Jailed Despite Documents
January 5, 1848
WAKE, North Carolina
African-Americans, Law, SlaverySherriff Willie Pope incarcerated the black man calling himself Sam Fary just three days after Christmas. Though Sam claimed himself a free man, Pope placed a front page advertisement in the local paper requesting Fary's owner to come forward, prove property, pay charges and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. The newspaper notice included a small cartoon of a running...
- Sarah C. Owen Addresses the Rochester 1848 Woman’s Rights Convention
August 2, 1848
MONROE, New York
Seneca Falls Convention, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Frederick Douglass, Elizabeth McClintock, Amy Post, woman's rights, woman's suffrageA little less than a month after the Seneca Falls Convention, the Convention that sparked the woman’s rights movement, a Woman’s Rights Convention was held on August 2, 1848 in Rochester, New York at the Unitarian Church to continue the work done at Seneca Falls. The Woman’s Rights Convention in Rochester was planned by Amy Post, Sarah Hallowell, Sarah Fish, and Sarah C. Owen because there...
- Casual Affection: An Explanation of Duality between Affection and Dominant Ownership.
December 28, 1847
ORANGE, North Carolina
Plantation Life, Cameron family, SlaveryHow can one person treat another as both indispensable and an object to be purchased? Frances Cameron writes to Duncan Cameron, “A man servant who formerly belonged to my mother is about to be sold, and has applied me to buy him [...] I am particularly desirous of purchasing him [...] But a good male servant in my establishment, is indispensable ...” (series: 1.3.3, box: 43, folder: 1023, date:...
- Shipwreck of the Steam-Packet Home
October 10, 1847 to 1847
CURRITUCK, North Carolina
Church/Religious-Activity, Health/Death, Migration/TransportationOn Saturday afternoon, John D. Roland left New York on the steam-packet Home bound for Charleston. His trip quickly took a turn for the worst. By Monday morning, the ship encountered a violent hurricane in the waters around Cape Hatteras and was taking on water. All hands were at the pumps, women included, bailing out water, but the leak continued to increase. After water reached the engine,...
- Fall Illness on the Greene County Plantation - Flu or Yellow Fever?
September 28, 1847 to October 26, 1847
GREENE, Alabama
Illness, Yellow Fever, plantation, SlaveryIn the “Cameron Plantation Letters” there are numerous references to the health of the slaves living on the Greene County Alabama plantation. There are one hundred or so letters in the University of North Carolina collection that are catalogued on the website ‘The Plantation Letters, Interpreting Antebellum Plantation Life’. I found thirty-five that directly referenced the health...
- Alabama Citizen Addresses Need for Diversity of Labor in Southern States
October 1, 1847
AUTAUGA, Alabama
Agriculture, EconomyDaniel Pratt, Alabama's first industrialist, published an address to the people of Alabama establishing the advantages to be had from a diversion of labor. Tennessee reviewers agreed with Pratt, stating that cotton is the article on which the South ought to commence manufacturing.' Logically, the larger the crops, the more negroes, the more negroes the more land is cultivated,...
- Washington Receives News of General Scott's Victories
September 17, 1847
Washington City, District of Columbia
WarIn the late summer of 1847, General Winfield Scott began his march towards Mexico City and the decisive series of battles that destroyed the Mexican army and ultimately the abdication of the presidency by Santa Anna. Beginning with the Battle of Contreras on August 19 and the Battle of Churubusco on August 20, the Americans suffered losses of less than a hundred men while the Mexicans had a five...
- Greene Springs School for Boys Opens
September, 1847
GREENE, Alabama
EducationProfessor Henry Tutwiler, a professor from LaGrange College and the University of Alabama, opened the Greene Springs School for Boys for its first term in 1847. The school was situated in Greene County near Havana (now known as Hale County). It quickly became one of the most famous academies in Alabama, recognized for the high caliber education provided by Tutwiler, who remained the principal...
- Gradual Abolition of Slavery in Western Virginia
September, 1847
ROCKBRIDGE, Virginia
Economy, Government, SlaveryIn 1831, the issue of slavery came to the forefront of political debate following Nat Turner's rebellion in Southampton County, Virginia. President of Washington College and slaveholder Dr. Henry Ruffner delivered an address in 1847 that outlined the evils of slavery and proposed the gradual eradication of slavery from western Virginia. In correspondence to Messrs. Moore, Letcher, &c, Ruffner...
- The American Highlanders Storm Chapultepec Castle
September 15, 1847 to September 16, 1847
CAMBRIA, Pennsylvania
Seige, MilitiaThe American Highlanders stormed Chapultepec Castle on September 15, 1847, a strategic and crucial battle that helped to begin the US Campaign in Mexico. In General Geary's Report of September 15, at which time he commanded the 2nd Pennsylvania, he detailed his own experience of the battle and that of each of his companies. Geary was struck with grape shot early in the battle and could not...
- A Peek at Things to Come: Whig Disunion
September 15, 1847
EAST BATON ROUG, Louisiana
Government, PoliticsThe Whig convention, nicknamed the rough and ready convention after prominent Whig Old Rough and Ready General Zachary Taylor, failed to nominate a candidate for the Third Congressional District. The convention consisted of a declaration of the opposition of the members to all caucuses, and a resolve not to make a nomination for any one for Congress. Five people were appointed to a committee who...
- The Hanging of Dave
November 17, 1848
WASHINGTON, Tennessee
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Health/Death, Race-Relations, SlaveryOn the Friday preceding November 20, 1848, the town of Jonesborough witnessed the hanging of a slave named Dave charged with the murder of his master. The slave did not deny his crime and appeared to show no remorse at the time of his execution. The only excuse offered by Dave for this gruesome act was that he had been drinking before the time the act was committed. Those who were there to witness...
- Yellow Fever Epidemic in Louisiana
August 3, 1847 to October 18, 1847
ORLEANS, Louisiana
Health/DeathIn the summer of 1847, New Orleans became victim to another regular widespread epidemic of yellow fever. On Tuesday, August 3rd, The Daily Picayune stated that the Board of Health apprised the public that New Orleans was on the eve of an epidemic. They called for the unacclimated who remain with us to heed the counsel of the board and avoid such exposure and imprudence as may increase their...
- Washington Learns that the Armistice Called Between America and Mexico Fails
September 6, 1847
Washington City, District of Columbia
WarOn the evening of the 20th, a white flag came out from the city, and on the morning of August 21st, the two enemies called upon an armistice for peace negotiations. The Daily Union of DC reprinted the text of communications on the same page that told of the failure of said negotiations and the resulting Battle of Molino del Rey. Nicholas Trist, an able, firm, and truly patriotic...