Episodes Nearest to June 1, 1850 to June 30, 1850: 1 through 25 of 25
- A Meeting of the Knox County Colonization Society
June, 1850
KNOX, Tennessee
African-Americans, Migration/Transportation, SlaveryDuring the week of June 16, 1850, the Knox County Colonization Society convened for a meeting. This was of great significance because it marked the second anniversary of the Society in the city of Knoxville. At this time, the Chairman of this society declared that 15 to 20 free blacks of the city were ready to begin the process of emigration to Liberia. During the meeting, officers for the following...
- Advancing Culture: Harper’s New Monthly Magazine
June, 1850 to 1850
NEW YORK, New York
Arts/Leisure, Economy, Politics, ModernizationCurrent issues, events, and ideas were spread and divided among many American journals, newspapers, and periodicals, but in June of 1850 Harper & Brothers of New York sought to “remedy this evil” and provide all of this information in one place for anyone who wished to read it. The firm introduced Harper’s New Monthly Magazine as the first general interest magazine in America. They prefaced...
- The People of Appomattox County
June 30, 1850
APPOMATTOX, Virginia
Agriculture, Economy, Race-RelationsThe 1850 census of Appomattox County revealed the social order of this western Virginia county and determined that although most Virginians were proponents of slavery, very few residents of Appomattox County actually owned slaves. Compiled by Stuart McD. Farrar, the census polled residents of the county on June 30, 1850 and organized the data by household. Each household was numbered and every...
- Governor Aaron V. Brown of Tennessee and the Question of Slavery
1850
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Government, Politics, Race-Relations, SlaveryIn 1850, Governor Aaron V. Brown of Tennessee spoke at a benefit for an orphan's asylum in Nashville, Tennessee. During his speech at Odd Fellow's Hall, he addressed the recent progress of the United States in regarding the escalating question of slavery. Governor Brown expressed the feelings of many southerners who felt threatened by the anti-slavery rhetoric in the North. The Governor...
- Mass Slave Runaway from McIntosh, GA Plantation
1850 to December, 1850
MC INTOSH, Georgia
African-Americans, Agriculture, Crime/Violence, Economy, Race-Relations, SlaveryThings were looking promising on Mr. Thomas' plantation, Peru, in 1850. He owned over 150 slaves and 15,000 acres, all of which produced great wealth in the form of cotton and other crops. Most of his slaves had been reared on his plantation alongside him and his son ten-year old son, Edward. Both father and son felt they were very good to their slaves and provided them with ample food, clothing,...
- A Different Type of Honor
1850
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Health/Death, EducationUniversity honor systems meant something very different in nineteenth century South from what they do in the twenty-first century. The Honor Systems essentially were guides on how to be a Southern Gentlemen. The University of Virginia's Honor Code, which in the twentieth century the university defined as only outlawing lying, cheating, and stealing, included rules against spitting in public...
- The Montpelier Guard Repairs to Charleston
1850
ORANGE, Virginia
Government, Politics, WarIn 1859, John Brown endeavored to start a liberation movement among enslaved people in Virginia. A staunch abolitionist, Brown was the first white American to set about culling up a slave insurrection. He first gained the nation's attention when he led a volunteer militia during the Bleeding Kansas crisis of the previous decade. Following his involvement in that conflict, Brown was responsible...
- The Virginia Census of 1850
1850
KANAWHA, Virginia
African-Americans, Government, Race-RelationsThe composition and make-up of Virginia was complicated and had changed since the last census, so the editors of the Martinsburg Gazette, Norman Miller and George A. Porterfield, published the 1850 census of Virginia in March 1851. It showed the free white, free colored, slave, and total population in each county of the Commonwealth Virginia. As the census broke down the Virginia population...
- Hydraulic Mining in California
1850
EL DORADO, California
hydraulic mining, gold fever, AgricultureGold fever broke out in the nation, and thousands of immigrants came to California joining in the greatest mass migration in America history in 1849. Many Americans traveled to California by sea, and they arrived at the southern tip of South America in the summer of 1849. The route posed a great risk of disease, but that could not stop gold seekers' ambition. At the beginning of 1849, San Francisco...
- In this episode, a historical essay titled The Underground Railroad by Levi Coffin is described. Coffin was an active abolitionist who dedicated nearly 20 years to helping slaves escape to freedom. In his essay, he details his experience.
1850
WAYNE, Indiana
Abolition, SlaveryThe Underground Railroad, a network of secret routes and safe houses, was established to lead slaves to freedom in Canada. In order to be successful, slaves needed the shelter, food, and safety of various abolitionists who were sympathetic to their cause. For the slaves, the long journey was anything but easy, but those who helped them along the way faced their own challenges. In his 1850 essay...
- Steamboating on the Cumberland
July 6, 1850
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
African-Americans, Economy, Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/BoosterismAs both a cotton and tobacco dealer, and a forwarding and commission merchant, A. Hamilton ran a regular advertisement for his services in The Nashville Daily Union. In the advertisement he ran on Saturday, July 6, 1850, Hamilton reassured his former patrons that he planned to remain in the business of buying and selling cotton. Hamilton thanked the public for the business they provided him in that...
- Feelings of Dissent in Alabama
May 16, 1850
MADISON, Alabama
Government, Politics, SlaveryIn 1849, each state in the Union was allotted one stone in the newly constructed Washington Monument, on which it was to put its name along with a brief inscription. The inscription chosen by Governor Chapman of Alabama read as follows: Alabama. A union of equality, as adjusted by the Constitution. This dedication was authorized by the Alabama General Assembly on December 4, 1849.
The editor...
- Arguments of a Slaveholding Society
May 12, 1850
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryJ. W. Parmalee, a South Carolina businessman, maintained close correspondence with an individual by the name of "Wheeler" in a series of letters spanning from 1848 to 1850. One topic of interest evident in Parmalee's letters was politics, with a particular focus on the sectional tension between the North and South. Parmalee's commentary on the sectional crisis echoed the sentiments shared...
- Opium Abuse in Barnwell, SC
May 7, 1850
BARNWELL, South Carolina
Health/DeathOn May 7, 1850, Dr. John William Ogilvie traveled eight miles to a plantation in Barnwell County, SC in response to a reported overdose of Laudanum, or a tincture of opium. The patient had attempted suicide, swallowing the tincture at 4:15 that morning. Arriving at 7:15 AM, Dr. Ogilvie found him still alive. Apparently in a state of melancholy, the patient was conscious and calm, but expressed regret...
- An advertisement for a runaway slave appears in The Republican Banner
August 3, 1850
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
SlaveryOn August 3, 1850 a notice appeared in The Republican Banner for a runaway slave. A slave boy named Tom who in appearance resembles an Indian' had run away from a Dr. Waters. (The Republican Banner, August 3, 1850) The note suggests that Tom would not be intellectually capable of escaping all the way to freedom without needing the assistance of Whites, and thus Dr. Waters published this...
- The Burial of John C. Calhoun, Statesman
April 26, 1850
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
Health/Death, PoliticsIn the early months of 1850, tuberculosis was shaping up to be the one opponent John C. Calhoun was unable to beat. Come March 4, Senator James Mason of Virginia had to read one of Calhoun's last speeches in the Senate, an ominous prediction of what the slavery debate would ultimately do to the cords which bound these states together in one common union. Calhoun never saw the cords finally snap...
- Typhoid As A Slave Killer
April 16, 1850
DOOLY, Georgia
African-Americans, Health/Death, SlaveryOn April 16, 1850, a plantation slave died from typhoid fever after having been sick for six weeks. The slave got up after four weeks of bed rest and subsequently entered a delusional state. The plantation's overseer, Hal Sonbeck, sent for the Doct and he cupt it and bled it and blistered it but he cold not rase it anymore. In a letter to the plantation owner, Iveson Lewis Brookes, Hal informed...
- Furman Promises Appropriate Education for Women
August, 1850
ANDERSON, South Carolina
Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, Education, WomenReverend James C. Furman delivered a speech for opening convocation on the anniversary of Johnson Female Seminary in August of 1850. He addressed the crowd of students with the words, "women's sphere lies within the limits of private life. Home is the true scene of her influence." He stressed the meaning of women as mothers, mistresses, advisors, physicians, judges, and educators. ...
- Reaction to the death of John C. Calhoun
April 12, 1850
PICKENS, South Carolina
Government, PoliticsIt was a solemn scene to witness wrote the Keowee Courier on April 1st, 1850. One of the greatest political figures of the 19th century had just died and the atmosphere surrounding his death was incredible. Both Chambers were crowded to overflowing, and the stillness that pervaded the vast assemblage told plainly that some great calamity had happened to the country. Calhoun, born in Abbeville in...
- Slave Trade
April 12, 1850
PICKENS, South Carolina
African-Americans, Economy, SlaveryEnticing a willing buyer to purchase a slave was not easy. But there were characteristics that Norton and Steele dramatically emphasized to gain interest in the slaves they wanted to sell. They offered young boys and girls who were desirable, because they are smart and 'copper coloured' and also posses other skills like being good nurses. Choosing to find a willing buyer through the newspaper,...
- Approximately 300 Irish workers arrive in Chattanooga to work on the Chattanooga and Nashville Railroad
August 25, 1850
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Migration/TransportationOn Thursday, August 22, approximately 300 Irish workers arrived in Chattanooga, Tennessee to work on the Chattanooga and Nashville Railroad. Plans for the construction of the Chattanooga and Nashville Railroad began in June of 1845. The railroad was conceived for the purpose of expanding commerce in Chattanooga by reducing the time it took to travel there from Nashville and other major cities, significantly...
- The California Bill
August 30, 1850
PICKENS, South Carolina
African-Americans, Economy, Government, Law, Politics, Migration/Transportation, SlaveryFollowing the death of John C. Calhoun, Congress passed a bill concerning the admission of California as a state. The bill, classified as unfair to the Southern cause by the Keowee Courier, was protested by Southern senators in particular Senator Badger. The Courier reflected on the prudence of how to protect Southern rights within the senate proceedings. Concerns were expressed regarding what the...
- Dividing up for Rights
March 7, 1850
MONTGOMERY, Maryland
Government, PoliticsAfter the revolution, it became even more important for government regulation for boundaries to be established between states. Since America remained dedicated to keeping power in state governments, officials came together and established the exact separation of the regions that respective governments oversaw. One such circumstance arose when it came time for the Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware...
- Dueling in Southwestern Virginia
September 26, 1850
WYTHE, Virginia
Crime/ViolenceWhen James E. Brown of Wytheville County wrote a letter to his daughter Jane, he discussed the latest duel as the topic of choice.< Writing from Cobbler's Spring, Virginia, he said that Mr. Hickman and Mr. Long had entered into a duel. Mr. Hickman was the principle fighter and Mr. Long was his second. Dueling with them was Mr. Naylor, the principle fighter, and Mr. Stephen Taylor, his second....
- Enactment of the 1850 Swamp Land Act
September 28, 1850
Washington City, District of Columbia
AgricultureOn September 28, 1850, Congress passed the Swamp Land Act of 1850. The Swamp Land Act of 1850 was the second piece of legislation passed in regards to the overflowing of Swamp Lands in the South. The first bill was passed on year earlier, in Mississippi. These Act ceded all unusable land due to swamps and flooding to be ceded to the State Governments. The states were then given the rights to sell...