Episodes Nearest to May 3, 1851: 1 through 25 of 25
- Bartle Family murdered
May 3, 1851
HENRICO, Virginia
Agriculture, Crime/ViolenceOn May 3rd three members of the Bartle family were brutally murdered by an Italian man who had worked the Bartle's fields. Accounts stated that there was an altercation the week prior to the murder between Bartle and the Italian worker over wages he felt he deserved. The family members killed were all struck in the head with a blunt object and were all found in a gruesome manner<br />Events...
- A Fugitive Slave Case in Knox County
April, 1851
KNOX, Tennessee
African-Americans, Law, SlaveryIn April of 1851, a fugitive slave case involving a black man by the name of Sydney was decided in the Knox County Circuit Court. Sydney's counsel argued that he was a free black man born in Tennessee, whom at an unspecified date was kidnapped and smuggled across the state line to Alabama. There, he was subsequently sold into bondage. The case arose when Sydney escaped from his master and returned...
- Sale of Medicines
May 29, 1851
ORLEANS, Louisiana
EducationThe front page of many Southern newspapers contained ads for aliments ranging from ulcers to gonorrhea. The remedies were listed as infallible,' secret' and invaluable'. Often the ads were reprinted for months or years at a time and placed in the same spot everyday.<br />Most often the ads were structured towards women and those being afflicted by venereal disease....
- Sojourner Truth: Feminist and Abolitionist Speech
May 28, 1851 to May 29, 1851
SUMMIT, Ohio
Sojourner Truth, Women's Rights Movement., Slavery, Feminist Movement, Abolitionist MovementSojourner Truth, an emancipated slave, had a vision in 1843 that convinced her that God wanted her to speak the truth about Americans' sins against African Americans as well as women. She presented these two causes as "inextricably intertwined." Sojourner Truth became a public speaker in many events in antislavery and women's rights.
On May 28-29, 1851, Truth gave a particularly compelling...
- Sentiment from Eastern Virginians towards Western Virginians
May 30, 1851
HENRICO, Virginia
SlaveryEastern Virginians complained of over-representation of Western Virginians for the amount of Taxes which they paid to the state. In a letter to the Richmond Whig on May 30th, 1851 an Eastern Virginian went as far as saying that the west was undoing what had been done by the revolution of 1776. <br />Trouble persisted because of the differences over slavery within the state. Cries from both...
- Crime and Instant Punishment in Gold Rush California
March 8, 1851 to April 27, 1851
YUBA, California
Stephen Chapin David, gold rush, Crime/Violence, VigilantesIn California there was lots of gold to be had, but not everyone would strike it rich. While early gold rush merchants Stephen Chapin David and his older brother Josiah ran their store near the mining camps in 1851, they were surrounded by all sorts of people. In close quarters you could not always trust the people around you. Stephen recounted upon his return from the city in March 1851,...
- Opposition to the Temperance Movement in Buncombe County
March, 1851
BUNCOMBE, North Carolina
Church/Religious-ActivityIn March of 1851, a vicious battle raged in Buncombe County, North Carolina between the Sons of Temperance and their local opposition. The members of the Buncombe Sons of Temperance consisted of men who were in favor of the moderation of alcohol consumption. The opponents of this order acted out against the Sons in spurts of violence. A Knoxville, Tennessee newspaper picked up this story and claimed...
- Virginia Constitutional Convention
October 14, 1850 to August 1, 1851
HENRICO, Virginia
SlaveryOn March 4, 1850, the Virginia General Assembly passed an act providing for the election of delegates to a convention in order to create a new constitution, or amend the existing one. A controversy over the degree to which slave populations could determine seats in the General Assembly precipitated this call for change; under the current constitution, the western part of the state felt that the...
- Mob Expels Wesleyan Minister for Abolitionist Agitation
May 18, 1851 to August 15, 1851
GUILFORD, North Carolina
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Crime/Violence, Race-Relations, SlaveryThe mob had made up its mind. Wesleyan Methodist preacher Jesse McBride had stirred too much controversy among whites and slaves in Guilford County. Intending to run McBride out of the county, about two-hundred men gathered on May 23, 1851 outside of the church where he would preach that morning. For six hours McBride had been on the road, not finishing the 18 mile journey to his Liberty Hill...
- The Implications of Racist Railroad Policies
1851
MACON, Georgia
African-Americans, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, SlaveryThe Macon and Western Railroad adopted a new policy in 1851 which prohibited all black people, regardless of their freed or enslaved status, from boarding any train unless they could prove the legitimacy of their travel. All African Americans had to have a written pass issued by the individual's owner or trustee. The office and the conductor both required a copy of it, and if the office was...
- A Woman's Worth
1851
AUGUSTA, Virginia
African-Americans, Race-Relations, Slavery, WomenWhen reading novels from nineteenth century, one often sees an overbearing mother whose only joy in life is finding suitable matches for her infinite number of daughters. In these stories, the daughter does not normally have much, if any, say as to whom she will wed. On Tuesday October 25, 1851, Mary Jane Boggs Holladay of Virginia was busy in preparation for her marriage. She was confronted with...
- Contraception of the 1840's and 1850's
1851
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Health/Death, WomenNEW EDITION OF DR WEISSELHOFF'S SCIENTIFIC WORK ON THE SUBJECT OF CHILD-BIRTH screamed an ad in Lexington's The Valley Star. The proclamation, which ran on Thursday, February 26, 1849, advertised a new book containing insights into birth control. Years before John Stuart Mill and his wife handed out condoms in a London subway, this paper in a small Virginia town danced around the issue a...
- A Good Christian
1851
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Church/Religious-Activity, WomenAs a sociable southerner, one expected certain attributes from you: manners, dress that suited your means, Christianity. Although Mary Jane Holladay wrote in her diary that it was her constant prayer that she should be able to please her husband and have a loving marriage, she was quite anxious when it came to religion. In her opinion, it was better to spend time wrestling with and testing her faith...
- Seed Planted for Central Park
1851
NEW YORK, New York
Arts/Leisure, Health/Death, Politics, Urban-Life/BoosterismIn 1851, a journalist put into words an ideology that would start a new trend in urban development. He proposed the construction of a huge public park that would "be enjoyed by thousands of all classes, without distinction." The ideals of Romanticism and the Republican view of the importance of nature were at a peak among educated Americans at this time and this commentator proposed a way to manifest...
- Abolitionism Takes a Whipping in Virginia
1851
GRAYSON, Virginia
Abolition, Vigilance CommitteeAll that John Gornith heard as he stood tied to an oak tree in the Virginia woods was the crack of the whip. In 1851, the Vigilance Committee of Grayson County, Virginia arrested Gornith for spreading abolitionist propaganda. The Committee forced Gornith, a friend of an Ohio abolitionist, to renounce his abolitionist sentiments and leave the state, but not before tying him to a tree to "receive...
- Paternalism, Slaveholders, and the Guilty Conscience
February 27, 1851
ADAMS, Mississippi
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryOn February 27, 1851, John M. Folkes wrote a letter in response to a request he had received from a man named Benjamin Drake. In his reply, he addressed Drake's plea for Folkes to surrender a number of his slaves. Throughout the letter, there was a tacit understanding of Drake's financial difficulties; one can assume from Folkes' reply that the end aspiration of Drake's request is...
- Cotton Planters Convention
July 26, 1851
LEON, Florida
Agriculture, EconomyThe Cotton farmers of Florida came together in hopes of stabilizing pricing and markets. Judge Broome was the chairman of this convention and created the report which was used to analyze Cotton production and output. They came to the conclusion that a price minimum was essential and blamed irregular output for their pricing problems. This convention sparked interest in other southern cotton growing...
- Arson Terrorizes Leesburg
February 3, 1851
LOUDOUN, Virginia
Crime/ViolenceIn the winter of 1851, the town of Leesburg in Loudoun County, Va, was hit by an epidemic. This plague, however, did not bring illness. It instead brought fire. According to an article in the Leesburg newspaper The Washingtonian, a series of fires had spread throughout the town. First, it wasthe firingof a barn belonging to Mr. Hempstone and the stabbing of Mr. Vandevater's horse. Then,...
- Gold Rush Merchants: Everything has a Price
October 25, 1850 to May 4, 1851
YUBA, California
Merchants, Stephen Chapin David, gold rushThere was gold in California and everyone wanted their share. In that spirit, in early September, 1850, 17-year old Stephen Chapin David and his older brother Josiah arrived in Gold Rush California. Entrepreneurial skills showed quickly as Stephen purchased newspapers before boarding the ship to sell to the other sailors. While early searching for gold did not prove as lucrative as hoped,...
- A Pennsylvania Court Convicts Under the Fugitive Slave Law
August 8, 1851
MARSHALL, Mississippi
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Law, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, SlaveryAs the news of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 reached Holly Springs, Mississippi, the citizens were very anxious to see how the North would uphold the laws. The law stated that if one captures a fugitive slave, it is the responsibility of the law enforcement and citizens to aide in the returning of those slaves to their rightful owners. The people of Mississippi knew that slaves would attempt...
- Bill against Fugitive Slave Act introduced in New York Legislature
January 25, 1851
HENRICO, Virginia
Race-Relations, SlaveryA small portion of the New York Legislature pushed for a bill which was against the Fugitive Slave Act. A similar Bill had been passed earlier in Vermont. The main conflict in this situation is difference between a state and federal law, which takes precedence etc. The South was using the power of the Federal government to keep the Fugitive Slave Act alive.<br />Shortly after these Bills...
- Arrival of Fugitive Slave Henry Long
January 14, 1851
HENRICO, Virginia
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryHenry Long ran away from his Master in Richmond, Virginia and was eventually caught in New York City. Judge Judson of New York City ordered Long to be brought back to Virginia. Much commotion was caused on the trip back to Virginia because of the fear of an uprising of blacks. Long was guarded by as many as 200 police officers at one time when stepping on to a ferry leaving New York. Long would...
- Fugitive Law approved in Indiana
January 4, 1851
HENRICO, Virginia
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryGovernor Wright's approval of this law showed the strong support which both he and state of Indiana had for the Union. In his message on Jan 4th, 1851 he eloquently summed up his feelings on the matter, There is no safety for property or life except in the absolute supremacy of the law: no higher duty of the citizen than to maintain by word and deed, that supremacy, as we value the heritage,...
- A la Mode
May 6, 1851 to 1851
ROCKBRIDGE, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WomenOn May 6, 1951, John P. Lightner of Rockbridge County received a letter from his traveling cousin. The author of the letter was finally able to see what city life was like He described Fifth Street as being packed; everywhere he looked he saw merchants with small stands trying to sell veggies, fowl, and more flowers than one could possibly imagine. That night, he bought tickets for six dollars each,...
- Southern Benefits from the Compromise of 1850
September 5, 1851
BARNWELL, South Carolina
Government, Law, Politics, SlaveryThe North and South had reached a stalemate, the compromise measures had been debated for over ten months. Finally, an agreement was reached. In September of 1850 the provisions that would become the Compromise of 1850 were passed. About a year later, on September 5, 1851, Winchester Graham, a representative from South Carolina, gave a speech in Barnwell, S.C. that defended his support of the...