Episodes Nearest to June 30, 1860: 1 through 25 of 25
- Elizabeth Blaetterman Embarks on a Teacher Career
June 30, 1860
MASON, Kentucky
Arts/Leisure, EducationElizabeth C. Blaetterman was born and raised on a farm in Virginia during the early 1800s. Raised on a large farm with relatives and close friends near by, Elizabeth became dear friends with a young girl named Victoria. Upon Elizabeth's move to Maysville, Kentucky, in hopes of a more prosperous life for her family, Victoria and Elizabeth agreed they would write to one another and stay in touch...
- Calvin v. State
1860
BROWN, Texas
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, SlaveryThis case involved an African-American slave killing another African-American slave. It was one of the few slave court cases in Texas where the judge went out of his way to ensure the rights of the slave. The state of Texas took on the responsibility of providing the slave defendant with a counsel because he did not have the resources to secure one himself. The state provided four different lawyers...
- Charles Whitehead Ridicules Jackson's Domestic Slaves
1860
MONROE, Florida
African-Americans, Agriculture, Race-Relations, SlaveryJackson was a wealthy Florida planter who inherited several acres of land from his family. He owned dogs, horses, and men-servants and maid-servants were born in his house, and the forests surrounding Jackson's plantation were plentiful with wild animals. In 1860, he and Charles Whitehead decided to practice their hunting techniques on his property. They camped by the side of his house to spend...
- The Confederate Image
1860
ROCKBRIDGE, Virginia
WarSoutherners thought about fashion even in the midst of the Civil War. Preserved in the diary of Virginian and officer in the Confederate Army John Cocke, a small slip of paper recorded the exact fashion of the uniform for officers in the Virginia military. According to the paper, the uniforms should be dark blue coat, red, white lining and buttons, white vest, blue pantaloons with red seams, gold...
- Orange County Elections of 1860
1860
ORANGE, Virginia
Government, PoliticsIn a letter written from Mossy Creek Academy to his parents back home, Casper C. Branner discussed the results of the presidential election of 1860. This election of 1860 demonstrated the adherence of the majority of Orange County, Virginia residents to the Union. Although the elections of 1860 were considered by many to be the beginning of the American Civil War, the processes and tensions regarding...
- Development of The Blue Ridge Railroad in South Carolina
January 1, 1860 to December 31, 1860
RICHLAND, South Carolina
Economy, Government, Law, Migration/Transportation, PoliticsThis was a road that led to development. This was a road that led to economic prosperity for the South. This was the Blue Ridge Railroad. In 1860, the President of the Blue Ridge Railroad Company, Edward Frost, in a report to the stockholders and the state legislature, reported on the condition and growth of the line, proposed a plan for its expansion, and requested renewed assistance from...
- The reliance on the slave trade as a benefit to the economy
1860
DADE, Florida
Slave Trade, Transatlantic Slave Trade, SlaverySlave Trade
Understanding the economic standards for growth in the new world at the time can help one understand the importance of the slave trade. There was a constant demand for slaves because they were vital to the stability of their individual plantations. "Slavery shaped the economic growth of the lower South in the eighteenth century " (Rosenbloom 1999). These individual slaves were...
- "The Political Quadrille": the 1860 Election
1860
NEW YORK, New York
Abraham Lincoln, 1860 Election, Harper's Weekly, "The Political Quadrille"During the Nineteenth Century, political cartoons became very popular ways for people to learn about politics in a humorous way. One of the first American Political magazines, Harper’s Weekly (A Journal of Civilization), was one of the first magazines that published political cartoons. Arguably, some of the most important articles, illustrations, and cartoons came from Harper’s...
- A Letter From Shanghai
1860
GREENVILLE, South Carolina
Christian, Missionaries, Cultural Life, ChinaIn his letter to Reverend Richard Furman, missionary J.B. Hartwell depicted the difficulties of embracing Chinese culture as well as spreading the Word of God in the non Christian community of Shanghai. Hartwell gave a summary of the current events that were taking place in Shanghai both with the group of missionaries in the field, as well as the ongoing practices of Chinese culture. One...
- The 1860 Greenville, SC Census: A Sampling of Wealth
1860
GREENVILLE, South Carolina
Greenville, SC, 1860 census, boarding housesThe wealth of residents listed in Greenville’s 1860 census, pages 298 and 299, is obvious and not simply because of the assets they claim. All of the children listed had attended school in the last year including children over fifteen (who were required to list their occupation in the 1860 census). This not only implies that area families did not require their children’s labor, but also that...
- Slave Sarah Frances Shaw Graves Recalls an Unjust Whipping
1860
NODAWAY, Missouri
African-Americans, Slavery, WomenSarah Frances Shaw Graves was born a slave in Missouri. She was interviewed in her later years as a part of the slave narratives taken when she was free. One story she related was of a Sunday when she attended a wedding for her master’s kinfolks. The bride walked into the church and someone kicked dust onto the bride’s dress, but it was not Graves. She, however, got blamed for it and...
- Railroad Revolution
July 4, 1860
PRINCESS ANNE, Virginia
Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/BoosterismRailroads were the transportation craze of the nation during the 1840s. In the early 1860s, tracks exceeded 30,000 miles in length. The North was certainly far more connected than the South, simply because they were more industrialized and had the money to do so. Often in the South, the majority of money spent was for land purchases or slaves. The railroads of the South were not evenly dispersed....
- City or Country Education?
June, 1860
BRISTOL, Massachusetts
Education, Women"Ought girls to receive a country or city school education?," asked the anonymous author of an essay published in the June 1880 issue of Rushlight, the literary magazine of Wheaton Female Seminary in Norton, Massachusetts. The author explained that people thought a city school education was better because "one has opportunities for mingling with a great number of people, and attending more...
- Newspapers used as a medium
June 8, 1860
LOUDOUN, Virginia
SlaveryAdvertisements for the sale and purchase of African-Americans were found daily in local newspapers. People who were interested in buying or selling slaves placed advertisements, which appeared on the front pages of many newspapers. While many people placed their own ads in the papers, there were some large slave-owners who went through agents specialized in locating the slaves they wished to purchase....
- Thaddeus Hyatt Appeals to President Buchanan to Address the Kansas Territory’s Drought
February 4, 1860 to January 14, 1861
DONIPHAN, Kansas, ALLEN, Kansas, BRECKENRIDGE, Kansas, GREENWOOD, Kansas, CHASE, Kansas
Thaddeus Hyatt, Kansas Territory, James Buchanan, Drought, Famine, Agriculture, Civil WarDiscussion of the Kansas Territory before the Civil War often turns directly to the time period known as “Bleeding Kansas,” which generally refers to the year of 1856 or to its part in the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854. These events, however, were not what the citizens of the Kansas Territory were concerned with immediately before the outbreak of the Civil War. In 1860, with the rest of the country...
- Charleston Mercury and Richmond Enquirer Debate the Richmond Convetion
May 10, 1860 to May 23, 1860
HENRICO, Virginia
African-Americans, Government, Politics, SlaveryIn May of 1860, two major Southern papers, The Charleston Mercury and The Richmond Enquirer, engaged in a fiery debate. The issue of this debate was participation in the Democratic Party National Convention at Baltimore, Maryland-where the party's Presidential nominee was to be decided. The Baltimore Convention was the second such attempt; Democrats had met earlier...
- Davis Resolutions
May 14, 1860
Washington City, District of Columbia
SlaveryThe Davis Resolutions were a set of agreements voted on by Congress in an attempt to end the feuding over the issue of slavery in the territories. The issue had been debated for months to decide whether the people in the territory should make decisions on domestic affairs or if the government of the United States should make the decisions. Jefferson Davis was a big proponent of the people in the...
- African-American Population growth
April 30, 1860
SHELBY, Tennessee
African-Americans, Migration/TransportationIn 1850, Shelby County ranked seventh in free colored population. In the ten years that followed, it grew considerably to be ranked fifth in free population and first in total population in Tennessee. The free population grew considerably because of many reasons, specifically natural birth from free African American mothers, more frequent self-purchase, and increased immigration free African-Americans...
- Indian Tension
April, 1860
GALVESTON, Texas
Government, Politics, Native-Americans, WarIndians in Texas, especially during the Civil War, were unruly and often feared. In fact, they raided and looted all across Texas in response to the constant threat of losing even more territory. While Indians succeeded by burning stations and driving settlers from their homes, their actions spurred many more debates, conventions, and other attempts to deal with the Indians. One attempt to coexist...
- A Democratic Division: Florida and the 1860 Presidential Election
April 9, 1860
LEON, Florida
PoliticsWith the Election of 1860 just months away, the Democratic Party in Florida began working on its strategy to defeat the Republicans. Hoping to gain momentum before the upcoming election, Florida began appointing officials to represent the Democratic Party in the late spring of 1860. Delegated wanted to insure that democratic values were integrated into the current federal government, so Florida...
- Finding Fashion
September 24, 1860
HARDY, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Economy, WomenFashion in the years following the Civil War was very different from years prior. More cotton and more efficient technology meant larger production and more variety for shoppers. Clothes were expressive and a status show to the public. The expansion of the railroads also made more in style clothing more readily accessible to people from all areas of the nation. While style began to spread across...
- The Love and Marriage of Isaetta Carter Randolph and James L. Hubard
August 8, 1860 to November 15, 1860
BUCKINGHAM, Virginia
African-Americans, Health/Death, Race-Relations, SlaveryBetween August 8, 1860 and October 4, 1860, Isaetta Carter Randolph and James L. Hubard wrote approximately twenty letters to each other on topics ranging from the health of their respective families to the passion they shared for each other. Randolph lived in Buckingham County, Virginia and made occasional visits to White Sulphur Springs (now a city in West Virginia) while Hubard, who was originally...
- Dr. Baynard Byme Praises Florida Agriculture
April 1, 1860
MARION, Florida
African-Americans, Agriculture, Economy, Migration/Transportation, SlaveryIn a pamphlet written to encourage colonists to visit East and South Florida, Dr. Baynard Byme highlighted the advantages of the soil, climate, and production of the relatively sparsely populated state of Florida. After describing the weather, terrain, and typical lifestyle, Dr. Byme acknowledged the differences between Florida cotton and that grown in other states but made sure to clarify the reason...
- The Survival of Innocent Slaves on Ship Erie
October 4, 1860
JEFFERSON, New York
Slave Trade, SlaveryThe capture of the slave ship Erie was a very jubilant moment for Mr. Seys, the United States agent for recaptured Africans. "It did my heart good," he said, "to hear the shout of exultation and the expressions of delight visible on every countenance." The ship was residence to 897 slaves. From the foul odor of feces to the rapid spread of unknown diseases, this ship was in no...
- An 1860 Presidential Debate Comes to Blows
October 13, 1860
WYTHE, Virginia
Crime/Violence, Government, PoliticsLess than a year before the Civil War spread destruction throughout the state of Virginia, a heated exchange between two Democrats indicated the sharp divide that split the party. In the election of 1860, the Democratic vote was split between three candidates, John Bell, Stephen Douglas, and John Breckinridge. During a formal debate between Gen. George Blow, a Douglas Democrat, L.H. Chandler, a...