Episodes Nearest to May 10, 1869: 1 through 25 of 25
- Photographs as Reflection: The Wedding of Rails, Reflection of Westward Optimism Date:
May 10, 1869
BOX ELDER, Utah
Western Expansion, Railroad, Migration/TransportationWhen looking at photographs from the 19th century, few examples viewed can portray the overall mentality of the people. Photography at the time was a new, relatively expensive invention, and thus photographs tended to have much more significance and meaning to the photographer and subjects than they do today. Photographs carried some of the emotional value previously given to painting,...
- Rapid development of railways and canals in America.
May 10, 1869
BOX ELDER, Utah
Railroad, canalsBefore the development of an interstate freeway system in the mid-twentieth century, most of the transportation systems in the US consisted of railways and canals. “Canal fever” spread through the states from the early 1820s because of the development of flatboats and steamboats but faced a decline after 1880. A statistic conducted in 1840 showed that “between 1810 and 1840 canal mileage...
- America's Need for a Second Transcontinental Railway
May 18, 1869
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
Economy, Migration/Transportation, Politics, Science/TechnologyOn Tuesday, May 18, 1869 an editorial appeared in the Charleston Courier titled "The Pacific Railway and a Southern Route" in which the author made the argument that the nation needed a southern transcontinental rail route. The first Transcontinental Railway had only been completed a few days earlier but already there were calls from southerners for a route that was more suited to their needs. A...
- Reverend Jackson Proscribes Church Code for Moral Conduct
April 27, 1869
ST LOUIS, Missouri
Church/Religious-Activity, WomenReverend J. Edward Jackson woke up tired on the morning of April 27, 1869. He had been traveling the country for eight years preaching in Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri and South Carolina. Evangelicalism stressed the importance in traveling from place to place to spread the good news of the Bible. That morning he gave a sermon on heavenly mindedness at the Church of the...
- Jeannie Coues: Describes Friendly Fire Casualties
April 16, 1869
BEAUFORT, North Carolina
friendly fire, prisonIn February of 1869, Jane Augusta McKinney Coues and her husband, Dr. Elliot Coues were stationed at Fort Macon, a small island fort off the coast of Beaufort, North Carolina. Dr. Coues was a well known surgeon and naturalist, and was stationed at the fort to serve the troops that occupied it; Jane lived with him at the Fort. During her stay there she kept in close contact with her sister in the...
- Encouraging Immigration to Alabama
January 1, 1869 to December 31, 1869
MONTGOMERY, Alabama
alabama, Immigration“A state favored by nature in every way” boasted a booklet created by the state of Alabama. Published in 1869, this 22 page document contained a detailed list of the states assets. “No part of the United States offers so many and such striking inducements to the immigrant as Alabama.” It was an effort to entice foreign immigrants to come and establish their roots in Alabama. It covered every...
- The People's Lincoln
1869
Washington City, District of Columbia
Civil War, arrest, Lincoln, seizure, YankeeIn Lincoln’s time, public opinion vigilantly labeled a danger posed by their anti-Constitution imperialist. Lincoln was widely hated, caricatured, and actively opposed. His concern for government outweighed his concern for the people, their freedom, and prosperity. The Lincoln depicted with loyal troops and grateful slaves is far from the man exposed in John A. Marshall’s series from 1869 American...
- The Power of the Slave Market
1869
CHESTERFIELD, Virginia, BENNINGTON, Vermont
fugitive slave, African-Americans, SlaveryCyrus Branch's father, Neptune, was used to getting lied to. His first owner, a Colonel in the Revolutionary War originally promised him his freedom, but upon the war's end and having lost so much “property” already in the war, he deemed it impossible for him to lose Neptune's services as well. Upon his owner's death Neptune found himself in the hands of a new master who approached Neptune with...
- The 15th Amendment is passed by Congressional Republicans and then sent to the states.
February, 1869
Washington City, District of Columbia
African-AmericansRadical Republicans had been in the process of getting another amendment to the Constitution. They desired to take the next step and allow the enfranchisement of African American males throughout the entire United States. They had finally gotten it passed through the House and were ready to send it to the Senate.<br /><br />The Atlanta Constitution runs two articles in its paper in...
- Grant County Founded
February 4, 1869
Urban-Life/BoosterismGrant County is formed in Arkansas during this year. Grant County is formed from three other counties and they all still remain counties also. There will be 637 miles that encompass this county. This formation shows the westward movement that is occurring during this stage of the south.<br /><br />Mr. FLB Goodwin is from Georgia and he wrote to the Atlanta constitution during this...
- Train Crash in Clarksville, Tennessee
August 14, 1869
MONTGOMERY, Tennessee
Health/Death, Economy, Government, Migration/TransportationEight miles outside of Clarksville Tennessee, a train shattered into splinters. The railroad bridge the train intended to pass over collapsed and the train plummeted thirty feet below into Rudd's creek. The impact was so severe that it killed four people and wounded forty to fifty people. The locomotive, caboose, express and baggage car, two passenger coaches, and one sleeping-car all burned...
- Planters Miss Black Labor
February 1, 1869
BALDWIN, Georgia
African-Americans, Agriculture, Economy, Race-RelationsFor the white plantation owners of the South, labor had always been a problem. Cotton-picking was back-breaking work. Always in the past, though, slaves had worked the long hours in the sweltering heat. Slavery ended, but the demand for labor did not. Suddenly the planters had the job of enticing labor that had been so simple, if expensive, to secure just years earlier. They began to question just...
- Confederate General John C. Breckinridge Provides Insight into Slave Loyalty and Confederate Expatriation
January 24, 1869
MUSCOGEE, Georgia
Reconstruction, Immigration, Politics, John C. Breckinridge, ExpatriationDated January 13, 1869, this letter written by ex-Confederate general and former United States Vice-President, John C. Breckinridge, first became public on January 20, 1869, when the newspaper of Columbus, Georgia printed a copy of the message. Four days later, the New York Times made it available to an even wider audience when it republished the article. After the surrender of the Confederacy,...
- Troubles between blacks and police in Princess Anne County
January 7, 1869
PRINCESS ANNE, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Economy, Politics, Race-RelationsOne January day, Lieutenant. Rogers of Princess Anne County Sheriff's Department ordered a detachment of twenty men headed by Lieutenant Farragut to serve a warrant to two black men living on the Baxter farm and the one adjacent to it. This detachment was sent because the last deputy that tried to serve was met with resistance. The whole detachment arrived at the farm and proceeded to the house...
- The Establishment of the First Black Law School
January 4, 1869
Washington City, District of Columbia
African-Americans, Education, Law, Race-RelationsAfrican Americans never enjoyed exclusive access to law schools, much less to graduate schools in general. At the start of 1869, however, John Mercer Langston and the Trustees of Howard University announced the opening of the very first law school in the United States intended for African Americans and those seeking to provide legal defense for other African Americans. Langston himself was the founding...
- Knights of the White Camellia Opposed in Arkansas
December 19, 1868
CONWAY, Arkansas
Crime/Violence, Law, Government, PoliticsIn December 1868 a report from Little Rock, Arkansas stated that "In the Legislature last night, Mr. Brooks introduced a bill requiring all persons to withdraw from the Knights of the White Camellia...within thirty days, under penalty of heavy fine and imprisonment...". Following this resolution the state declared martial law in Conway County, Arkansas as reported in the New York Times.
The...
- More Funds Needed for the Manual Labor School
December 12, 1868
RUTHERFORD, Tennessee
African-Americans, Agriculture, Economy, Education, GovernmentOn behalf of the Manual Labor School of the colored citizens in Rutherford, Tennessee, Reverend Daniel Watkins appealed to the public for extra support. The school aimed to enhance the labor skills of newly freed blacks. The state chartered 15,000 towards the school, but still needed more funds. The board of trustees purchased three hundred acres of land with an estimated worth of 2800 in yielded...
- Economic Disparity in the South after the Civil War
November 12, 1869
PAGE, Virginia
Economy, Migration/Transportation, WarThe Page Courier newspaper, on November 12, 1869, submitted a request to some of their clients in the county. The newspaper declared Wood-Wood-Our wood paying subscribers will remember that we will freeze without fire. The Page Courier Newspaper had previously set up a method of payment with its poorer clients to exchange newspapers with firewood. BRING IT IN the Courier begged. This desperate...
- Governor Clayton declares martial law in large parts of Arkansas
November 4, 1868
PULASKI, Arkansas
Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsDuring the summer and fall of 1868, white unrest grew in most of the southern states due to the newly created state governments enacted under the radical Reconstruction Acts. Resentful of Republican control and the extension of rights to blacks, white southerners further turned to violence to impose their will. In Arkansas, racial violence continued to escalate as whites attempted to keep blacks...
- Election Day riot in Savannah
November 3, 1868
CHATHAM, Georgia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsRacial tensions in Savannah came to a head on November 3, the day of the presidential election. Both the Charleston Mercury and Atlanta Constitution contained similar accounts of the event. Allegedly, a large group of black people moved to the voting booths and proceeded to block the entrance of whites to the polls. During the afternoon, a group of men from the central railroad came to vote and...
- New Orleans Race Riots
October 24, 1868 to October 28, 1868
ORLEANS, Louisiana
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsTensions between White Democratic clubs and Black Republican clubs in the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson and St. Bernard and heightened fear from whites of a black uprising led to violence days before the 1868 elections. The conflict erupted when a white democratic procession opened fire on a black procession on the streets of the city. Violence escalated when blacks went home to gather weapons...
- The Murder of Senator Benjamin Franklin Randolph
October 17, 1868
ORANGEBURG, South Carolina
hate, Reconstruction, Crime, PoliticsBenjamin Franklin Randolph was born a freeman in Kentucky in 1820. He graduated from Oberlin College and became an ordained minister. After college, he joined the U.S. Colored Troops and served as a chaplain. B.F. Randolph found himself in South Carolina after the war, where he became a prominent participant in local politics. In 1868, Randolph was elected to the Senate for the Orangeburg...
- Hesper Affair
October 8, 1868 to October 15, 1868
SHELBY, Tennessee
Crime/Violence, Migration/TransportationWith the increase in racial violence in Arkansas, Governor Powell Clayton sought to create a secret militia aimed at preventing white supremacy movements in the form of organizations like the Ku Klux Klan. The majority of white citizens in Arkansas despised the Governor's enforcement officials. To outfit his militia Clayton ordered 4,000 muskets which were shipped to Memphis, Tennessee. However,...
- Amnesty and Pardon for former Confederates
July 4, 1868 to December 25, 1868
Washington City, District of Columbia
WarOn July 4th, 1868, President Johnson gave amnesty to approximately 300 Southerners still under the edict of rebellion, except for several top Confederate officials. On Christmas 1868, he pardoned the rest, including Breckenridge, Slidell, and Thompson. This was significant because Johnson had just been impeached (in March) and though he hoped he would receive the Democratic nomination at the Democratic...
- Freedmen Massacred at Opelousas
September 28, 1868 to September 29, 1868
ST LANDRY, Louisiana
Politics, Race-Relations, Crime/Violence, African-AmericansThe Opelousas massacre occurred in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana, on September 28, 1868. It centered around Emerson Bentley, a white editor for a local newspaper called The Landry Progress and an influential schoolteacher who promoted the education of black children. Bentley wrote an article that local members of the Seymour Knights, a branch unit of the white supremacist group The Knights...