Episodes Nearest to September 17, 1874: 1 through 25 of 25
- Louisiana White League Mobs
September 17, 1874
ORLEANS, Louisiana
Race-RelationsOn September 14th, 1874, 3500 White Leaguers, a white supremacist group that arose after the Civil War, staged an armed demonstration demanding that the carpetbag Republican Gov. William Kellogg resign. The White Leaguers had much in common with the Ku Klux Klan, especially their desire to rid themselves from carpetbaggers' such as Gov. Kellogg. White protestors met under the Clay statue...
- Contested Greenville Mayoral Election
September 15, 1874
GREENVILLE, South Carolina
Elections, Politics, African-AmericansOn September 15, 1874 Luther Roe wrote a letter to his soon to be betrothed, Mary. Yet in this letter he did not just talk of his affection for her or his most recent social engagements, he wrote of something that caused the most excitement that “has been here since the war”. He was writing to Mary about the highly contested election for the Mayor of Greenville. This was something that Mary...
- Senator Morton of Indianapolis Speaks Out about Colfax Riot
September 23, 1874
MARION, Indiana
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, PoliticsSenator Oliver P. Morton of Indianapolis gave a speech in Indianapolis referring to The White League and the violence that goes on in southern states. Morton said, "The White League not only exists in Louisiana, but in other Southern States." The White League or the Order of the Pale Faces was a pre-Ku Klux Klan group that terrorized freedmen and white Unionists. Morton's statement illustrates...
- Nashville Industrial Exposition supposed to show the New South
September 10, 1874
FRANKLIN, Tennessee
Crime/Violence, Economy, Urban-Life/BoosterismIn an Ohio newspaper, continued lynching in Tennessee overshadowed the Nashville Industrial Exposition. The Tennessee Historical Society hoped that the exposition would show the future of the South and respect or a proud military history. Local businesses shut down as a military and civic parade marched down the street. The most popular exhibit was an exotic Egyptian mummy display and a collection...
- Counterfeit Money in the South
September 24, 1874
PAGE, Virginia
Economy, Government, LawOn September 24, 1874 the Page Courier Newspaper reported to the citizens of Page County, Virginia that a new counterfeit 50-cent bill was in circulation. The Dangerous Counterfeit was described to readers in great detail. The news paper stated that on the back, right upper corner Act March 3d, 1863, the 6 is reversed. The colored silk line in the genuine are not in the counterfeit.
The...
- Jefferson Davis Responds to the Gibson County Massacre
September 2, 1874
SHELBY, Tennessee
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsOn September 2, 1874 former President of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, delivered a speech in Memphis, Tennessee denouncing a massacre of sixteen black men a week prior in Trenton, TN. The massacre was committed on August 26, and as the New York Times reported, “About 400 armed, disguised, mounted men,” set upon the jail with the design of kidnapping the sixteen black occupants....
- The Rise of Jim Crow in Southern Education
April 28, 1874 to 1874
ALBEMARLE, Virginia
African-Americans, Economy, Education, Government, Politics, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarA. Thomas McKee was an official in the Charlottesville school district in 1874. McKee handled funding both for the district's African American school and for the white school. He was puzzled to discover that the African American school received less funding in 1874 than its number of students was supposed to receive. McKee wrote D.P Powers, the local Superintendent of Schools explaining the...
- Peggy Stewart Centennial
October 10, 1874
ANNE ARUNDEL, Maryland
Arts/LeisureThe citizens celebrated the burning of a ship called the Peggy Stewart, a ship owned by Anthony Stewart, an Annapolis resident. The Peggy Stewart had arrived full of tea to the Annapolis harbor at a very inopportune time, because Annapolis citizens were keen on enforcing the non-importation agreement. Anthony was willing to pay the tax on the tea and to secretly bring the ship to dock, but word...
- R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Established
October 19, 1874
FORSYTH, North Carolina
Economy, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe 1870's was the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in North Carolina. North Carolina has been dubbed Tobacco Land' because of the defining industry in the state of the manufacture of tobacco. On October 19, 1874 Richard J. Reynolds purchased a 300 ft lot of property in Winston-Salem, NC and established the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company where he began to manufacture tobacco....
- Judge Richard Busteed Takes a Stand against Segregation
August 15, 1874
MONTGOMERY, Alabama
Race-RelationsU.S. District Judge Busteed took side with a black man on a train during a dispute between the black man and the conductor. The conductor ordered the black man to exit the ladies car when Judge Busteed drew a pistol in defense of the black man and told him not to go. The two men then gathered twenty blacks and took over the car until two white Republicans convinced them to stand down. <br />Busteed...
- Arkansas Race Siege
August 11, 1874
Race-RelationsFive people arrived in Memphis, Tennessee by boat, reporting that the town of Austin, Arkansas was being held siege by seven hundred' negroes. (Another paper mistakenly reported it as Austin, Texas-a testament to the ease with which rumors of race riots could spread) Major Horn Chalmors of Hernando was sent into Austin with about 200 men to win back the city of Austin for the whites. Both...
- Schoolteacher Sees Importance of Religion in Education
October 27, 1874
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Church/Religious-Activity, Education, WomenAn Augusta County, Virginia schoolteacher named Mary Susan Gregory recognized the importance of using her devotion to God to show her students how to live their lives properly. In a diary entry dated October 1874, she noted, "as teachers we should set an example worthy of imitation, (for there is a fearful responsibility resting upon us,) and there is no better way of doing it than by showing...
- Chicago Grain Corner
July 31, 1874
DE KALB, Illinois
"Chicago Grain Corner", "Chicago Market Crisis"In July 1874, America was in the middle of the largest economic downturn it had ever seen. Prices on goods and services had started on a deflationary path and would decrease by a total 15.6% during the period of 1873-1879 according to the Balke-Gordon Price Index. The bad news of bank failures, labor riots, and disastrous epidemics were coming in from everywhere, but on July 31, 1874,...
- Trouble In Vicksburg
July 29, 1874
WARREN, Mississippi
African-Americans, Race-Relations, WarMississippi was prone to violent outbreaks between political parties. The Democrats represented by whites who feared fraud', while the Republicans, usually represented by blacks, also feared fraud on the part of the Democrats. In a telegram to President Grant, Governor Ames pleaded with him to send Federal troops to help control the organized and armed political factions, especially at...
- Caroline Cutler Metcalf's Role in Education
November 11, 1874
BRISTOL, Massachusetts
Education, Women's HistoryOn November 11, 1874, S.C. Beach wrote a letter to Mrs. Caroline Cutler Metcalf. Mrs. Metcalf was the first long-term principal of Wheaton Female Seminary. Beach wrote to Mrs. Metcalf primarily to relay a message from Reverand Edward Everette Hale. In a conversation between Beach and Hale, Hale had stated that he had never seen a paper written by a Wheaton Female Seminary student that was...
- The Advent of Refrigerator Cars in the City of Richmond
July 15, 1874
RICHMOND, Virginia
Agriculture, Economy, Migration/Transportation, Science/TechnologyFruit growers all over the state of Virginia rejoiced on Wednesday, July 15, 1874 when the Daily Dispatch of Richmond reported that two refrigerated cars arrived in the city. The article claimed, that "this new feature in the express business meets a necessity our fruit growers have long felt, and secures a method for the swift transportation of their produce." Finally, a technology...
- Storm Destruction
November 22, 1874
COLBERT, Alabama
Health/DeathOn November 22, 1874, a giant storm rolled through Tuscumbia Alabama. 300 people were left homeless and the storm caused an estimated half a million dollars in damages. The storm came like the sound of rushing thunder'(Atlanta Constitution), catching the town while it slept, around 8P.M. The townspeople reportedly organized quickly and appointed a leader to oversee repairs. A tornado the...
- Railroad Company vs. Richmond
1874
RICHMOND, Virginia
Economy, Government, Law, Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe feud between the city of Richmond and the Fredericksburg & Potomac Railroad Company reached Virginia's Supreme Court of Appeals. Fredericksburg & Potomac had violated Richmond's laws, the city claimed, by running its steam- propelled cars through Broad Street. According to an ordinance passed on September 8, 1873, no vehicle of any kind was allowed to traverse that specific lane, the...
- Newspapers and Magazines close their doors
November, 1874 to January, 1875
HENRICO, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, EconomyAs reported by the American Journalist, more than 200 magazines and newspapers closed their doors in the first weeks of 1875. This was a time of change and evolution for the print industry, as newspapers moved form admittedly opinionated and biased rumor and news mills, to objective fonts of factual stories and reliability. The industry was changing, and not all the papers could keep up as the readership...
- Letters By Colored Messenger
December 24, 1874
WARREN, Mississippi
African-Americans, Race-RelationsA letter arrived for Jerry Hyland of Warrenton, Mississippi as the year 1875 began. The letter, from a friend Emma S., commenced with the usual pleasantries before expressing dismay that earlier correspondence had not made its way into Hyland's possession. I am surprised to learn that my last letter to you, written in November, failed to reach you- I have forgotten who mailed it for me wrote...
- Near Death at the Hands of the Ku Klux Klan
January 9, 1875
POWELL, Kentucky
LawRace relations during and after Reconstruction were tense. Many whites had never dealt with free blacks and many free blacks had never been free. White Anglo-Saxon Protestant groups such as the Ku Klux Klan were formed in an attempt to maintain the status quo that had arisen over the past two centuries. Through acts of violence and intimidation, Ku Klux members aimed to scare free blacks into adopting...
- Resumption Act
January, 1875
Washington City, District of Columbia
EconomyThe Resumption Act of 1875 was intended to shift America away from the paper currency greenbacks' that had developed during the Civil war and to return to a gold standard. This was largely accepted except by those who promoted a silver standard as well, who felt that greenbacks were good because they could be traded for either gold or silver. This act provided for the redemption of US...
- Grant Ends the Brooks-Baxter War in Arkansas
May 15, 1874
PULASKI, Arkansas
WarIn January of 1873, after Elisha Baxter, a Republican, was elected as governor of Arkansas in 1872, Joseph Brooks, who was supported by Liberals, Democrats, and Arkansas Unionists, claimed that the election had been doctored' and that he was the rightful governor. After being informed that the Supreme Court of Arkansas had no jurisdiction in settling the decision and that it was up to...
- Growing Dissent
January 27, 1875
JEFFERSON, Mississippi
Government, Law, Politics, WarAn article appeared in The Vicksburg Herald discussing the widespread outrage from military occupation in Vicksburg. The article said that lately the officers who were supposed to keep the South in line had begun to overstep their original duties and were getting involved in both civil and local matters in the city. The president had apologized for the officer?s actions and said he was unaware of...
- Temperance Alliance of the State of Maryland
May 6, 1874
BALTIMORE, Maryland
Church/Religious-ActivityThe inaugural convention for the Temperance Alliance of the State of Maryland was held on May 6, 1874. There were four hundred delegates present, including 260 from the city of Baltimore, approximately fifty women, and at least fifty blacks. There were also several Reverends who spoke at the convention. A resolution was proposed to aid the women's temperance crusade and request women from...