Episodes Nearest to October 1, 1881 to October 30, 1881: 1 through 25 of 25
- Death of Lousianna Governor
October, 1881
EAST BATON ROUG, Louisiana
LawAfter the Civil War, political machines exerted strong control over Lousianna politics. Louis Wiltz, the Democrat who defeated Judge Taylor Beattie for the governorship in 1879, died in office in October of 1881. Wiltz was a French creole of German ancestry, who experienced great success in the Lousianna business world and became vice-president of the Louisianna State National bank before being...
- Black Women Agitate for Civil Rights on the Railroads
October 2, 1881
DAVIDSON, Tennessee
Migration/Transportation, Race-RelationsOn October 2, 1881, Mrs. Harding, the wife of a upstanding black man, was initially denied access to the ladies car on the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad. She ordered the assistance of General Manager Thomas, who promptly ordered that a separate car be arranged for her. Harding refused to enter the separate car and filed a law suit against the company. Later that afternoon, a black organist,...
- Rambin's Cotton Crop Failure
September 25, 1881
DE SOTO, Louisiana
African-Americans, AgricultureSally Garland Young Rambin struggled to write to her sister because of a sore eye, which she had gotten from the family that her husband had brought to the plantation. He had brought them to help pick the cotton crop that a young man had cultivated on their land but had not picked. Rambin's sore eye and the negligent young man were the least of the Rambins' worries, however. Rambin wrote...
- Angry Alabamians Protest Austrian's Governmental Position
November 12, 1881
MOBILE, Alabama
Government, Migration/Transportation, Race-RelationsIn late 1881, writers for The Mobile Register were frustrated with the federal government, as were many citizens of the area. The newspaper's editor wrote that Strobach, an Austrian who had been appointed to oversee the Federal patronage of Alabama, should not be trusted to this office. The newspaper claimed that he came to the United States originally as hostler to Prince Salm-Salm....
- Refusal to Pay Poll Tax
November 22, 1881
ABBEVILLE, South Carolina
Race-RelationsEdward F Stokes refused to pay the poll tax required for voting purposes in South Carolina. He claimed that such a tax was a debt, making imprisonment upon his refusal to pay a violation of Commonwealth organic law. Nonetheless, Judge Hawthorne found him guilty and offered him the choice of a fine of five dollars and costs or thirty days in jail. Stokes appealed the decision, and it was brought...
- Death of Sidney Lanier
September 7, 1881
POLK, North Carolina
Arts/LeisureSydney Lanier, a Southern poet and musician, died on September 7, 1881 of consumption in Lynn, North Carolina. Having suffered health problems before the Civil War, his death was not unexpected. Nonetheless, his early death was mourned by many, especially the wife and three children left behind.<br />Born in Macon, Georgia, Lanier received an education at Oglethorpe University. He initially...
- The Dynamics of Virginia Politics in the 1880s
September 6, 1881
LOUISA, Virginia
Economy, Government, PoliticsOn September 6, 1881 James Lyons, Jr. felt both nervous and excited about Virginia's upcoming gubernatorial election. In a letter to Reuben Lindsay Gordon, an attorney from Louisa County, Virginia, Lyons asserted, I am watching eagerly and anxiously to see Louisa roll up a majority for Daniel and yourself. You must get as big a majority as you can . . . I do hope you will win by a big vote....
- Texas Railroad Agreement
November 26, 1881
TRAVIS, Texas
Migration/TransportationRailroads were essential modes of development in Texas, a state which retained its frontier status while others turned to a manufacturing economy. After the Civil War, efforts were renewed to construct a southern transcontinental railroad. In order to do so, the Texas and Pacific Railway Company, which had received a federal charter in 1871, was granted permission to build tracks from Marshall,...
- Prohibition Bill Defeated
September 4, 1881
NEW HANOVER, North Carolina
Church/Religious-ActivityThe North Carolina prohibitionists were clearly defeated in Wilmington, Charlotte, and Raleigh in elections on August 4th, 1881. News from Charlotte indicated that the Republicans were overwhelmingly anti-Prohibitionists, while Democrats voted in favor of Prohibition. In Raleigh, the Prohibitionists gained strength in the towns, yet they still faced defeat. Therefore, the anti-Prohibitionists...
- John Daniel Delivers Speeches Discussing Public Education
August 15, 1881 to August 19, 1881
PAGE, Virginia
Education, Race-RelationsJohn W. Daniel, who later served as a US Senator from VA from 1887-1910, gave speeches on August 15th, 18th, and 19th as a part of his campaign for the governorship of VA. Daniel was well-known for his oratorical skills, which made his speeches crucial to his campaign against William Cameron of the Readjusters, a new party in Virginia led by William Mahone that ran in opposition to the conservative...
- An Incident of Charity
December, 1881
ROCKBRIDGE, Virginia
Church/Religious-ActivityM. Rowan Barclay, carrier of the Lexington Gazette, printed a special broadside in 1881 to the subscribers of his newspaper, urging them to realize the true meaning of Christmas. His broadside was a poem titled "An Incident of Christmas Eve" and told the story of an old woman who was unable to cross the street. Several passersby overlooked her until Barclay introduced a group of rowdy...
- Testimonies at the Turlington Camp
August 7, 1881 to August 15, 1881
ACCOMACK, Virginia
African-Americans, Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, Migration/Transportation, Race-Relations, WomenWagons loaded with fried chicken, vegetables, figs, fruits, grapes, cantaloupes, and watermelon crept towards the sea of tents. People also packed carpets, mattresses, plates, bowls, bed linens, lamps, rocking chairs, and even clocks. The annual, week-long, Turlington camp meeting had finally arrived. The big bell tolled, beckoning everyone to the benches. It was quite a congregation: almost 8000...
- Interracial Shootout Leaves Two Dead
December 28, 1881
BALDWIN, Alabama
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Law, Race-RelationsJoel Johnson, a well-known citizen of Baldwin County, Alabama, was riding quietly along a public road near Sibley's Mill. Unexpectedly, an African American hiding behind a tree shot Johnson in the head, stunning him and throwing him from his horse. The black man then shot him twice more, first in the wrist and again in the side. Taking him for dead, the assailant dragged Johnson three-hundred...
- Quarantine Station at Vicksburg Abolished
August 3, 1881
WARREN, Mississippi
Health/Death, Urban-Life/BoosterismOn August 3rd, the National Board of Health reopened the quarantine station at Vicksburg, Mississippi that had been abolished earlier. The location at Vicksburg was closed, because the board, supervised by Dr. Frank Reily, was unable to safely man the station. Of the inspectors sent to the quarantine, all contracted malarial fever. The board found it unnecessary to continue the station at Vicksburg,...
- Lynching of Perry Munson; Black Man Arrested for Attempted Rape
June 30, 1881 to August 22, 1881
DE KALB, Georgia
Race-RelationsOn August 22, Perry Munson, a black man of Ouachita Parish in Lousianna, was murdered by an unknown mob. His death was one of many lynchings in the late 19th century that signified the rise of racial violence in the South. <br />Similarly, on June 30, police arrested Seab Marjam, a black man, on the Georgia railroad at Stone Mountain for attempted rape of a white woman. The article states,...
- The Death of Billy the Kid
July 19, 1881
LINCOLN, New Mexico
billy the kid, new mexico, old westBilly the Kid gained legendary status as one of the Wild West’s most famous outlaws. Even before his death, the public viewed him as larger than life, thanks in part to newspaper coverage of his murders, his capture, and his escape from jail. When he was finally tracked down and fatally shot by sheriff Pat Garrett of Lincoln County New Mexico, news of his death was printed in newspapers all around...
- Railway Disaster Prevented by the Courageous Deeds of One Man
January 14, 1882
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Migration/TransportationIf it were not for the courageous actions of Mr. I. P. Irving one Wednesday evening in 1882, disaster assuredly would have befallen the railway system outside Waynesboro. Four trains were supposed to meet and pass four sections of extra trains traveling in opposite directions on the C. &. O. road. When the extra trains were tardy, eleven trains on Waynesboro's main tracked were unable to travel...
- A Gunpowder Plot
July 9, 1881
HENRICO, Virginia
African-Americans, Arts/Leisure, Education, Race-Relations, SlaveryTeddie and Lud visited the farm of a family friend out in the country. They became friends with a black boy named Bat, short for Bartholomew. One lazy afternoon, Bat came running to the boys with exciting news: I done found sumthin ... Tudder side de broom-straw field, bustin big hornicks' ness-big as half-peck measure. ... I didn't tetch de thing; but I thought I'd come and tell ye...
- The Trial of John W. Guiteau
January 23, 1882
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Crime/Violence, Health/Death, Law, PoliticsAmong an enormous crowd of four hundred newspaper reporters and interested visitors, the verdict of the trial of John W. Guiteau was delivered at the courthouse on the morning of the twenty-third of January. Although the court officers continually shouted for silence, Guiteau never ceased his criticisms of the court and Judge Porter even as the judge read off the charges against him. Judge Porter...
- Tuskegee Institute Founded
July 4, 1881
MACON, Alabama
African-Americans, Education, Race-RelationsOn July 4, 1881, Booker T. Washington founded Tuskegee University, a school created to provide blacks with both a moral and an industrial education. Washington advocated an emphasis on economic self-reliance for blacks, rather than an emphasis on political and social advancement, and he recruited renowned teachers, such as George Washington Carver, to train his university students in domestic, agricultural,...
- INDEPENDENCE DAY, 1881:The Founding of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute
July 4, 1881
MACON, Alabama
African-Americans, Education, Government, Race-RelationsOn July 4, 1881, Booker T. Washington helped Lewis Adams, a former slave, make his dream a reality. The founding of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute ushered in a new era for African American education in Alabama and the nation. Booker T. Washington began his career the Hampton Institute in Hampton, Virginia, under General Samuel Chapman Armstrong. Washington's keen mind and brilliant...
- Petersburg Convention for Blacks
1881
FAUQUIER, Virginia
Race-RelationsA convention was held in Petersburg, VA, that gathered the blacks of Virginia for political discussion. At the time, the Readjuster party was gaining force in the Southern states as it challenged the conservative Democrats and posed a threat of division amongst the Republicans. General William Mahone, a well-known capitalist, a former Democrat, and a former Confederate general, led the Readjusters...
- Uncle Remus Published
1881
PUTNAM, Georgia
Arts/Leisure, Race-RelationsJoel Chandler Harris, an author born in Eatonton County, GA, published Uncle Remus: His Songs and Sayings, his first collection of Uncle Remus stories, in 1881 and found an enormously receptive audience. Harris first began developing his interest in writing and journalism at the age of thirteen when he served as an apprentice for a nearby newspaper. Harris experienced success as a humorist began...
- The Shooting of Walter Rountree
1881
CLARKE, Georgia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Law, Race-RelationsThe animosity between whites and African Americans in Georgia often resulted in violent conflicts. In 1881, Walter Rountree took a walk one day from the University of Georgia with his brother and some of his friends. They encountered two African American men at the town courthouse and a conflict ensued. All the men drew their pistols against one another. In the shooting that followed, Walter Rountree...
- From Delicacy to Modesty
1881
WYTHE, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, WomenStella Haas, a resident of New Orleans, Louisiana, had her photograph taken by W.A. Johnston's photograph gallery in Wytheville, Virginia. Her portrait, like the other nine in the 1881 collection of photographs from western Virginia was taken as a solo frame and was presented as a "carte-de-visite," or postcard. Although the portrait did not reveal anything about Stella Haas except her hometown,...