Episodes Nearest to November 6, 1886 to November 27, 1886: 1 through 25 of 25
- Thanksgiving Day
November 6, 1886 to November 27, 1886
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, Health/Death, Economy, Government, Politics, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WarThe November 6, 1886, edition of the Goodson Gazette of the Virginia Institute for the Education of the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind ran the announcement by President Grover Cleveland who declared Thursday, November 25 as a day of thanksgiving and prayer. He asked the families of the country to gather and show their thanks and gratitude for their lives. Two weeks later, the paper ran Governor...
- Teaching in the South
October 9, 1886 to 1886
BEDFORD, Virginia
Economy, Education, WomenEducation in Southside Virginia during the late nineteenth century was sporadic and not completely uniform. While there had been an educational revival after the Civil War, public education was still defined by the typical one-room schoolhouse, taught by a young woman with children whose ages ranged from 6 years to 16 years. Teaching was not an ideal job; it was very difficult. Even with the difficulties,...
- A Morning in the Kitchen
December 1, 1886
BRISTOL, Massachusetts
Economy, WomenIn December of 1886, "A Morning in the Kitchen" was published in Rushlight, the magazine of Wheaton Female Seminary in Norton, Massachusetts. In this essay our unknown author provided accounts from a day without her cook. She began her essay by remarking on the morning outside and then discussed the tasks of making and cleaning up after a meal. She stated that men's genius was...
- A Great City
December 4, 1886
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Economy, Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/BoosterismBy 1900, Staunton had a population of 7,289, and in 1886, the city already boasted of its greatness. The Goodson Gazette, a small circulation paper, ran a few lines devoted to the city's attractive characteristics. Not only did the city have electricity, but also they had streetlights on some of the main streets. They had a telegraph since the 1850's, but did not mention it, nor...
- Negro Family Turning White
December 11, 1886
TAZEWELL, Virginia
African-Americans, Law, Race-RelationsRace relations and classifications resounded strongly in the minds of many in the South. West Virginia was no exception to this. A story ran in the Martinsburg Gazette on December 11, 1866 that a young African American boy living in Chicago, Illinois was supposedly turning white. Born to two African American parents, the pigmentation in the young boy's skin was becoming increasingly lighter...
- The New Teacher's Institute
October 21, 1886
RICHMOND, Virginia
Church/Religious-Activity, Education, Race-Relations, WomenIn Warsaw, Superintendent Robert Hall called a meeting for the new teachers of the Northern Neck Peninsula. The teachers needed to talk about the best way to educate the hundreds of students entering the new public school system. Reverend A. B. Kinsolving opened the session by leading prayers. Mr. Hall began the discussion by encouraging the teachers to express their candid views on each topic covered...
- Henry Grady sells the New South'
December 22, 1886
FULTON, Georgia
EconomyHenry Grady was the editor of the Atlanta Constitution and a supporter and spokesman of the New South' concept. Grady was invited to speak at the New England Club of New York in 1886, where he made a famous speech about the New South. He disarmed his listeners by saying There was a South of slavery and secession that South, thank God, is dead. There is a South of union and freedom...
- Henry Grady and His New South Speech
December 22, 1886
NEW YORK, New York
PoliticsA man of great charisma and incredible oratory skills, Grady was a man with a goal. Henry W. Grady was born in Georgia and was throughout his career a spokesman, a proponent, and an ambassador for the South to the rest of the world. Growing up in the disenfranchised and embittered South, Grady had a vision of a reintegrated South that would take its place of glory and prominence in the newly restored...
- A Strike at the Docks
January 15, 1887
WARWICK, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Economy, PoliticsThe Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company lay powerless, while over 300 mostly black dockworkers armed themselves with any object they could find. Once organized, they forced their way through the barricaded doors of Pier 2. Now inside the docks, they struck out at the scabs, filling their jobs, and ravaged the offices, where they stole a barrel of whiskey. The effects of their new capture only further...
- Texas Farmer's Alliance
January 20, 1887
MC LENNAN, Texas
Agriculture, Economy, Race-Relations, Urban-Life/BoosterismWhen they met on January 20, 1887 in Waco, members of the Texas state alliance made plans to stage a coup that would get rid of the current president of the organization and unite smaller factions already within the coalition. This newly integrated group created a national alliance, known as the Texas Farmer's Alliance, and declared C.W. Macune their president. <br /><br />The...
- Male Competition and a Female Audience
January 26, 1887
NORFOLK CITY, Virginia
Government, Politics, WomenOn January 26, 1887, the Virginian Weekly & Carolinian reported with little excitement that the Senate had rejected a constitutional amendment for women's suffrage. Paying more attention to the Army Appropriation bill, funding for public building, and the Railroad Attorney's Bill, the article hardly focused on women's perpetual disenfranchisement. While one senator presented...
- Major Earthquake Hits Charleston, South Carolina
August 31, 1886
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
Health/Death, EconomyAlmost exactly one year after being hit by a category three hurricane that destroyed 90 percent of Charleston's homes, on August 31, 1886, the city was hit with another devastating blow. Before it had fully recovered from the effects of the hurricane, the city was rocked by an earthquake that registered a 6.6 on the Richter scale. Eyewitness accounts report that tremors were felt all over the...
- The Federal Government Passes the Dawes Act
February 8, 1887
Washington City, District of Columbia
IndiansBy the 1870s, prime agricultural land remained in the plains. Many American citizens believed the federal government should free this valuable land from nomadic Indian tribes for white settlers. Other whites approached the situation from a paternalistic perspective and insisted Indians should be assimilated into American society. Named after Senator Henry Dawes of Massachusetts, the Federal Government...
- Major R. R. Henry runs for Congress
August 13, 1886
TAZEWELL, Virginia
Economy, Government, Politics, WarMajor R. R. Henry of Tazewell County, Virginia campaigned for a seat in Congress under the Democratic Party in 1886. People from neighboring communities such as Lynchburg, Abingdon and Wytheville voiced their full support of his campaign and hopes for his success in the quest for a seat in Congress in the November elections. Although varied in their syntax, the message behind Henry's supporters...
- They Elope
March 18, 1886 to 1886
PITTSYLVANIA, Virginia
Church/Religious-Activity, WomenMiss Lizzie D. Hutter was everything a southern, Virginia belle should be. She was accomplished, beautiful, from a good family, and very popular in the highest of social circles. She was known as a poetically perfect and symmetrically beautiful girl. She was the eldest daughter of the superintendent of the Houston mines, and both her mother's and father's side were distinguished families...
- Badly in Need of a Revival
February 26, 1887
HAWKINS, Tennessee
Arts/Leisure, Church/Religious-Activity, WomenRogersville needed religion- at least Reverend Jarvis and Reverend Roberts thought so. These two clergymen, along with the ministers of the churches near Rogersville held a series of union meetings or revivals at the Methodist Episcopal Church.
The faithful churchgoers who attended prayed together, coming forth to offer their wishes for the success of the revival meeting and for the souls...
- Hatch Act of 1887
March 2, 1887
Washington City, District of Columbia
Agriculture, Health/Death, Economy, Urban-Life/BoosterismDuring and after the Civil War, many farms and ranches were without the man power needed to cultivate the land. William Henry Hatch of Missouri joined forces with Norman J. Coleman to create legislation that would promote all aspects of agriculture. The Martinsburg Gazette reported that President Grover Cleveland approved the famous Hatch Act on March, 2 1887,' which created agricultural...
- Anne Sullivan begins teaching Helen Keller
March 3, 1887
COLBERT, Alabama
Health/Death, EducationHelen Keller was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama in 1880. At the young age of nineteen months, Helen's brain and stomach were exposed to Scarlet Fever, which left her blind, deaf, and mute. Helen explained in her autobiography, then, in the dreary month of February, came the illness which closed my eyes and ears and plunged me into the unconsciousness of a new-born baby. They called it acute...
- Town Improvement Association of Winter Park
March 3, 1887
ORANGE, Florida
Agriculture, Economy, GovernmentThe city of Winter Park was established in 1881 as a main trading center for fruit companies throughout Central Florida. This flourishing trading spot transformed itself into a popular resort where northerners came to flee from the harsh cold northern winters. According to the Seminole Hotel Booklet, the Winter Park area was ideal for northern settlement since it was full of natural...
- In Memory of Patriotism and Valor
July 31, 1886
NORTHUMBERLAND, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Migration/Transportation, WarThe camp ground at Marvin Grove was the site for this year's Annual Reunion of Confederate Veterans on the Northern Neck peninsula. The Northern Neck News widely advertised the event, hoping that the Reunion would receive ... the favor and patronage it justly merit[ed], especially because the proceeds went to the construction of a Methodist Church. While men stabled their horses, they recognized...
- Convict Standoff
July 13, 1886 to July 14, 1886
DADE, Georgia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Economy, Government, Law, Race-RelationsIt was already hot. As the Superintendent lined the convicts up to march back to the Dade County coal mines for another day of exhausting labor, one group refused to move. At the head of a long line of men chained together, the leader of the rebellion spoke up to Colonel Tower. He said that he and all the rest of the men from his stockade refused to work another day in the heat at their awful work....
- Engines of Progress
April 2, 1887
CALHOUN, Alabama
Economy, Urban-Life/BoosterismDeep in the iron-rich north central region of Alabama, industry was booming. The owners of Murray and Stephenson ironworks in Anniston took the huge step of enlarging their foundry, allowing for bigger commissions and higher production rates. They had negotiated with the managers of the Alabama Car Works for a contract for enough work for the next eight months.
Over at the engine works of...
- The Education of African Americans After the Civil War
1886
ALBEMARLE, Virginia
African-Americans, Economy, Education, Health/Death, Law, Politics, Race-Relations"Our crops are poor on account of too much wet in the summer which prevented us from working with them," John McClure, a resident of Albemarle County, wrote to his aunt and uncle. He went on to explain that "with what little (crops) we have to sell won't bring enough to pay for the expense of raising it." Other such maladies that McClure noted were that the livestock was not selling for a...
- African Americans in the Seminole Hotel
1886
ORANGE, Florida
Economy, Race Relations, african americansObserving the history of Winter Park, the Seminole Hotel which was built in 1886 is one location that is significant in many ways to the American Life, especially for African Americans. The Seminole Hotel was a grand resort in Lake Osceola and it was a vacation destination which attracted many wealthy northerners who were escaping the unpleasant weather from their home towns. While it is evident...
- State of Liberty and Immigrants: First Days
1886
NEW YORK, New York
Statue of Liberty, ImmigrantsThe Statue of Liberty is an icon of today, just as it was for immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th Century. The inauguration of the Statue of LIberty took place on Thursday, October 23, 1886. The day started with a military, naval and civil parade in New York City. After the parade, a signal was given for steamers in the bay to move in a particular and pre-calculated order towards the...