Episodes Nearest to January 1, 1887 to December 31, 1887: 1 through 25 of 25
- Shoot-out in Kentucky
July 2, 1887
ROWAN, Kentucky
Government, LawIn 1887, a long-standing feud between the Tolliver family and the Martin family came to a bloody end in Rowan County, Kentucky. The feud began after the 1884 election when Cook Humphrey defeated Sam Goodson for the position of sheriff. John Day and Floyd Tolliver were accused of beating John Martin with a club after words were exchanged over the election of Humphrey. This incident was the beginning...
- How's the Weather?
1887
RAPPAHANNOCK, Virginia
African-Americans, Agriculture, Health/Death, EconomyOnce again, H. A. Tayloe sat down by the fireplace to read the correspondence he had picked up. Today he received the latest news from a friend he had not seen in a long time, N. H. Hudson. As he read over the news, it was once again, as usual, all about how Mr. Hudson's planting season was going. In this particular letter, Mr. Hudson had finally gotten around to planting his cotton and he still...
- Florida in 1887: Malaria and Alligators
1887
ORANGE, Florida
Arts/Leisure, Health/Death, Migration/Transportation"It was a malaria-cursed desert, a barren wilderness swarming with poisonous snakes and repulsive reptiles." Travel author Iza Hardy observed that this was the resounding view of Florida in 1887 held by those in the northern, eastern and western United States. The statement is only one of many Hardy presents in his 1887 book, Oranges and Alligators, that illustrates the verbal abuse...
- Looking Back: Thoughts On Secession By Anson Morse
1887
ANSON, North Carolina
Politics, WarViews on why and how secession occurred plagued the thoughts of Anson D. Morse and others. Morse, explaining to his comrades why the country remained divided even twenty years after the close of the war, stated that "the terms North and South retain too much of their earlier meaning. This vitality of the sectional spirit....testifies to the completeness of...the conservatism of American character."...
- The Revolution of Vocal Assemblage
1887
GRATIOT, Michigan
Liberal Arts, Choir Tour, Choir, Alma CollegeThe choral programs at Alma College have been an important part of the liberal arts experience. Through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries a wide variety of choral groups were formed such, as the early Almaroon Quartette, Choral Club, Men’s and Women’s Glee Clubs and several a cappella choirs and have been named some of Michigan’s finest small choirs. At times, after a student’s...
- Illicit Whiskey Distilleries in Mountains of Western North Carolina
April, 1887 to October, 1887
WILKES, North Carolina
Crime/Violence, GovernmentIn early 1887, B.F. Jones of Yadkin County leaked information to the Internal Revenue Service-he knew of men who had been illegally distilling whiskey in the mountains of Western North Carolina. These men were arrested and punished for their crimes. But how did B.F. Jones, a former Sheriff of his home county of Yadkin, a Republican, and a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1875 know of these...
- Uplifting Community at the Tuskegee Institute
June 5, 1887
MACON, Alabama
African-Americans, Education, Politics, Race-RelationsSix years after its foundation in 1881, The New York Times reported on the success of the Tuskegee Institution live from Tuskegee, Alabama. The Tuskegee Institution invited the black community to witness what work the school has turned out, how that work is accomplished, and what is the character of the general population in which the raw material comes. Gathered in the hall were, perhaps...
- Knights of Labor Seek Justice for Shooting of Hiram Hoover
May 8, 1887 to November 1, 1887
WARREN, Georgia
African-Americans, Health/Death, Economy, Race-RelationsDuring the fall convention of the Knights of Labor in Minneapolis, Minnesota delegates from Warrenton, Georgia asked the convention board to pursue action and facilitate in the arrest of the shooters of Hiram Hoover. Hoover, a white labor organizer, had gained momentum in South Carolina as he promoted interracial labor organizing. He was shot by an enraged group of white vigilantes on May 8th....
- Equal Educations?
May 27, 1887
FAUQUIER, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Economy, EducationMr. Mathews opened the letter. It was from his son who wrote of the upcoming exams he had in school. Included among those exams were Geometry, Rhetoric, Vergil and Latin Exercises, French Reading and Exercise, Latin Syntax, Algebra, and History. Among these exams, there was no break except for Sunday, a day for Church and rest. Mr. Mathews felt proud that his son was getting such a good education,...
- Economies At Odds
August 13, 1887
MADISON, Mississippi
EconomyEconomic change was slow to come to the former Confederacy after the Civil War. Although railroads began to crisscross New South cities like Atlanta, dependence on an agricultural way of life made the cities of the South less likely sites of industrial development than their Northern counterparts. This impeded development was only further hindered by the outbreak of Yellow Fever in Montgomery,...
- Post-Reconstruction Tensions in Fairview Township, South Carolina
April, 1887 to June 29, 1887
GREENVILLE, South Carolina
African-Americans, Race-RelationsTensions between the black and white communities of Fairview Township in Greenville County increased drastically due to the revelation of secret night-time meetings amongst the black societies. The Enterprise and Mountaineer initially talked to the white population of Fairview and it was revealed how the African-American community was holding secret meetings at varying locations; according...
- A Fear of Mahoneism
August 22, 1887
CAMPBELL, Virginia
African-Americans, Education, Government, Politics, Race-Relations"If you knew, as we do, the horror of Mahoneism, you would not begrudge us the few hours of your time which we ask," wrote Alexander McDonald to President Grover Cleveland in August 1887. McDonald affirmed his solemn belief that "the best interests of Virginia are involved in this proposed visit, and it may be the country, too." Not surprisingly, McDonald was the editor of a Democratic...
- Chincoteague Prohibition
April 25, 1887
ACCOMACK, Virginia
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Law, Politics, Race-Relations, WomenOn a late April weekend, Chincoteague residents gathered to celebrate the one year anniversary of their local option legislation, which barred their community from devastating alcohol consumption. Crowded in the town's Temperance Hall, because of rain outside, Friday night witnessed the much anticipated literary and musical entertainment. Despite the weather, spirits remained high and prominent...
- Communion Alcohol
April 9, 1887
ALEXANDER, Illinois
Temperance Movement, woman’s suffrageIn a letter dated April 9, 1887 Isabella Maud Rittenhouse described a confrontation with her pastor. Rittenhouse, a teetotaler and member of the Temperance Movement, had demanded to know whether communion wine contained alcohol, to which her pastor dismissively replied that “it amused him to hear these WCTU people talking about unfermented wine; that there was no such thing in Christ’s time”.
- 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...
- Journey to Work: Walter B. Simpson
October 12, 1887
ORANGE, Florida
Work, Florida, Winter ParkOn October 12, 1887 Walter B. Simpson and fellow Hannibal Square resident Frank R. Israel were elected as Winter Park Aldermen. They were the first black men to have ever been elected into any type of political office in Winter Park at that time. This vote came during a tumultuous time when Hannibal Square was taken out of the Winter Park boundaries and during this 1887 election was once again reincorporated...
- Farmers in Central Virginia Cope after Economic Depression
October 28, 1887
SPOTSYLVANIA, Virginia
Agriculture, Economy, Migration/TransportationJames Holladay, the owner of a plantation in Spotsylvania County, Virginia was exceedingly proud of his new invention. Holladay had worked hard to perfect the new silo he designed for his farm, but he wanted assurance from an expert that his silo needed no further improvements. On October 28, 1887 Holladay wrote to Professor Elliot W. Stuart, an expert in agriculture at the University of Virginia,...
- 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...
- 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...
- 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...
- Attack of Mrs. Yeakle and Lynching of John H. Bigus
November 18, 1887 to November 23, 1887
FREDERICK, Maryland
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Health/Death, Race-Relations, WomenOn November 18, 1887 at around 9:30 P.M., Mrs. Yeakle, an old, white widow, was walking home from church when a black man attacked her in Frederick County, Maryland. He knocked her down, injuring her, and attempted to assault her. Her yells drew attention to the scene. The black man then ran away into the suburbs and escaped into the woods. A group was organized to track him down.
Although...
- 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...
- 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...
- 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...