Episodes Nearest to June 5, 1889 to October 24, 1889: 1 through 25 of 25
- Angel Comes to Johnstown
June 5, 1889 to October 24, 1889
CAMBRIA, Pennsylvania
relief effortAs the news of the destruction of the 1889 Johnstown flood reached beyond Cambria County, relief and aid efforts immediately began to mobilize and move into the valley. Among the first to arrive was Clara Barton, the "Angel of the Battlefield." Barton's American Red Cross was a relief organization that she founded during the Civil War. During the war, she and her envoy of good...
- Love Letters from William A. Moats to Nela Miller
April, 1889 to December, 1889
PENDLETON, West Virginia
Arts/Leisure, WomenDuring an eight month period, William A. Moats wrote love letters to Nela Miller. Each letter was structurally similar to the previous, always commenting on his good health and the hope that the letter reached her well. Moat made continually plans to visit her and her family in the months the correspondence took place. As the letters evolved chronologically, his profession of his undying love for...
- Boston's Predicament: Women in the City
August 18, 1889
SUFFOLK, Massachusetts
Migration/Transportation, Urban-Life/Boosterism, WomenAccording to the Boston Daily Globe of August 18, 1889, "Too Good to Lose Are Boston's Surplus Women." This article pertains to a matter of utmost importance, the eligible bachelors of the Wild West heroically discovering a solution for the "marriageable femininity" and the "confoundly delicate matter" of the over 80,000 surplus of women in Massachusetts. Belle Eyre even reports that these men...
- Freedom of the Black Press?
August 20, 1889 to August 27, 1889
DALLAS, Alabama
African-Americans, Health/Death, Politics, Race-Relations, SlaveryIt was just another days' work for two employees of the Alabama Great Southern train company. On the evening of August 27, 1889, the trainmen pulled into the Birmingham station and prepared to disembark. Upon exiting the train, the workers spotted two black men swinging from trees in the near distance. According to sources at The Washington Post, the lynched men were the incendiary...
- A New Reservation for Geronimo
July 7, 1889
SWAIN, North Carolina
Government, Law, Migration/Transportation, Native-AmericansChief Geronimo and his Apaches were forcibly removed from the western territories of the United States. The government relocated them to Mt. Vernon Barracks, Alabama, where they were forced to stay, cramped and confined, until the government decided what to do with them and where to send them next. As Native Americans, they were at the mercy of an unsympathetic government.
Sometime thereafter,...
- Military Inspection and Celebration in Panola
September 27, 1889
CLARENDON, South Carolina
Arts/LeisureOn September 27, 1889, General Bonham came to the Panola Academy to do his inspection of Clarendon's cavalry, consisting of the Hampton Light Dragoons commanded by Captain D.W. Brailsford and the Connor Mounted Rifles led by Captain A.L. Lesesne. By 11 o'clock in the morning, the decorated Panola Academy building was filled with lovely maidens and friends of the company who had come to watch...
- Florida Canal?
January 1, 1889 to 1889
ST JOHNS, Florida
Economy, Politics, Migration/TransportationThe recovering South slowly caught up to the North after the Civil War in means of transportation. In a large a state as Florida, transportation posed a serious problem in the late nineteenth century. However, politicians felt that railroads were a priority since Florida is a peninsula. More than 300 miles of land also created a challenge to connect the Atlantic Ocean and trade from Europe to prosperous...
- Remembering the Confederacy: Helpful or Hurtful?
1889
NOTTOWAY, Virginia
Politics, Race-Relations, WarIn 1889 Thomas D. Houston, formerly a Captain in the Eleventh Virginia Infantry, wrote about a letter a man named Captain James had written to his family after the Battle of Gettysburg. Houston's writing demonstrated that more than ten years after the Civil War, Southerners were still haunted by the devastation and eventual loss they faced during the Civil War. At the same time, they still...
- Journey to Freedom: The Bethany Veney Story
1889
PAGE, Virginia
Runaway Slaves, Children, Freedom, Massachusetts, Women, SlaveryBethany Veney recalls her time as a slave in her autobiography, The Narrative of Bethany Veney: a Slave Woman. Born into slavery Bethany had little memory of her early life, but distinctly remembered being a source of entertainment for her master by singing and dancing. Although Bethany never mentioned feelings of objectification or dehumanization, which Hartman discusses in Scenes...
- Southern Ladies
June 12, 1889
RICHMOND, Virginia
African-Americans, Arts/Leisure, Slavery, WomenIn an 1889 letter to her close friend, Mrs. Hannah Weisiger described her late mother as "one of the noblest & dearest women on earth...so much good...yet so humble...of her good deeds." Throughout the nineteenth century, Southern women were idealized as the moral compass of the family, supposedly gentle and noble in deeds. Even in the latter part of the century, values firmly rooted in the...
- President of Wake Forest University Denounces Participation of his students in Republican Stump-speaking
October 26, 1889
WAKE, North Carolina
Education, PoliticsDespite President Charles E. Taylor's plea, the students of Wake Forest University would not silence their political opinions.On the night of October 26, 1889, a Republican stump-speaking, literally delivering a speech from atop a freshly cut tree stump, occurred half-a-mile from campus. Fifty of Taylor's students attended the stump-speaking, led by Wake County native John Nichols, who was...
- Dam Breaks, Johnstown Floods
May 31, 1889
CAMBRIA, Pennsylvania
highdeath tollOn May 31, 1889 one of the most devastating disasters in Pennsylvania history occurred in Cambria County, starting in the town of St. Michael and ending in Johnstown. The dam of the South Fork of the Little Conemaugh, which created Lake Conemaugh was abandoned by the Alleghany Portage Railroad in 1854. It was then purchased by the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club. They were to maintain the...
- "Victor" is the written account of Victor Hesier's story. He was a survivor of the 1889 Johnstown Flood.
May 31, 1889
CAMBRIA, Pennsylvania
1889 Johnstown Flood, Johnstown Flood SurvivorsImagine being tossed around by the rush of floodwaters, hanging on to a rooftop for dear life while the thunderclap of a massive wave destroys your childhood home; or helplessly watching as those around you are carried off to a watery grave. That is what Victor Heiser, a survivor of the 1889 Johnstown Flood endured. Victor Heiser’s written description of the flood is a chilling account...
- Purging Polls in Virginia's Black Belt
October 31, 1889
SOUTHAMPTON, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Government, Law, Politics, Race-RelationsIn one fell swoop, Democrats in Southampton and Nansemond counties erased over 1,000 black names from the voter registration books, hoping to secure Democratic majorities in previously Republican dominated counties. Looking at Virginia's entire 2 district (heavily African American), which included these Tidewater counties, Democrats appeared to have netted about 4,000 votes, greatly slimming...
- How the Wrong Man Got Liquor
May 22, 1889
OGLETHORPE, Georgia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, LawOne does not usually conceive of alcohol as the traditional gift of mysterious benefactors, yet that is exactly what Jake Culberth received in his depot package one day. An agent roused Culberth from his work to pick up a package which he eventually discovered was full of alcohol Believing it to be the gift of some kind person, Culberth and his friends immediately set forth consuming the package's...
- Mary Evans Thanks Brian Philpot, Her Former Master, for His Sending Money
May, 1889
FREDERICK, Maryland
African-Americans, Church/Religious-Activity, Economy, Race-Relations, WomenMary Evans, living in Knoxville in Frederick County, Maryland, in May 1889, wrote her former master, Brian Philpot, to thank him for his gift of five dollars. She wrote that she did not know how to thank him for his kindness and made sure to write him right away to tell him so. Evans also remarked that she [remained] as ever a servant. She said if he came by, he would see what his gift had done...
- Yellow Fever Strikes Kearney, Mississippi
May 14, 1889
SHELBY, Tennessee
Health/Death, EconomyThe letter to Stephen Duncan, a wealthy cotton and sugar planter in Natchez, was postmarked Kearney, Mississippi and began with a harried excuse. The letter's author, a business associate of Duncan's, apologized for the delay of a trip out West to hire Chinese laborers. Your letter of July 1st [1879] received today the letter hurriedly opened. Had I known where to address you, I should have...
- Reverend Hawley Calls for Baltimore Methodists to Modernize
April 24, 1889
BALTIMORE, Maryland
Church/Religious-ActivityOn April 24, 1889, The Episcopal Methodist, a Baltimore, Maryland newspaper, published an article by the Reverend J. M. Hawley entitled Southern Methodism and the Age, calling for the Methodist Church to reform itself in order to be a success in the modern age. Hawley called the present age a great period for both the Church and the country. The Church, he said, must embrace the age and modernize...
- The Lynching of Scott Baily
April 23, 1889
PITTSYLVANIA, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Health/Death, Race-RelationsOn April 23rd, 1889, ...Scott Baily, colored, made a desperate but unsuccessful attempt to commit an outrage on the person of one of the most prominent young ladies in the village. ; Baily was caught soon afterwards, confessed his crime, and was lynched about midnight.' The ritual act of lynching was used by white Southerners to literally destroy the humanity of the black victim, but...
- Mormons Forced Out of a Georgia County
April, 1889
GLASCOCK, Georgia
Church/Religious-ActivityTwo Glascock County, Georgia residents returned to their home in Gibson, expecting nothing out of the ordinary. Yet on this day in early April 1889, a group of local citizens waited for their arrival. Upon their return, the group strongly advised that the two residents, who happened to be of the Mormon faith, leave immediately. The warning proved effective as the Mormons departed from the area shortly...
- Black Prisoners Taken and Killed
December 28, 1889
BARNWELL, South Carolina
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Migration/Transportation, Race-RelationsAuthorities in Barnwell, South Carolina had arrested and jailed a group of black men, accusing them of the murder of a pair of white men in the area. As the eight suspects sat in their jail cells one night in late December 1889, a group of masked men entered and forcefully removed them from the jail. The masked men took the accused and slaughtered each and every one of them. While the law enforcement...
- Opposition to Freedom
December 31, 1889
ROANOKE, Virginia
African-Americans, Government, Politics, Race-Relations, WarOn the last day of 1889, an editor of the Roanoke Daily Times criticized "the relations of the races," which, he avowed, "do not appear to be at all improved by the election of a Republican president." The editor continued, affirming that black people had "become restless and arrogant in a large measure, and ready at any time to enter on the work of bloodshed and murder." ...
- The Cigar Industry: Florida's Livelihood
January 1, 1890
MONROE, Florida
Agriculture, EconomyAn 1890 article from the Manatee River Journal clearly noted the importance of the cigar industry in Florida. Following the cigar manufacturers' strike in Key West that same year, Florida was forced to recognize cigars as a major agricultural product. The opportunities that the cigar industry offered, as well as the profits, made cigar factories in Florida as valuable as tobacco...
- Georgia Outlaw Escapes from Jail
January 5, 1890
HARRIS, Georgia
Crime/ViolenceMany masked men broke Willie Wallace, the infamous outlaw of Harris County, Georgia, from jail in Hamilton at eight o'clock in the morning. The group of masked men rode quickly into town and disposed of guards on the roads leading to Hamilton. Ten of the masked men remained outside the sheriff's house. The men broke in through the front door of the jail and proceeded to find Wallace's...
- McNeilly Shoots Jenkins in Self-defense
January 8, 1890
MECKLENBURG, North Carolina
Crime/ViolenceOn January 8, 1890, an intoxicated H.O. Jenkins approached J.H. McNeilly, an employee of Jenkins's distillery, with a drawn knife. McNeilly had boarded with the Jenkins's family while also working for them, and had fallen in love with Jenkins's seventeen year old daughter. The teenage girl, however, did not have reciprocal feelings for McNeilly and did not appreciate his advances. ...