Episodes Around: 18920718 to 18920730
- Madison, Roanoke, and Walton County School Boards Attempt to Establish a High School
August 21, 1891 to August, 1893
ROANOKE, Virginia
EducationOn August 21, 1891, a group of citizens from counties surrounding Smithville, Virginia came before the Madison, Roanoke, and Walton County School Boards to ask that a high school to be established in the town. The citizens had decided they could only afford to spend 250, so they needed additional money from the school funds in each district. At first, the task was deemed as impossible because...
- Garza War (or Tin Horn War)
September 15, 1891 to January 21, 1893
WEBB, Texas
Crime/Violence, WarOn September 15, 1891, Mexican Catarino Garza led twenty-six armed men across the Rio Grande in an attempt at a Texas-based revolution against the Mexican regime of Porfirio Diaz. Thus began a series of disturbances known as the Garza War or the Tin Horn War in which Garza recruited rebels to fight against the Mexican government by launching attacks from across the border in Texas. In this way...
- Baylee, the Democrat from Eastville
1892
NORTHAMPTON, Virginia
African-Americans, Politics, Race-RelationsBaylee was a Democrat from Eastville, a town in Virginia's Eastern Shore. Baylee became a Democrat after an Eastern Shore county chairman approached him about an upcoming election. Eastville, with its sizable black population, had voted Republican in recent years. Democrats knew that wooing black voters with their often racist platform was difficult. One thing worked to the Democrats' advantage:...
- Race Relations Turn Violent
1892
MADISON, Florida
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsIn less than thirty years following the Civil War and the Emancipation Proclamation, Florida became host to a violent flare up of racial tensions between a white man and a black man in Madison, Florida. The United States of America was one of the few major players in the world economy that still had a firmly intact system that subjugated a race by the late nineteenth century. However, the race lines...
- Hallowell Praises Black Soldiers
1892
EAST BATON ROUG, Louisiana
Nashville, Soldier, African-AmericansSince 1865 the importance of the black soldiers fighting in the Civil War for the Union has not been disputed, whether it be freed slaves or fugitive slaves. Without a doubt the black soldiers that fought helped the Union immensely, absorbing significant losses while doing so. Part of the success resulted from the way that black soldiers were treated. According to Norwood P. Hallowell, the black...
- The Washington Post reports on the Homestead Strike
June 30, 1892 to November 20, 1892
Washington City, District of Columbia
Crime/Violence, Health/Death, EconomyThe Homestead Strike was a series of labor confrontations that occurred for nearly five months in 1892 in Homestead, Pennsylvania. On June 30, 1892, a three-year contract with the National Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers expired. The Carnegie Steel Company, managed at this time by Henry Clay Frick, attempted to cut the wages of the skilled steel workers. When the workers refused...
- The Alice Mitchell Trial
July 18, 1892 to July 30, 1892
SHELBY, Tennessee
Crime/Violence, Health/DeathOn January 25, 1892, Alice Mitchell cut the throat of Freda Ward, her lover, in Memphis, TN. The trial of Alice Mitchell began in Memphis on July 18. Her defense entered a plea of present insanity. Many love letters between Freda and Alice were read at the trial, and Lillie Johnson testified that they had plans to elope. A medical expert believed that Alice Mitchell was a sexual pervert.<br...