Episodes Around: 18950612 to 18950614
- Ida B. Wells Writes and Releases Book About Lynching in the South
1895
WASHINGTON, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsThree years prior to the release of A Red Record, Ida B.Wells was forced out of her home in Memphis, Tennessee and into Northern exile by her campaign against lynching. The white Northern press excluded most African American writers, so Wells was forced to create new arguments and tactics. In an effort to attract attention to the plight of blacks, Wells attacked white fears of declining manliness...
- Taxes and Their Uses
1895
WESTMORELAND, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Economy, Education, Government, PoliticsIn 1895 Mr. Thomas Brown paid his taxes to S.B. Hardwick, who was the treasurer of Westmoreland County, Virginia at that time. During that time, everyone had to pay one dollar to the state and fifty cents to the county per head. Taxes were based on every one hundred dollars worth of property. For example, it was thirty cents for state tax, ten cents for state school tax, and fifteen cents for road...
- Durham Handbook Reveals Thoughts on Local African Americans
1895 to 1896
DURHAM, North Carolina
African-Americans, Education, Government, Law, Politics, Race-RelationsThe Educator Company, comprised of a group of people dedicated to the advancement and prosperity of their towns, released a Handbook of Durham County in 1895. In the introduction, the authors stated that their intention was to give people seeking a new home a brief description of the area and the advantages it offers as one of the foremost cities of the South. Throughout the book, they gave detailed...
- Growing Violence in the South between Blacks and Whites
June, 1895
LUNENBERG, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsLucy Pollard's dead body laid in the grass brutally mutilated by an ax on the sunny June afternoon in 1895. Immediately upon discovery that evening by her husband, Edward Pollard, a black farmhand named Soloman Marable was arrested for the murder along three black women of the crime - Mary Abernathy, Mary Barnes, and Pokey Barnes. Edward Pollard of Lunenburg County, Virginia was a wealthy farmer...
- Convention of Free Silver Supporters
June 12, 1895 to June 14, 1895
SHELBY, Tennessee
EconomyAfter the Civil War, silver reserves were discovered in the Western United States. Free silver advocates were people who advocated the Federal Government to allow silver to be minted at 1 per troy ounce as opposed to the gold standard which valued gold at 20 per troy ounce. The result of introducing silver into the market would have been an increase in money supply and inflation. Those who backed...