Episodes Nearest to December 27, 1900: 1 through 25 of 25
- A New Courthouse
December 27, 1900
AUGUSTA, Virginia
Government, Law, Politics, Urban-Life/BoosterismOn December 27, 1900, Staunton, the county seat of Augusta County, laid the cornerstone for its new courthouse. Most of the city attended the ceremony, which was complete with an unveiling of the stone and speeches by prominent local lawyers, clerks, and judges. They spoke of historical events and the importance of the new courthouse. To signify this step towards the future, they made the cornerstone...
- Convicts Sent to Work on Plantations
December 4, 1900
WEST FELICIANA, Louisiana
African-Americans, Agriculture, EconomyIn December of 1900, the Board of Control of the Louisiana State Penitentiary held a meeting in which they decided to set aside two immense plantations in West Feliciana and Iberia Parish for convicts to work. Cotton would be grown on the West Feliciana plantation, while sugar would be grown on the one in Iberia Parish. Approximately five hundred workers were expected to work on these plantations,...
- 1900 Elections
October 26, 1900
AUGUSTA, Virginia
African-Americans, Politics, Race-RelationsOne week before the November 1900 presidential elections, the Staunton Spectator and Vindicator gave its readers a public forum for their political opinions. In the local section, no less than nine anonymous editorials gave the citizens their neighbors' opinions concerning the election. Two in particular mentioned Roosevelt and his relationship with the negro. The first included the...
- African American Vote Eliminated in Louisiana
October 19, 1900
ST CHARLES, Louisiana
African-Americans, Government, Law, Politics, Race-RelationsIn October of 1900 the African Americans of Louisiana did not vote. The newly implemented Poll Tax Qualifications eliminated their ability to do so. The total amount of white men that registered to vote was 102,723 against only 1,147 registered African American men. What was true of the state as a whole was equally true of individual parishes, as well. Fifteen parishes reported less than ten African...
- Wright Hall
March, 1901 to 1901
Gratiot, Michigan
Buildings - Wright Hall, Alma CollegeWright Hall is dedicated to Ammi Wright, the local businessman who donated the original thirty acres of land on which Alma College is located. In early 1900, Mr. Wright donated more land to the college, including a block and a half located on the south side of Superior Street, directly across from the campus. Mr. Wright wished for new buildings to be erected on this land, specifically a new dormitory.
Construction...
- The Galveston Hurricane of 1900
September 8, 1900 to September 18, 1900
GALVESTON, Texas
Health/Death, EconomyDeath, damage, extreme destruction - these were the results the city of Galveston, Texas had to face in the wake of the hurricane of 1900. On September 18 of that year, Joseph Hawley, a railroad executive in Galveston, wrote to his wife and daughter to share details of the ruin caused by the hurricane that hit the coastal region 10 days earlier. While Hawley sent news that their immediate family...
- Hurricane Creates Chaos and Damage along the Gulf Coast and Texas
September 8, 1900
Galveston, Texas
Natural Disaster, HurricaneThe horrific storm approached Galveston, Texas, with a fury and strong winds. The 20 foot wave rushed into the bay and ravished the town of 30,000 people. Trees were torn from their roots, people drowned from the rushing waters, and thousands of homes were destroyed. The mass of the storm was the worst that had been known thus far. The chaos that erupted from this massive hurricane would change...
- Cluster Springs Academy
1900
HALIFAX, Virginia
Arts/Leisure, Education, Government, PoliticsAwaiting the click of the camera, the 25 boys gathered around the porch laughing and talking. Some were joking and kidding around while others waited seriously with thoughts of their impending studies for the night. Many of the boys clutched baseball bats, gloves, and catcher's masks in anticipation of baseball practice later that afternoon. On the back of the keepsake photograph, someone had...
- America Experiments with Medicine
1900
New York, New York
diet, Medicine/Health, Health, GrahamWith the idea that America was the new Promised Land, many Americans were open to everything new including ideas on health. Diet, nutrition and wellness were topics of debate, often with men claiming to have the latest and greatest cure-all remedy.
Reverend Sylvester Graham was an advocate for healthful living. He introduced a restrictive diet excluding meat, butter, coffee, tea and...
- Maddens Kept in Poverty
1901
CULPEPER, Virginia
Race-RelationsBy the end of the nineteenth century, the African American Madden family had lived in Culpeper for generations. The Maddens long tenure in the area allowed them to become involved in various aspects of the community. The family relied heavily on their farm, known as Madden Farm, for sustenance. However, during the 1890s, both Thomas Madden and his wife Landonia Stokes supplemented their meager income...
- A Race War Results in Murder
June 10, 1900
WEST BATON ROUG, Louisiana
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsIn June of 1900, a young white man by the name of Marler was murdered by a black man, Pritchard, in West Baton Rouge, Louisiana. After Pritchard killed Marler, he returned to shoot the dead body repeatedly. The citizens of the parish were infuriated by the situation. Pritchard fled to the swamps. However, other black men had taken up the quarrel for him, and a conflict took place between armed white...
- Industrial Education for Boys in Alabama
May 10, 1900
MONTGOMERY, Alabama
African-Americans, Education, Law, PoliticsThe stage was set; the town was ready. The conference on race relations to be held in Montgomery, Alabama was a highly anticipated event. The political affair would bring to town many of the nation's finest orators and most distinguished authorities on the subject of race. On May 8, 1900, the Montgomery Auditorium hosted the conference, which included various speeches on racial issues from greater...
- The Interurban Railroad of California
October 18, 1901
Santa Clara, California
Urban-Life/Boosterism, Paul Shoup, Railroad, TransportationThe Southern Pacific Railroad Company Traffic Department announced on October 16, 1901, that Paul Shoup would be replacing Thomas A. Graham as division freight and passenger agent with jurisdictions south of San Francisco, Oakland, and north of Santa Barbara, with his headquarters in San Jose. J.C Stubbs, Traffic Director; William Sproule, freight traffic manager and E.O McCormick, passenger traffic...
- Golf in Florida
February 26, 1900
BREVARD, Florida
Arts/LeisureFlorida was booming at the turn of the century. In 1907 the Florida governor pointed out the population increased 16.4 percent from 1900 to 1905. Even more impressive, property value increased 45.5 percent in this same period. The economy was thriving and Florida used the surplus to fund new legislation that involved creating an arsenal of state troops, restricting child labor, building good railroads,...
- Prohibition Throughout Time
January 30, 1900
Albany, New York
Prohibition, Temperance MovementIn 1861, the Boston Temperance Alliance exclaimed that "alcohol in the living body [was] not a servant or a friend, but a disturber, a foe; in a single word,...a narcotic poison." The idea of prohibition has been around since colonial times, spear-headed by a man named Dr. Benjamin Rush who argued in 1784 that excessive alcohol consumption was harmful to both the human body and mind. These ideas...
- Kentucky Governor Election
December, 1899 to February 3, 1900
FAYETTE, Kentucky
Crime/ViolenceWilliam Goebel won the Democratic party's nomination in December, 1899 for Governor of Kentucky. In light of the fact that the Democratic party had previously been a Confederate dominated party, it was unusual for the Pennsylvanian to win the nomination. His following was mainly composed of young democrats. His campaign was extremely ambitious and well organized. He stood for controlling...
- California Oranges in Alabama
January 1, 1900
JEFFERSON, Alabama
Agriculture, Economy, Migration/TransportationWas the California fruit market ripe for expansion? Horticulturist, W. G. Fraser spent four weeks in the South during the winter of 1900 testing a new market for Californian oranges. Upon returning to California he reported to the Los Angeles Daily Times, The result of my trip was most satisfactory. I found a very active demand for California fruit... Fraser attributed this demand to the...
- 100th Anniversary of the Death of George Washington
December 14, 1899
Washington City, District of Columbia
Church/Religious-ActivityGeorge Washington was an important figure in the South in the 1900s, as he himself was a southerner from Virginia. After the Confederacy seceded from the Union and created the Constitution of the confederacy they turned to Washington as a symbol of their patriotism. An image of Washington was put on the seal of the Confederacy and on a postage stamp suggesting that the Confederacy, not the Union,...
- Murder of Milton Seaton
November 25, 1899
PITTSYLVANIA, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Race-RelationsThe prevalence of homicide in the south increased greatly in the second half of the nineteenth century. Manslaughter, murder, and mutilation took the place of duels in the old south. Violence in Virginia became increasingly commonplace, especially in rural areas. Descriptions of black men on wanted posters reflected racial prejudice in the south.<br /><br />Harrison Thompson was a...
- Meeting of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
November, 1899
HENRICO, Virginia
Church/Religious-ActivityThe United Daughters of the Confederacy was founded in 1895 in Atlanta, Georgia. Southern women integrated religion with the promotion of the Lost Cause. They often closed letters with, Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet. Lest we forget. Lest we forget'. Monuments constructed under their supervision were mostly of armed Confederate soldiers facing the north, and were placed in public...
- A Letter from Italy to Savannah, Georgia
November, 1899
CHATHAM, Georgia
Migration/Transportation, WomenPeople in the United States and around the world began to utilize the newly developed railroad system during the nineteenth century. People shipped numerous items by means of the railroad. Southern natives such as Phoebe Yates-Levy Pember, a native of Savannah, Georgia also utilized the new system. Pember spent the years 1895-1899 traveling around Europe. In 1899 she sent home to Savannah a package...
- Water Made into Nicety on Paris Mountain
November 1, 1899
GREENVILLE, South Carolina
African-Americans, Economy, Race-RelationsWater is a necessity; however, white southerners knew that indoor plumbing was only a nicety. As the white administrators of the Paris Mountain Water Company drafted new rules of their newly acquired waterworks, they established regulations to prevent or oppress most African Americans in their struggle for survival in the post-Reconstruction era southern United States. For example, as a newly reunited...
- Lost and Found
August 31, 1899 to 1899
HINDS, Mississippi
Migration/Transportation, WarOn August 31 of 1899, a brief letter from E.B. Hill, Telegraph Editor of the Detroit Journal, was published in the Jackson Weekly Clarion Ledger. Mr. Hill, it appeared, had inherited a Civil War era relic from his father, who had received it from a member of a troop of Michigan cavalry. The relic itself was an ornamental Bowieknife with a six-inch blade, horn handle, German silver mounted. The sheath...
- Longshoreman Strike
August 31, 1899 to 1899
NORFOLK CITY, Virginia
African-Americans, EconomyBlack members of the International Longshoremen's Association quit work until their demand that the United States Shipping Company at Newport News fired all non-union white men. On August 31, 1899, the unofficial strike of the black men disrupted the handling and loading of ships in the Warwick County port. However, within one day, the shipping company had obtained nearly one hundred white men...
- Southern Industrial Convention
October 19, 1899
MADISON, Alabama
Economy, Urban-Life/BoosterismThe Huntsville chamber of commerce called for the Southern Industrial Convention to discuss southern industrial conditions. The convention was attended by all southern states. The convention lasted for six days allotting time for the discussion of the industrial condition of each state individually. Booker T. Washington spoke on the impact of racial relations on southern industry, and Senator...