Graham, William Alexander
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Knapsack Raleigh Civil War Round Table the Same Rain Falls on Both Friend and Foe
The Knapsack Raleigh Civil War Round Table The same rain falls on both friend and foe. June 24, 2017 Volume 17 Our 196th Meeting Number 6 http://www.raleighcwrt.org June 24 Meeting Features Symposium On Reconstruction in North Carolina The Raleigh Civil War Round Table’s June 2017 NOTE: The symposium will be held at our usual meeting will be a special weekend event featuring meeting place at the N.C. Museum of History but will four well-known authors and historians speaking on run from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Sat., June 24. The reconstruction in North Carolina. event also will cost $30 per person. Federal Occupation of North Carolina Women’s Role in Reconstruction Mark Bradley, staff historian at the Angela Robbins, assistant professor of U.S. Army Center of Military History in history at Meredith College in Raleigh, Washington, D.C., will speak on the will speak on the women’s role in re- federal occupation. Mark is nationally construction. She has also taught at known for his knowledge of the Battle UNC-Greensboro and Wake Forest of Bentonville and the surrender at University. She received her Ph.D. in Bennett Place. He also is an award- U.S. History from UNC-Greensboro in winning author, having written This 2010. Her dissertation research looked Astounding Close: The Road to Bennett Place, Last at strategies used by women in the North Carolina Stand in the Carolinas: The Battle of Bentonville, Piedmont to support themselves and their families in and Bluecoats and Tar Heels: Soldiers and Civilians the unstable post-Civil War economy. -
Stonewall Jackson
AMERICAN CRISIS BIOGRAPHIES STONEWALL JACKSON HENRY ALEXANDER WHITE. A.M.. Ph.D. Author of " Robert E. Lee and the Southern Confederacy," "A History of the United States," etc. PHILADELPHIA GEORGE W. JACOBS & COMPANY PUBLISHERS COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY GEORGE W. JACOBS & COMPANY Published January, 1909 This volume is dedicated to My Wife Fanny Beverley Wellford White PREFACE THE present biography of Stonewall Jackson is based upon an examination of original sources, as far as these are available. The accounts of Jack son s early life and of the development of his per sonal character are drawn, for the most part, from Doctor Eobert L. Dabney s biography and from Jackson s Life and Letters, by Mrs. Jackson. The Official Eecords of the war, of course, constitute the main source of the account here given of Jackson s military operations. Colonel G. F. E. Henderson s Life is an admirable of his career study military ; Doctor Dabney s biography, however, must remain the chief source of our knowledge concerning the personality of the Confederate leader. Written accounts by eye-witnesses, and oral statements made to the writer by participants in Jackson s campaigns, have been of great service in the preparation of this volume. Some of these are mentioned in the partial list of sources given in the bibliography. HENRY ALEXANDER WHITE. Columbia, S. C. CONTENTS CHRONOLOGY 11 I. EARLY YEARS 15 II. AT WEST POINT .... 25 III. THE MEXICAN WAR ... 34 IV. THE VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE 47 V. THE BEGINNING OF WAR . 63 VI. COMMANDER OF VOLUNTEERS AT HARPER S FERRY .. -
Historic Cabarrus Newsmagazine 5
THE NEWSMAGAZINE OF HISTORIC CABARRUS ASSOCIATION, INC. HISTORIC CABARRUS ASSOCIATION,PAST INC. TIMES P.O. Box 966 Winter 2011 Issue No. 5 historiccabarrus.org Concord, NC 28026 TELEPHONE (704) 782-3688 FIND US ON FACEBOOK! This issue’s Cabarrus County During Wartime: highlights The War Between the States include... SPECIAL EXHIBIT OBSERVES THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CIVIL WAR VISIT OUR TWO MUSEUMS IN DOWNTOWN CONCORD: CONCORD MUSEUM Union Street Square Confederate hand grenades among items on display at Concord Museum. 11 Union Street South, Suite 104 Concord, NC 28025 Open Tuesdays through Saturdays, 11 AM until 3 PM CABARRUS COUNTY VETERANS MUSEUM Historic Courthouse New curator gives Concord Museum a 65 Union Street South, First Floor New Concord book, pg. 4. Concord, NC 28025 makeover, pg. 7. Open Mondays through Fridays, 10 AM until 4 PM Free admission. Group tours by appointment. Donations warmly appreciated. Past Times No. 5, Winter 2011 PAST TIMES! PAGE2 Grand opening of the Concord Museum’s “War Between the States” special exhibit, Friday, February Michael Eury, Editor. 11, 2011. Approximately 200 people visited the museum that evening. One hundred and fifty years ago, in early Presented therein is an array of Civil 1861, tensions smoldered between the War-era weapons, uniforms, flags, northern and southern United States over photographs, oil paintings, and other artifacts BOARD OF states’ rights versus federal jurisdiction, revisiting this important era of Southern DIRECTORS westward expansion, and slavery. These history. For a limited time, visitors will be able disagreements gave way to The War to see original Confederate regiment banners R. -
THE NORTH CAROLINA BOOKLET Mrs
J> Vol. XVI JULY, 1916 No. 1 North Carolina Booklet GREAT EVENTS IN 'mm NORTH CAROLINA HISTORY PUBLISHED QUARTERLY BY THE NORTH CAROLINA SOCIETY DAUGHTERS OF THE REVOLUTION RALEIGH, N. C. CONTENTS PAGE. William Alexander Graham 3 By Chief Justice Waxtee Clabk. James Cochran Dobbin 17 By Henry Elliot Shepherd, M.A., LL.D. Selwyn 32 By Violet G. Alexander. An Educational Practice in Colonial North Carolina 39 By Edgar W. Knight. Biographical and Genealogical Memoranda 52 Genealogical Department 59 SINGLE NUMBERS 35 CENTS $1.00 THE YEAR Entered at the Postoffice at Raleigh. N. C, July 15. 1905. under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 — The North GaroHna Booklet Great Events in North Carolina History Volume XVI of The Booklet will be issued quarterly by the North Carolina Society, Daughters of the Revolution, beginning July, 1916. The Booklet will be published in July, October, January, and April, Price $1.00 per year, 35 cents for single copy. Editor : Miss Mary Hilliard Hinton. Biographical Editor: Mrs. E. E. Moffitt. VOLUME XVI. Isaac Shelby : Revolutionary Patriot and Border Hero—Dr. Archi- bald Henderson. An Educational Practice in Colonial North Carolina—Edgar W. Knight. George Selwyn—Miss Violet G. Alexander. Martha McFarlane Bell, a Revolutionary Heroine—Miss Mary Hil- liard Hinton. North Carolinians in the President's Cabinet, Part III : William A. Graham—Chief Justice Walter Clark. Historic Homes, Part VII : The Fountain, the Home of Colonel Davenport—Colonel Edmund Jones. North Carolinians in the President's Cabinet, Part IV : James Cochran Dobbin—Dr. Henry Elliot Shepherd. A History of Rowan County—Dr. -
Barnaby the Society of American Archivists Announces Its 25Th Annual Meeting
Records are the backbone of the modern economy... Fairy Godfathers In fact, records ARE the go along with the economy!... Work for all- times. Everybody Downloaded from http://meridian.allenpress.com/american-archivist/article-pdf/24/3/289/2744215/aarc_24_3_y884l70215jx5172.pdf by guest on 28 September 2021 filing, typing, computing, compiles records— bookkeeping, classifying, card punching, indexing— LT 1>» Holl Smdlcot., IIK, And mines, steelplants, Printing industries! Paper factories, making tiling mills! Forests resounding cases! Speeding them— to the cry of "Timber!"... by rail, ship, highway So, come, let's get on with —to great skyscrapers this red tape... Your age? rising up everywhere to house more records- CROCKfTT JOMIJoJ —Reprinted by permission of The Hall Syndicate, Inc. All rights reserved. BARNABY THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN ARCHIVISTS ANNOUNCES ITS 25TH ANNUAL MEETING KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Downloaded from http://meridian.allenpress.com/american-archivist/article-pdf/24/3/289/2744215/aarc_24_3_y884l70215jx5172.pdf by guest on 28 September 2021 October 5-7, 1961 Headquarters: Continental Hotel nth & Baltimore Local Arrangements Committee Chairman: Philip C. Brooks Director Harry S. Truman Library Independence, Missouri Program Committee Chairman: Karl L. Trever Special Assistant to the Archivist of the United States National Archives and Records Service Washington 25, D. C. The American Archivist Is Pleased To Announce for its October 1961 issue-- A SYMPOSIUM ON RELIGIOUS ARCHIVES Principal United States Depositories • Evolution of Standards Archives of Representative Religions and Denominations Development of Manuals of Procedures Evaluation and Uses it When Ordered in Quantities of Ten or More, This Issue May be Purchased at $2 a Copy. -
Garner, Ncrth Carolina A.B., Pfeiffer College, 1970 a Thesis
'J1ff� ImJ(J'h CAEvLIUA COlJ}./l'I11.'u'I'ICI:.A.L CONV.tJf2ION OF 1835 Boyd Dale Cathey Garner, Ncrth Carolina A.B., Pfeiffer College, 1970 A Thesis Presented to the Gruduete :E'acult,:r of :.he Un:L v,0rsity cf Virginia in Candid8cJ for tha Degree of Master of Arts Corcoran Department of History University of Virgin�.a June 1971 CONTENTS The Paper 1 A. Coming of the Convention. • J_ B. Convention: Race . .15 C. Convention: Representation . .25 D. Convention: Religion . .35 E. Convention: Conclusion . ••50 F. Epilogue. .59 Appendices A. Maps of North Carolina. 63 B. Chart of County Formation . .64 C. Population of North Carolina, 1790-1860 . .65 D. Population of North Carolina in the Twenty-five Counties with the Highest Concentration of Free Negroes, 1830 . .65 E. Slave and White Population Cha�ges in Western North Carolina, 1790-1860 . • .66 F. Votes Tabulations . ..67 G. Directory of Delegates to the Convention of 1835. .68 Bibliography. .79 COMING OF TIIE CONVENTION In 1835 North Carolina revised its constitution. The fifty-nine year old document which underwent modification had been the product of the Revolutionary outpouring of 1776. Like the constitutions of other American states the North Carolina constitution had embodied the Whig idea of "balanced" govern ment.1 Richard Caswell, James Iredell, Samuel Johnston, and Willie Jones, representing all shades of Patriot opinion, had had a hand in shaping it. In the best Whig tradition, property was weighed in a Polybian fashion in the two houses of the General Assembly. Franchised freeholders were required to possess sLable residence and adequate property as an assurance of the voter's character and attachment to the corn.munity. -
Good Old Days? Discovery Tour
e Good Old Days? Discovery Tour Resource Manual A compendium of classroom activities and resource materials to help you prepare for your Discovery Tour Who Was Here in 1860? On the eve of the American Civil War, North Carolina was a rural state with a total population of 992,622. Most citizens had been born in North Carolina and farmed for a living. Less than 1 percent of the state’s population in 1860 was foreign born, and about 70 percent of white families owned no slaves. Nevertheless, African Americans composed approximately one-third of the total population, and the majority were slaves. Few urban commercial centers existed, and Wilmington, the largest town, had fewer than 10,000 citizens. Yeoman Famers The majority of North Carolinians in 1860 were white subsistence farmers who worked small farms, 50 to 100 acres, and owned fewer than 20 slaves. They were more concerned with rainfall, crops, and seasonal changes for planting and harvesting than with national politics. They produced most of what they consumed and relied on the sale of surplus crops for money to buy what they could not grow or make by hand on their farms. These men would constitute the bulk of North Carolina’s army in the coming war. Planters Individuals who owned 20 or more slaves were considered planters. Most North Carolina planters lived in the Coastal Plain and Piedmont regions of the state, where conditions favored large-scale farming. Although they made up a minority, these individuals exercised political influence far greater than their actual number when compared to families with few or no slaves. -
Walter Clark and the Long Progressive Era in North Carolina. (2015) Directed by Dr
KAISER, JOHN JAMES, Ph.D. Judicial Knight Errant: Walter Clark and the Long Progressive Era in North Carolina. (2015) Directed by Dr. Mark Elliott. 277 pp. From 1889-1924 Walter Clark served on the North Carolina Supreme Court. Clark, the son of a wealthy slaveholding eastern North Carolina family, emerged as a force for progressive change in North Carolina law and politics. During Justice Clark’s tenure on the North Carolina Supreme Court (Associate Justice, 1889-1902; Chief Justice 1903-1924) he forged a progressive jurisprudence that defied the traditional perception of the judiciary as a conservative bulwark against reform and instead promoted labor rights, women’s rights, and public regulation. Clark’s often controversial judicial decisions and political positions led to conflict with the state’s railroad interests, textile mills, and even the wealthy Duke family. While Clark’s activism often pushed the limits of acceptable political engagement by a sitting Supreme Court justice, he was continuously reelected to the North Carolina Supreme Court up until his death in 1924. Clark’s judicial and political career provides insight into progressive politics in North Carolina history. Early twentieth century progressives in North Carolina enacted moderate reforms in education, child labor, women’s rights, and utility regulation through the legislature. Yet Chief Justice Clark offers us a popular political figure whose views pushed for much greater reform. Clark, through legal and political means, influenced Supreme Court opinions and legislation that protected North Carolina’s laborers from workplace injury, limited child labor in the industrial workplace, expanded property and voting rights to women in North Carolina, and pushed for active public regulation of private utility companies. -
UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Party Formation in the United States a Dissertation Submitted in Partial Satisfaction of Th
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Party Formation in the United States Adissertationsubmittedinpartialsatisfactionofthe requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science by Darin Dion DeWitt 2013 c Copyright by Darin Dion DeWitt 2013 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Party Formation in the United States by Darin Dion DeWitt Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science University of California, Los Angeles, 2013 Professor Thomas Schwartz, Chair This dissertation is about how political parties formed in the world’s first mass democracy, the United States. I trace the process of party formation from the bottom up. First, I ask: How do individuals become engaged in politics and develop political affiliations? In most states, throughout the antebellum era, the county was the primary unit of political admin- istration and electoral representation. Owing to their small size, contiguity, and economic homogeneity, I expect that each county’s active citizens will form a county-wide governing coalition that organizes and dominates local politics. Second, I ask: Which political actor had incentives to lure county organizations into one coalition? I argue that the institutional rules for electing United States Senators – indirect election by state legislature – induced prospective United States Senators to construct a majority coalition in the state legislature. Drawing on nineteenth century newspapers, I construct a new dataset from the minutes of political meetings in three states between 1820 and 1860. I find that United States Senators created state parties out of homogeneous counties. They encouraged cooperation among county-wide governing coalitions by canvassing annual county political meetings, drafting ii and revising a multi-issue policy platform that had the potential to unite a majority of the state’s county governing coalitions, encouraging individual counties to create county- wide committees of correspondence and vigilance, and, finally, organizing a permanent state central committee and regular state-wide conventions. -
The Extremest Condition of Humanity: Emancipation, Conflict
THE EXTREMEST CONDITION OF HUMANITY: EMANCIPATION, CONFLICT AND PROGRESS IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA, 1865-1880 by STEVEN E. NASH (Under the Direction of John C. Inscoe) ABSTRACT Reconstruction in western North Carolina brings into great relief the disconnection between national policy and local reality that has become a driving force in American historians’ study of their nation’s reconstruction following the Civil War. This project is part of a growing trend that examines southern Reconstruction at the local level. It explores the transformation of western North Carolina’s political culture from a localized emphasis on community autonomy to a blending of local rule by elites mixed with external sources of power. It reveals the complexity beneath the surface of the overarching interpretation of Reconstruction as dominated by the struggle over black freedom. Race and the redefinition of African Americans’ place within the region, the state, and the nation were vital components of the mountain region’s Reconstruction, but due to the smaller black presence it was not the dominating issue. Western North Carolina’s similarities and differences with the plantation belt underscore the diversity and complexity of the postwar period throughout the South. Reconstruction in western Carolina forces scholars to recognize the broader issues of loyalty, industrial development and market integration, and reunification that played critical roles in restoring the United States after the war. At the heart of these issues was the exercise of power of the national state over local communities, white over black highlanders, and between different classes of white mountaineers. The political culture of the western counties changed because of the expansion of federal power in the form of tax collectors, soldiers, and conscription officials during the Civil War. -
National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. 1. Name of Property Historic name: _Appomattox Court House ______________ _____ Other names/site number: _ Appomattox Court House National Historical Park __________ Name of related multiple property listing : __N/A_________________________________________________________ (Enter "N/A" if property is not part of a multiple property listing ____________________________________________________________________________ 2. Location Street & number: _ Appomattox Court House National Historical Park ________________ City or town: _Appomattox________ State: _Virginia______ County: _Appomattox_____ Not For Publication: Vicinity: ___________________________________________________ _________________________ 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this X nomination ___ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation -
Lee's Retreat Map Side
618 LYNCHBURG JA HIGH BRIDGE TRAIL SAILOR’S CREEK PETERSBURG M Surrender of Gen. Ewell’s Corps at 636 95 E STATE PARK BATTLEFIELD STATE PARK 1 Packet Boat S 29 Sailor’s Creek, by Alfred R. Waud. Holt’s 301 501 501 Marshall R Business I 617 Corner R V To Culpeper IV E 36 Petersburg ER M R O R ST. National N Hillsman House South Side Station RIVE . T T Cumberland K S R AN Battlefield D J B . A Point of Church M 36 ES T. T D S Honor O OL Old Court House W N R J Blandford Museum D. High Monument Petersburg Civil War 657 A Campbell’s Church The Confederate Lynchburg Bridge M Visitor Center 45 ES Bridge Cemetery R N ST. Ewell’s L NGTO it I 522 ASHI C t W RA l V T D. Surrender e ER ER R T. R 501 Fort McCausland R 1 HE S D IVE 620 S WYT First Battle . R S a Lee’s Last 460 29 Civil War Hospitals Y Business i C Marshall’s l A of Petersburg o Bivouac 460 M 221 Business Crossroads r O ’ Derwent R s E . HAMR S A D D R . Spring Hill Cemetery C G T FARMVILLE R . Fort Early r 711 288 X e A 460 F I e L k A 29 H Lee’s Retreat Driving Route 460 POWHATAN Business 56 Huguenot Buckingham 301 95 Wilson-Kautz Raid Driving Route Sandusky 29 600 617 620 Powhatan Springs Business 128 Court House B 15 A Court House Y To Lexington L Alternate Wilson-Kautz Raid Driving Route O 501 R 85 ’ S 460 629 45 Lee’s Retreat Site L Quaker 60 60 60 A N E Wilson-Kautz Raid Site Meeting House OX T RD .