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Granville Brian Chetwynd-Staplyton
Granville Brian Chetwynd-Staplyton How can I make you acquainted, I wonder? Above middle height, [5’8”] straight and square, fair hair, blue eyes, small fair moustache, a handsome face with a grave expression and altogether of an aristocratic appearance, and no wonder, for this family trace their descent from before the Conquest. He is rather quiet to outsiders but I don't find him so. I think we are something alike in some things, for instance most people think us both very reserved, excepting those who know us best. [Elizabeth Chetwynd- Stapylton to her sister March 1, 1886] It stretches one’s mind to believe that the mastermind behind the development of an English Colony near the western border of present Lake County, Florida in early 1882, was an ambitious, energetic 23 year-old English entrepreneur and a pioneer of dogged determination, Granville Brian Chetwynd-Stapylton. Granville Brian Chetwynd-Stapylton Stapylton, the youngest of four children, was born December 11, 1858, to William and Elizabeth Briscoe Tritton Chetwynd-Stapylton. His father was then the vicar of Old Malden Church, also known as St. John the Baptist Church, Surrey, London, England. Given the surname it should come as no surprise that this family is found in Burke's Peerage, Barontage and Knightage , a major royal, aristocratic and historical reference book. Granville descends from Sir Robert Constable, Knight of Flamborough (1423-1480). Although his father was an Oxford graduate Granville chose Haileybury College where, as an honor student, his interests were drama and geology. He is enumerated as a commercial clerk to a colonial broker in London in the 1881 English census along with his father, his sister Ella, a brother Frederick, a cook, a parlourmaid, a housemaid and a coachman. -
Table of Contents
Table of Contents Welcome from the Dais ……………………………………………………………………… 1 Introduction …………………………………………………………………………………… 2 Background Information ……………………………………………………………………… 3 The Golden Age of Piracy ……………………………………………………………… 3 A Pirate’s Life for Me …………………………………………………………………… 4 The True Pirates ………………………………………………………………………… 4 Pirate Values …………………………………………………………………………… 5 A History of Nassau ……………………………………………………………………… 5 Woodes Rogers ………………………………………………………………………… 8 Outline of Topics ……………………………………………………………………………… 9 Topic One: Fortification of Nassau …………………………………………………… 9 Topic Two: Expulsion of the British Threat …………………………………………… 9 Topic Three: Ensuring the Future of Piracy in the Caribbean ………………………… 10 Character Guides …………………………………………………………………………… 11 Committee Mechanics ……………………………………………………………………… 16 Bibliography ………………………………………………………………………………… 18 1 Welcome from the Dais Dear delegates, My name is Elizabeth Bobbitt, and it is my pleasure to be serving as your director for The Republic of Pirates committee. In this committee, we will be looking at the Golden Age of Piracy, a period of history that has captured the imaginations of writers and filmmakers for decades. People have long been enthralled by the swashbuckling tales of pirates, their fame multiplied by famous books and movies such as Treasure Island, Pirates of the Caribbean, and Peter Pan. But more often than not, these portrayals have been misrepresentations, leading to a multitude of inaccuracies regarding pirates and their lifestyle. This committee seeks to change this. In the late 1710s, nearly all pirates in the Caribbean operated out of the town of Nassau, on the Bahamian island of New Providence. From there, they ravaged shipping lanes and terrorized the Caribbean’s law-abiding citizens, striking fear even into the hearts of the world’s most powerful empires. Eventually, the British had enough, and sent a man to rectify the situation — Woodes Rogers. In just a short while, Rogers was able to oust most of the pirates from Nassau, converting it back into a lawful British colony. -
Ten Years of Winter: the Cold Decade and Environmental
TEN YEARS OF WINTER: THE COLD DECADE AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONSCIOUSNESS IN THE EARLY 19 TH CENTURY by MICHAEL SEAN MUNGER A DISSERTATION Presented to the Department of History and the Graduate School of the University of Oregon in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy June 2017 DISSERTATION APPROVAL PAGE Student: Michael Sean Munger Title: Ten Years of Winter: The Cold Decade and Environmental Consciousness in the Early 19 th Century This dissertation has been accepted and approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in the Department of History by: Matthew Dennis Chair Lindsay Braun Core Member Marsha Weisiger Core Member Mark Carey Institutional Representative and Scott L. Pratt Dean of the Graduate School Original approval signatures are on file with the University of Oregon Graduate School. Degree awarded June 2017 ii © 2017 Michael Sean Munger iii DISSERTATION ABSTRACT Michael Sean Munger Doctor of Philosophy Department of History June 2017 Title: Ten Years of Winter: The Cold Decade and Environmental Consciousness in the Early 19 th Century Two volcanic eruptions in 1809 and 1815 shrouded the earth in sulfur dioxide and triggered a series of weather and climate anomalies manifesting themselves between 1810 and 1819, a period that scientists have termed the “Cold Decade.” People who lived during the Cold Decade appreciated its anomalies through direct experience, and they employed a number of cognitive and analytical tools to try to construct the environmental worlds in which they lived. Environmental consciousness in the early 19 th century commonly operated on two interrelated layers. -
Mark Howard Long Instructor University of Central Florida 100 Weldon Blvd., PC #3013 Sanford, FL 32773 407.708.2816 ______
Mark Howard Long Instructor University of Central Florida 100 Weldon Blvd., PC #3013 Sanford, FL 32773 407.708.2816 ____________________________________________________________ AFFILIATION Instructor, University of Central Florida, History Department. PROFESSIONAL FEILDS U. S. History: American South, Frontier/Borderlands, Maritime, Labor, Florida. EDUCATION 2007 Ph. D. Loyola University, Chicago. History 2005 M.A. Loyola University, Chicago. History 1984 B.A., Auburn University. Political Science. RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION Book Chapters: “„A Decidedly Mutinous Spirit‟: The „Labor Problem‟ in the Postbellum South as an Exercise of Free Labor; a Case Study of Sanford, Florida;” in Florida’s Labor and Working Class Past: Three Centuries of Work in the Sunshine State, eds. Melanie Shell-Weiss and Robert Cassanello, The University Press of Florida, 2008. Reviews: "Tampa Bay History Center." Journal of American History (June 2010). “History for the Twenty First Century: The 114th Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association.” International Labor and Working Class History No. 58, Fall 2000. Encyclopedia Entries: “Gurnee, IL,” entry for the Encyclopedia of Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2004. Conference Papers: "'Another Kind of Slavery': Maritime Mobility and Unfree Labor in a New South Context," Southern Historical Association, October 2011 (forthcoming). "Banana Republic or Margaritaville?: Jimmy Buffett's Greater Caribbean as a Libidinal Space," Sea Music Symposium, Mystic Seaport, June 2011. "Surfing Florida: A Public History," National Council of Public History, April 2011. "Reconstruction/Re-creation/Recreation: Remaking Florida's Postbellum Frontier," Western Historical Association, October 2010. "A Cautionary Tale: Monocrop Agriculture and Development in Florida in the Postbellum Period," Agricultural History Society, June 2010. "Creating the Sunshine State: Maritime Tourism in Florida in the Nineteenth Century," Maritime in the Humanities, October 2009. -
Page 1 of 279 FLORIDA LRC DECISIONS
FLORIDA LRC DECISIONS. January 01, 2012 to Date 2019/06/19 TITLE / EDITION OR ISSUE / AUTHOR OR EDITOR ACTION RULE MEETING (Titles beginning with "A", "An", or "The" will be listed according to the (Rejected / AUTH. DATE second/next word in title.) Approved) (Rejectio (YYYY/MM/DD) ns) 10 DAI THOU TUONG TRUNG QUAC. BY DONG VAN. REJECTED 3D 2017/07/06 10 DAI VAN HAO TRUNG QUOC. PUBLISHER NHA XUAT BAN VAN HOC. REJECTED 3D 2017/07/06 10 POWER REPORTS. SUPPLEMENT TO MEN'S HEALTH REJECTED 3IJ 2013/03/28 10 WORST PSYCHOPATHS: THE MOST DEPRAVED KILLERS IN HISTORY. BY VICTOR REJECTED 3M 2017/06/01 MCQUEEN. 100 + YEARS OF CASE LAW PROVIDING RIGHTS TO TRAVEL ON ROADS WITHOUT A APPROVED 2018/08/09 LICENSE. 100 AMAZING FACTS ABOUT THE NEGRO. BY J. A. ROGERS. APPROVED 2015/10/14 100 BEST SOLITAIRE GAMES. BY SLOANE LEE, ETAL REJECTED 3M 2013/07/17 100 CARD GAMES FOR ALL THE FAMILY. BY JEREMY HARWOOD. REJECTED 3M 2016/06/22 100 COOL MUSHROOMS. BY MICHAEL KUO & ANDY METHVEN. REJECTED 3C 2019/02/06 100 DEADLY SKILLS SURVIVAL EDITION. BY CLINT EVERSON, NAVEL SEAL, RET. REJECTED 3M 2018/09/12 100 HOT AND SEXY STORIES. BY ANTONIA ALLUPATO. © 2012. APPROVED 2014/12/17 100 HOT SEX POSITIONS. BY TRACEY COX. REJECTED 3I 3J 2014/12/17 100 MOST INFAMOUS CRIMINALS. BY JO DURDEN SMITH. APPROVED 2019/01/09 100 NO- EQUIPMENT WORKOUTS. BY NEILA REY. REJECTED 3M 2018/03/21 100 WAYS TO WIN A TEN-SPOT. BY PAUL ZENON REJECTED 3E, 3M 2015/09/09 1000 BIKER TATTOOS. -
The Golden Age of Piracy Slideshow
Golden Age of Piracy Golden Age of Piracy Buccaneering Age: 1650s - 1714 Buccaneers were early Privateers up to the end of the War of Spanish Succession Bases: Jamaica and Tortuga – Morgan, Kidd, Dampier THE GOLDEN AGE: 1715 to 1725 Leftovers from the war with no employment The age of history’s most famous pirates What makes it a Golden Age? 1. A time when democratic rebels thieves assumed sea power (through denial of the sea) over the four largest naval powers in the world - Britain, France, Spain, Netherlands 2. A true democracy • The only pure democracy in the Western World at the time • Captains are elected at a council of war • All had equal representation • Some ships went through 13 capts in 2 yrs • Capt had authority only in time of battle • Crews voted on where the ship went and what it did • Crews shared profit equally • Real social & political revolutionaries Pirate or Privateer? •Privateers were licensed by a government in times of war to attack and enemy’s commercial shipping – the license was called a Letter of Marque •The crew/owner kept a portion of what they captured, the government also got a share •Best way to make war at sea with a limited naval force •With a Letter of Marque you couldn’t be hanged as a pirate Letter of Marque for William Dampier in the St. George October 13, 1702 The National Archives of the UK http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/pathways/blackhisto ry/journeys/voyage_html/docs/marque_stgeorge.htm (Transcript in Slide 57) The end of the War of Spanish Succession = the end of Privateering • Since 1701 -
Heritage Matters
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE MATTERS NEWS OF THE NATION'S DIVERSE CULTURAL HERITAGE Hovenweep National Monument and Hopi Foundation Archeological Documentation and Preservation Workshop INSIDE THIS ISSUE Eric J. Brunnemann and preservation. The fourth week the Southeast Utah Group, which Southeast Utah Group, National Park Service Conferences was dedicated to meeting with includes Hovenweep National Mon planned, p. 23 Hopi tribal elders to review the ument, entered into a Cooperative Beginning October 15, 2001 and Contributors program and tour the sites that Agreement with the Hopi Found sought for research continuing to November 9, 2001, were documented and stabilized. ation, a 501(c)(3) organization. project p. 23 Vanishing Treasures archeologists, The four-week long program of The Vanishing Treasures masonry specialists, photographers, Save America's on-site documentation, stabiliza Initiative, "a grass-roots program Treasures grants, p. 9 computer specialists, and the entire tion, and consultation is the result designed to address both the devas Hovenweep National Monument National Register of two parallel rehabilitation tating destruction of...irreplaceable listings, p. 11 staff, participated in a workshop programs: the NPS Vanishing historic and prehistoric structures with Hopi masonry specialists from Publications Treasures Initiative, and the Hopi as well as the impending loss of of note, p. 22 Greasewood, Coyote, and Reed Foundation Clan House Restor preservation expertise," was Clans, under the guidance of Hopi ation Program. In early 2000, SEE HOPI, PAGE 3 Reed Clan Mother Eilene Ran the parks and monuments of dolph from Bacavi. This workshop marked the beginning of a mutual assistance program with the Hopi Foundation, Hopi Nation, and National Park Service. -
September 19 – International Talk Like a Pirate Day – Drill
September 19 – International Talk Like a Pirate Day – Drill “This is a Drill” Type of Event: Civil Disturbance: Invasion of pirates ---Blackbeard (and his crew – Black Ceaser, Israel Hands, Lieutenant Richards), Zheng Yi Sao, Jean Lafitte, Micajah and Wiley Harpe Pirates Duration of exercise: Wednesday, Sept 19 from 0000 to2400 (12:00am to 11:59pm) You may participate any time after that if you wish Place of occurrence: The Southeast Texas Region Objective: The goal of a drill is to request resources through WebEOC following your processes to fight against the Pirates and push them back into the sea so they never return. Participants: Sentinels and their users District Coordinators TDEM Critical Information Systems (CIS) SOC Methodology: WebEOC Event and STAR board Active Incident Name: Exercise 09/19/2018 International Talk Like Pirate Drill Exercise Directors: Black Dollie Winn (Janette Walker) , 832-690-8765 Thiefin’ Jackie Sneed (Jennifer Suter) Emergency Scenario: The above pirate have risen from their grave and traveled to the Gulf Coast during Tuesday night (9/18) and have already invaded the coastal counties (Matagorda, Brazoria, Galveston, and Chambers) and are working their way to the most northern counties (Walker, Colorado, Austin, Sabine). Each county they invade, they commandeer the liquor and supply chain stores as well as EOCs. Inject: AVAST Ye!! Ye land lovers, we gentleman o' fortunes be havin' risen from Davy Jones` Locker an' be are invadin' yer area an' plan t' commandeer all yer resources an' government land. We be tired o' th' water an' be movin' inland. We be havin' already invaded th' coastal counties an' movin' up t' th' northern counties. -
Reminiscences of Early Plant Introduction Work in South Florida
Proc. Fla. State Hort. Soc. 51:11-33. 1938. REMINISCENCES OF EARLY PLANT INTRODUCTION WORK IN SOUTH FLORIDA DR. DAVID FAIRCHILD Coconut Grove To look back fifty years and put into words anything but tiny pictures of one's life is almost an impossible undertaking. The difficulty of the task is not, as I once thought it would be, made lighter by accumulations of written notes and photographs. Here in The Kampong the shelves are filled with albums and travel reports dating back to the earliest days of my visits to Florida. Hundreds of tiny red note books record the events of each week. The printed Inventories of Plant Introductions cover an entire shelf and in them I can find the stories of over 100,000 shipments of seeds or plants which since 1898 have come into America to contribute their part towards the making of a different agriculture from that of the Old World which traces its history back to the men and women of the Stone Age. What he was like we do not exactly know—the man and his wife who came from somewhere across the land bridge which connected Asia and America, but we do know that he brought with him his dog, for dog skeletons are mingled with his own in the caves and other remains of his early occupancy of this continent. He was a hunter. That he did not bring seeds of any cultivated plants is probable, for when Columbus landed there were nowhere to be found cultivated crops such as had come down through the ages of European history and were the basis of European cultures such as rice, wheat, barley, etc. -
UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Octopus’s Garden: Railroads, Citrus Agriculture, and the Emergence of Southern California Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7rr152hg Author Jenkins, Benjamin Publication Date 2016 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 4.0 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE The Octopus’s Garden: Railroads, Citrus Agriculture, and the Emergence of Southern California A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History by Benjamin Thomas Jenkins June 2016 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Clifford E. Trafzer, Chairperson Dr. Larry E. Burgess Dr. Rebecca Kugel Copyright by Benjamin Thomas Jenkins 2016 The Dissertation of Benjamin Thomas Jenkins is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements Upon reflection, writing a dissertation seems not unlike summiting Mount Everest. The thrill of the challenge empowers the would-be climber at first, but soon the sheer enormity of the task overwhelms the senses. Only with the guidance of intellectual, emotional, and spiritual supporters does one have any hope of reaching the dissertation’s peak. Countless historians have written about agriculture and transportation in the American West, and many have focused specifically on topics pertaining to this study. Richard Orsi’s Sunset Limited, William Deverell’s Railroad Crossing, Donovan Hofsommer’s Southern Pacific, Ward McAfee’s California’s Railroad Era, and Keith Bryant’s History of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway have all shaped my understanding of the roles of railroads in the Golden State. -
Here He Drew a Grant of Land and Died in 1681
f^ / ^1 » I 7 . .-^. 'i .U&; Given By ^ c \ THE GARY LETTERS EDITED AT THE REQUEST OF THE FAMILY BY C. G. C. E ^Cu-RTis, AAks, Ca-r^l(M G/\"R3>^r/E'R CC/\'WiY)] CAMBRIDGE 5^rintcti at tljc i!t\3cr^itie ^re^^ M DCCC XCI L \ ^ - •* TREFACE wm the letters which make this volume tf. ^iV arranging K attention has not always been to dates, as I paid ^L ^^ /// some places it seemed to me that a better idea would be given of t/je writers by letting a succes- sion of letters follow from t/je same person. My chief wish Jms been to make tJje characters of the former gen- eration clear to their descendants ; and as I learned from these letters to know those wJjom I had never seen, I hope that I may succeed in wljat I have under- taken. As the work has gone on I have regretted very much that some one had not thougJjt of the plan while those were still living who could have answered the questions I would have liked so much to ask. The series of letters by Miss Margaret G. Gary were written at the request of her two nephews, George Blankern Gary and Edward Montague Gary, and to these are added extracts from a series of articles written by her for a children's magazine. But as both letters and magazine articles were written after my aunt was IV PREFA CE seventy years old, they are naturally fragmentary recol- lections. I have preceded them by a slight genealogical sketch, arranged from the family tree ; and following this are such anecdotes and recollections as I have been able to gather together. -
Tequesta : Number 6/1946
Ti 'e•f" THE JOURNAL OF THE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN FLORIDA Editor: Charlton W. Tebeau CONTENTS PAGE Pirate Lore and Treasure Trove 3 David O. True Medical Events in the History of Key West 14 Albert W. Diddle Some Reflections on the Florida of Long Ago 38 John C. Gifford The Adjudication of Shipwrecking in Florida in 1831 44 Albert W. Diddle Population Growth in Miami and Dade County, Florida 50 James I. Carney Select Bibliography for History of South Florida 56 The PublicationsCommittee Contributors 61 COPYRIGHTED 1947 BY THE HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN FLORIDA E7 uestA' is published annually by the Historical Association of Southern Florida of Miami as a bulletin of the University. Subscrip- I and the University tion, $1.00. Communications should be addressed to the editor at the University of Miami. Neither the Association nor the University assumes responsibility for statements of fact or of opinion made by the contributors. This Page Blank in Original Source Document Pirates and Treasure Trove of South Florida DAVID O. TRUE The history of piracy in America had its roots in Hakluyt's compilation of the "Principall Navigations, Voiages and Discoveries of the English Nation" in 1589. Almost one hundred years later, in 1678, Esquemeling's classic "Bucaniers of America" was printed in Dutch. It was received with a flood of enthusiasm, being translated into Spanish, French and English. In England it was the best seller of its times, and it was issued in tides of editions and additions. Not since then has there been a better account written of the doughty Henry Morgan, his butchering contem- poraries or their bloody cohorts, than was so indelibly inscribed by this erudite Dutchman who 'went a piriting' with them.