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Browsing named entities in Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). You can also browse the collection for Richmond (Virginia, United States) or search for Richmond (Virginia, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 165 results in 113 document sections:
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Daniel , John Moncure , 1825 -1865 (search)
Daniel, John Moncure, 1825-1865
Editor; born in Stafford county, Va., Oct. 24, 1825; in 1853 was appointed minister to Italy, where he almost caused a rupture of diplomatic relations.
Garibaldi requested Daniel to annex Nice to the United States, but Daniel declined on the ground that such action would be contrary to the Monroe doctrine.
When the Civil War broke out Daniel hastened home and entered the Confederate army, but resigned in consequence of severe wounds, when he resumed the editorship of the Richmond Examiner, in which he attacked Jefferson Davis, and in which he predicted in 1864 the early collapse of the Confederacy.
He died in Richmond, Va., March 30, 1865.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Daniel , Peter Vivian , 1784 -1860 (search)
Daniel, Peter Vivian, 1784-1860
Statesman; born in Stafford county, Va., April 24, 1784; graduated at Princeton in 1805; appointed judge of the United States Circuit Court in 1836; and to the United States Supreme Court in 1841.
He died in Richmond, Va., June 30, 1860.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Davenport , Henry Kallock , 1820 -1872 (search)
Davenport, Henry Kallock, 1820-1872
Naval officer; born in Savannah, Ga., Dec. 10, 1820; joined the navy in 1838; commanded the steamer Hetzel in 1861-64; took part in the engagements on James River and off Roanoke Island; and was promoted captain in 1868.
He died in Franzensbad, Bohemia, Aug. 18, 1872.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Davis , Varina Anne Jefferson , 1864 -1898 (search)
Davis, Varina Anne Jefferson, 1864-1898
author; second daughter of Jefferson Davis; born in Richmond, Va., June 27, 1864; known popularly in the South as the Daughter of the Confederacy.
Her childhood was mostly spent abroad, and for several years she devoted herself to literature.
Her works include An Irish knight of the nineteenth century; Sketch of the life of Robert Emmet; The veiled Doctor; Foreign education for American girls; and A romance of summer seas.
She died at Narraganset Pier, R. I., Sept. 18, 1898.
Delaware, Lord
The 3d Lord Delaware succeeded his father in 1602; appointed governor of Virginia in 1609; and arrived at Jamestown, June 9, 1610.
He built two forts at the mouth of the James River, which he named Henry and Charles respectively, in honor of the King's sons.
In 1611 he sailed for the West Indies, but was driven back by a storm and landed at the mouth of the Delaware River, from whence he sailed for England.
In 1618 he embarked for Virginia and died on the voyage.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Ducking-stool. (search)
Ducking-stool.
The English colonies in America continued for a long time the manners and customs of their native land; among others, that of the use of the ducking-stool for the punishment of inveterate scolding women.
Bishop Meade, in Old churches, ministers, and families in Virginia, says, If a woman was convicted of slander, her husband was made to pay five hundred-weight of tobacco ; but the law proving insufficient, the penalty was changed to ducking.
Places for ducking were prepared at court-houses.
An instance is mentioned of a woman who was ordered to be ducked three times from a vessel lying in the James River.
The woman was tied to a chair at the longer end of a lever, controlled at the shorter end by men with a rope.
The stool being planted firmly, the woman was raised on the lever, and then lowered so as to be plunged under the water.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Dunmore , John Murray , Earl of, 1732 -1809 (search)
Dutch Gap Canal.
There is a sharp bend in the James River between the Appomattox and Richmond, where the stream, after flowing several miles, approaches itself within 500 yards. To flank Confederate works and to shorten the passage of the river 6 or 7 miles, General Butler set a large force of colored troops at work, in the summer of 1864, in cutting a canal for the passage of vessels across this peninsula.
This canal was completed, with the exception of blowing out the bulkhead, at the
The canal was then swept by Confederate cannon, and could not be dredged.
As a military operation, it was a failure.
It was excavated in 140 days, and has since been made navigable.
While a greater part of the National naval force on the James River was on the expedition against Fort Fisher (q. v.)the Confederates sent down from the shelter of Fort Darling, on Drewry's Bluff, a squadron of vessels for the purpose of breaking the obstructions at the lower end of the Dutch Gap Canal, and de
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Electricity in the nineteenth century. (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Fires, Great. (search)
Fires, Great.
The following is a list of the most notable fires in the United States:
Theatre at Richmond, Va.; the governor and many leading citizens perishedDec. 26, 1811
New York City, 600 warehouses, etc.; loss, $20,000,000Dec. 16, 1835
Washington, D. C., destroying general post-office and patent-office, with 10,000 valuable models, drawings, etcDec. 15, 1836
Charleston, S. C., 1,158 buildings, covering 145 acresApril 27, 1838
New York City, 46 buildings; loss, $10,000,000Sept. 6, 1839
Pittsburg, Pa., 1,000 buildings; loss about $6,000,000April 10, 1845
New York City, 1,300 dwellings destroyedJune 28, 1845
New York City, 302 stores and dwellings, 4 lives, and $6,000,000 of propertyJuly 19, 1845
Albany, N. Y., 600 buildings, besides steamboats, piers, etc.; 24 acres burned over; loss, $3,000,000Sept. 9, 1848
St. Louis, Mo., 15 blocks of houses and 23 steamboats; loss estimated at $3,000,000May 17, 1849
San Francisco, Cal., nearly 2,500 buildings burned; estim