Showing posts with label LOC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LOC. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2022

He Came Of A Valiant Race



Source


...leaving Fort Peyton on the 7th inst., and proceeding south....

Fort Peyton (Florida) LOC 1839 Map


...a large Seminole villae, near Mosquito Inlet, was reached, and, after surrounding it, at dawn of day on the 10th the dragoons, under McNeil and May, charged the enemy... .  Our loss was the gallant McNeil, who received a mortal wound while leading his men.  This officer--one of the youngest in service--was deeply regretted, both on account of personal and professional worth; he came of a valiant race--son of General John McNeil, late of the army, and grandson of General Benjamin Pierce,* of New Hampshire, a hero of the Revolution.

*Father of McNeil's mother, Elizabeth Andrews Pierce McNeil, and President Franklin Pierce


 

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Stationed At Larkinville


An excerpt from Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:


"A portion of Buell's Army were stationed at Larkinville a day or two.  Two of them came out here, made a more favorable impression than Michell division, because they conducted themselves better..". (July, 1862)



Michigan Historical Collections - Regarding The Michigan Thirteenth


Larkinsville, Alabama (LOC)

Friday, June 4, 2021

Vacationing At Avon Springs


Cyrus and Nettie McCormick's vacation:

"The next summer included a stay at Avon Springs, New York, known to both, since there in his bachelor days...

Avon Twp., Livingston County, New York - LOC Map


...Mr. McCormick had drunk the waters and Nettie Fowler had more than once visited this town while she was in school at near-by Lima. Both had at least slight sentimental associations with the place." [Source]

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Boarded At Mrs. Bradford's


From Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

"'twas rumored over the river, That I and a Yanky Capt. were married, I have not been as angry before since the 31st of January, when I was at Mrs. Bradfords...".


1871 Huntsville, Alabama (LOC) - Randolph Street - Female College - Far Right

"In January 1862, Priscilla was a student at Huntsville Female College and boarded at the home of  *Mrs. J. B. Bradford on Randolph Avenue in Huntsville, Alabama." [Source]  *Probably Mrs. Joseph Bennett Bradford / (Martha (Patton) Smith Bradford)



Thursday, January 21, 2021

History of Monongalia County


History


Indian Creek was part of the Eastern Trail (Native American) page 25


Page 68, Thomas Pindall


Page 81, Lochrey




Wednesday, August 26, 2020

The 10th Wisconsin In Alabama


From the diary of Miss Priscilla Larkin...:

"The 10th Wisconsin Regiment are at last stationed, in our little village, We received intelligence to day of a glorious victory at Richmond...".


Source - Map of middle and east Tennessee and parts of Alabama and Georgia


The 10th Wisconsin Infantry History:

"...the Tenth Regiment as rear guard, brought through the last trains from Huntsville to Stevenson.
We find the following in the table of casualties prepared by Adjutant General Gaylord:

Killed.—At Mud Creek, Ala., August 22.— Company J—Privates Thos. Denlan, G. W. Hancock and Henry Reed.  At Larkinsville, Ala.—Company F— Private Theo. Helgus.

At Stevenson, the rebels attempted to prevent the leaving of the trains; the Tenth Regiment bringing up the rear, secured the final departure of the troops, and arrived at Nashville on the 5th September.


Thursday, July 30, 2020

Folks Outside


Map Of Philadelphia - Library Of Congress

...to think of folks outside going their ownways, some in comfort and peace and even richness, deciding things in Williamsburg and Fort Pitt and Philadelphia, and even over in London, that would make things harder or easier for us here in the western country. (Source - The Kentuckians)


Monday, May 25, 2020

The Well-Known Flotilla



1794 Map Of Kentucky And Adjoining Territories (LOC)
Ohio, Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers Are Shown


FLOWERING of the CUMBERLAND by Harriette Simpson Arnow:

April 24, 1780, the well known flotilla, headed by John Donelson in his boat the Adventure, reached French Lick after a hazardous trip from Reedy Creek of the Holston on down the Tennessee and up the Ohio and the Cumberland.



Thursday, April 30, 2020

Fort Levis


Source



Fort Levis (Fort William Augustus)


1768 Map With Fort Levy Now F. William Augustus (LOC)


Saturday, March 14, 2020

Queenstown And The Falls


"Queenstown is the key to the trade of the Western Lakes...".

Source

Circa 1812 Map (Queenstown In The Middle) (LOC)






Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Hugh McGary's Encounters With Famous People


Excerpts from THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE The Story of the Natchez Trace, by Nathan Daniels:


1763 Map Of Louisiana, Natchez, And The Missippi River (LOC)
(After they were married, Andrew and Rachel Jackson traveled in a large group from Bayou Pierre in Sept 1791) "Yet only the names of three of its members (of the traveling party) are known: Andrew and Rachel, and a dangerous, swashbuckling, Virginia-born Kentuckian, one Hugh McGary."  "The Jacksons had no reason to fear him."  "McGary's brother [Martin] had married Jackson's cousin [Bettie Crawford]."

"...Marquis James described McGary as a famous 'frontier soldier and Indian fighter." (Jackson's biographer)

Displayed At Harrodstown, Kentucky

"Nine years before he rode up the[Natchez] Trace with the Jacksons, McGary had a similar argument with Daniel Boone about an Indian fight in Kentucky."  Then Kentuckians were pursuing a body of Indians and Canadians who had struck at Bryant's Station.....  (McGary challenged Boone and the reluctant settlers to follow him)  "Many did."  "And in the Battle of Blue Licks, August 19, 1782, one of the bloodiest battles ever fought on the frontier, many died, too..."


Plaque (Partial) At Harrodstown, Kentucky

"Even before that McGary had quarrled with James Harrod over an Indian attack."



Friday, September 13, 2019

Flotilla Got Past The Guards


Heights (or Plains) Of Abraham And Quebec City  Illustrated on Map (Partial Section - Map Source LOC)

From The Plains of Abraham:

"As it came level with the batteries of Sillery and Samos, the flotilla had reached its crucial danger point. The French had posts passed without incident, but at the second a guard sighted the leading boats and immediately challenged them."

"Invisible in the dark hour before the dawn, his sharp Qui vive? came as an unwelcome shock. A quick-witted officer of the Fraser Highlanders, Captain Donald McDonald, who in his time had served the Jacobite cause in France and spoke the language perfectly, answered in a low voice, "La France!" The sentry was insistent:  "A quel regiment," he demanded--"De la Reine," McDonald ventured, knowing that part of this battalion was with Bougainville. The sentry, apparently satisfied, did not ask for the password."

"A little further on, under the Samos battery, another sentry repeated the challenge and he could just be seen running down to the water within pistol shot. What are you speaking so quietly for, he wanted to know. Provision boats, replied McDonald. Don't make noise or the English will hear us. Again the sentry let them pass."



Sunday, August 11, 2019

Redstone And Union Town In Asbury's Journal


Journal of Rev. Francis Asbury: Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal ...:


11 August 1803

"I dined with the aforesaid Colonel Mason [Isaac Meason],
one of the great men of the west."

"I believe God will yet work in the Redstone settlement; he has already begun amongst the Presbyterians."


1792 Map Of Pennsylvania (Including Union Town) Held At The Library of Congress 

"Next day I came to Union Town...".



Wednesday, July 24, 2019

The Fort


Source: LOC of Penobscot Bay (Maine) Map

A quote from The FortA Novel of the Revolutionary War by Bernard Cornwell; the subject was the Siege of Penobscot Bay, then part of Massachusetts, from July 24, 1779 to August 14, 1779):

We have received intelligence...from patriots in the Penobscot region.  We know for certain that a considerable force of the enemy has landed, that they are guarded by three sloops-of-war, and that they are commanded by Brigadier-General Francis McLean.  ...an experienced soldier.  Most of his service was in the Portuguese employment. (Page 96)

An authentic document that included a real-life character of The Fort:

Dr. Califf, affiant, was also a charachter in the book The Fort.

"Dr. Califf thinks that Matthew Lymburner cannot return to Penobscott.  he was taken prisoner by the Rebels during the Siege of Penobscott and cruelly treated but was liberated when the Rebel Fleet was drove a shore." [Source Audit Office: AO 12. Claims, American Loyalists...]

General McLean was also mentioned in the "Claims."


Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Extended From The River Tweed


Partial Map Of Scotland (1806) With Tweed River In Lower Right Corner (LOC)

Source
"Caledonia, in its most extensive acceptation, extended from the rivers Tweed and Eden on the south...".


Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Sir William Johnson Came To Detroit In 1761


(Partial) Carte des possessions françoises et angloises dans le Canada, et partie de la Louisiane, 1756.
Map Held At The Library Of Congress
(Fort de Detroit Is On This Part Of The Map)


Source

Saturday, February 23, 2019

Pittsburgh Was A Pleasant Village


Partial Map Of Pennsylvania Circa 1810 (LOC)

From the Biography of Mrs. Lydia B. Bacon:


Description - Circa 1811

Pittsburgh - Circa 2003:





Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Thomas Walker's Birthplace


1757 Virginia Map (Showing Portion of King and Queen County) at the LOC

"Thomas Walker was born in King and Queen County, Virginia, on the 15th day of January 1715. He was married in 1741, at the age of twenty-six years, to a young widow six years younger than himself,--Mrs Nicholas Meriwether, whose maiden name was Mildred Thornton. She was the cousin of George Washington, whose elder brother, Samuel, had married one of her near relatives; and in this way Thomas Walker became closely and doubly connected with the Washington family. Through this marriage he came into possession of fifteen thousand acres of land in a beautiful, well-wooded and well-watered region of Piedmont Virginia... ." [Source]


Sunday, November 18, 2018

Settled Near Brandywine Creek


Memoirs of Ann [Baker] Carson (published in 1822):





Partial Map - Brandywine Creek, Delaware (LOC)

James McCutchen, a native of Ireland, emigrated to America and settled near Brandywine Creek in Delaware, afterwards removing to Philadelphia.

"Captain Thomas Baker (Born in England) and Jane McCutcheon (Born in Ireland) met in Philadelphia in the late 1700s and had a son James McCutcheon Baker. Everything listed below stems from them. We have no information on Captain Thomas Baker other than he was born in England 1758 and died of yellow fever in 1820." [Message Board]