Quantcast
Channel: The Historical Marker Database - New Entries
Viewing all 103659 articles
Browse latest View live

The Underground Railroad in Champaign County / Lewis Adams

$
0
0
Ohio, Champaign County, Urbana


The Underground Railroad
in Champaign County


The inhumanity of slavery and the Fugitive Slave Acts of 1793 and 1850 motivated anti-slavery activists to operate a covert network, the "Underground Railroad," which helped fugitive slaves escape captivity. From early 1800s to the end of the Civil War, local activists assisted runaway slaves on their journeys north to freedom. Guides ("conductors") used their homes, farms, and churches ("stations") to hide and shelter runaway slaves ("cargo.") If captured, fugitives were severly punished and re-enslaved; "conductors" faced large fines and imprisonment, and Free Persons of Color risked being sold into slavery. A route often - traveled was once a path used by migrating buffalo, which became an Indian trail called the Bullskin Trace. It ran north from the Ohio River to Lake Erie and later became U.S. Route 68.

Lewis Adams

Lewis Adams (1785 - 1864), a free Black man and a founding member of St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, was an Underground Railroad conductor in Champaign County from approximately 1825 to 1861. Adams, his sons, and his father-in-law, Francis Reno, guided many runaways through the county. Adams sheltered fugitives at his home in Urbana and later his farm in Concord Township (Muddy Creek). In 1848 Adam' son, David, moved north to Findlay, Ohio (Hancock County), and also operated as a conductor who guided runaway slaves north along the Bullskin Trace through Ohio to Canada. Listed among other Champaign County operators are William Adams, Cephes Atkinson, Joseph Brand, John Butcher, Peter Byrd, Moses Corwin, Thomas Cowgill, William Jamison, Joseph Reno, David Rutan, Levi Stanup, Joseph Stillgess, and Abner Winder.

(Abolition & Underground RR • African Americans) Includes location, directions, 4 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Frederick W. Galbraith

$
0
0
Ohio, Hamilton County, Cincinnati


May 6, 1874-July 9, 1921.
President, Cincinnati Rotary Club 1914-1915.
Commanding Officer, 147th Infantry Regiment Ohio National Guard, World War I.
First National Commander, American Legion 1920.

(War, World I) Includes location, directions, 6 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Cherry Tree Grove

$
0
0
Ohio, Hamilton County, Cincinnati
In memory of the citizens of Hamilton County who gave their lives in the country's service. 1917 - 1918. These cherry trees were planted by the Garden Club of Cincinnati. 1920

(War, World I) Includes location, directions, GPS coordinates, map.

The Point

$
0
0
Kentucky, Kenton County, Covington


Side A

The Point

Confluence of Ohio and Licking Rivers. Christopher Gist, Agent of the Ohio Company, was first white man known to have set foot on Point, 1751. The Lieutenant of Kentucky Co., Va., Col. John Bowman, led expedition from here against Shawnee Indians in Ohio, 1777. Gov. Isaac Shelby rendezvoused 4,000 Kentucky troops here before his victory at the Thames, 1813. Over, 1973 Kentucky Historical Society Kentucky Department of Highways 1472 Side B

Pioneer Leaders Here

Many other pioneer leaders made the Point a base of military operations, among them Benjamin Logan, Daniel Boone, Simon Kenton and George Rogers Clark. In 1780 and 1782 Clark and his 2 regiments met here before crossing the Ohio to attack the Shawnees. Second expedition was to avenge the Battle of Blue Licks; 5 Indian towns were destroyed. See over. 1973 Kentucky Historical Society Kentucky Department of Highways 1472

(Settlements & Settlers • War of 1812 • Wars, US Indian) Includes location, directions, 5 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Northern Pacific Railway Depot

$
0
0
Minnesota, Morrison County, Little Falls


Cass Gilbert Depot
has been placed on the
National Register
of Historic Places

by the United States
Department of the Interior
Built 1899

(Man-Made Features • Railroads & Streetcars) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Sprandel Block

$
0
0
Minnesota, Morrison County, Little Falls


Established 1887
Renovated 1996
This property recognized by
Heritage Preservation Commission

(Notable Buildings) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Gen. James Edward Oglethorpe

$
0
0
Georgia, Oglethorpe County, Lexington

Oglethorpe, the fifth county created in Georgia, Dec. 19, 1793 was named for James Edward Oglethorpe, founder and first governor of Georgia.

Born in London, Dec. 22, 1696, Oglethorpe started his early life in Godalming, England. He was a philanthropist, soldier and member of house of commons.

Oglethorpe arrived with the first Georgia colonists at Yamacraw Bluff on Feb. 12, 1733, and started the settlement of Savannah. As war threatened between England and Spain, Oglethorpe defeated the Spaniards at the Battle of Bloody Marsh, July 1742.

Oglethorpe died in Cranham, England June 30, 1785 and is buried within All Saints Parish church.

(Notable Persons) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Oglethorpe County Veterans Monument

$
0
0
Georgia, Oglethorpe County, Lexington

Front Oglethorpe Veterans
Reverse Lest We Forget

Includes location, directions, 4 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

James T. Rayle Post No. 123 Monument

$
0
0
Georgia, Oglethorpe County, Lexington
Dedicated to those who served
1776-1976

(Military) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Cornwallis Headquarters

$
0
0
Virginia, York County, Yorktown

"…Lord Cornwallis has built a kind of Grotto at the foot of the secretary's Garden where he lives under Ground…" – St. George Tucker, October 11, 1781

On the level plain above you stood the home of Thomas Nelson, former secretary of the royal governor's council prior to the American Revolutionary War. General Charles Lord Cornwallis chose the prominent two story mansion just within the British Inner Defense Line for his headquarters. When the American and French bombardment began on October 9, 1781, the secretary's house was extensively damaged, forcing Cornwallis to seek safer quarters from which to direct the defense of his position.

According to eyewitness descriptions of the town after the siege, Cornwallis moved his headquarters to an earthen bunker in this ravine where he had additional protection from the intense artillery barrage. An American officer who visited Yorktown after the siege described Cornwallis' headquarters as a "bombproof."

Unfortunately any trace of this important spot no longer exists. It is left to one's imagination to paint the scene of Cornwallis and his staff carrying on their duties in this ravine and making important decisions while faced with the ever-growing possibility of defeat as cannonballs struck around them and their defenses crumbled.

(War, US Revolutionary) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Matthew Lyon

$
0
0
Vermont, Rutland County, Fair Haven

Matthew Lyon, Irish-born leading grantee, built grist, saw and paper mills here, 1783, and a forge above. He ran first store, inn, and newspaper. As Congressman from Vermont he was jailed under the Sedition Law and later elected from Kentucky and Arkansas.

(Industry & Commerce • Notable Persons • Politics • Settlements & Settlers) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Dorset

$
0
0
Vermont, Bennington County, Dorset

At Cephas Kent’s Tavern on the West Road, four Conventions were held, 1775-76, where finally the vote to form a "separate District" was passed by the delegates from the East and West sides without one dissenting vote.
westerly 1½ mi.

(Notable Events • Politics • Settlements & Settlers) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Cobblestones

$
0
0
New York, Orleans County, Gaines
Ingenious use of local materials gave rise to a home-grown Seaway Trail architectural style.
Cobblestone construction was perfected by local masons between the opening of the Erie Canal and the Civil War. Local farmers had access to the stone, oxen to haul it, and labor to build with it. Borrowing from popular architectural styles, the ingenious masons built structures that soon became status symbols.

The Core of Cobblestone Country
Cobblestone masonry originated around Rochester and spread with the pioneers moving along the Great Lakes Plain. The area around Childs is one of the most dense clusters of cobblestone buildings in existence.
Whipple House. Cyrus Witheral, Stone Mason. Flat lake stones set in herringbone pattern. Medina sandstone quoins and sills. V's joints.
Cobblestone Museum and Gift Shop. Field stone veneer with V'd joints. Brick lintels. Limestone quoins.
Cobblestone Schoolhouse. Sandstone quoins and lintels. 6" thick lake stone veneer over plank.

The Cobblestone Society Museum Buildings 1-7 (Distance not to scale in this artists rendering)
[map of section of NY 104 Ridge Road with buildings depicted with addresses and index numbers]
Actual distance from Childs to the Whipple House is 3.5 miles. Actual distance from Childs to 15071 Ridge Road is 2.25 miles.
Cobblestone Directory
Historic District Buildings
1 First Universalist Church, built in 1834 of field stone.
2 Ward House, built in 1840.
3 Schoolhouse, built in 1849, used until 1952.
4 Blacksmith Shop, built 1922 by Jos. H. Vagg.
5 Print Shop, built 1870s, relocated here from Medina.
6 Harness Shop, built 1838 by Starr Chester, relocated here from Gaines.
7 Farmers Hall, built in 1855, relocated here from Kendall.
8 Brick House, built in 1836.


Other Area Cobblestones
9 Whipple house, built in 1845 by Cyrus Witheral.
10 Saunders house, built in 1844.
11 Anderson house, built in 1830s, wing added 1859.
12 Hayden house, built about 1840.
13 More than one masonry pattern used.
14 Gaines District #4 Schoolhouse.
15 John Proctor's residence, brick, built in 1830s.
16 Cobblestone lower floor, brick upper floor.
17 Built in the 1870s by John Proctor.
18 Built in 1840s by John Proctor.
19 Brick front, old cobblestone at rear.
20 Built in 1836, sandstone arch over front door.

Many of these structures are private. Please respect property rights.

Seaway Trail, Inc. Corner Ray & West Main Street. Sackets Harbor, NY 13685. 1-800-SEAWAY-T.
This exhibit made possible by a grant from FHWA to Seaway Trail, Inc. Thanks to the Cobblestone Society Museum, C.W. Lattin, Director.

(Notable Buildings) Includes location, directions, 15 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Fenton Pottery Site

$
0
0
Vermont, Bennington County, Dorset

Jonathon Fenton established a pottery and kiln near this site in 1801. He first made redware from clay found along the banks of the Mettowee River. He then became the first potter in Vermont to make salt-glazed stoneware. In 1810 he moved his pottery to East Dorset. His two sons, Richard Lucas Fenton and Christopher Webber Fenton, also became stoneware potters of note, working in East Dorset and later with the Norton family in Bennington.

(Industry & Commerce • Notable Persons) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

First Marble Quarry

$
0
0
Vermont, Bennington County, Dorset

Here, near Mt. Aeolus, Isaac Underhill opened the first marble quarry in 1785. Dorset quarries were most active in early 1800's when small slabs were used for hearths, doorsills and headstones. With better transportation and saws, larger blocks were quarried.

(Industry & Commerce • Natural Resources) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

The Southern Vermont Arts Center

$
0
0
Vermont, Bennington County, Manchester

Begun in the 1920s as an informal artists' group for the exhibition of painting and sculpture, the Southern Vermont Arts Center has grown to become a leading Vermont institution devoted to performance, exhibition and studio art. It acquired the current site, the former Gertrude Divine Webster estate, in 1950. By 2000 a music pavilion, studios and museum expanded its role in the local and regional community. Hundreds of artists show and perform annually, and thousands attend programs, continuing the traditional search for creativity in the inspiring hills and small villages of southern Vermont.

(Arts, Letters, Music) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

The Road to the Capital

$
0
0
Maryland, Prince Georges County, Bladensburg
The War of 1812 raged on land and sea, touching every border of the young nation. On August 24, 1814, after two years at war, the Americans faced the British here at Bladensburg.

While the American militia were unable to hold back the British attack at the Anacostia River, Marines and sailors —including U. S. Chesapeake Flotillamen—set up a defense blocking the road outside present-day Fort Lincoln Cemetery. After hours of intense fighting, American forces were overrun and British troops marched to invade the Nation's Capital.

(War of 1812) Includes location, directions, 5 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

The Revolutionary War

$
0
0
Vermont, Bennington County, Manchester

Ethan Allen crossed Lake Champlain to capture Fort Ticonderoga on May 10, 1775 for "America's First Victory." Allen's expedition passed through here on May 5, 1775. Nathan Beman from Manchester guided the expedition into the fort; John Roberts of Manchester was the head of the expedition's largest immediate family. In 1777, after evacuating Ft. Ti and Mount Independence, Gen. Arthur St. Clair traveled to the Saratoga area via Manchester. The first meetings of the Council of Safety (Vermont's initial government) were at the original Marsh Tavern (on site of south wing of The Equinox). In Manchester, Gen. John Stark declined orders from Gen. Benjamin Lincoln and opted to go to Bennington. Starks's NH troops and Seth Warner's "Green Mountain Boys" camped in Manchester prior to the Battle of Bennington victory on August 16, 1777.

(Forts, Castles • War, US Revolutionary) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Sunderland

$
0
0
Vermont, Bennington County, Sunderland

Ira Allen lived on this site by the Batten Kill and as Treasurer and Surveyor-General his "Office" helped shape the destiny of the Republic of Vermont. Here Ethan's family lived; here he dictated his freethinking "Oracles of Reason" in 1782. To his bride, his second wife, he presented the first copy.

(Arts, Letters, Music • Notable Persons • Settlements & Settlers) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Cedar Covered Bridge

$
0
0
Iowa, Madison County, near Winterset
Original Built: 1883
By: H.P. Jones

Replica Built: 2004
By: Herberger Construction Company

Type: Covered Timber Town Lattice Truss
Overlaid by a Queenpost Frame

Size: 130 feet (66 ft truss with an 42.5 ft approach to the south
and a 21.5 ft approach to the north) x 13.7 feet wide

Cedar Bridge (formally known as the Casper Bridge) was one of the last covered bridges built in the county, reportedly undertaken by Jones after he completed the Roseman Bridge so that he could resolve some framing difficulties. Originally built over North River, it carried traffic until 1920, when it was moved to its present site over Cedar Creek. Here it functioned in place until it too was bypassed in 1964 by another bridge. The Cedar Bridge cost just $2,965 to build and was the only covered bridge still open to traffic.

Unfortunately, on September 3, 2202, the original Cedar Covered Bridge was destroyed by arson. In 2004, an exact replica was built to replace the Cedar Covered Bridge at a cost of $772,824. the new bridge was opened to traffic on August 23, 2004.

(Bridges & Viaducts) Includes location, directions, 5 photos, GPS coordinates, map.
Viewing all 103659 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images