1861
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Explore the profound interplay between faith, marriage, and societal values in a journey that promises to reshape your daily life. What if placing God and your spouse at the forefront of your priorities could transform your decisions and actions? Through prayerful reflection and insights from Proverbs 11, you'll discover the virtues of humility, integrity, and righteousness as guiding lights in personal and communal existence. We contrast these with the dangers of pride, greed, and deceit, making a compelling case for wisdom and trustworthiness as pillars of a fulfilling life. This episode offers a heartfelt tribute to the divine and the bonds of marriage as essential components of a meaningful existence.Our narrative weaves through the tapestry of American history, highlighting the indelible mark of faith on national identity and governance. Through the lens of "America the Beautiful" and the moral framework it inspires in education, we draw parallels to the Marine Corps' training ethos and reflect on the influence of visionary leaders like Patrick Henry and Gerald Ford. Discover how the Great Awakening fortified the Bible's role in shaping America's republican ideals, fostering a nation built on liberty and wisdom. We conclude with a call to embrace the Bible as a daily touchstone that sustains freedom and governance, extending blessings to families and nations worldwide.Support the showThe American Soul Podcasthttps://www.buzzsprout.com/1791934/subscribe
Legal Man - Long time lawyer, self certified master practitioner joins us again for a great chat about the current situation, his concerns and main beef, and his ideas for solutions to the government and fascistic brainwashing going on right now. We talk about the masses moving with the narratives, false flags and revelation of the method, rolling out the draft, and whatever Mr. Global is doing its working, their books, tech rollouts, how they are ahead of schedule, being black pilled, the security state, politicians, Hillary care from the 90's, grieving for the free range days. In the second half we get into the Constitution and why it's not applicable, 1861 war declaration for those who want to leave the constitution, government control, articles of federation, how the conservatives in the USA are making it worse, loosing ground fighting now?, Lysander Spooner and solutions like; super majorities, sunset laws, jury trials and nullification, living off the land for a generation until they come for ya. https://www.patreon.com/TheQuash https://the-quash.captivate.fm/ https://twitter.com/USlawreview Thank you for your support. To gain access to the second half of show and our Plus feed please clink the link http://www.grimericaoutlawed.ca/support. Help support the show because without your help we can't continue to address these controversial topics. If you value this content with 0 ads, 0 sponsorships, 0 breaks, 0 portals and links to corporate websites, please assist. Many hours of unlimited content for free. Thanks for listening!! Support the show directly: https://www.patreon.com/grimericaoutlawed Get your Magic Mushrooms delivered from: Mushroom Spores, Spore Syringes, Best Spore Syringes,Grow Mushrooms Spores Lab Get Psychedelics online Our audio book page: www.adultbrain.ca Darren's book www.acanadianshame.ca Other affiliated shows: https://www.13questionspodcast.com/ Our New Podcast - 13 Questions www.grimerica.ca The OG Grimerica Show www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica Our channel on free speech Rokfin Join the chat / hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimerican's www.grimerica.ca/chats 1-403-702-6083 Call and leave a voice mail or send us a text GrimericaFM https://s2.radio.co/s053ed3122/listen Check out our next trip/conference/meetup - Contact at the Cabin www.contactatthecabin.com Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/grimerica-outlawed http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/grimerica-outlawed Sign up for our newsletter http://www.grimerica.ca/news SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/ Tweet Darren https://twitter.com/Grimerica Connect through other platforms: https://www.reddit.com/r/grimerica/ https://gab.ai/Grimerica Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ ART Napolean Duheme's site http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/ MUSIC Tru North Felix's Site sirfelix.bandcamp.com
On this episode of The Resident Historian with Feliks Banel: how local museums and historical societies are finding ways to “LIKE” Facebook. Then, on “All Over The Map,” San Juan Islands residents are working to change the name of Harney Channel. And, From The Archives: the extreme winter of 1861-1862. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Il problema amministrativo e il problema finanziario. Centralismo e decentramento amministrativo.
Esisteva già il divario tra Nord e Sud nel 1861?
Esisteva già il divario tra Nord e Sud nel 1861?
Helena Palmgren fann historien som sin farmors farmor Sofia av en slump. Sofia hade tre små barn och Helena tror att hennes anmoder tog med sig den yngste sonen till bordellen i Stockholm. Sofia Törnkvist föddes i Härnösand 1831 som yngsta dotter till en hattmakare. Också hennes mamma kom också från en hantverkarsläkt och där arbetade de flesta som garvare. När Sofia var 18 år anställdes Jonas Bäckström från Skåne som lärling i garveriet. Och snart blev han och Sofia kära i varandra. Men Jonas hade större ambitioner än att jobba som garvare och sökte sig till konstakademin i Stockholm. När han antogs som elev två år senare, ville han ha med sig Sofia. De två gifte sig och flyttade till huvudstaden. Sofias ättling släktforskaren Helena Palmgren i Umeå hittade sin farmors farmor Sofias öde mest av en slump när hon forskade om familjen. Och till en början såg det ut som Sofia och hennes Jonas skulle få ett lyckosamt liv tillsammans. Men några år efter flytten separerar paret. Deras två flickor Alma och Gustafva är då nio och sju år gamla och yngsta barnet Elo bara ett år. Helena har läst mängder av rättegångsprotokoll och ser att Sofia bland annat döms för fylleri och har "tillfälliga arbeten" och "samlag med okända män". - Det verkar som hon bor på Ålandsgatan 16 och tar emot kunder där samtidigt som sonen bor hos henne, säger Helena Palmgren. När Jonas begär skilsmässa har Sofia suttit redan suttit på kurhus på grund av att hon fått könssjukdomen syfilis. Hon döms så småningom för horbrott och hamnar i fängelse fem gånger innan hon till slut dör 45 år gammal. - Det går inte så bra för flickorna som först flyttar till Härnösand för att bo hos släktingar. Alma dör ung och hennes utomäktenskapliga dotter blir också hon prostituerad. Gustafva hamnar på mentalsjukhus tidigt och dör där. Yngsta sonen Elo blir efter Sofias rättegång 1863 fosterhemsplacerad och flyttar den dag skolan är slut, 14 år gammal. - Det som tagit mig är den tystandskultur som funnits kring den här berättelsen, avslutar Helena Palmgren. Kartor över centrala Stockholm Sofia bodde på Ålandsgatan där många prostituerade bodde och verkade. Ålandsgatan bytte så småningom namn till Mäster Samuelsgatan. Stockholmskällan har kartor som bland annat visar hur det såg ut 1855. Stockholmskällan: Stockholm 1855 Lägenheter hyrdes ut till prostituerade Ett dokument funnet i poliskammarens arkiv i Göteborg visar hur fastighetsägare och mellanhänder tjänade pengar på prostitutionen i staden. Bakgrunden är att ett antal boende i några speciella kvarter i staden klagade på att de blev störda av trafiken i deras hus. En polis skrev då ner vad han visste om dessa fastigheter. Ett antal fastighetsägare i området hyrde ut hela sina hus till en person, ofta en kvinna, som i sin tur hyrde ut lägenheter per dag till prostituerade kvinnor, i båda leden tog man bra betalt. Kvinnorna som hyrde lägenheterna betalade mellan fem till sju kronor om dagen i hyra, i hyran ingick ofta morgonkaffe. Polisen kunde berätta vilka hus som hyrdes ut på detta sättet, vad alla inblandade hette och vilka summor som skiftade ägare, men han konstaterar i slutet av sin rapport att det nog ändå är bäst att låta den här verksamheten fortsätta eftersom man då vet var man har de prostituerade kvinnorna. Om de kvinnor hvilka nu äro boende vid Öfra Kyrkogatan och Ekelundsgatan skulle avhysas derifrån, då kommo de säkerligen att söka sig bostäder på hotellen och sedermera såväl dagar som nätter kringstryka å gatorna derigenom åstadkomma mycket mera ondt än hvad de nu göra då de hafva bestämda bostäder och kunna under sträng polisuppsigt hållas inom hus. Ur polisrapport från Göteborg 1896 Karl-Magnus Johansson, arkivarie på Riksarkivet Göteborg berättar att mellanhänderna ofta var före detta prostituerade. En av dem hade när hon dog en 15-årig son som ärvde verksamheten efter sin mor. Sonen tjänade sannolikt någonstans mellan fyra till sextusen kronor om året under en tid då en vanlig arbetare tjänare cirka fem-sexhundra. Ny teknik transkriberar handskrivna dokument Det var ingen tillfällighet att det här dokumentet det ligget nämligen i en dokumentserie som fått extra uppmärksamhet en tid. En del av arkiven efter Poliskammaren i Göteborg har nämligen valts ut för att testa ny teknik som går ut på att lära datorn att läsa handskriven text och göra om den till maskintext. Den som har svårt att läsa gammal stil skulle alltså kunna få hjälp av tekniken på detta sätt. Från skiftet januari-februari 2021 kommer det att vara möjligt att via sin dator söka i det här materialet, berättar Karl-Magnus Johansson. Här finns länk till det transkriberade materialet: Automatiserad handskriftstolkning från Poliskammaren Det här pilotprojektet sker i samarbete mellan Riksarkivet Göteborg och Göteborgs universitet. Mycket arbete har också utförts av privatpersoner, inte minst släktforskare. De har, med sin vana vid att läsa äldre skrivstilar kunnat i ett första steg lära datorn att känna igen det handskrivna materialet och transformera det till skrivtecken. I det steget lyckades man uppnå en korrekthet om 97%. I nästa steg rättades felen till genom en kontroll mot originalet, för att kunna uppnå ännu större träffsäkerhet. Det här materialet består av polisrapporter från 35 år, 1868 till 1902, från detektiva avdelningen vid Göteborgs polis. Det är en period då stadens befolkning mer än fördubblas. Dessutom flyter enorma mängder, cirka 600 000 emigranter genom staden, och många av dem återfinns i polisrapporterna. Kanske har de blivit av med sin emigrantkoffert eller själv gjort något som väckt polisens intresse. - Jag bedömer att det finns cirka 100 000 namn i de här rapporterna som alltså kan ge släktforskare ingångar till annat material, domstolshandlingar och liknande, säger Karl-Magnus Johansson. Det här är ett pilotprojekt för att testa tekniken, efter en utvärdering kommer man att ta ställning till om det kan bli någon fortsättning. - Det är visserligen 22 500 sidor som har bearbetats nu, men det motsvarar en och en halv hyllmeter och Riksarkivet har ungefär 80 hyllmil dokument. - Så det är en bit kvar, slutar arkivarie Karl-Magnus Johansson. Vill du höra mer om husen som hyrdes ut till prostituerade och om transkriberingen av handskrivna dokument finns två extra avsnitt nedan att lyssna till under "höjdpunkter från avsnittet". Programmet är gjort av Gunilla Nordlund och Elisabeth Renström Uppläsare: Patrik Paulsson slaktband@sverigesradio.se
Our sub-series Beyond the Blue and gray is where we discuss the histories, uniforms, traditions, and culture of the unique companies and regiments of the war. Today we’ll be looking at the First Defenders. The men who saved Washington in those Early days of the war. And we will be looking at Nicholas Biddle, an African American who is said to be the first man to shed blood for the Union. Joining me is renowned Park Ranger John Hoptak who has written a fantastic book in these brave men. Learn more about Hoptak at his blog: https://48thpennsylvania.blogspot.com/ Support the show:(The podcast receives monetary compensation from these options.)Use the code untoldcivilwar when downloading the smartphone app, Gettysburg: A Nation Divided.Instructions in the link below:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmMJ2SuTMZsAlready downloaded the app? Check out Gentleman’s Box! Get all the tools you need as a gentleman delivered to your door! From cuff links, to cologne, to fitness gear, they have it all!http://imp.i121497.net/KaPv7You can also support us by using Instacart! Hauling groceries can be a thing of the past! Have all your groceries delivered to your doorstep. Use the link below to start an account and you will be supporting this show at no extra cost to you!https://instacart.oloiyb.net/PPVYzCheck us out on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube:https://www.facebook.com/untoldcivilwar/ https://www.instagram.com/untold_civil_war/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMMWxeF5zojtN8_NeWtyULw?view_as=subscriber
durée : 00:03:00 - Les Pourquoi des Pays de Savoie
Ángeles González Gamio visita la colonia Santa María La Ribera, creada en 1861.
There's a certain romanticism attached to the Pony Express and this week Sarah goes into the short but memorable history of the fastest mail delivery system in the wild west (which also might involve watching the swoony 90s show "Young Riders").
Esto es HistoCast. No es Esparta pero casi. Nos vamos al Oeste del Mississippi para ver el proceso de adhesión o no de los distintos estados a La Confederación. Y si tenemos que hablar de la Guerra de Secesión Americana hablamos con @tamtamveramendi y al que acompañada @goyix_salduero.Secciones Historia: - La importancia del territorio al Oeste del Mississippi - 6:57 - Arkansas - 53:29 - Arizona - 1:24:54 - Bibliografía - 1:53:00
Ambie interviews Josh Starr, the creator of Grand Trunk Games, a new publishing company dedicated to making 18xx games more available, affordable, and approachable. Interview: 0:24 1861/1867: 13:00 Outro: 26:57 Grand Trunk Games: https://www.grandtrunkgames.com/
Following victory for the South in the battle of Bull Run, President Lincoln reached an inescapable conclusion. Without an effective railway network to transport troops quickly, the North couldn't... The latest in science, culture, and history from Smithsonian Channel.
The rotating-barreled, hand-cranked Gatling gun was invented in 1861-and immediately rewrote the rules of warfare. Now, Weapon Hunter host Paul Shull puts one to the test and demonstrates its... The latest in science, culture, and history from Smithsonian Channel.
Until this point, the states that seceded from the Union had been perhaps more diplomatic when it came to their Ordinances of Secession, passing sweeping statements rather than commentaries on the current political climate or tensions that had arose with the election of 1860. Though the undertones were there, the closest mention even to slavery was the term “Property” used two days prior when Mississippi declared its own intention to withdraw from the United States. Then, on January 11th, 1861 Alabama became the fourth State to declare itself free of the Constitution and the authority of the Federal Government in Washington D.C.. The language was plain, and without any pretexts, as it declared: Whereas, the election of Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin to the offices of president and vice-president of the United States of America, by a sectional party, avowedly hostile to the domestic institutions and to the peace and security of the people of the State of Alabama, preceded by many and dangerous infractions of the constitution of the United States by many of the States and people of the Northern section, is a political wrong of so insulting and menacing a character as to justify the people of the State of Alabama in the adoption of prompt and decided measures for their future peace and security… In their mind Abraham Lincoln would never be their President, nor would they recognize the authority of a regional Northern Government under Lincoln and Maine Senator turned Vice President-Elect Hannibal Hamlin. They would not respect that authority, nor would they abide by the peaceful transition of power that had been a hallmark of the American republican democracy since the nations inception. No, this election challenged the institution on which the economy of the State of Alabama was built on. Of the over 964,000 people who resided in the state, just over 435,000 were slaves. It drove the prosperity of the state, and to the slaveholding population of the state, it was not just an economic institution, but as the newspapers in the state would also declare, a religious one as well. The truth was there was little question that Alabama would leave the Union. In February of the year prior the State Legislature had passed legislation requiring the state to elect delegates to a secessionist convention if a “Black Republican” were to win the Presidency. In December those elections were called by Governor Andrew Moore, and the convention was set for January 7th. Moore though had already begun to make moves before the Secessionist Convention even met. Anticipating the state’s desire to leave, he would order troops to seize Fort Gaines and Fort Morgan on Mobile Bay as well as the Arsenal at Mount Vernon as early as the 3rd and the 4th of January. Under his orders 500 Alabama Troops marched to Florida to assist Governor Madison Perry take the Fort at Pensacola, even as the fellow slaveholding state prepared to leave the Union. Not only did they declare that they wished to meet with other slave states to form a new confederacy, but they also acted on it, taking hardline steps to not only chase the Union from their state, to decrease their financial reliance on the North and ensure their own stability during this unstable time, but also to assist their neighbors in this cause. Even as the fourth of the original six founding states of the Confederate States of America severed its bonds in open defiance to the United States, it wouldn’t be long before the new rebel nation would be formed. Though Richmond would eventually become the Capital, in those early days Montgomery would serve as the first capital of the CSA. Moore would be an influential player, tirelessly working to ensure the election of Jefferson Davis as the first President. Though some would argue for cooler heads to prevail, and for compromise to be struck, it was too late, and Alabama, swayed too heavily by the cause of slavery would not hear it. Still, at least some would remain loyal to the Union, with the 1st Alabama Calvary choosing to place first the United States, over its loyalty to that of its state. It would be at least one sign of the depth of the divide in the nation that would pit brother against brother and neighbor against neighbor as the blood of its people stained the soil, and the soul, of the nation.
Only a few weeks prior, on December 20th, 1860, South Carolina seceded from the Union, becoming the first state to leave. Even before then tension had been building with the election of Abraham Lincoln as president. With roughly 40% of the popular vote but almost 60% of the Electoral College, there was little doubt that he would be sworn in as the 16th President of the United States. It was a prospect that many in the South refused to live with. To them the Constitution created a voluntary union rather than a binding one, and they had the right to peaceably leave at any point. On January 9th, 1861, almost two months before the Inauguration of the President-Elect, Mississippi, the 20th state to be admitted into the Union, became the second state to exercise what they believed to be their right. Congressman Lucius Lamar would draft, “An ordinance to dissolve the union between the State of Mississippi and other States united with her under the compact entitled "The Constitution of the United States of America’”, outlining not only its desire to secede, but to form a new confederacy with other states that would chose also to separate. In their declaration and justification of secession, they would argue, “Utter subjugation awaits us in the Union, if we should consent longer to remain in it. It is not a matter of choice, but of necessity. We must either submit to degradation, and to the loss of property worth four billions of money, or we must secede from the Union framed by our fathers, to secure this as well as every other species of property. For far less cause than this, our fathers separated from the Crown of England. Our decision is made. We follow their footsteps. We embrace the alternative of separation; and for the reasons here stated, we resolve to maintain our rights with the full consciousness of the justice of our course, and the undoubting belief of our ability to maintain it.” Slavery would be maintained. Joining with South Carolina, they would remain firm in their assertion that these African-Americans were their property, and that the economic value of slavery outweighed the benefit of the 84-year-old nation, forged together under the Constitution just over 70 years prior. Yet the hopes of a peaceful separation was perhaps quickly fading. What Mississippi Governor John Pettus, who campaigned on secession and the formation of a southern confederacy to preserve slavery, and other secessionists in his state didn’t know was that to the East, on that same day, the civilian steamship the Star of the West sailed for Charleston Harbor. It was loaded with supplies for the garrison stationed at Fort Sumter under the command of Major Robert Anderson, the man who in a few short months would, to the Union, become the hero of that first battle of the Civil War and promoted to Brigadier-General. It wouldn’t reach its destination nor fulfill that contract for the US Government. Major Peter Stevens, Superintendent of the Citadel, had received orders from South Carolina’s Governor Francis Pekins, to take cadets and man the strategic battery on Morris Island. If they were to see a vessel flying an American flag they were to fire. Three shots would hit the Spirit of the West, forcing the ships Captain, John McGowan, to turn and sail back to New York. Though open hostilities would not begin until April, the first shots of the Civil War had been fired as South Carolina openly defied the authority and the jurisdiction of the Union Government. Three days later Pekins would demand that the US Government surrender Fort Sumter and remove its troops from South Carolina soil, now, in the minds of the residents of that state, free of the ties that bound it to the United States. Of course it would remain in US possession until the first battle of the Civil War would be fought, almost exactly three months after his demands were made. Mississippi, South Carolina, and the states of the Confederacy would eventually, after the long and bloodied war between the states, be brought back into the Union. Pickens, once so proud and defiant, would make the motion to repeal the South Carolina Ordinance of Secession. Lucius Lamar would receive a Presidential Pardon, and serve as the first Democrat elected to the House of Representatives after the Civil War, before election to the Senate, and appointment to Cabinet as Secretary of the Interior and, finally, the Supreme Court. The Star of the West, on the other hand, would meet an untimely fate. After being commissioned in by the Department of War, it would end up trading hands between the Union and the Confederacy, before being sunk in 1863. In the end it became just another bill for the United States to pay for its history of ignoring the issue of slavery, though, in this case, one that it could pay with a simple check to the US Mail Steamship Company. Other prices would be less monetary but much higher, taking longer to pay.
On November 30, 2011, Adam Goodheart delivered a lecture entitled "1861: Civil War Awakening." With his new book, "1861: The Civil War Awakening," Adam Goodheart revisits the most turbulent and consequential year in American history. In the hands of a master storyteller, we relive a time that witnessed the breakup of the nation and the first bloodletting in what became a four-year catalog of internecine violence and destruction. As the first year of the Civil War Sesquicentennial comes to an end, this lecture will pull together for us all of the drama and tumult of 1861 and present vividly the characters who populated that decisive era. Adam Goodheart teaches history and is director of the C. V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College in Maryland. (Introduction by Paul Levengood)
On April 14, 2011, Nelson D. Lankford delivered a Banner Lecture entitled "The Crooked Road to Civil War." When Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated in March 1861, Virginia remained a loyal state within the Union. In the convention that met in Richmond to consider the commonwealth's relationship to the national government, union men held a strong majority. But as events unfolded, their loyalty wavered. Nelson Lankford recounts the dramatic events of that spring, when no one could foretell the future of the country, seemingly poised on the brink of dissolution. Dr. Lankford is vice president for programs at the Virginia Historical Society and author of "Cry Havoc! The Crooked Road to Civil War, 1861." This lecture is cosponsored with the Richmond National Battlefield Park. (Introduction by Paul A. Levengood)