From: Katherine Balch
Question:
Please can you tell me if there are any diaries or other
primary documents written by people who owned potteries
in South Carolina in the early nineteenth century? Alternatively,
do you know of any diaries that mention potteries in this
time period?
I am writing about Dave Drake, an enslaved poet-potter,
who lived in Pottersville, SC, near Edgefield. His owners
were Harvey Drake, Abner Landrum (who founded the pottery
and who was also a physician, journalist, and horticulturist),
and a man named Miles. Although there are several diaries
kept by local landowners, I can’t find any by
pottery owners.
Thanks very much for your time and efforts!
Answer: Dear
Ms. Balch:
Do you know about this book, scheduled for publication
by Norton this October?
Carolina Clay: The Life and Legend of the Slave
Potter Dave by Leonard Todd: New York: W.W.
Norton & Co., 2008.
Here’s the page on the Norton Website that gives
you information about Mr. Todd. If you haven’t
been in touch with him already, now is the time to do
it:
http://www.wwnorton.com/catalog/fall08/005856.htm
A quick search of online reference tools like Archive:
USA doesn’t reveal catalog records for collections
that could be of use to you. We both know that this
doesn’t mean they don’t exist – just
that the records currently available on the Web don’t
show anything. I suspect that Mr. Todd’s bibliography
would be enlightening.
Mary-Jo Kline
From:
Debora Latour
Question: Dear
Dr. Kline,
A
friend of mine is working on a family history which
involves a West Virginia coal miner named "Conley"
who was wounded in a shoot out with either the Pinkerton
Co. or the Baldwin-Felts Co following a Mother Jones
rally near Bluefield, WV circa 1905.
I have tried using your website's search, but to no
avail. I would greatly appreciate any assistance you
could offer.
Thank you!
Answer: Dear
Ms. Latour:
The Mother Jones Museum Website has very good suggestions
for further reading about Mary “Mother”
Jones – be sure to scroll down the section about
labor unrest in West Virginia. Your first task will
be figuring out the date of the rally – and a
more precise idea of its location. Once you get that
settled, I can offer more suggestions about the local
history organizations that might help you in your work.
Get back to me if you have more questions. I come from
an old union family (railroads, not mines), and when
my (Republican) husband and I drove through southeastern
Illinois a few years ago, I ordered him to pull off
the highway when I saw the sign for the Mother Jones
Monument in the Miners Cemetery in Mt. Olive. If you’re
ever in that area, don’t miss it:
http://www.synaptic.bc.ca/gallery/illin023.htm
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/places/mtolive.htm
I hope to hear from you,
Mary-Jo Kline
From: LauThm
Question:
All our lives my mother and I have heard about Abigail
Adams plea to John to let women vote!
B ut there are no specific names of who in 1776 said "lets
make sure no mention of women, no vote, nothing, no life
liberty & pursuit of happiness for women."
W ho said what about women in 1776 ?
I appreciate your web site. I could not finish school
due to illness, so this helps many people like me.
Answer: Dear
LauThm:
Remember that I used to be an editor of the Adams Family’s
Papers, so I’m pretty fussy about quoting any
of them. Abigail didn’t ask John to try to get
the vote for women. She wrote only “remember the
ladies” when he and other members of the Continental
Congress were considering the Declaration of Independence
and the laws of the new American nation. We can’t
be absolutely sure what she meant.
But whatever it was, John ignored it.
I’m afraid that we can’t point to one person
or even a few people as those who made sure that there
was no mention of women in the Declaration of Independence
– or the Articles of Confederation (1781) or the
Constitution (1787). Neither Abigail Adams’s husband
John nor any other (man) in a position to do anything
thought that it was worth while even to propose that
they “do” something for the ladies. Thus
no one else had to oppose it!!!
I’d suggest that you look at some of the sources
I list for studying the legal status of women in America
for our History Now issue of March 2006 :
/historynow/03_2006/ask2d.php
As you’ll find out, it was a long, long time before
the question of more legal rights for women (not just
voting rights) reached the point where you could point
to a person or group who had to oppose the idea publicly.
I think that you and your mother will enjoy learning
more about this. Get back to me if you have any other
questions.
Mary-Jo Kline
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