Friday, February 26, 2010

The Patent Office Building

Then


The Old Patent Office Building, 1846.







Now


The National Portrait Gallery, 2005.

Monday, February 22, 2010

"Indians at Washington"

Mackay, Charles. Life and Liberty in America: Sketches of a Tour in the United States and Canada, in 1857-8. Vol. I. London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1859. 133-153.





Mackay was a Scottish poet and journalist with strong ties to London.

Mackay was in the United States during the Civil War--in New York--acting as a correspondent for The Times. He makes at least one trip to Washington during the war and exchanges letters with "his old, friend the Honourable W.H. Seward". But something happens between them (Mackay suggests that Seward was trying to bribe him to write favorably of the North!) and they have a falling-out.

In the chapter, "Indians at Washington," from his Sketches, Mackay includes a fascinating reproduction of a table published by the US Gov. that gives the names and locations of all the Indian tribes left within the limits of the Union.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Former Slave Elizabeth Keckley and the “Contraband” of Washington DC, 1862.

from http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6223:

"Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley was born in slavery in Virginia around 1818 and purchased her freedom in 1855. In 1862 she was living in Washington DC and working as a skilled dressmaker; her principal client was Mary Todd Lincoln, wife of the president. Keckley sympathized with the former slaves, or “contraband,” as they were called, who fled to the relative safety of Washington during the Civil War. The Contraband Relief Association, which Keckley founded and headed, gathered funds and clothing for the poor former slaves. Yet, as her rather condescending remarks make clear, Keckley felt superior to the people she helped. Keckley’s memoir Behind the Scenes was published in 1868. The book included revelations about Mary Lincoln’s private life, and, feeling betrayed, the former First Lady shunned Keckley. Her dressmaking business declined, and she died in poverty in 1907 at the Home for Destitute Women and Children in Washington, one of the institutions she had helped to found."

[read more . . .]

On the condition of contraband camps (near Hilton Head, SC), from the New York Herald, February 27, 1863, 1.


In his correspondence, Whitman makes a reference to the squalid conditions of the contraband camps as described in this article:



The smallpox is just now prevailing to some extent at Beaufort. Its victims are principally among the contrabands, though six or eight cases were discovered last week among the soldiers of the Eighth Main regiment. The negroes, by their filthy habits, are constantly contracting and disseminating the loathsome disease. Surgeon Crane, the Medical Director, has advised their removal beyond the limits of the city, and Gen. Hunter has directed that all negroes not necessary in the Quartermaster's Department shall be so disposed of. The necessity of this measure is apparent when it is considered that the city of Beaufort abounds in hospitals, in two of which the smallpox has already appeared. During the hot months to come it is not unlikely that most of the invalid soldiers of the department will be transferred to Beaufort for treatment, and banishing the negroes is but the beginning of the work of purifying and disinfecting the town. The only deaths from smallpox that have come to my knowledge have occurred in the colored regiment, which is encamped about four miles south of Beaufort, near the river bank.