USA > Indiana > Jay County > Historical hand-atlas, illustrated : containing twelve farm maps, and History of Jay County, Indiana > Part 30
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On the revolution in England, the people of Virginia espoused the monarchical cause, and after the execution of Charles I., refused to recognize the government of Cromwell. In 1661 the governor convened an assembly. Notwithstanding the loyalty of Virginia to the mother country, she suffered greatly from the blind policy of the home government. The navigation act, and other measures of a similar kind which were adopted by the Eng- lish government, greatly harassed the people. The king, regard- less of the rights of the landed proprietors, granted to his cour- tiers large tracts of land to which the settlers were legally entitled, and committed other equally illegal acts. These griev- ances were the cause of an insurrection known as Bacon's Rehel- lion. Colonel Bacon placed himself at the head of the people with the apparent object of a foray against the savages. The governor declared, by proclamation, their assembly illegal (the legislature concurring), whereupon they attacked, instead of the Indians, the government. Scattering the assembly, Bacon assumed the chief authority. Civil war now ensuing, Jamestown was hurnt, and the colony pillaged. Anarchy prevailed for several months, when, Bacon dying suddenly, his party was dispersed, and order restored. Berkeley then returned to England, and was succeeded hy Lord Culpepper, who excited the colonists hy his infamous exactions to increase his personal gains. The deposition of James II. from the English throne gave Virginia tranquillity, and during many prosperous years nothing occurred to retard her growth.
In 1754, the colonial militia took part in the French war; and Major George Washington was in General Braddock's expedition. In 1769, Thomas Jefferson, who was a member of the House of Burgesses, which had heen established in 1619, asserted for the colony the right of self-taxation, denying the right of parliament to tax the colonies. In 1773, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and Richard Henry Lee were appointed a committee to confer with the other colonies, and urged upon their delegates the Declara- tion of Independence. Virginia, the earliest settled, largest, and most populous of the thirteen original States, called the Old Dominion, has been called the Mother of Presidents, four out of the five hefore 1825 having heen Virginians. She was the first to propose the confederacy and the constitution, and hore an heroic
and conspicuous part in the Revolutionary War. Besides George Washington, many of hor most distinguished men and thousands of her soldiers fought throughout the war. She was one of the strongest advocates of tho Constitutional Union, which was set up in 1784.
On April 17, 1861, the legislature of Virginia passed an ordi- nance of secession, which was ratified hy the people on June 25th hy a vote of four to one.
On May 13th, a convention of loyal men assemhled at Wheel- ing, and took measures for a convention of delegates from the western counties on the 11th of June. This convention formed a government for the State to take the place of the scccding oue, and provided for an election of members to the new legislature. This legislature, which met at Wheeling, July 2, 1861, clected senators to Congress, the result of which was the formation of a new State, which was admitted into the Union December 18, 1862, and called West Virginia. It embraces all that portion of old Virginia lying west of the Alleghanies, and has an area of 23,000 square miles, with a population of 442,014. For the con- venience of the thing, we have treated of these two States as one.
During the war between the States, Virginia was one great hattle-field. For four years successive campaigns were fought over her territory. The heautiful Shonandoah Valley was deso- lated hy the contending hosts, and the whole State was ravaged hy invader and defender alike, through all the years of the war. Most of the great hattles were fought on her soil, and there is scarcely a spot in the eastern section of her territory hut is rich in historic memories.
Geology and Mineralogy .- The eastern coast is composed of tertiary sands, clays, and marls; further inland, strata of the miocene groups emerge from heneath these, and ahut against granite, gneiss, and other metamorphic rocks, at the line of the lowest falls of the principal rivers, the head of navigation; and sites of the chief towns. In the metamorphic helt are gold mines, copper, iron, etc. There are two upper secondary heits parallel to the Blue Ridge, crossing the James ahove Richmond, with rich coal deposits. The valley is of the Lower Silurian, with rich limestones, hematite iron, and a fertile soil. Virginia is surpris- ingly rich in minerals. Coal ahounds extensively ; tho bituminous on the west, and the semi-hituminous and anthracite on the east side of the mountains. The heds of coal are, in many places, from thirty to sixty feet thick, and alternate sometimes with dense heds of iron ore. Gypsum, magnesia, alum, and petroleum are among the mineral products. There are numerous salt and other mineral springs ; those on the Kanawha furnishing a very large supply of salt,
Climate and Rivers .- The climate of the east and southeast, or low and level portions, is hot, with malaria in the swampy river-hottoms, producing hilious and remittent fevers ; the higher regions are cold in winter, hut a large portion of Virginia is pleas- ant and healthful.
The rivers may he divided into those that flow into the Atlan- tic, and those that join the Ohio. The Potomac rises in latitude 39deg. 12min, north; it flows at first northeast to ahout latitude -39deg. 50min. north, and thence in a southeasterly direction into Chesapeake Bay, which it enters seventy miles, in a direct line, helow Washington, after a course of ahout 360 miles. It receives its principal affluent, the Shenandoah, from the southwest, at the celebrated mountain-pass of Harper's Ferry, where it hreaks through the Blue Mountains, amid some of the most magnificent scenery in the country. The Potomac is navigahle for ships of any hurthen to Alexandria, upwards of 100 miles from its mouth, heing the most distant point from the ocean to which ships-of-war can be navigated in the interior of the Union. James River, on which the capital of Virginia is huilt, rises in and flows through the center of this State to Chesapeake Bay, being navigable for vessels of 140 tons to Richmond, 100 miles from its mouth. The Roanoke lies partly within the State; the Rappahannock, York, and Nottaway are the other principal streams on the Atlantic side. The chief affluent of the Ohio is the great Kanawha, which rises in North Carolina, joins the Ohio at Point Pleasant in Vir- ginia, and is navigahle to Charleston, sixty miles from its mouth.
Products .- Tobacco is the great staple product of Virginia. In the early days of Virginia, tobacco was used as a medium of exchange. It took the place of currency. Flax is raised in ahun- dance. Indian corn, wheat, oats, live-stock, and hutter are cxten- sively produced. Rye, wool, peas, beans, common and sweet potatoes, huckwheat, market products, fruit, cheese, hay, grass- seeds, maple-sugar, honey, heeswax, rice, cotton, hops, harley, hemp, wine, etc., are produced.
Education, etc .- Virginia has a State hoard of education and a superintendent of public instruction. There are eighty five county, and five city superintendents, who are appointed hy the State hoard. Township hoards are composed of three members
119
VIRGINIA AND NORTH CAROLINA.
each. The county superintendents examine teachers, and give certificates which are valid one year in the county where they are given. The school-fund consists of the interest on the Library Fund, ahout $50,000 a year, an annual tax upon the property of the State of not less than one, nor more than five, mills on the dollar, and a capitation tax of one dollar.
The deconnial population of Virginia, from 1790, is as follows:
History, Government and Finances .- The first English set- tlement was made in this State in 1585 on Roanoke Island. In 1584 Queen Elizabeth granted a patent to Sir Walter Raleigh for such lands as he might discover iu America not possessed by any Christian people. Raleigh sent out two small vessels to make discoveries, which anchored in Ocracoke Inlet in July, in 1584. The strangers landed on an island near Roanoke, called by the natives Wococon, where they were well received. They returned to England with a favorable account of the climate and soil. The country was named Virginia, and Raleigh's patent was confirmed by parliament, and Raleigh immediately sent out another colony. The tyrannical behavior of the leaders of the colonies provoked the Indians to hostilities, and much suffering followed. Becoming discouraged, the colonists would have returned home immediately, hut a ship, under Grenville, arrived, and ascertaining the disposi- tion of the colonists, left fifteen men, with provision for two years, to maintain the settlement. In 1587 Raleigh sent out another colony, with directions to settle on Chesapeake Bay, where they were to build the projected oity of Raleigh, hut the new colonists landed at Roanoke. They had hardly put ashore when they were attacked hy Indians. No trace of Grenville's men was discovered, and it is prohahle that they fell victims to Indians.' The governor
of the new colony, White, went back to England for supplies, hut he was detained from revisiting the colony until 1590. Arriving in the autumn of that year, he found the site of the settlement enclosed within a strong palisade, hut not a colonist remained. To this day their fate is unknown, and can he conjectured only. Thus ended the first attempt on the part of the English to settle North Carolina.
Later, under a grant from Charles II. to Lord Clarendon, per- 1880 1870 1860 1850 1840 1830 1820 1810 1800 1700 manent settlements were made at several points. This was in 1670, and from that time accessions were made from the neighboring 1225163 1210630 1119348 1015260 1034481 928848 869181 801008 091737 colonies, as well as from England and Germany. In 1698 settle- According to the last census returns, the total population of Virginia was 1,225,163, of which 512,841 were colored, 229 Indians, and 4 Chinese. ments were made on the Pamlico River, upon the Tar and the Neuse, and Bath county was set off to the southward. About this time the Carey rebellion broke out, and was crushed after several The decennial population of West Virginia, from 1790, is as follows : engagements and much bloodshed. Iu 1707 a colony of Huguenots had removed from Virginia and settled on the Trent, and in 1709 a colony of Germans from Heidelberg and vicinity founded the 1880 1870 1800 1850 1840 1830 1820 1810 1800 55873 settlement of New Berne (Newhern) at the confluence of the Trent and the Neuse. They received a liberal grant from the pro- 442014 870688 802318 224537 176924 136768 105469 78592 1790 According to the last census returns, the total population of West Virginia was 442,014, of which 17,980 were colored, and one Indian. prietaries, and it was the surveying of these lands that led to the Indian outhreak. Viewing the surveys as a blow to their inde- pendence, the Tuscaroras seized the governor-general and killed him, and the savages immediately attacked the white settlements The chief cities of Virginia are Richmond, the capital; Wheel- ing, the capital of West Virginia; Norfolk, Petersburg, Alexan- dria, and Lynchhurg. south of Albemarle Sound. Other savage tribes joined the Tus- caroras, and the war hecame general. At this time there were not 2,000 able-bodied men in all Carolina. Assistance was obtained from the southern province, and the savages were whip- NORTH CAROLINA. ped in several engagements ; and were at last forced to seek refuge in a fort near the Neuse River. They surrendered, hut in a man- ner disadvantageous to the colonists, and shortly afterwards NORTH CAROLINA, one of the original thirteen States, lies between latitude 33deg. 53min. and 36deg. 53min. north, and longitude 75deg. 25min. and 84deg. 30min, west, and is hounded on the north hy Virginia, east hy the Atlantic, south by South Carolina and Georgia, and west by Tennessee. It has an area of ahout 50,704 square miles, or 32,450,560 acres. The greater part of the coast is fenced hy a line of long, low, narrow, sandy isles, separated from the mainland in some places hy narrow sounds, in others hy hroad gulfs or lagoons. The passages between them are mostly shallow and dangerous, and Ocracoke Inlet is the only one north of Cape Fear, through which even small vessels can pass. The shores of the islands are generally regular and unbroken, while that of the mainland is deeply indented hy numerons inlets, the principal of which are Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds. The only harhor of any importance is formed by the estuary of Cape Fear River, near the southern extremity of the State, and has eighteen feet of water. The surface may he classed under three divisions-the low-level, hilly, and mountainous country. The low country comprises nearly all the east half of the State, and for sixty or eighty miles inland consists of a dead flat, intersected with swamps and marshes, the most extensive of which, Alligator Swamp, is more than fifty miles long, hy thirty hroad, and occu- pies the peninsula formed hy Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds. The swamps are mostly covered with a luxuriant vegetation, and have extensive forests, chiefly of pine, cedar, and cypress trees. renewed hostilities. The colony obtained aid from neighboring provinces, and in 1713 the power of the Tuscaroras was subdued. Emigrating to the north, the Tuscaroras amalgamated with the Senecas and other tribes, which subsequently hecame six nations. The other tribes were soon subdued, and in 1717 peace was con- cluded. Many settlers abandoned their homes during the Carey rebellion and the Indian war, which appreciahly reduced the pop- ulation. In July, 1729, the king purchased seven-eighths of the whole province. The eighth was retained hy Lord Carteret, and was laid off for him adjoining the Virginia line. About 1738 the Carolinas were involved in war with the Spanish settlements of Florida. In 1765 Tryon hecame governor. On November 4th, 1769, the assembly declared against the right of England to tax North Carolina, and Tryon immediately dissolved it. Previously, the country was disturbed hy a formidable insurrection of men, mostly poor and uneducated, styling themselves "regulators," from whose violence neither life nor property were secure. In 1771 Tryon, with a hody of 1,000 militia, encountered a force of the "regulators" of 3,000 men, over whom he gained a decisive victory. In August, 1771, Tryon was succeeded hy Josiah Martin, One of Martin's first acts was the settlement of the boundary line between North and South Carolina. Notwithstanding the oppo- sition of its governor, North Carolina was represented in the first Continental Congress, and its representatives joined in adopting the Declaration of Colonial Rights. An association for the defence Beyond this region, the surface swells into hills, and in the most of colonial rights was organized, and the citizens of Mecklenburg western part rises into mountains. These belong to the Appa- lachian chain, which here rises to an elevation of 3,000 feet. They form two principal ranges, the most western called the Iron Mountains, and the more eastern, the Blue Ridge; the intermedi- ate valleys are estimated at ahout 1,000 feet above the level of the Atlantic.
county anticipated events hy formally declaring their indepen- dence of the orown on May 21, 1775. In July, 1775, the governor hecame alarmed, and retired on hoard a ship-of-war in Cape Fear River. North Carolina immediately raised five regiments, which were taken hy Congress into Continental pay, and shortly after- wards four more were raised. In April, 1776, the State, in con- vention, authorized its delegates in Congress to join with other colonies in declaring independence, and her troops fought hravely throughout the Revolutionary war. The legislature adopted the Federal Constitution on the 27th of November, 1789, hy a vote of 193 to 75.
North Carolina seceded from the Union on May 20, 1861, and took an active part in the war which followed.
The government is administered under the constitution adopted in 1868, which declares that the State shall ever remain a member of the American Union. The executive officers are a governor, and lieutenant-governor, treasurer, superintendent of public instruction, and attorney-general, all chosen hy the people for a term of four years. The general assembly, which meets on the third Monday in November, is composed of fifty senators and one hundred and twenty representatives, who hold office two years. The judiciary is composed of a supreme court, superior courts, courts of justices of the peace, and special courts. The supreme court consists of a chief justice and four associates, who are elected for eight years hy the people; the judges of the superior courts, twelve in number, are elected for the same period. North Carolina sends eight representatives to Congress, and casts ten electoral votes.
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