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Charleston, S. C.
City, port of entry, and commercial metropolis of South Carolina; on a peninsula between the Cooper and Ashley rivers, which unite in forming an admirable harbor; 82 miles northeast of Savannah, Ga. The city was founded in 1680 by an English colony; was occupied by the British in 1780-82; and was the State capital till 1790.
It has been the scene of many stirring and historical events.
The celebrated Democratic National Convention of 1860 was opened here, and after the split among the delegates an adjourned session was held in Baltimore.
It was the birthplace, the same year, of the Secession movement; the first act of hostility to the national government occurred here (see Sumter, Fort; Beauregard, Pierre Gustave Toutant); was besieged and bombarded during the last two years of the war; and was evacuated by the Confederates on Feb. 17, 1865.
On Aug. 31, 1886, a large part of the city was destroyed by an earthquake, in which many lives were lost.
In the fi
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Clarke , Samuel 1599 -1682 (search)
Clarke, Samuel 1599-1682
Clergyman; born in Warwickshire, England, in 1599.
He was the author of A true and faithful account of the four chiefest plantations of the English in America; and New description of the world, etc. He died in 1682.
Clarke, Samuel 1599-1682
Clergyman; born in Warwickshire, England, in 1599.
He was the author of A true and faithful account of the four chiefest plantations of the English in America; and New description of the world, etc. He died in 1682.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Claypoole , James 1634 - (search)
Claypoole, James 1634-
Settler; born in England in 1634; a Quaker, and a close friend of William Penn; was a witness of the signing of the Charter of Privileges granted to the settlers in 1682; came with his family to Pennsylvania in 1683, and held important offices.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Denison , Daniel , 1613 -1682 (search)
Denison, Daniel, 1613-1682
Military officer; born in England in 1613; settled in New England about 1631; was commissioner to arrange the differences with D'Aulny, the French commander at Penobscot, in 1646 :and 1653; and later was major-general of the colonial forces for ten years. He was made commander-in-chief of the Massachusetts troops in 1675, but owing to illness during that year was not able to lead his forces in the Indian War. He published Irenicon, or salve for New England's sore.
He died in Ipswich, Mass., Sept. 20, 1682.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Frontenac , Louis de Buade , Count de 1620 - (search)
Frontenac, Louis de Buade, Count de 1620-
Colonial governor; born in France in 1620; was made a colonel at seventeen years of age, and was an eminent lieutenant-gen- eral at twenty-nine, covered with decorations and scars.
Selected by Marshal Turenne to lead troops sent for the relief of Canada, he was made governor of that province in 1672, and built Fort Frontenac (now Kingston), at the foot of Lake Ontario in 1673.
He was recalled in 1682, but was reappointed in 1689, when the French dominions in America were on the brink of ruin.
With great energy he carried on war against the English in New York and New England, and their allies, the Iroquois.
Early in 1696 an expedition which he sent towards Albany desolated Schenectady; and the same year he successfully resisted a land and naval force sent against Canada.
He was in Montreal when an Indian runner told him of the approach to the St. Lawrence of Colonel Schuyler (see King William's War). Frontenac, then seventy years of
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Hart , Albert Bushnell 1854 - (search)