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Browsing named entities in Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). You can also browse the collection for Mobile Bay (Alabama, United States) or search for Mobile Bay (Alabama, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 27 results in 19 document sections:
Alabama.
The soil of this State was first trodden by Europeans in 1540.
These were the followers of De Soto (q. v.). In 1702, Bienville.
the French governor of Louisiana, entered Mobile Bay, and built a fort and trading-house at the mouth of Dog River.
In 1711 the French founded Mobile, and there a colony prospered for a while.
Negro
State seal of Alabama. slaves were first brought into this colony by three French ships of war in 1721.
By the treaty of 1763 this region was transferred by France to Great Britain. Alabama formed a portion of the State of Georgia, but in 1798 the country now included in the States of Alabama and Mississippi was organized as a Territory called Mississippi.
After the Creeks disappeared the region of Alabama was rapidly settled by white people, and in 1819 it entered the Union as a State.
The slave population increased more rapidly than the white.
In the Democratic National Convention that was held at Charleston in 1860 the delegates of Alaba
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Alden , James , 1810 -1877 (search)
Alden, James, 1810-1877
Naval officer; born in Portland, Me.. March 31, 1810; became a midshipman in 1828; lieutenant in 1841; commander in 1855; captain, Jan. 2, 1863; commodore, July 25, 1866; and rear-admiral, June 19, 1871.
He was a participant in the South Sea Exploring Expedition under Lieutenant Wilkes, and served under Commodore Conner on the Gulf coast of Mexico during the war with that country.
He was active in the reinforcement of Fort Pickens; in the expedition against Galveston; as commander of the Richmond in the passage of Forts Jackson and St. Philip in the capture of New Orleans; and at Vicksburg, Port Hudson. Mobile Bay, and Fort Fisher.
He was appointed chief of the Bureau of Navigation and Detail in 1869, and, after his promotion to rear-admiral, commander of the European squadron.
He died in San Francisco, Cal., Feb. 6, 1877.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Borgne, Lake , battle on. (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Bowyer , Fort, attack it upon. (search)
Bowyer, Fort, attack it upon.
At the entrance to Mobile Bay, 30 miles from the village of Mobile, was Fort Bowyer (afterwards Fort Morgan), occupying the extremity of a narrow cape on the eastern side of the entrance, and commanding the channel between it and Fort Dauphin opposite.
It was a small work, in semicircular form towards the channel, without bomb-proofs, and mounting only twenty guns, nearly all of them 12-pounders.
It was the chief defence of Mobile; and in it Jackson, on his return from Pensacola, placed Maj. William Lawrence and 130 men. On Sept. 12, 1814, a British squadron appeared off Mobile Point with land troops, and very soon Lieutenant-Colonel Nichols appeared in rear of the fort with a few marines and 600 Indians.
The squadron consisted of the Hermes, twenty-two guns; Sophia, eighteen; Caron, twenty; and Anaconda, eighteen--the whole under Captain Percy, the commander of a squadron of nine vessels which Jackson drove from Pensacola Bay.
By a skilful use of
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Buchanan , Franklin , 1800 -1874 (search)
Buchanan, Franklin, 1800-1874
Naval officer; born in Baltimore, Md., Sept. 17, 1800: entered the navy in 1815; became lieutenant in 1825, and master-commander in 1841.
He was the first superintendent of the Naval Academy at Annapolis.
Sympathizing with the Confederate movement, and believing his State would secede, he sent in his resignation.
Finding that Maryland did not secede, he petitioned for restoration, but was refused, when he entered the Confederate service, and superintended( the fitting-out of the old Merrimac (rechristened the Virginia) at Norfolk.
In her he fought the Monitor and was severely wounded.
He afterwards blew up his vessel to save her from capture.
In command of the ironclad Tennessee, in Mobile Bay, he was defeated and made prisoner.
He died in Talbot county. Md., May 11, 1874.
See monitor and Merrimac.
Buchanan, James
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Civil War in the United States . (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Craven , Tunis Augustus MacDONOUGHonough 1813 - (search)
Craven, Tunis Augustus MacDONOUGHonough 1813-
Naval officer; born in Portsmouth, N. H., Jan. 11, 1813; entered the United States navy as midshipman in February, 1829.
He was commissioned lieutenant in 1841, and made commander in 1861.
In command of the iron-clad Tecumseh, he perished when she was blown up by a torpedo in Mobile Bay, Aug. 5, 1864, he then holding the rank of commodore.
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Farragut , David Glasgow -1870 (search)