Archive for March, 2019

Play Ball

Thursday, March 28th, 2019

A fun pickup from the The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette dated 01Oct1894.  Direct your attention to the boxscore.  There has been little change in format  in the past 125 years.  Traditional statistics, individual and team achievement, are very important to baseball, perhaps more than any other sport.

Unfortunately, the Pittsburgh “boys” lost their final game of that season to the Boston team in Boston. 

 

Boxscore (The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette , 01Oct1894, p6)

 

Georgetown was noted as a highly ranked town for amateur baseball.  Check out the results of the Georgetown team v Honus Wagner”s barnstormers - The Game.

 

 

Copyright©2019 Francis W Nash

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Briceland’s Cross-Roads

Tuesday, March 26th, 2019

Briceland’s Crossroads was once an important village.  Located at the intersection of the Pittsburgh to Steubenvile Pike (now US Route 22) and the Washington to Georgetown road (now PA Route 18 and earlier the Catfish Camp Trail), it was a buzzing vilage in the days of the stagecoach.  It had a newspaper, an academy, a female seminary, one tavern, an annual fair, and many businesses. [1]

 

The Panhandle Division of the PA RR changed all of that by passing by the village.  Today, Florence is an unpretentiout community approximity sixteen miles from Georgetown.

 

 

 

Reference. 

 

 



[1]  James F Mullooly, “Steamboat ‘Round the Bend”, Fort Vance Historical Society, 1994, p62-63.

 

 

 

 

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Officers of the str Katie Stcodale

Wednesday, March 20th, 2019

More names have been added to the list of officers of the str Katie Stockdale.   The names were collected from a newsclip from the Pittsburgh Daily Post dated 3 Dec 1877.   With that crew, the str Katie Stockdale left Pittsburgh for Cincinnati on Sat, 1 Dec 1877.

The Pittsburgh Daily Post 3 Dec 1877, p4.

 

 

Copyright©2019 Francis W Nash

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No part of this website may be reproduced without permission in writing from the author.

 

 

 

Rising Tide

Sunday, March 10th, 2019

The book by John Barry, Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America, is required reading.  The book provides an excellent explanation of the hydrology of the Mississippi River in flood conditions.  The river becomes an unpredictably violent, almost a living thing consuming everything in its path.    This catastrophe in 1927 was a struggle of man against nature, man against man, honor versus money, black and white clashes, and regional and national political conflicts.

 

 

 

Copyright © 2019 Francis W Nash

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No part of this website may be reproduced without permission in writing from the author.

 

 

 

Str Clara Poe Impressed

Tuesday, March 5th, 2019

The str Clara Poe served the entire duration of the Civil War.  From 18 Oct 1861 to 17 Apr 1865.  Four years.  Summer and winter.  Transporting troops and supplies on all the watery highways of the western theater.

Capt Thomas W Poe was the master and Jonathon Kinsey was one of his pilots. 

 

Pittsburgh Daily Commercial 5 Mar 1864.

One sentence in the article from the Pittsburgh Daily Commercial dated 5 Mar 1864 indicated that the str Clara Poe was “taken by the government”.  The packet was forced into public service by the US Army.  That was not unusual.  During the war, whether the str Clara Poe was temporarily impressed into service or chartered is unclear at times. 

There is no controversy concerning the destruction of the str Clara Poe.  The packet was intentionally set afire by men supporting the confederacy.  The dispute is whether the steamer was under government orders whether impressed or chartered.  

The owners of the str Clara Poe petitioned the US government for compensation to no avail.  They contacted their US representative, CC Townsend.  The Deputy Quartermaster General determined that the vessel “had been engaged as a common carrier transporting public property”.  That decision failed to address the fact that the str Clara Poe was transporting hay and military supplies in an active war zone. 

The last of the signature owners of the str Clara Poe, Capt Jacob Poe, died on 13 Mar 1891.  The struggle for compensation ended. 

Then, in the Pittsburgh Daily Post dated 8 Dec 1903 p9, the claim for compensation, $100K, had been carried on by Capt Thomas W Poe’s heirs.  What a shout-out for persistence in spite of the difficulty.  Thirty-eight years of struggle.    

 

Pittsburgh Daily Post 8Dec 1903 1.

 

 

 

 

Copyright©2019 Francis W Nash

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No part of this website may be reproduced without permission in writing from the author.