Report on the Agriculture and Geology of Mississippi: Embracing a Sketch of the Social and Natural History of the State |
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Page 17
... settlement of the country seems appropriate and necessary. Were a precedent required to sanction the ver}^ abridged historical outline here introduced, a distinguished one may be found in the able and elaborate memoir that forms the ...
... settlement of the country seems appropriate and necessary. Were a precedent required to sanction the ver}^ abridged historical outline here introduced, a distinguished one may be found in the able and elaborate memoir that forms the ...
Page 20
... settlement of the Natchez, from which the hostile bearing of that people hastened his departure. Failing in his subsequent expedition, fitted out in France with a view to the establishment of a colony, to reach the mouth of the ...
... settlement of the Natchez, from which the hostile bearing of that people hastened his departure. Failing in his subsequent expedition, fitted out in France with a view to the establishment of a colony, to reach the mouth of the ...
Page 21
... settlement was established in Mississippi. Iberville, leaving his brothers in charge of the settlement, the elder, Sauvolle, as governor, and the younger, Bienville, as his lieutenant, set sail on his return to France for the purpose of ...
... settlement was established in Mississippi. Iberville, leaving his brothers in charge of the settlement, the elder, Sauvolle, as governor, and the younger, Bienville, as his lieutenant, set sail on his return to France for the purpose of ...
Page 24
... settlement at Baluxi, it will suffice to state, in reference to the progress of the colony for many years, that it was characterized by an entire neglect of agricultural pursuits, and that it was subjected to great hardships from famine ...
... settlement at Baluxi, it will suffice to state, in reference to the progress of the colony for many years, that it was characterized by an entire neglect of agricultural pursuits, and that it was subjected to great hardships from famine ...
Page 30
... settlements in Carolina. The Indians were sent in pursuit, and all of them were captured or slain. The arrival of a ship in September afforded some relief, and it was learned that the Regent, after the failure and flight of Law, had ...
... settlements in Carolina. The Indians were sent in pursuit, and all of them were captured or slain. The arrival of a ship in September afforded some relief, and it was learned that the Regent, after the failure and flight of Law, had ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres Adams County afford agricultural arrived attack bale Baluxi Bayou Pierre beds Bienville bluff boll British bushels Carolina Carondelet character Chickasaws chiefly Choctaws Claiborne County colony color commandant considerable corn County Creek cretaceous crop cultivation cylinder deposits detached early Eli Whitney Ellicott embraced Eocene expedition extent favor feet fossils French Gayoso geological Geologist Georgia governor grants green-sand Hinds County hundred inches Indians indigo inhabitants iron Jackson Kemper County known lands latter lime Louisiana Marion County marl ment miles mineral Mississippi Natchez District obtained officers Orleans patent perhaps period plantations planters Plate possession potato present produced province remains rH rH river rock sand Section seed seen sent settlement shells soil Spain Spanish species springs strata Sulphate supply surface teeth tertiary tion Tippah County Township treaty trees tribes troops United varieties Vicksburg West Florida Whitney William Dunbar Yazoo Yazoo River
Popular passages
Page 165 - Individuals who were depressed with poverty and sunk in idleness, have suddenly risen to wealth and respectability. Our debts have been paid off; our capitals have increased, and our lands trebled themselves in value. We cannot express the weight of the obligation which the country owes to this invention. The extent of it cannot now be seen.
Page 59 - George the Third by the Grace of God, of Great Britain, France and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, and so forth, To all to whom these presents shall come, Greeting: Know ye, that we...
Page 370 - March one thousand eight hundred and thirty-one, the full and exclusive right and liberty of making, constructing, using and vending to others to be used...
Page 164 - A Mr. Holmes has cut teeth in plates of iron, and passed them over the cylinder. This is certainly a meritorious improvement in the mechanical process of constructing this machine. But at last, what does it amount to except a more convenient method of making the same thing?
Page 162 - An invention so important to the agricultural interest, and, as it has proved, to every department of human industry, could not long remain a secret. The knowledge of it soon spread through the state ; and so great was the excitement on the subject, that multitudes of persons came from all quarters of it to see the machine ; but it was not deemed prudent to gratify their curiosity until the patent right had been secured. So determined, however, were some of the populace to possess this treasure,...
Page 278 - Gibbes, published with figures in the first volume of the second series of the Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia.
Page 159 - Greene then invited to her house gentlemen from different parts of the state ; and on the first day after they had assembled, she conducted them to a temporary building which had been erected for the machine, and they saw with astonishment and delight...
Page 163 - The cylinder is only two feet two inches in length and six inches diameter. It is turned by hand and requires the strength of one man to keep it in constant motion.
Page 109 - ... of this Government on any pretext whatever, and notwithstanding the operation of the law aforesaid is hereby admitted, yet the inhabitants shall be considered to be in an actual state of neutrality during the continuance of their uncertainty, as mentioned in the second proposition.
Page 163 - Georgia. Within about ten days after my first conception of the plan I made a small though imperfect model. Experiments with this encouraged me to make one on a larger scale; but the extreme difficulty of procuring workmen and proper materials in Georgia prevented my completing the larger one until some time in April last.