Report on the Agriculture and Geology of Mississippi: Embracing a Sketch of the Social and Natural History of the State |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 41
Page 18
... poin " kills " jut in upon the assign the mouth of the . the place of De Soto's d down on an English map of these points , however encountered . Here he continued , notwithstanding his disasters and Expedition and discovery by De Soto.
... poin " kills " jut in upon the assign the mouth of the . the place of De Soto's d down on an English map of these points , however encountered . Here he continued , notwithstanding his disasters and Expedition and discovery by De Soto.
Page 19
... continued , notwithstanding his disasters and the persevering and galling attacks of the Indians , until the 1st of April , 1541. The position of this winter encampment is conjectured to have been near the northeastern part of Pontitoc ...
... continued , notwithstanding his disasters and the persevering and galling attacks of the Indians , until the 1st of April , 1541. The position of this winter encampment is conjectured to have been near the northeastern part of Pontitoc ...
Page 37
... continued scene of carousal and debauchery . A few only escaped , and succeeded in reaching New Orleans , bearing the first intelligence of this sad disaster . The first of these who arrived was Richard , followed shortly after by ...
... continued scene of carousal and debauchery . A few only escaped , and succeeded in reaching New Orleans , bearing the first intelligence of this sad disaster . The first of these who arrived was Richard , followed shortly after by ...
Page 41
... continued for several years , in conjunction with the latter tribe , to attack and harass the French on all favorable occasions , and still numbered two hundred warriors . When informed of these disasters , the company of the Indies ...
... continued for several years , in conjunction with the latter tribe , to attack and harass the French on all favorable occasions , and still numbered two hundred warriors . When informed of these disasters , the company of the Indies ...
Page 51
... continued their hostilities against the Chickasaws during many years with constantly increas- ing success , and the latter seemed in danger of sharing , in the end , the fate of the exterminated Natchez . Sorely beset , they sued for ...
... continued their hostilities against the Chickasaws during many years with constantly increas- ing success , and the latter seemed in danger of sharing , in the end , the fate of the exterminated Natchez . Sorely beset , they sued for ...
Other editions - View all
REPORT ON THE AGRICULTURE & GE Mississippi State Geologist,Benjamin L. C. (Benjamin Leonard Wailes No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
acres Adams County afford AGRICULTURE American Anthony Hutchins arrived attack bales Baluxi Bayou Bayou Pierre BERNARD LINTOT Bienville bluff boll Britain British Carondelet character Chickasaws chiefly Choctaws Colonel colony commandant committee considerable corn cotton plant Creek crop cultivation cylinder Daniel Clark deposited Dunbar early Ellicott Eocene established expedition extent feet fibre Fort Adams Fort Rosalie fossils French Gabriel Benoist Georgia Governor Gayoso grants HISTORICAL OUTLINE hundred Iberville inches Indians inhabitants iron known land late latter Lieutenant Pope Louisiana marls ment miles Mississippi Natchez District officers Orleans party patent period plantations planters Plate possession potato present proclamation produced province river rock season seed seen sent settlement shells soil Spain Spanish species strata surface thirty-first degree tion tobacco treaty tribes troops United varieties West Florida Whitney Whitney's William Dunbar Yazoo Yazoo River
Popular passages
Page 144 - 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 61 - 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 144 - ... 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. This, though much larger than my first attempt, is not above one third as large as the machines may be made with convenience.
Page 326 - 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 144 - 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 144 - 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 141 - 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 112 - July, when the following gentlemen were chosen. Joseph Bernard, Peter B. Bruin, Daniel Clark, Gabriel Benoist, Philander Smith, Isaac Gaillard, Roger Dixon, William Ratliff and Frederick Kimball. The election of this committee...
Page 265 - Carbonate of lime 41 Carbonate of magnesia 26 Chloride of potassium 25 Carbonate of potassa Sulphate of lime Sulphate of magnesia Alumina and oxides of iron Manganese in traces and loss . . .1.64 100.00 Analysis of the Fibre of Sea Island Cotton.
Page 243 - ... in different parts of the Continent, although some of them seem to have disappeared, or to have now no living representative in the fauna of this region. Among the species most numerous, may be enumerated the Helix albolabris, alternata, concava, elevata, fraterna, perspectiva, profunda, thyroides, tridentata, &c.