The year was 1841 and after a two-year internment in the United
States, thirty-five surviving slaves from the ship Amistad were
freed by a Supreme Court ruling following a four and a half hour
address by former President John Quincy Adams who led the defense.
The slaves stayed for a time and toured New England states as
abolitionists raised funds to ship them home to Sierra Leone.
Yellow Fever swept through southern states; the Adams Sentinel of
15 November 1841 gives the following account:
"Yellow Fever at New Orleans--We are informed by a letter from New
Orleans, published in the New York Commercial Advertiser, dated
October 29, that the yellow fever has taken its departure from that
city; and that those who had fled the city are now returning. The
writer in order to demonstrate most conclusively the fatality of the
epidemic during the past season, has taken the trouble to sum up the
total mortality, since the outbreak of the fever, commencing on the
1st of August, and ending on the 29th October, comprising a period of
twelve weeks and five days, which he states to be 2,699 of whom,
1,722 were carried off by the fever, showing an average weekly
mortality of 211 deaths, of which 135 were of yellow fever."
In November of 1841 a trader named John Neely Bryan settled on the
east bank of the Trinity River to set up a trading post. That trading
post would grow to be a small settlement and eventually the city of
Dallas. By 1860 it would be home to 2,000 people.
In August, another group headed out West with California as their
destination. A wagon train gathered at Independence, Missouri, and on
15 May, fifteen wagons and two carts set out on the Oregon Trail. The
party split with some of the group heading to California, while
others went to Oregon. This was the first of many wagon trains that
would make the journey West on the Oregon Trail.
Edgar Allan Poe thrilled readers with the first fictional detective
story when The Murders in the Rue Morgue was published.
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