Clay McCauley, 1863, detail

Scanned by
John Osborne, Dickinson College
Scan date
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
At Princeton College: And in the Army of the Union, 1863
Source citation
Clay MacCauley, Memories and Memorials: Gatherings From an Eventful Life(Tokyo, Japan: The Fukien Printing Co., Ltd., 1904), 44.
Source note
This is the spelling of the author's name on this source, as it appears on the book's cover page.

Clay McCauley, 1863

Scanned by
John Osborne, Dickinson College
Scan date
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
At Princeton College: And in the Army of the Union, 1863
Source citation
Clay MacCauley, Memories and Memorials: Gatherings From an Eventful Life(Tokyo, Japan: The Fukien Printing Co., Ltd., 1904), 44.

Clay McCauley, 1859, detail

Scanned by
John Osborne, Dickinson College
Scan date
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
At Dickinson College, 1859
Source citation
Clay MacCauley, Memories and Memorials: Gatherings From an Eventful Life(Tokyo, Japan: The Fukien Printing Co., Ltd., 1904), 30.
Source note
This is the spelling of the author's name on this source, as it appears on the book's cover page.

Thomas Verner Moore, detail

Scanned by
John Osborne, Dickinson College
Scan date
Image type
engraving
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
Thomas Verner Moore, D.D.
Source citation
Alfred Nevin, David Robert Bruce Nevin, editors, Encyclopaedia of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America (Philadelphia: Presbyterian Encyclopaedia Publishing Co., 1884), 543.

Dangerfield Newby (Villard, 1910)

Scholarship
Oswald Garrison Villard, John Brown, 1800-1859: A Biography Fifty Years After (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1910), 686.
Dangerfield Newby, colored, was born a slave in 1815, in Fauqier County, Virginia. His father, a Scotchman, freed his mulatto children. Newby’s wife, from whom he received the touching letters given in the text, was the slave of Jesse Jennings, of Warington, Virginia. She and her children were “sold South” after the raid, but it is said that she subsequently lived in Ohio. The shot that gave Newby his death-wound cut his throat from ear to ear, the missile being a six-inch spike in lieu of a bullet.
Subscribe to