Tag Archives: 1840s coming of age
Young Love in the Old South
In the early spring of 1841, thirteen-year-old Eliza Fisk Harwood of Williamsburg, Virginia, wrote a letter to her friend Tristrim “Trim” Skinner so crammed with news that it was practically unreadable. What she considered to be her most important news, … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged 1840s coming of age, 1840s courtship correspondence, 1840s economic depression, 1840s planter elite, 1840s romanticism, 1840s southern belle, 1840s Upper South, 1840s Victorian culture, 1840s Williamsburg, 19th century courtship, 19th century engagement, 19th century girlhood, 19th century love letters, 19th century marriage, Charles Minnigerode, College of William and Mary history, courtship in the antebellum South, courtship letters, documentary editing, early Victorian American courtship, early Victorian American love letters, early Victorian American primary sources, early Victorian American youth culture, ebook documentary edition, ebook primary source, Edenton North Carolina, Eliza Fisk Harwood, Grantley Manor, John Millington, love and courtship in the antebellum South, Mary Maillard, Nathaniel Beverley Tucker, Skinner family Edenton, southern belle, The Belles of Williamsburg: The Courtship Correspondence of Eliza Fisk Harwood and Tristrim Lowther Skinner 1839-1849, Thomas Roderick Dew, Tristrim Lowther Skinner, Victorian American adolescence, Victorian American romantic love, Victorian American teenage girl
Comments Off on Young Love in the Old South
“General Harrison is certainly dead,” April 5, 1841
Williamsburg April 5th 1841 [Tazewell Hall] Conscience, my dear friend has severely reproved for thus neglecting to answer your truly welcome letter, and I sincerely hope that you will not think the phrase “out of sight, out of mind” applicable … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged 1840s coming of age, 1840s courtship correspondence, 1840s Williamsburg elite, 1841, 19th century letters, antebellum, April 4 1841, Bruton Parish Church, College of William and Mary, coming of age, courtship, courtship letters, Death of President Harrison, documentary editing, early Victorian American primary sources, early Victorian American youth culture, ebook documentary edition, ebook Old South, ebook primary source, February 25 1841, ghost of Tazewell Hall, Governor John Tyler, John Beverly Christian, Mary Maillard, Norfolk, President John Tyler, President William Henry Harrison, primary source, Skinner family Edenton, southern belle, Tazewell Hall, The Belles of Williamsburg: The Courtship Correspondence of Eliza Fisk Harwood and Tristrim Lowther Skinner 1839-1849, Twelfth Night, Victorian American coming of age, Victorian American teenage girl, Virgina, Whig, White House, Williamsburg, Williamsburg Court House
Comments Off on “General Harrison is certainly dead,” April 5, 1841