Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Oct. 25, 1826, edition 1 / Page 1
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- - 1 i , , ' . . ' - - v -. vii . "-'fu . " - ' fcr s.!.-. Vuli I. ' I : , i r . f T 1 If - ILL '. I V ' r - . -.m , . Jv" THIT PATRIOT, Is printed and published weekly b At Two Dollars; per annum pay ablo within three months from tin receipt of the first number, or Three D -llars, after (lis expiration f tbn, tiine . No paper to be discontinued unii' all irroaraee are paid, unles it option of the Editor; .in ! a 'ailnre to notify a discontinuance wilt be consi deri'd a new engagfinent. I be third child wa Charles Ad Him. now deceased He married the sister of UofTmilh, nowTiviog and Vft iwm dauir1i . ihe one the wife of Al -xnndria B. Johnson, Esq. of Uiica. N. V who hs several eiHI- .i . r . .1 ' I D,arlil U en, (He -il'ier Ml wunw -'f - from SewYork to Cant.,nrom m.u.,1 our wetrern irauer. go .er.. tn' i 32 doilam Der h. rrel. 0if dol lar pet barrel is a high frt-ight fnu this to New-Orlcaus. One dollar mnrii wiuilil be naid o carry it t New.York, and three dollar would I conimrrcial cj;p.neiiU ill the world our camirru , the -.titer Mi WUIOW imrin iV:r.-j - U,k, K.n. h I... a .UUSl.ler, l,.wti;r. i. rrom .here to .he 1. 1.. I . . . I. . u hurra ill llullr and who raided with her grand- ' r(iue,i , , , rr ld from St. Louis to the Council TVeir, nances, child was the l!".,.!, AS Tl.oma yylnn AdamS late Judge ..f r .ate woulcr always be , pr . erred, of .be, tmmo.1 least ade,uher ,c osim. It inevitable, that he ,.f . l,p Kx;;,r ,vi CuntiV wlVrmamJsu. pHrf IV ihr-Inili-tFadeis, , tke ii..rik...t.. f ...!, HurmiL tr ibix. aad the eolonisis, instead oi Ivn o Haverhill, and has fx chil go In-from the western country by ,lre!., all minor,, two dm;M rs and the W.ute of the Missouri, would be f ,r .oti. n y lived in the faui.ly sb pped at New York or & win. the hit, reid,ut after the; ph,rtf fr the raouth ot the Columbia, T . . i. 1 1 u i ii i il a .i i li i W m a A.l.., ' iflmMlielor3COIirc.ru in an u..v . i.i . nonn-HnlU. at.d! Mr. da., bpqiifalhed to his son ' 5100 of eouotr y, ..U be carri.dili ierted three timrs for one ilollai, ai.u - 1 , a. :Lf ni (J iinorEi-p I cousideL . , Joint I), his mansion Ixnis. Mil al t re! m y,,,l or 1J r , r.- .1 unaa.iiiinA mini I . k. ...... . lit. noli n sa em i.ir cc.y -uu. s 1 - c ,(,),. D;t,,er lie save to the f OW. mat tne wesif". ru..; r , ..- . ...rlMo,. , h sa.nepmportln-Le,ter. totbe Edi. tiu.wd at , Uipo dollar., o;re,j b'v the h.bit. havequ.r." A 0 V Efl 1 1 E Vl E NTS There ft an emnire ot wild and between the Missouri and M-si-p-pi. nt much betier quality than a'y on our coasts upon thi V cilic. A military post is not asked for by our whale fishermen, or otlie tra ders, tho frequent that coas'., nor have their gieat rivals, the English, any proteciion of that kind, lu. is iiigd by the people jfl jhe .M .sl! Troops sat)ooi jlhere would ,he a, A. greater expense than elsewhere. r,v ery thing must be transported an 1.1 mei'te il.stance,'arid doujble sUp; iei kept for feir of aee dent. T"4 mui ttry character of the troops would become ergd in that of the eivilj they will becom" -colonists, humeM, and fishermen, and in.. the. even' of tor must he post paid FAMILIES IUL ADAMS AND JKKFEttSON Appended to , the Eulogy of the Hon. JosKPH E Pr a6Ck, of 8atem, is the following note. Mr. .lefterson was married Jan. 1772, Jo a daughter of Mr Wnyies, an p ninent lawyer tj? Virginia M. J flferon died in the aummn f 1782, le.vin? two dHiieMeri.-'r.On "f j e duufhierg married JohnAV Epie, T ... d H ritffffhe4 - member -f(' leav crinrte house, for the clnjch of which thVslauiislitnent of a military post, 3 . . .1 M. ..!. AT Ifid I'll. he was a number lor -ixiy years, tie or colony, a mo .ui.i als.. heqneat' ed anoth r lo of land In nbia. it is by th. se on the conti to the town ior an Academy, and hisjnent opps -.toji; nor;d 1 think aoy l.brar of a.-r,. , 20OO volumes .part (f the Uni'. i. to ece.v heu.h fur theuse of that Ac id-my. , frm 1" nothing ofthe dpubl- fuf p lieyf est abttshin very remifte OREGON rKUUIiOiiY. !clnie, he we have such an 1 -I he'loKvl silence, during li.e last mpn,c extent of unsettled country nession oT Co i-rcss. of those who an, one hundred miilions acres of it u-prh heretoi'ore t 1. mist n is hj t riil acfl lament. ------ - - --- -- I. II II ' I U " k ' u i u i.vw ------------ the Territory of Oregon, has been a , for cultivation, surveyed and un nter of uneipf iiiedurp'ieji the; 8M,; has?, not : experieoce t ught. v. SVes . Y" h v been favored with , 4jjiitinn between the rapid ad- ed, or-;by their bec';jrning a piey to a nuTal preponderance. The Englih traders who have, uni il 1828.' more rights than our own eit rerfu iu tbat country, -ohoi 'lirough i wtfhoiii the aid-of proteetion.fi m military p sts They start from 'luds-ns Hay, and tr.ivers he northwest coant to the 4'Hh decree -df lattude, witlioul any otlePfear tbao " that ofmeetjng opposition in t;d, from t'Me with whose territorial ""V( rights thev. have been slraoeely Wr- f other daughter -married Thm Ma Randolph, late (Joy of Vi iniii G'v. Randolph posesnd ntat nevrr 2oiiticello. but om (amPy g ' erahy formed a part of that at Ion tice Hi Mrs Itui'inlnh 'ba. hud eleven children, two or three of whom have died She has tw daug ter mameil; she lost a married daughter la t winter, Mrs. Bkhed Her son, riiomas. J. ff'son 11 inl dph. the executor 0' hi grandfather, is ab-i 34-or iCr years oldj he has, I tink but one brother.'' Mr J ff rson men tious in his will, to graod-son-in. law, Nicholas l ! rists and Joseph Coolidge. of B 'S'on. Mr .Jlfergoo g.ive his Library to the University of Virginia, and his valuable manuscripts and p pera lo hiM grandson an executor, Thomas J ftWson Itandidph.. - The University of Virginia has re quested perm'ssi in to erect a monu ment over Mr. JefTtfrsooVrerna'na None of our President have had sons except dams and his so J hn Q Adams. Neither Washington nor Madison had any children J ffers n and Mon'oc only daughters John Adams wa married in I7ft4 to Abigail the daughter of the late (TI. Willinm Similh tllA rp npt H II I P clergvman of. Weymonth. She di'-d pr pound, (as much as, ten cents per 11... 1... ik. 14 iuio "" ! 1 1 . 1 :. 1.1 : i r. uciiiurr oir iDi ioia piiuno nn neen piii,j 11, uiirciu'r, The eldest child was daughter, now i,.0,t, 10 carry a barrel of fl ur deceased. She was married in Eny; one-s'Xth; part of the distance to h land, In" 1785, to William 8tevens nutli of the Columbi itiver. Siip Smith, who had served in the Army pin the whole roo'e to be, like as inspector general and aid to Wash , ihat to the Council B'uffi,a steam ington,"bu was then Secretary of le-j,aAt i,avigatim, that itiere were no gation. Tluee of their ch ldren sur-J prf igHs, no mountains to cross, no vive, two son, am! one aaugnter, tne wife of John F. Dew itt, of Fishkill N. Y." Theii.tiecond child, John Q. Ad ms, married iti London in t707v to Louirta Katharioa daughter of Josh ua JohiiHon, Esq. of Maryland, then Consul at London. They have three sons, (leorgeiAyashingtnn, now re presenive from : Boston iu our Legis Jalufe: and ,.t wtcynunger. Rnosi. t he Second son, John Adams, private se cretary to the! President, was bom July . . rAV -- - - " T. Louis J nuary, TS(2G. itt: B ' -MV) lUal the prupod in- s e of s' ,-Vhf.g a eolo'iy. or ' e; a lin.lity... postt at lie Mouth of I. C tiir.ibia ttiyer, will, if carriMl mio rt' ei, jerntf agan st the inter hi of (bis senium of ih count-y; and is it ha tj-en heretofore urg d by western men, and as a westorn me i iire, I take the I berty, a one of the former, in sfnte to u reasons why 1 Ii tile y ou ougnl to vote against it. i w u!d have a leniency to take fr in us migrants that would other wise settle upon our fertile land? md si --r-ngtlien our St ite, and the United -tales; troops, that wou d otherwise b- Hsmned to protect our frontier and for the I ride, bmh in its equip ineu and returns; and I am at a lost in conceive, what in eresf. or profi. able communication, we could have wi'h a colony 'itant from us 3,500 mila, and from which w are separa td by a lofty raog of mouniains and deserts, only practicable to light hunt ing parti- s To judge sanely of tins matter, we nun.ikftiirHClical fcts, not imagin. ay pee lati 'tis. The freight pui by the g ivernrnent from tin place t- the C iUiicil BltilTs, dn'an' 000 miles, has never bei legs thaa 2 t-8 cents mpare by K. mucky d .Ohio, an I othe wnsiero states witn the tamy pi ress niu-.lt in the car?y iet:k aKrr on the eastern slope of iheL.coatiueuL H'w-have resources to spire, le them ba applied to encourage the ex tension of our present settlement 0-ir eiitern liianufaetiirerrt and mer cnauts have infinitely more to expec:, from the ereation of a substantial market by the rapid icreaso of or l:Unn. wlm mtut he their euttn- mors, than from any thm they could ; at Romo point on the Misnur from d'-rive froniupplyrng a feeble col ny, j wl.ich they can mak perindiral ex- wmi 11, ior a ioug uiiif, vim no trim I lie luea 01 prmycmiij uxouu oao in this eountiy. by , perm'anet p-f'8 and immoveable g'arrtsons, is a 1II11- sory ns it would be !,p meet ' UT commerce on tbc high "se.i f- , - pir ate by a chain of p'-sts al-ns: he coast f'rm New-Orleans in llo'"ii. Our advances b youd tb M s - i 'live bf iigln us i eontact w 1 monn'ed tartarsof A-ncica. H'wo vsh to protect the fur trade of T: iave a influence over the Indians", '-Ji. we must adopt our means of eoitrol ' 'i their situation. Instead of sr u ting up the tro .ps at the mouth, of Ihe Columbia. IM them be a'aitoned o'it other me'ahs of payment tian thuse derive. I from a source, to which they themselves are called upon to cursion in'o the Indian eountrv A lure part of., the force should bo mounted, and a depot funnel, to which thev could occasionally sort changes in the transportation neees- ' - V. J ---w - - - - f ff II I' " " 7 - - - - " - ' ' - contribute, and which will be a mar-I n obtain 11 ov-si ns, &c. and r fit ket for ihem only until the colonists ; tlii r hors -. F m this oin', let can set up for themselves, and hold them rove or cruise over the mi direet communication with Eurepe mense plai s of Western America, and China. They will soon become as" ex peri in . If. may be said, that those who obtaining the means of subsistence would emigrate to the Pacific are a the Indians. Let "Jhem cross if peron who would no emigrate 'o ripc.-gmxry , the mountains, and jo to the West- but. if their n ac, s are sun- : tle P-icific: let it be their busines to plied, as they would b ? by those wt. j atJord eouvov and prOtectioU 'o tra- (j, rs t . go wtierever their presence maybe necessary, or wherever ihe Indians themselves can peneiratey and carry punishment upon truns-o;resio-s in their most hidden r cesses. It is'by this means alone that aoy strong impression can be made opoa thos wandering hordes. Soldiers of iin-'Xampled efficiency will thus be formed and the extraordinary pee" tacle avoided of accumulating Indi ans on our birders, and removing to the mouth f Columbia the ni" t ft would otherwise emigrate westward- ly, the ette, is the same. It would b- vry erroneous, indeed 10 supnose. that because our enler pnsing etiz ns can fun is I; to the in habitants of the northern parts of E isternMexico, to a limited extent light good at a ch aper rate thin they can obtain them by the way of their own'seaboard, that the same o peration oould be carried on to any settlements that might be formed on ihe Columbia lliver. Initejmient of the greater length and diOicufty ofnf controlling them. But perf-et . . I . . .1 ' I I . .1 the route to the latter point, from sary, il would even then cost 30 to 0tj settlements, the Mexican par la carry 0 barrel ol II..tir from ot. I u;s nn the Gulf nre shoal. nod inconyen to the Mouth of the Columbia Uiver ent, and the .MranO'" tb the princi Gen. Ash I e y ; whose aagaei t y 1 s equ a I p d oaeTali'beenr'iin t i'l'lTriitTiFly ion to hisehterprise. told me, that he tf 0ei) 0y the Uoyaiisls. Their ri would have willing) given one dollar verR are .'unfit.. 'for nivigation, their per pound to transport his furs fom rads. execrable, apd infested with the centre of the Itoeky Mountains to, banditti, and the quickening ..fluence Ul Inula Putcilll' ihiS 111 A iliitfl. CL.rla Lni nut tut ln frtTt t A I P I V f'- he probable eost of arryi4ig u barrl rnu5ed -the ffufldued-eit'rrg-er nf -wt.r -i uonr irom iiiei ) iflmsipjii i im-- Mexican netguoors. wiiiur wrmii Pacific, w 11 Id. be Juoi.lyloMars.. c-,i, there; a re spaciuusarbo 1 understand that the Value of freight .D(j an immense navieabts river, at?A security to those who are."e'mpell4d to- traverse the-lndian eountrrf in nnt be ohtaih 'd until -i more -umma- ry m ode of piiDisbi.ntt ..3$r?,f9S:. jegaily . auiliorizcdi I beli-.v it Would btrue hum nity lo the. red ind white skns boi h, if th" form r wero' placed .im ler martial law, and ''.at tbe su'render of a muni .-r uy his" tribe should be considered "3 le.r-i ff Iden c"i f-jm itnwl r a m ho r itr f.if t m ioiin-'diaie exeu un; l otn your .nost obedicnl servant. IV -
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 25, 1826, edition 1
1
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