Mother: MATILDA of Oldenburg de RINGELHEIM Countess of Ringelheim |
"Sources: Kraentzler 1517, 1525, 1631; RC 237, 321, 359, 376;
AF; Horizon History of Germany; An Encyclopedia of World
History; A. Roots 45, 241; Pfafman; NEHGR 99.
King of Germany, 939-973. King of Italy, 951. Emperor of the
West, 962-973.
Called in RC 376 Kaiser Otto I the Great.
K: Otto I the Great, German King, King of Italy, Roman Emperor.
NEHGR: Emperor Otto the Great (of the Saxon House)."
_LUDOLPH Duke of Saxony__________________________ | (0806 - ....) _OTTO "Le Grand" Duke of Saxony_____________________________________| | (0836 - 0912) m 0869 | | |_HEDWIGE de FRIOUL ______________________________ | (0810 - ....) _HENRY I "The Fowler" of Rome______________________________| | (0876 - 0936) m 0909 | | | _ARNULF King of the Franks_______________________+ | | | (0863 - 0899) | |_HEDWIGE____________________________________________________________| | (0860 - 0903) m 0869 | | |_ODA of Bavaria__________________________________+ | (0850 - ....) | |--OTTO I "The Great" of Germany | (0912 - 0973) | _WALPERT de RINGELHEIM of Ringelheim_____________+ | | (.... - 0856) | _THEUDEBERT (Dietrich) Thiederich de RINGELHEIM Count of Ringelheim_| | | (0853 - 0916) m 0882 | | | |_________________________________________________ | | |_MATILDA of Oldenburg de RINGELHEIM Countess of Ringelheim_| (0880 - 0968) m 0909 | | _LOTHAIRE II "The Saxon" de CAROLING of Lorraine_+ | | (0827 - 0869) m 0862 |_GISELA de LORRAINE of Lorraine_____________________________________| (0863 - 0907) m 0882 | |_WALDRADA of Saxony______________________________ (0836 - 0869) m 0862
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Mother: Nancy Hervey LESTER |
BARKSDALE, Ethelbert, 1824-1893: BARKSDALE, Ethelbert, (brother
of William Barksdale), a Representative from Mississippi; born
in Smyrna, Rutherford County, Tenn., January 4, 1824; moved to
Jackson, Hinds County, Miss.; adopted journalism as a
profession; edited the official journal of the State 1854-1861
and 1876-1883; member of the Confederate Congress 1861-1865;
delegate to the Democratic National Conventions in 1860, 1868,
1872, and 1880; chairman of the Democratic State executive
committee 1877-1879; elected as a Democrat to the Forty-eighth
and Forty-ninth Congresses (March 4, 1883-March 3, 1887);
unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1886; engaged in
agricultural pursuits in Yazoo County; died in Yazoo City,
Miss., February 17, 1893; interment in Greenwood Cemetery,
Jackson, Miss.
Bibliography
Peterson, Owen M. “Ethelbert Barksdale in the Democratic
National Convention of 1860.” Journal of Mississippi History 14
(October 1952): 257-78.
What Abraham Lincoln Taught
Ethelbert Barksdale
The object of this paper is to fix the responsibility of
"reconstruction" and its disastrous consequences, where they
belong, not to extol the intelligent and honest rule of the
white race. An estimate of what the State suffered by the alien
and negro rule resulting from the plan of reconstruction
unwisely and needlessly enforced, can be formed by contrasing
the losses on the one hand, with the gains on the other.
WHAT ABRAHAM LINCOLN TAUGHT.
In clothing the negro with the weighty responsibilities of
government when he was utterly unfit for them, the authors of
the measure acted not only in defiance of all the lessons of
history, but of the teachings of the statesman whom they
professed to revere above all others. In his letter of March
13th, 1864, to Michael Hahn, of Louisiana, President Lincoln
wrote: "You are about to have a convention, which will probably
define the elective franchise. I have a suggestion for your
private consideration, whether some of the colored people may
not be let in, as, for instance, the very intelligent, and those
who have fought gallantly in our ranks . . . But this is only a
suggestion," etc., etc.
Mr. Lincoln, it will be seen, was not even clear in the opinion
that even the "very intelligent negro," and the negro who had
fought "gallantly" for his freedom, should be allowed to vote.
He could not have tolerated the plan of admitting to suffrage
the entire mass of ignorance and total incompetency as provided
in the plan of "reconstruction." This is in accord with the
well-matured opinion he had previously declared on the subject
of negro capacity for self-government.
In 1858, he said: "I am not, and have never been, in favor of
bringing about, in any form, the social and political equality
of the white and the black races. There is a physical difference
which forbids them from living together on terms of social and
political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while
they do remain together, there must be the position of superior
and inferior, and I, as much as any other man, am in favor of
having the superior position assigned to the whites."
Thus spoke Abraham Lincoln. But in the plan of "reconstruction"
forced upon the Southern States, the doctrine which he declared
was reversed, so far as it applied to Mississippi and other
Southern States in which there was a majority of the "inferior"
race.
Nor could the illustrious prophet of Republicanism have
tolerated the plan of turning the Southern States over to
CARPET-BAGGERS AND FEDERAL ARMY OFFICERS,
who, taking advantage of their positions, secured their election
to office, as in the case of General Ames. In a letter to G. F.
Shipley, in relation to the Government of Louisiana, dated
November 21st, 1862, Mr. Lincoln wrote: -
"Mr. Kennedy has some apprehensions that federal officers, not
citizens of Louisiana, may run as candidates for Congress in
that State. In my view, there would be no possible object in
such a course. . . . What we want is conclusive evidence that
respectable citizens of Louisiana are willing to serve as
members of congress, and to swear to support the Constitution,
and that other respectable citizens are willing to vote for
them. To send a parcel of Northern men here as Representatives,
elected, as it would be understood, and prehaps really so, at
the point of the bayonet, would be disgraceful and outrageous."
Directly opposed to these common-sense ideas of Abraham Lincoln
was the policy of "reconstruction" devised and enforced after
his death. It was even worse. It was a combination of the two
objectionable elements which he described - the negro and the
carpet-bagger. We have seen that, under the government of
Mississippi succeeding the provisional administration of
Governor Sharkey, "respectable citizens" were elected to
Congress, "willing to serve, and to swear to support the
Constitution," by "other respectable citizens," and were not
admitted. Under the mongrel system eventually adopted, "federal
officers, not citizens," and "a parcel of Northern men," who had
come as adventurers, were elected by the negro majority and
admitted as Representatives and Senators. With language aptly
applied, President Lincoln characterized such proceedings as
"disgraceful and outrageous." Such men were not only sent to
represent Mississippi in the national councils, but they were
deputed to unite with the negroes to seize the State government,
and to have and to hold it for all time. No wonder Rev. Henry
Ward Beecher, one of the founders of the anti-slavery party,
referring to the overthrow of a similar conspiracy in another
Southern State, indignantly proclaimed that it "was sheer
madness to place the government of the State in the hands of
ignorant negroes and vile carpet-baggers." Said Mr. Beecher,
"There never was such a system of taxation and general
government. . . . Just consider the state of things! The South
has sunk all its property in a war that had been bravely fought.
Its young men were decimated, but they set themselves honestly
and sublimely to work. They endured nobly. The class that was
suffering all these ills found itself suddenly governed by a
majority that a little while ago were slaves. There never was
such a subversion in the history of the white people. It was
monstrous!"
THE LESSONS OF HISTORY.
In assigning to the negro a part which he was wholly unprepared
to perform, and which he could not undertake without bringing
calamity upon himself, as well as the whites, the parties to the
plot acted not only in defiance of the admonition of their
idolized statesman, but of the warnings of history with its
"philosophy teaching by example." The learned English historian,
Allison, in describing the experiments of negro rule in the West
Indies, says, it has demonstrated that the negro "does not
possess the qualities requisite to erect a fabric of civilized
freedom." Mackenzie, in his work on St. Domingo, says, that "it
is impossible to arrive at any other conclusion but that in the
qualities requisite to create and perpetuate civilization, the
African is decidely inferior to the European race, and if any
doubt could exist on this subject, it would be removed by the
subsequent history, and present state of the Haytien
government." Sir Spencer St. John, formerly English minister
resident at Hayti, in giving the result of his observations
after personlly knowing the Haytien Republic for twenty-five
years, says:
"I know what the black man is, and I have no hesitiation in
declaring that he is incapable of the art of government, and
that to entrust him with framing and working the laws for our
(the English) islands (West Indies) is to condmen those islands
to inevitable ruin. What the negro may become after centuries of
civilized education, I cannot tell, but what I know is, he is
not fit to govern now." "In spite," he says "of all civilizing
elements around the Haytiens, there is a distinct tendency to
sink into the state of an African tribe." After ninety years of
trial, the negro government of Hayti is a mockery in which every
form of tyranny and vice is blended, instead of progressing
towards a higher civilization the negroes, he says, "are in a
state of rapid decadence." He quotes from another eminent
historian of close observation, James Anthony Froude, the
declaration, that in the negro Republic of Hayti, "there lies
active and alive, the horrible revival of the West African
superstition, the serpent worship, the child sacrifice, and the
cannibalism." In his work, "The English in the West Indies,"
written after he had visited the Islands and investigated
carefully, in order to form corect conclusions as to negro
capacity for self-government, he endorses the opinion of Sir
Spencer St. John, and says:
"If for the sake of theory and to shirk responsibility these
(negro) islands are left to govern themselves, the state of
Hayti stands as a ghastly example of the condition in which they
will inevitably fall. If we (the English) persist, we shall be
sinning against light - the clearest light that was ever given
in such affairs." He adds:
"One does not grudge the black man his property, his freedom,
his opportunity of advancing himself; one would wish him as free
and prosperous as the fates, and his own exertions can make him,
with more and more means of raising himself to the white man's
level. But left to himself and without the white man to lead
him, he can never reach it . . . We have a population to deal
with, the majority of whom are an inferior race. Inferior, I am
obliged to call them, because as yet they have shown no capacity
to rise above the condition of their ancestors, except under
European laws, European education, and European authority to
keep them from war upon one another. . . . Give them
independence, and in a few generations they will peel off such
civilization as they have as easily and as willingly as their
coats and trousers."
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS
It was to this same inferior race comprising a large majority of
the whole people that the authors of the "reconstruction"
policy, wickedly but, under an over-ruling Providence, vainly
endeavored to commit the destinies of Mississippi. It is
reasonable to infer that upon the ordinary questions of
governmental policy the white people of the state would have
differed and ranged themselves under the opposing political
banners, but when the "race issue," with its consequences of
life and death to their liberty and civilization, was needlessly
and cruelly thrust upon them, they were forced into a solid,
compact organization in obedience to the higher law of
self-preservation which God in His wisdom has instituted; and
this organization they will maintain so long as the cause which
made it inevitable remains.
Candor requires that this should be said. A part of the
"reconstruction" plan has expended its force. Other parts having
been engrafted upon the Constitution of the United States, have
remained to plague not the inventor only, but both the white and
the negro races in the South. The blunder must now be clear to
the authors themselves. It is not the purpose of the writer to
ask them to retrace their steps and undo their folly, but may we
not hope that under the influence of the sober, second thought,
they will permit us to control our domestic affairs as nominated
in the bond of union as it now stands, according to our own
judgment, and to take care of ourselves as best we may.
Jackson, Mississippi, March 10th, 1890.
http://www.adena.com/adena/usa/cw/cw211.htm
_Nathaniel BARKSDALE Sr.______+ | (1720 - 1790) m 1748 _Nathaniel BARKSDALE Jr._| | (1760 - 1830) m 1784 | | |_Mourning DICKENSON __________ | (1725 - ....) m 1748 _William BARKSDALE Sr._| | (1787 - 1834) | | | _James GARDEN "the Immigrant"_ | | | (1750 - 1773) | |_Nancy "Anne" GARDEN ____| | (1769 - 1835) m 1784 | | |_Sarah WIMBISH _______________ | (1750 - ....) | |--Ethelbert BARKSDALE C.S.A. | (1824 - 1893) | ______________________________ | | | _________________________| | | | | | |______________________________ | | |_Nancy Hervey LESTER __| (1800 - ....) | | ______________________________ | | |_________________________| | |______________________________
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margravate (a medieval German name for a colony ruled by a
military governor, or margrave)
[310292]
Orbe,Vaud, Switzerland
_BOSO I in Austrasia_ | (0740 - ....) _BOSO II Count in Italy_| | (0784 - 0829) | | |_____________________ | _BOSO III "the Old" of Turin & East Frank_| | (0799 - 0855) | | | _____________________ | | | | |________________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--HERBERT de BURGUNDY of Transjuran Burgundy | (0820 - 0864) | _____________________ | | | ________________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |__________________________________________| | | _____________________ | | |________________________| | |_____________________
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Father: (RESEARCH QUERY) COOK |
__ | __| | | | |__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) COOK _| | | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Ruth COOK | (1905 - 1964) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |________________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Father: James Edward GAINES Mother: Susan Catherine CLARK |
_Francis GAINES _____+ | (1752 - 1826) m 1776 _Francis Pendleton GAINES Sr._| | (1786 - 1820) m 1811 | | |_Elizabeth LEWIS ____+ | (1755 - ....) m 1776 _James Edward GAINES ___| | (1810 - 1846) m 1837 | | | _Thomas BRONAUGH ____ | | | (1765 - ....) | |_Polly BRONAUGH ______________| | (1790 - ....) m 1811 | | |_____________________ | | |--Mary E. GAINES | (1842 - 1924) | _____________________ | | | ______________________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Susan Catherine CLARK _| (1820 - ....) m 1837 | | _____________________ | | |______________________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Rebecca WARREN |
_John STONE _________+ | (1730 - 1782) _Stephen STONE ______| | (1760 - 1817) m 1772| | |_Elizabeth___________ | (1740 - ....) _Marble (Marvel) STONE _| | (1780 - 1832) m 1811 | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Sarah HAWKINS ______| | (1760 - 1822) m 1772| | |_____________________ | | |--William Warren STONE Sr. | (1826 - 1907) | _Hackley WARREN _____+ | | (1723 - 1807) m 1744 | _Lott WARREN ________| | | (1750 - 1798) m 1771| | | |_Sarah SHIPP ________+ | | (1732 - 1800) m 1744 |_Rebecca WARREN ________| (1789 - 1832) m 1811 | | _____________________ | | |_Rebecca GORDON _____| (1754 - ....) m 1771| |_____________________
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