A Documentary History of the Norfolk (Gosport) Navy Yard 1800-1861

by John G. M. Sharp

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Lull, Edward P. History of the United States Navy Yard at Gosport (near Norfolk), Government Printing Office, Washington D.C., 1874, p. 2.

2. Sharp, John G.M., Early Gosport Documents, Gosport Navy Yard Employees, Occupation and Per Diem Pay Rates, http://www.usgwarchives.net/va/portsmouth/shipyard/sharptoc/nnysharp4.html

3. Wilkinson to Bancroft, 2 January 1846, pp. 1-20, Letters Received from Captains (“Captains Letters”), 1805-1861, 1 Jan 1846 to 31 Jan 1846, volume 326, letter number 6, RG260 National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C.

4. Ericson, David F. Slavery in the American Republic Developing the Federal Government, 1791-1861 (University of Kansas, Lawrence Kansas, 2011), p. 135.

5. Dibble, Ernest F. Slave Rentals to the Military: Pensacola and the Gulf Coast, Civil War History, Volume 23, Number 2, June 1977 pp. 101-113.

6. Thompson, E. P. The Making of the English Working Class, (Vintage Books, New York, 1963), p. 12.

7. Lewis Warrington to Secretary of the Navy, 20 June 1833,  Captains Letters, Letters Received from Captains (“Captains Letters”), 1805-1861, p. 1, Letter no. 80, Volume 183, RG 260, National Archives and Records Administration Washington D.C.

8. Miscellaneous Records of the Secretary of the Navy, "Muster Rolls" 1830, p. 40, roll number 0183, RG 45, NARA Washington D.C., "Rachel Barron" enumerated as # 2, O. S.2nd, wage $15.55 and "Lucy Henley" # 4, O. S.2nd, wage, $15.55. Both women’s wages were signed for by Commodore James Barron.

9. Wilkinson to Bancroft, 6 December 1845, Letters Received from Captains (“Captains Letters”), 1805-1885, 1 Nov 1845 to 31 Dec 1845, Volume 325, Letter number 84, pp. 1-2, RG 260, National Archives and Records Administration Washington D.C.

10. Teamoth, George, God Made Man, Man Made the Slave: The Autobiography of George Teamoh, editors F. N. Boney, Richard L. Hume and Rafia Zafar (Mercer University Press: Macon 1990), p. 83.

11. UK American Loyalist Claims, 1776-1835, AO 12–13, Katherine Sproule, aka Katherine Sprowle

12. Sprowle, Andrew, “formerly of Milton but late of Gosport", will filed, 22/1/1779, Edinburgh Commissary Court, CC 8/8/124.

13. Donnon, Elizabeth, Documents Illustrative of the Slave Trade to America, Volume IV, (Carnegie Institute, Washington D.C., 1935), pp. 162m, 218, 219, 221, 732, citing Sprowl aka Sprowle Andrew https://archive.org/details/documentsillustr00donn_2/page/218/mode/2up?q=sprowl accessed 5 August 2021

14. Harper, Kyle Plagues Upon the Earth Disease and the Course of Human History (Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2021), p. 363.

15. Starobin, Robert S.  Industrial Slavery in the Old South, Oxford University Press, New York, 1971), p.159.

16. Lichtenstein, Alex, “Industrial Slavery and the Tragedy of Robert Starobin,” Reviews in American History, vol. 19, no. 4, (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991), pp. 604–617.

17. Tomlins, Christopher L. (1992) In Nat Turner's shadow: Reflections on the Norfolk Dry Dock Affair of 1830–1831, Labor History, 33:4, 494-518, DOI: 10.1080/00236569200890261

18. Tomlins, Christopher, In the Matter of Nat Turner: A Speculative History, (Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2020) pp. 152-163

19. Hulse, Thomas, “Military Slave Rentals, the Construction of Army Fortifications, and the Navy Yard in Pensacola, Florida, 1824-1863,” The Florida Historical Quarterly 88, no. 4 (Spring 2010), 504.