The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service > LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)

Pike, Albert, 1809-1891


  • URI(s)

  • Variants

    • Barnacle, Sam, 1809-1891
    • Citizen of Arkansas, 1809-1891
  • Additional Information

    • Birth Date

        1809-12-29
    • Death Date

        1891-04-02
    • Has Affiliation

        • Organization: Confederate States of America. Army
        • Organization: Little Rock Guards
        • Organization: Masonic Lodge (Washington, D.C.)
    • Birth Place

        Boston (Mass.)
    • Occupation

      Attorney

      Soldier

      Writer

      Freemason

      Newspaper editor

      Teacher

      General

  • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Sources

    • found: His Prose sketches and poems, written in the Western country, c1987:CIP t.p. (Albert Pike) data sheet (b. Dec. 1809)
    • found: LC data base, 10/24/86(hdg.: Pike, Albert, 1809-1891)
    • found: His Lays of the humbuggers, &c. By Sam. Barnacle, 1836
    • found: Macarthy, H. The bonnie blue flag, c1861:t.p. (Albert G. Pike, Esq., the poet-lawyer of Arkansas)
    • found: Wikipedia, Mar. 17, 2014(born Dec. 29, 1809, Boston, died Apr. 2, 1891, Washington, D.C., American attorney, Confederate officer, writer, and Freemason) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Pike
    • found: NUCMC data from Arkansas Hist. Comm. for His Papers, 1833-1920(Albert Pike was born in Boston, Mass., on Dec. 29, 1809. He had many different professions through the years, including lawyer, newspaper editor, writer, and teacher. In 1831, he traveled to Santa Fe in Mexico Territory, where he took part in some exploratory expeditions. In 1834, Pike married Mary Ann Hamilton and settled in Little Rock, Ark. During the Mexican War, he helped raise the Little Rock Guards and served as their captain. At the start of the Civil War, Pike was given the task of forming treaties with the Indians. Appointed brigadier general in Indian Territory, he received constant complaints and criticism from other Confederate leaders concerning the conduct of his Indian troops. In response to the mounting hostility, Pike resigned in 1862. He moved to Washington, District of Columbia, in 1870, where he became increasingly involved with the Masonic Lodge, an organization of which he had been a member since 1850. Pike died in Washington, District of Columbia, on Apr. 2, 1891)
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  • Change Notes

    • 1986-10-28: new
    • 2017-09-11: revised
  • Alternate Formats