Henry Berry, (1719-1812) was Liverpool's second dock engineer succedding Thomas Steers. Liverpool waterfront by night, as seen from the Wirral. ... Thomas Steers was born in 1672 in Kent and died in 1750. ...
He built Salthouse Dock, George’s Dock and King’s Docks. The Salthouse Dock is a dock, on the River Mersey and part of the Port of Liverpool it is situated in the southern dock system, connected to Canning Dock to the north, Wapping Dock to the south and Albert Dock to the west. ...
But it was the death of HenryBerry Lowrie's father and brother that brought a decade of conflict to Robeson County and made HenryBerry Lowrie an outlaw to the elite of Robeson County and a hero to its Indian, Black, and poor White inhabitants.
Most versions of HenryBerry Lowrie's story state that after a dispute with a neighbor, usually identified as James Barnes, and accusations of stealing food and harboring Yankee prisoners, the Confederate Home Guard were called in to adjudicate the dispute.
HenryBerry Lowrie's fame is unhindered by the relatively short amount of time he spent directly impacting the history of Robeson County, and has become one of the most notable figures in Lumbee History.