Guide to the Sam Houston papers, 1821-1863
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| Creator: | Houston, Samuel, 1793-1863 |
| Title | Sam Houston papers
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| Dates: | 1821-1863 |
| Abstract: | Sam Houston was the
leader of the Battle of San Jacinto which won Texan independence from Mexico,
the first regularly elected president of the Republic of Texas, U.S. Senator
from state of Texas, and later Governor of Texas. This collection of letters
contains government letters and documents written by Houston, letters to
Houston from other government officials, and people seeking favors, and
personal materials such as letters to and from family members, and bills.
Government and military correspondents include Col. James W. Fannin, James
Bowie, Anson Jones, Thomas Jefferson Rusk, James A. Hamilton, Gen. Memucan
Hunt, Gen. Albert S. Johnston, Cherokee Chief Bowles, Edward Burleson, Gen.
George W. Terrell, John C. Calhoun, Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels (founder of
New Braunfels), U.S. Sec. of War George W. Hockley, U.S. Sec. of State Daniel
Webster, U.S. Sec. of State, James Buchanan (later Pres. of U.S.) and
others. |
| ID | MS 049 |
| Extent | 1 box originals, 1 box use
copies (1 lin. ft. total) |
| Language | Materials are in
English. |
| Repository: | Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University,
Houston, TX |
Sam Houston, one of the most illustrious political figures of Texas, was
born on March 2, 1793, the fifth child (and fifth son) of Samuel and Elizabeth
(Paxton) Houston, on their plantation in Rockbridge County, Virginia. When he
was thirteen years old, his father died; some months later, in the spring of
1807, he emigrated with his mother, five brothers, and three sisters to Blount
County in Eastern Tennessee, where the family established a farm near
Maryville.
Rebelling at his older brothers' attempts to make him work on the farm
and in the family's store in Maryville, Houston ran away from home as an
adolescent in 1809 to dwell among the Cherokees, who lived across the Tennessee
River. Between intermittent visits to Maryville, he sojourned for three years
with the band of Chief Oolooteka, who adopted him and gave him the Indian name
Colonneh, or "the Raven." Houston viewed Oolooteka as his "Indian Father" and
the Cherokees much as a surrogate family. He henceforth maintained great
sympathy toward Indians.
At age eighteen he left the Cherokees to set up
a school, so that he could earn money to repay debts. After war broke out with
the British, he joined the United States Army as a 20 year-old private, on
March 24, 1813. As part of Andrew Jackson's army, he fought at the battle of
Horseshoe Bend, where he received three near-fatal wounds, but won the
attention of General Jackson. Jackson thereafter became his benefactor and in
return, Houston became a staunch Jacksonian Democrat.
Following his
difficulties with Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, Houston resigned from the
army on March 1, 1818. That year, Houston began practicing law in Lebanon,
Tennessee. With Jackson's endorsement, he became adjutant general of the state
militia through appointment by Governor Joseph McMinn. In late 1818, Houston
was elected attorney general of the District of Nashville, where he took up
residence. After returning to private practice in Nashville by late 1821, he
was elected major general of the state militia by his fellow
officers.
Houston's rapid rise in public office continued in 1823, when,
as a member of Jackson's political circle, he was elected to the United States
House of Representatives from the Ninth Tennessee District. As a member of
Congress, he worked mightily, though unsuccessfully, for the election of Andrew
Jackson to the presidency in 1824. In 1825, he returned to Congress for a
second and final term. In 1827, Houston was elected governor of Tennessee at
the age of 34.
On January 22, 1829, he married nineteen-year-old Eliza
Allen of Gallatin, Tennessee and soon after, announced his bid for re-election
to the governorship. After eleven weeks and amid much mystery, the marriage
ended. Extremely distraught, Houston abruptly resigned from his office on April
16 and fled west across the Mississippi River to Indian Territory, bringing an
end to Houston's Tennessee phase and possibly, an eventual run at the
presidency of the United States.
He made his way to the lodge of
Oolooteka in what is now day Oklahoma to live once again in self-imposed exile
among the Cherokees, this time for three years. Among the Indians, he initially
drank heavily and secluded himself from contacts with white society. He quickly
became active in Indian affairs, was granted Cherokee citizenship, and under
Cherokee law, married Diana Rogers Gentry, an Indian woman of mixed
blood.
Gradually reinvolving himself in the white world, he made various
trips East. On the evening of April 13, 1832, on the streets of Washington,
Houston thrashed William Stanbery, United States representative from Ohio, with
a hickory cane. The assault resulted from a perceived insult by Stanbery over
an Indian rations contract. Houston was soon arrested and tried before the
House of Representatives. The month-long proceedings ended in an official
reprimand and a fine, but the affair catapulted Houston back into the political
arena. Leaving Diana and his life among the Indians, Houston crossed the Red
River into Mexican Texas on December 2, 1832, and began perhaps the most
important phase of his career.
Houston saw Texas as his "land of
promise", a place for bold enterprise, rife with political and financial
opportunity. He quickly became embroiled in the Anglo-Texans' politics of
rebellion. He served as a delegate from Nacogdoches at the Convention of 1833
in San Felipe and in September 1835, he chaired a mass meeting in Nacogdoches
to consider the possibility of convening a consultation. By October, Houston
had expressed his belief that war between Texas and the central government was
inevitable and on March 2, 1836, Texas adopted its Declaration of Independence.
Two days later, Houston received the appointment of major general of the Texas
army, with instructions to organize the Republic's military forces. Despite
problems with infantry discipline, Houston and his men defeated the Mexican
forces of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna at the decisive battle of San
Jacinto on the afternoon of April 21, 1836. At San Jacinto, Sam Houston became
forever enshrined as a member of the pantheon of Texas heroes and a symbol for
the age.
Riding the wave of popularity as "Old Sam Jacinto," Houston
became the first regularly elected president of the Republic of Texas,
defeating Stephen F. Austin. His first term lasted from October 22, 1836, to
December 10, 1838, during which the town of Houston served as the capital of
the Republic. During this term, Houston sought to demilitarize Texas and avoid
trouble between white settlers and Indians. In late 1836, Houston sent Santa
Anna, then a prisoner of war, to Washington to seek the annexation of Texas to
the United States. Although Houston favored annexation, his initial efforts to
bring Texas into the Union proved futile, and he formally withdrew the offer by
the end of his first term. After leaving office because the Constitution of the
Republic of Texas barred a president from succeeding himself, Houston served in
the Texas House of Representatives as a congressman from San Augustine from
1839 to 1841.
On May 9, 1840, Houston married twenty-one-year-old Margaret Moffette
Lea of Marion, Alabama. A strict Baptist, Margaret served as a restraining
influence on her husband and especially bridled his drinking. They had eight
children: Sam Houston, Jr., (1843), Nancy Elizabeth (1846), Margaret (1848),
Mary William (1850), Antoinette Power (1852), Andrew Jackson Houston (1854),
William Rogers (1858), and Temple Lea Houston (1860).
Houston succeeded
Mirabeau B. Lamar to a second term as president from December 12, 1841, to
December 9, 1844. During this administration, Houston stressed financial
austerity and drastically reduced government offices and salaries. Although
many Texans clamored for action, President Houston deftly managed to avoid war
with Mexico after the two Mexican invasions of 1842. After the first incursion,
Houston directed that the government archives be moved from Austin, an order
that ultimately resulted in the "Archive War," in which residents of Austin
forcibly prevented removal of the files.
Following his succession to the
presidency by Anson Jones, Houston became one of Texas's two United States
senators, along with Thomas Jefferson Rusk. Houston served in the Senate from
February 21, 1846, until March 4, 1859. As senator, Houston emerged as an
ardent Unionist, true to his association with Andrew Jackson, a stand that made
him an increasingly controversial figure. He stridently opposed the rising
sectionalism of the antebellum period and delivered eloquent speeches on the
issue. His career in the Senate was effectively ended when, in 1855, the Texas
legislature officially condemned his position on the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which
he opposed because it allowed the status of slavery to be determined by popular
sovereignty, a concept he saw as potentially destabilizing to the
nation.
As a lame-duck senator, Houston ran for governor of Texas in
1857, but was defeated by the state Democratic party's official nominee, Hardin
R. Runnels. Predictably, the state legislature did not reelect Houston to the
Senate; instead, in late 1857, it replaced him with John Hemphill. Out of the
Senate, Houston ran a second time for governor in 1859. Because of his name
recognition, a temporary lull in the sectional conflict, and other factors, he
defeated the incumbent, Runnels, and assumed office on December 21.
When
Abraham Lincoln was elected president of the United States, the clamor of
discontent in Texas prompted Houston to call a special session of the state
legislature. Despite his adamant opposition to slavery, Texas withdrew from the
Union, a move Houston acquiesced in order to avoid bringing civil strife and
bloodshed to his beloved state. But when he refused to take the oath of loyalty
to the newly formed Confederate States of America, the Texas convention removed
him from office on March 16 and replaced him with Lieutenant Governor Edward
Clark.
After leaving the Governor's Mansion, Houston at least verbally
supported the Southern cause. Against his father's advice, Sam, Jr., eagerly
joined the Confederate Army and was wounded at the battle of Shiloh. Houston
moved his wife and other children in the fall of 1862 to Huntsville, where they
rented a two-story residence known as the Steamboat House, so called because it
resembled a riverboat. On July 26, 1863, after being ill for several weeks, he
died in the downstairs bedroom of the Steamboat House, succumbing to pneumonia
at age 70. Dressed in Masonic ceremonial trappings, he was buried in Oakwood
Cemetery at Huntsville.
Excerpted from: "HOUSTON, SAMUEL." The Handbook of Texas Online.
<http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/HH/fho73.html>
[Accessed Thu May 20 10:48:47 US/Central 2004 ].
This collection contains government letters and documents written by Sam
Houston, letters to Sam Houston from other government officials, and people
seeking favors, and personal materials such as letters to and from family
members, and bills. Government and military correspondents include Col. James
W. Fannin, James Bowie, Anson Jones, Thomas Jefferson Rusk, James A. Hamilton,
Gen. Memucan Hunt, Gen. Albert S. Johnston, Cherokee Chief Bowles, Edward
Burleson, Gen. George W. Terrell, John C. Calhoun, Prince Carl of
Solms-Braunfels (founder of New Braunfels), U.S. Sec. of War George W. Hockley,
U.S. Sec. of State Daniel Webster, U.S. Sec. of State, James Buchanan (later
Pres. of U.S.), Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels (founder of New Braunfels), and
others.
While still in private hands, some of these letters were published in
Marquis James'
The Raven, published 1929, and in Eugene C.
Barker's eight-volume set entitled
The Writings of Sam Houston, first volume of
eight published in 1938. Where possible, it has been noted in this guide where
letters appear in Barker's publication. Many items remain unpublished as of
2004, particularly those of Anson Jones and Thomas Jefferson
Rusk.
Highlights include letters to Bowie and Fannin in December 1830
giving orders which were ignored, letters from Indian scouts and from Cherokee
Chief John Jolly (aka Oo-la-te-ka, Houston's adopted Indian father) regarding
Houston's career and the land needs of the Cherokees, and the 1861 letter from
Houston to his wife urging that she let their son Sam go on to war ("God can
shield him as he has me,"), and Houston's own account of Andrew Jackson's death
as related to James Buchanan, U.S. Sec. of State.
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Arrangement
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| The Houston letters have been arranged in 15 series which mainly
represent chronological groupings. |
| |
| | Series I: Early Letter and Documents, 1821-1828 |
| | Series II: Military Affairs, 1835-1842 |
| | Series III: Series III: Republic of Texas Indian Affairs,
1836-1843 |
| | Series IV: Relations of Texas and U.S. Government, 1842-1845 |
| | Series V: Colonists, 1835-1844 |
| | Series VI: Bills for General Houston, 1836-1859 |
| | SeriesVII: Family Letters, 1829-1863 |
| | SeriesVIII: Partially identified Sam Houston letters and fragment,
1836-1842 |
| | Series IX: Meeting Invitations, 1848-1855 |
| | Series X: General Correspondence, 1830's |
| | Series XI: General Correspondence, 1840's |
| | Series XII: General Correspondence, 1850's |
| | Series XIII: Series XIII: Communications from Citizens' Groups
regarding moving Texan seat of government, 1842 |
| | Series XIV: Notes, Essay, Newsclippings, Correspondence,
1842 |
| | Series XV: Photocopies of Family Letters, 1824-1857 |
Access Restrictions
There are no restrictions on access to
these papers, although patrons will use photocopies of these materials unless
access to the fragile originals is essential.
Use Restrictions
Permission to publish material from Sam Houston papers must be obtained
from the Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University.
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| Subjects (Persons) |
| | Houston, Samuel, 1793-1863 --
correspondence |
| | Bowie, James --
correspondence |
| | Buchanan, James (U.S.
President) -- correspondence |
| | Fannin, James W. --
correspondence |
| | Rusk, Thomas Jefferson --
correspondence |
| | Jones, Anson --
correspondence |
| | Hamilton, James A. --
correspondence |
| | Hunt, Memucan --
correspondence |
| | Johnston, Albert S. --
correspondence |
| | Chief Bowles (Cherokee) --
correspondence |
| | Burleson, Edward --
correspondence |
| | Terrell, George W. --
correspondence |
| | Calhoun, John C. --
correspondence |
| | Prince Carl of
Solms-Braunfels -- correspondence |
| | Hockley, George W. --
correspondence |
| | Webster, Daniel --
correspondence |
| | Houston family --
correspondence |
| Subjects (Places) |
| | Texas--Politics and government. |
| | Texas--history. |
| Subjects |
| | Cherokee Indians --
government relations |
| | Cherokee Indians --
history |
| | Cherokee Indians --
correspondence |
Sam Houston papers, MS 049, Woodson Research
Center, Fondren Library, Rice University
This collection was donated in 1992 by Charlotte Williams Darby,
great-granddaughter of Houston, daughter of Franklin Weston Williams.
Detailed Description of the Collection
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Series I: Early Letter and Documents,
1821-1828
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| box | folder |
| 1 | 1 | | Sam Houston's commission as a Major General in the Militia
of Tennessee, signed by William Carroll, Governor of Tenneessee, dated Dec. 14,
1821. |
| 1 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Hon. John MacLean, dated May
10, 1826. |
| 1 | | Letter from Sam Houston concerning the duel with General
White, dated Sept. 12, 1826. |
| 1 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Colonel Martin, dated Oct. 10,
1828. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series II: Military Affairs,
1835-1842
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 2 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Col. James Bowie concerning the
expedition into Mexico which Houston opposed, dated Dec. 17, 1835. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. I, p.
322-323) |
| 2 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Col. James W. Fannin ordering
that all volunteers should proceed to Copano to encamp, dated Dec. 30, 1835.
(see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. IV, p.
15) |
| 2 | | Letter from Gen. Thomas J. Rusk to Sam Houston thanking
him for suggesting that he run for President of Texas, but declining, dated
Aug. 9, 1836. |
| 2 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Col. P. A. Sublette, Capt.
Burdett, & Col. Jacob Garrett ordering to enroll the troops at San
Augustine and have the election of officers, dated Sept. 1, 1836. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. IV, p.
24) |
| 2 | | Letter from Gen. James A. Hamilton declining the offer by
the Texas Congress to command the army of Texas, dated Feb. 16,
1837. |
| 2 | | Notes from Sam Houston for a secretary, one of which
concerns the certification of property taken by Col. Seguin, dated April 4,
1837. |
| 2 | | Letter from Sam Houston to S. Rhodes (sic)Fisher, Sec. of
the Navy, telling him to proceed to Velasco to see if there is a Mexican naval
force off the south of the "Brasos", dated April 5, 1837. Correct spelling of
names is Rhoads. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. IV, p.
28-29) |
| 2 | | Letter from Richard Pollard, Charge d'Affaires of the
United States to the Republic of Chile, to Sam Houston congratulating him on
his accomplishments and calling for justice in the murder of his son at the
hands of Lt. Hoath, dated April 21, 1837. |
| 2 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Col. Alexander Horton ordering
him to use caution in his power to sustain the Civil Authorities in the County
of San Augustine, dated July 15, 1837. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. II, p.
133) |
| 2 | | Letter from Capt. B. Jones to Sam Houston asking that his
bond be paid and saying that it cannot without Houston's permission, dated
Sept. 22, 1837. |
| 2 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Bernard A. Bee, Sec. of War,
stating, "The troops yet remaining at Bernard must have supplies...", dated
Feb. 25, 1838. |
| 2 | | Letter from Bernard A. Bee to Sam Houston stating his
resignation as Secretary of War, dated May 23, 1838. |
| 2 | | Broadside written by Sam Houston ordering for the proper
and humane treatment of civilians by the army and soldiers of the Republic,
dated Aug. 11, 1838. |
| 2 | | Letter from Albert Emanuel to Sam Houston concerning the
possibility of a Mexican invasion, dated Jan. 1842. |
| 2 | | Letter from George W. Hockley to Sam Houston assuring him
that he does not keep copies of documents marked "private" and informing him of
the conditions on the frontier, dated Feb. 16, 1842. |
| 2 | | Letter from George W. Hockley, Sec. of War, to James
Bourland informing him of the travel route of Gen. Armijo and calling for his
interception and capture in retaliation for the injuries inflicted upon the
citizens at Santa Fe, dated July 22, 1842. |
| 2 | | Letter from Gen. Memucan Hunt to Sam Houston asking if he
will veto or sign the War Bill, dated July 21, 1842. |
| 2 | | Letter from William H. Jack to Sam Houston asking for his
views on an intended secret mission to send a confidential agent to Yucatan,
dated July 22, 1842. |
| 2 | | Letter from Jefferson Wright to Sam Houston stating his
frustration over regimental orders, dated Nov. 2, 1842. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series III: Republic of Texas Indian Affairs,
1836-1843
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 3 | | Letter from Sam Houston to William Goyens, Indian agent,
dated Nov. 15, 1836. |
| 3 | | Notes from Sam Houston directing a secretary to write to
the Indian Commissioners; to William Goyens, the Secret Agent to the Cherokees;
and to the Comanche chiefs, dated Dec. 6, 1836. (This letter is shown as being
dated Dec. 3, 1936 in
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. VII,
p. 4-5.) |
| 3 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Gen. Albert S. Johnston
informing him about the precariousness of the Texas situation in 1837, dated
Feb. 7, 1837. |
| 3 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Gen. Thomas J. Rusk expressing
his frustration over what he believes was a disobedience of orders, resulting
in a Houston massacre, dated Feb. 13, 1837. |
| 3 | | Letter from W. S. McDonald to Sam Houston concerning
misinformation about the massacre in Houston, dated Feb. 14, 1837. |
| 3 | | Letter from Gen. Albert S. Johnston to Sam Houston
informing him about a friendly meeting with the Comanches and urging him to use
the opportunity to make peace with the tribe, dated March 5, 1838. |
| 3 | | Letter from John Jolly, Houston's Cherokee foster father,
to Sam Houston informing him that he has kept with the news and asking if the
Cherokees can have a "country" set aside and have their rights respected, dated
March 27, 1838. |
| 3 | | Letter from Bowles, Cherokee Chief, to "all my White
friends" asking for their patience and forebearance in the death of Col.
Sparks, dated May 2, 1838. |
| 3 | | Letter from Edward Burleson to Sam Houston expressing his
willingness to go bond for King and Glasscock as traders with the Comanches,
dated June 9, 1838. |
| 3 | | Letter from Thomas W. Ward to Sam Houston reporting of
high water, difficulty in getting horses, Indian hostility, and the taking of a
buried chest by Col. Cazneau, dated Oct. 30, 1842. |
| 3 | | Letter from L. B. Franks to Sam Houston informing him that
the prospects of a treaty with the Indians are favorable, dated Nov. 12,
1842. |
| 3 | | Letter from John S. Black to Sam Houston informing him
that no Indians are present as of yet in the Waco Village, dated Nov. 6,
1842. |
| 3 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Gen. George W. Terrell
regarding the possibility of having a treaty with the Indians at Waco Village,
dated Feb. 13, 1843. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. IV, p.
160-162.) |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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Series IV: Relations of State of Texas and U.S. Government,
1842-1845
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 4 | | Letter from Daniel Webster, Sec. of State, to Nathaniel
Amory, acting Charge d'Affaires of Texas, acknowledging receipt of note
concerning the "Eagle" and the "Liberty" seized at New York, dated Jan. 19,
1842. |
| 4 | | Lettter from Isaac Van Zandt to Sam Houston tendering his
resignation as member of the Sixth Congress of the Republic of Texas from the
County of Harrison, dated July 23, 1842. |
| 4 | | Letter from Zachary Taylor to Sam Houston saying that a
Mexican invasion of Texas should not be taken seriously, but if it were to
happen, San Jacinto would undoubtedly be repeated, dated Aug. 13, 1844. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. V, p.
93.) |
| 4 | | Letter from John C. Calhoun, Sec. of State, to Isaac Van
Zandt promising to give orders to have two boys reported stolen by the Wichita
Indians returned if found in U.S. territory, dated Aug. 17, 1844. |
| 4 | | Letter from John C. Calhoun, Sec. of State, to the Hon. C.
H. Raymond regarding the unknown fate of the two boys presumably taken by the
Wichita Indians, dated Jan. 22, 1845. |
| 4 | | Letter from James Buchanan, Sec. of State, to C. H.
Raymond saying that he will gladly receive him with his credentials as Charge
d'Affaires for the Republic of Texas, dated March 10, 1845. |
| 4 | | Letter from Sam Houston to the Hon. James Buchanan
informing him on the death of Gen. Jackson and introducing Col. Joseph Eldredge
as being of the Department of State of Texas, dated June 8, 1845. (see similar
letter in
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. IV, p.
424-425.) |
| 4 | | Letter from Andrew Jackson Donelson to Sam Houston saying
how much he values the stick which was to be given to Gen. Jackson and letting
him know how valuable he has been to the U. S. for securing annexation, dated
June 16, 1845. |
| 4 | | Letter from Sec. of the Treasury to Daniel Webster, Sec.
of State, regarding the refund of duties by John W. Dough to the party of John
A. Rodgers, dated March 2, 1842. |
| 4 | | (illegible item) |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series V: Colonists,
1835-1844
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 5 | | Letter from Jesse Carter Ferrar to Sam Houston asking
about emigrating to Texas and wanting information concerning land and laws
before the independence of Texas, dated Jan. 2, 1835. |
| 5 | | Letter from Henry Swartz to Sam Houston inquiring about
Texas, dated July 26, 1836. (copy only - missing original) |
| 5 | | Letter from Henri Castro to Sam Houston writing about
bringing French colonists to Texas, dated Nov. 1, 1842. |
| 5 | | Letter from Henri Castro to Sam Houston writing about a
communication with Anson Jones, Sec. of State for Texas, dated Nov. 15,
1842. |
| 5 | | Letters from Lt. Techow to Sam Houston writing about his
desire to leave the army post in Berlin to seek his fortune in Texas, dated
Nov. 6, 1842. |
| 5 | | Letter from Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels at Antonio de
Bexar to Sam Houston thanking him for sending a copy of the laws of Texas and
saying that he wants good land for his proposed colonists, dated Aug. 11,
1844. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series VI: Bills for General Houston,
1836-1859
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 6 | | Receipt for Sam Houston signed by Niles F. Smith, agent of
City Sabine, for $1808.32, dated March 20, 1836. |
| 6 | | Bill signed by Sam Houston to be paid to N. G. Cooke for
$98.38, dated Aug. 23, 1837. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by Geo. Allen Heo, for an
order of sugar, flour, and coffee, dated Nov. 26, 1842. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by Vernal B. Lea to be paid to
D. H. McDonald for $35, dated July 6, 1843. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by J. B. Miller to be paid to
K. L. Anderson for $250.00, dated Jan. 24, 1844. |
| 6 | | Hon. Sam Houston per diem account with a remaining balance
of $1,341.00, dated Dec. 15, 1849 - Sept. 30, 1850. |
| 6 | | Received payment by Charles M. Nichol from Sam Houston for
$34.20, dated April 18, 1850. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by J. C. & S. R. Smith for
$527.69, dated June 24 - Nov. 19, 1856. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by J. C. & S. R. Smith for
$47.50, dated Jan. 1 - Oct. 21, 1857. |
| 6 | | Bills for Sam Houston signed by J. C. & S. R. Smith
for $31.89, dated Dec. 2, 1853. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by J. C. & S. R. Smith for
$453.28, dated Jan 24 - Nov. 9, 1857. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by Jack W. Terrell for
$100.00, dated Oct. 16, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by J. C. & S. R. Smith for
$3,161.96, dated Nov. 23, 1857 - Nov. 20, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill stating Mr. S. Morgan took a load of [illegible
material, probably agricultural] in quanitity of 1000 feet, accepted by Thom.
[illegible], dated Nov. 22, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by Baker & Markham for
$11.25, dated July 23, 1857 - Nov. 22, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by Silas Morgan to be paid for
the amount of freight over to Newman, dated Nov. 22, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by M. & L. C. Roundtree
for $15.85, dated Nov. 22, 1858. |
| 6 | | List of nine bills due to various people for varying
amounts, dated 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by T. & S. Gibbs and
received payment for $200.00, dated Aug. 4 - Nov. 23, 1858 (2
leaves). |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by T. & S. Gibbs for
$384.84, dated Jan. 12 - Aug. 4, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by Randolph & Son and
received payment for $23.25, dated Jan. 20 - Nov. 18, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by J. R. & E. E. Smither
and received payment for $26.27, dated Dec. 1, 1856 - Nov. 14,
1859. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by H. Garnett to be paid to J.
W. Terrell for $100.00, dated Oct. 16, 1858. |
| 6 | | Bill for Sam Houston signed by T. & S. Gibbs for
$30.80, dated Dec. 31, 1857 - Jan. 12, 1858. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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SeriesVII: Family Letters,
1829-1863
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| box | folder |
| 1 | 7 | | Criss-cross style letter from Sam Houston to Margaret
Houston concerning his trip and worry about Sister's (Vernal Lee's widow)
having gained so much weight, dated Aug. 16, 1861. |
| 7 | | Letter from R. G. Houston to Sam Houston, concerning a
letter Sam had sent him about the health of a beloved one, dated July 17,
1829. |
| 7 | | Letter from Mary Wallace to Sam Houston, regarding the
prospect of Texans obtaining liberty, Sam getting wounded, and the health of
family members, dated June 4, 1836. |
| 7 | | Letter from Eliza A. Moore to Sam Houston, regarding the
recent birth of her daughter, her concerns for him in battle, and the
well-being of family and friends, dated Aug. 14, 1836. |
| 7 | | Letter from Eliza A. Moore to Sam Houston, regarding the
recent deaths of her two children who were afflicted with scarlett fever and
inflamation of the throat, dated May 21, 1838. |
| 7 | | Letter from R. H. McEwen to Sam Houston, regarding a
letter Sam had sent him about getting $500 to his sister through Mr. McEwen of
Kingston, Aug. 29, 1838. |
| 7 | | Letter from Sam Houston to William Bledsoe regarding
Houston's financial investments in Texas, dated Sept. 21, 1840. |
| 7 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Nancy Lee, stating what a
pleasure and privilege it is to be writing her and recounting a dream he
recently had, dated Jan. 28, 1844. |
| 7 | | Letter from H. Stevenson to Sam Houston, regarding family
matters, dated Feb. 15, 1847. |
| 7 | | Letter from Margaret Trimble to Sam Houston, explaining
that she had not written him because she was unaware of his whereabouts, dated
Nov. 27, 1845. |
| 7 | | Two letters to Sam Houston, one from his cousin, N. B.
Hamilton, dated May 27, 1850, and one from his sister, Margaret Houston, dated
May 30, 1850. |
| 7 | | Letter from Margaret Houston to Sam Houston, concerning a
lost letter she had sent him, dated May 13, 1857. |
| 7 | | Letter from Margaret Houston to Sam Houston, regarding a
loan she had asked for, dated June 9, 1851. |
| 7 | | Letter from H. Houston to Sam Houston, concerning a
certain correspondence that appeared in the New York Herald on the 22nd of
August, dated Sept. 17, 1851. |
| 7 | | Letter from N. Houston to Sam Houston, regarding family
matters, dated Aug. 21, 1858. |
| 7 | | Letter from Sam Houston to a "dear sir" acknowlegding that
he has received his letter, dated June 1, 1860. |
| 7 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Nancy Lee, concerning family
matters and his writing to Bledsoe and Antoinette, not dated. |
| 7 | | Letter from Priscilla Houston to Sam Houston, stating how
she sees him as an uncle and concerning a letter from Mr. Kinsey, dated June 3,
1863. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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SeriesVIII: Partially identified Sam Houston letters and
fragment,
1836-1842
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| box | folder |
| 1 | 8 | | Letter from A. W. Morris to B. F. Tankersley enclosed in a
letter to B. F. Tankersley from Sam Houston saying that the letter had been
picked up in Galveston with the seal broken and sent to him, dated July 1,
1842. |
| 8 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Captain, authorizing him to buy
beef, dated July 9, 1837. |
| 8 | | Incomplete letter from Margaret Houston to Sam Houston
regarding the improvement of his health, not dated. |
| 8 | | Letter from Sam Houston to the Hon. B. J. Auchal
acknowledging that he has received his note by the Hon. S. Rhodes Fisher, dated
Nov. 17, 1838. |
| 8 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Davis, acknowledging that he
has received his letters, dated July 18, 1842. |
| 8 | | Incomplete letter from Sam Houston concerning the letter
of the honorable chairman of the secretary committee, dated Nov.
1836. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series IX: Meeting Invitations,
1848-1855
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 9 | | Letter from B. S. Moore to Sam Houston, urging him to come
to a meeting July 4th to help their cause and show a "live Texas", dated June
17, 1848. |
| 9 | | Letter from Stephen D. Dellaye to Sam Houston inviting him
to visit while he is in Syracuse to lecture before the Franklin Institute,
dated Jan. 3, 1855. |
| 9 | | Letter from the Committee of Invitations to Sam Houston
inviting him to attend a convention of the American Party of Virginia, dated
Aug. 20, 1855. |
| 9 | | Letter from S. P. Hollingworth to Sam Houston inviting him
to attend a mass meeting of the American Party in Rusk County, dated Sept. 14,
1855. |
| 9 | | Letter from M. W. Armstrong to Sam Houston inviting him to
speak on "Great American Principles" to Rusk Council #25, dated Sept. 18,
1855. |
| 9 | | Letter from J. C. Smith to Sam Houston inviting Houston to
attend a meeting of the American Party to "Counteract the Meeting of the
Democrats", dated Sept. 28, 1855. |
| 9 | | Letter from A. H. Davidson and John S. McDonald to Sam
Houston inviting him to attend a meeting of the American Party in San Antonio,
dated Oct. 15, 1855. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series X: General Correspondence,
1830's
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 10 | | Letter from W. G. Anderson to Sam Houston, assuring him
that he personally had checked the appropriate records and that the proper
steps had been taken to insure the validity of Houston's divorce as granted by
the Mexican government in 1833, dated April 8, 1837. |
| 10 | | Letter from Sam Houston to T. F. McKinney, asking him to
send a copy of S. Rhoads Fisher's order appointing McKinney "Prize Agent",
dated Sept. 5, 1837. (see
Writings of Sam Houston, Vol. IV, p.
26-27.) |
| 10 | | Contract and agreement between Sam Houston and Hervey
Whiting ordering the delivery of beef to Spillman's Island for the supply of
Galveston, dated Feb. 11, 1838. |
| 10 | | Letter from M. B. Lewis to Sam Houston acknowledging that
he has received his letter directing him to take the place recently occupied by
Mr. M. Gofifce, dated July 19, 1834. |
| 10 | | Letter from A. M. Gall to Sam Houston letting him know it
grieved him to see Houston in so sick of appearance, dated June 24,
1834. |
| 10 | | Letter from John S. Taylor to Sam Houston asking for his
permission to resettle on his land in Texas, dated Feb. 1837. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series XI: General Correspondence,
1840's
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 11 | | Letter from Gen. James A. Hamilton to Sam Houston advising
him on how to manage the affairs of the Republic, dated Nov. 6,
1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Gail Borden Jr. to Sam Houston consisting of
political and personal comments, dated Nov. 17, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Samuel May Williams (partner in Williams and
McKinney law firm which previosuly loaned the Republic of Texas money) to Sam
Houston telling him that at this point, he cannot lend any money to the
Republic, but sends all good wishes and will send some supplies for the troops,
dated Nov. 22, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from John S. Ford to Sam Houston telling him that
Gov. James P. Henderson will surely appoint Houston to the U. S. Senate from
Texas and reporting a rumor that the Comanches had killed Col. L. H. Williams
and their chief, Pahuaca, dated May 19, 1846. |
| 11 | | Letter from Henry de Zavala to Sam Houston telling him
that he had gone to Yucatan to investigate the conditions of the country from
which his parents came, dated May 22, 1848. |
| 11 | | Letter from Sam Houston to W. G. Cooke asking him to
please give Mr. Clements a note or receipt he had left with care, dated Jan.
15, 1840. |
| 11 | | Letter from Ben Fitzpatrick to Sam Houston regarding the
resolutions unanimously approved by the General Assembly of the State of
Alabama, dated Jan. 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Rawdon, Wright, Hatch, &
Redsoa asking them to please deliver to Capt. J. S. Wright blank bills ordered
for the government of Texas by the Hon. William Berry Dangersfield, Secretary
of the Treasury of the Republic of Texas, dated April 30, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from A. S. Johnston to Sam Houston regarding a
proclamation Houston made that had appeared in the Civilian, dated May 1,
1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from William Christy to Sam Houston regarding the
unexpected departure of Macon and congratulating him on personal matters, dated
July 8, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from J. C. Eldredge to Sam Houston announcing that
after an absence of two years, he has returned to Texas with renewed feelings
of attachment, dated Nov. 1, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from J. Morgan to Sam Houston regarding the
disappearance of his previous letters, dated Nov. 5, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from T. B. J. Hadley to Sam Houston regarding the
resignation of Judge Jarvis, dated Nov. 3, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from M. P. Woodhouse to Sam Houston informing him
that the Treasury is now able to pay recent receipts due to offices of the
government, dated Nov. 4, 1842. |
| 11 | | Anonymous letter to Sam Houston warning him that he is in
great personal danger, dated Nov. 10th, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Lewis J. Gist to Sam Houston stating that he
embraces the opportunity offered by the return of Mr. Riley to Texas, dated
Nov. 5, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from W. B. Ochittree to Sam Houston informing him
on his duty as a senator to nominate a district attorney to fill the vacancy
occasioned by the resignation of R. J. Wheeler, dated Nov. 7, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from John Chenoweth to Sam Houston regretfully
informing him that he was not able to perform the duties asked of him because
he had received Houston's letters too late, dated Nov. 8, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from S. Harrington to Sam Houston regarding the
case of W. James D. Usher, dated Nov. 8, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Mrs. M. Hutchinson to Sam Houston concerning
her various griefs, dated Nov. 10, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from S. Holland to Sam Houston introducing to him
Major Andrew Allen, dated Nov. 8, 1842. |
| 11 | | [Illegible letter] dated Nov. 12, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Sam. M. Williams to Sam Houston advising him
that it is not in the interest of Texas to war upon the borders while the
inhabitants are struggling for a federal system, dated Nov. 12,
1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from James Power to Sam Houston informing him about
Mexican forces in the town of Malamones, dated Nov. 16, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from R. D. Johnson to Sam Houston introducing to
him Mr. E. L. Bearnard, dated Nov. 17, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from James Morgan to Sam Houston informing him
about a Mexican fleet seen off the Brazos, dated Nov. 17, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from M. P. Woodhouse to Sam Houston seeking his
approval on an account, dated Nov. 17, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from William Henry Daingerfield to Sam Houston
informing him of his arrival, dated Nov. 17, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from William Henry Daingerfield to Sam Houston
regarding an official note of his arrival, dated Nov. 17, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Joseph Eve to Sam Houston acknowledging that
he has received his letter for Mr. Scott and regretting that his health will
not allow him to visit Washington, dated Nov. 18, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from N. G. Harding to Sam Houston telling him that
he is in need of friends because of "peculiar embarassments", dated Nov. 18,
1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Stewart Newell from Sam Houston updating him
on the formation of the Sabine City, dated Nov. 18, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter Tho. M. Bagby to Sam Houston writing on behalf of
Maj. Andrew Allen, dated Nov. 19, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Albert H. Ely to Sam Houston volunteering his
surgical services to the army of the Republic of Texas, dated Nov. 21,
1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from George S. McIntosh to Sam Houston regarding
the arrival of Dr. Carrol, a gentleman interested in the affairs of Texas,
dated Nov. 22, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from John W. Rols to Sam Houston regarding a letter
that was opened by citizens hoping to "quiet the people and learn the truth",
dated Nov. 22, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Thomas J. Smith to Sam Houston regarding a
confidential verbal message that was to be communicated to him by way of Mr.
Wills, dated Nov. 28, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from William Anderson to Sam Houston regarding Dr.
Daniel J. Carrol, dated Nov. 29, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from M. P. Woodhouse to Sam Houston regarding Mr.
Baldwin's $400 in Treasury warrants, dated Nov. 29, 1842. |
| 11 | | Envelope from Charles Elliot to Sam Houston, dated Nov.
12, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from Joseph Eve to Sam Houston informing him about
a possible invasion of Texas by Mexican forces, dated Dec. 28,
1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from William Riddle and Co. to Sam Houston
introducing him to William and John Riddle, dated Nov. 30, 1842. |
| 11 | | Letter from John H. Moon to Sam Houston respectfully
declining the appointment for the collection of the various Indian prisoners,
dated Jan. 28, 1843. |
| 11 | | Letter from Edwin B. Settle to Isaac Vanzandt regarding an
individual matter involving his late mother-in-law, Mrs. Gibbs, dated May 24,
1843. |
| 11 | | Letter in Spanish from Gen. Adrian Woll to Sam Houston,
dated Aug. 16, 1844. |
| 11 | | Letter from Palmer Job Pillans to Sam Houston regarding a
letter in which Mr. McCutchan was introduced, dated Nov. 27, 1843. |
| 11 | | Letter from David S. Kaufman to Sam Houston thanking him
for ELLEGIBLE, dated July 13, 1847. |
| 11 | | Letter from Sam Williams to Sam Houston informing him on
his intentions to meet up with Com. Moore, dated Nov. 25, 1842. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series XII: General Correspondence,
1850's
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 12 | | Letter from J. J. Hanna to Sam Houston regarding an
anecdote of Houston, dated Dec. 24, 1854. |
| 12 | | Letter from Eliza W. Lanitta to Sam Houston praising him
for his accomplishments, dated March 13. |
| 12 | | Letter from Eve P. Avery (???) to Sam Houston offering
information that "cannot be otherwise obtained", dated April 7,
1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from C. Edwards Lester to Sam Houston concerning
the publication of the "Life of Sam Houston", dated March 28, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from R. R. le Howell to Sam Houston offering his
services in Houston's removal to Texas, dated July 24, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from Anne G. Forbes to Sam Houston regarding her
wishes to go to Texas, dated Aug. 31, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from Jason Wright Leminon (???) to Sam Houston
thanking him for (???) of patents for 1853, dated Aug. 5, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from Preston Starrell to Sam Houston regarding the
"restoration of the principles of our fathers", dated Sept. 3,
1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from J. W. McKnight to Sam Houston informing him
that he has been unanimously selected as an honorary member of the Philosophian
Society at Irving College, dated Sept. 4, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from J. B. Kaufman to Sam Houston regarding the son
of Mr. Dyr, who left Louisville to go to Texas and "be part of the
revolutionary struggle", dated Sept. 7, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from James H. Durst to Sam Houston regarding
Houston's speech on the subject of "An Increase of the Army, the Indian Policy
of the Government", dated Sept. 13, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from John N. Pomeroy to Sam Houston writing in
behalf of the Union of Societies to invite him to listen to the review of the
associators in the state of New York, dated Sept. 15, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from W. D. Miller to Sam Houston answering his
request to send him a copy of the instructions to Henderson and Raugandt, dated
Sept. 17, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from ??? to Sam Houston thanking him for the
receipt of the Congressional Globe and Appendix, dated Sept. 16,
1853. |
| 12 | | Letter from Eden Walker regarding the recently published
book entitled "A Voice to America", dated Sept. 17, 1853. |
| 12 | | Letter from John M. Shreve to Sam Houston writing his
former military commander about the revolution in Texas, dated Sept. 18,
1955. |
| 12 | | Letter from J. W. Bradford to Sam Houston regarding some
columns printed in the Congressional Globe, dated Sept. 18, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from J. L. L. McGall to Sam Houston informing him
that he represented Texas as a delegate in the American Convention, dated Sept.
21, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from William A. Shaw to Sam Houston regarding his
plans to leave for Texas, dated Sept. 22, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from Paul G. Wheeler to Sam Houston regarding an
amount of $252.50 subscribed in the town of Huntsville, dated Oct. 13,
1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from J. B. Stiteler to Sam Houston asking for
monetary contributions to Baylor University, dated Oct. 18, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from E. N. Case to Sam Houston regarding the late
response to a letter Houston had sent him, dated Oct. 16, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from J. B. Stiteler to Sam Houston acknowledging
that he received Houston's $20, his third annual installment of $100, dated
Oct. 19, 1855. |
| 12 | | Letter from James C. Jones to Sam Houston responding to a
previous letter from Houston in which he informs him that Lexington has been
flooded with Thomas Jefferson pamphlets in reply to Houston's speech in the
U.S. Senate, dated Jan. 21, 1856. |
| 12 | | Letter from G. M. Lawson to Sam Houston, dated Feb. 28,
1857. |
| 12 | | Letter from E. N. Smith to Sam Houston thanking him for
his interest in her, dated Oct. 9, 1858. |
| 12 | | Letter from Davis Grigg to Sam Houston congratulating him
on his election as governor of Texas, dated Sept. 1859. |
| 12 | | Letter from N. Young to Sam Houston congratulating him on
his election as governer of Texas, dated Aug. 24, 1859. |
| 12 | | Letter from D. H. Oliver to Sam Houston regarding hisgreat
speech at Nacogdoches, dated Sept. 2, 1859. |
| 12 | | Letter from Thomas R. Gray to Sam Houston informing him
about the object of the "National Guard of the Union" and asking for his
support, dated Sept. 6, 1859. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series XIII: Communications from Citizens' Groups regarding
moving Texan seat of government,
1842
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 13 | | Document from the Citizens of Travis County protesting the
ordered transfer of the Public Archives from the capital in Austin to Houston,
unofficially dated March 1842. |
| 13 | | Document from the "Manifesto of the Committee of Vigilance
and Safety of Houston" supporting the ordered transfer of the Public Archives
from the capital in Austin to Houston, dated March 14, 1842. |
| 13 | | Document from the "Proceedings of Public Meeting at
Galveston" in which the assembled citizens, because of the perilous situation
with Mexico, wished to extend to the Executive prompt and united support of the
President, dated April 26, 1842. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series XIV: Notes, Essay, Newsclippings, Correspondence,
1842
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 14 | | Letter from Sam Houston to Mr. Harvey of the Louisville
Democrat in which Houston takes issue with his opinions, dated Oct. 11,
1855. |
| 14 | | Letter from ??? to ??? of the Convention regarding the
forwarding of a copy of the Galveston News of June 11th, dated June 23,
1853. |
| 14 | | Essay by Margaret Houston entitled, "Improvement of Time",
not dated. |
| 14 | | Letter from Dr. Fletcher to Margaret Houston prescribing
her to take a few drops of Fowlers solution of arsenic, not dated. |
| 14 | | Note from Nelson Griswald acknowledging that he has
received a copy of Sam Houston's copy of the ??? to them for examination, dated
April 2, 1856. |
| 14 | | Letter from William Slade to Miss Forbes acknowledging
that he has received her letter and advising her to go see Sam Houston to "get
a good school", dated Aug. 6, 1855. |
| 14 | | Letter from Aedie (???) A. Harris to Sam Houston
expressing her joy for his fame, dated Jan. 16. |
| 14 | | Letter from L. Lanee to Dr. Charles M. Hitchcock seeking
to open a correspondence with him, not dated. |
| 14 | | Letter from John M. Heriree to J. L. Roberts asking if it
"would be best to land the sheriff after the horse", not dated. |
| 14 | | Letter from William A. Shaw to Sam Houston acknowledging
that he received his letter and hastened to reply, dated Sept. 6,
1855. |
| 14 | | Letter from William A. Shaw to Sam Houston (???) regarding
the future of the American Party, not dated. |
| 14 | | Letter from ??? to ??? beginning, "The religious aspect of
the question, I have not touched, except by distant allusion.", not
dated. |
| 14 | | Document from "The Gallery of Illustrious Americans",
dated Jan. 1, 1850. |
| 14 | | Letter in Spanish from San Jacinto, Mexico, not
dated. |
| 14 | | Letter in Spanish from Pangacinan, Mexico, not
date. |
| 14 | | Column letter from the San Augustine Committee inviting
Sam Houston to a public dinner and his response, dated Aug. 27-28,
1840. |
| 14 | | Column honoring Sam Houston's committment to temperance,
not dated. |
| 14 | | Column regarding the coverage Sam Houston's election as
Governor of Texas by the Charleston Mercury, not date. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
Series XV: Photocopies of Family Letters,
1824-1857
|
| box | folder |
| 1 | 15 | | Letter from Sam Houston to his first cousin, William
Houston Letcher, dated April 8, 1824. |
| 15 | | Letter from Sam Houston to his first cousin, William
Houston Letcher, dated Nov. 25, 1845. |
| 15 | | Letter from Sam Houston to his first cousin, William
Houston Letcher, dated July 19, 1857. |
|