TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary
Scope and Contents
Restrictions
Index Terms
Related Material
Separated Material
Administrative Information
Description of Series
Thaddeus Lyman maps,
1775
Stephen Duncan Land Indenture,
1776
Andrew Ellicott Letter,
1788
Mississippi Territorial Era Manuscripts,
1797-1817
Abijah Hunt Papers
Leverich Correspondence
Map and Description of Vicksburg,
1836
Assorted documents
Mississippi River Valley Addenda
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A Guide to the Natchez Trace Collection Supplement,
1775-1965
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Creator: |
Natchez Trace Collection |
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Title: |
Natchez Trace Collection
Supplement |
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Dates: |
1775-1965 |
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Abstract: |
The Natchez Trace
Collection Supplement, 1775-1965, consists of personal letters, plantation
inventories, receipts, slave documents, business correspondence and documents,
and family-related documents generated by early settlers of the lower
Mississippi Valley. The bulk of the collection comes from antebellum
Mississippi and Louisiana, with Natchez, New Orleans, and territorial material.
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Accession No.: |
2008-146 |
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Extent: |
4 ft., 6 in. |
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Language: |
Materials are written in
English. |
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Repository: |
The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History,
The University of Texas at Austin |
The Natchez Trace Collection Supplement
consists of personal letters, plantation inventories, receipts, slave
documents, business correspondence and documents, and family-related documents
generated by early settlers of the lower Mississippi Valley. The bulk of the
collection comes from antebellum Mississippi and Louisiana, with Natchez, New
Orleans, and territorial material.
Archivist's note: Numbers in inventory
refer to original auction lot number, and consequently, items are identified by
these numbers on the folders within the collection. This collection remains in
the order received from the auction house, and by permission, uses edited
descriptions provided by them. The original descriptions with more in-depth
information about items and individuals may obtained by contacting the
repository.
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Access Restrictions
Unrestricted access.
Use Restrictions
Unrestricted use.
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Subjects (Persons) |
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Lyman, Thaddeus. |
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Duncan, Stephen, 1787-1867 |
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Ellicott, Andrew, 1754-1820 |
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Hunt, Abijah, d. 1811 |
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Leverich, Charles P., 1803-1876. |
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Subjects |
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Decedents' estates --
Mississippi. |
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Land titles -- Registration and transfer --
Mississippi. |
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Slave records -- Mississippi. |
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Slave records -- Southern States. |
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Court records -- Mississippi -- Sources. |
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Education -- Mississippi -- Sources. |
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Business records -- Mississippi. |
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Places |
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Vicksburg (Miss.) --
History -- Sources. |
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Natchez (Miss.) --
History -- Sources. |
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Natchez (Miss. : District) -- History -- Sources. |
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Adams County (Miss.) --
History -- Sources. |
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Mississippi -- History
-- Sources. |
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Mississippi
River. |
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Warren County (Miss.) --
History -- Sources. |
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United States -- History
-- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Sources. |
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Jefferson County (Miss.) -- History -- 19th century --
Sources. |
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Several 19th century docket and record
books from Jefferson County, Mississippi, have been removed to the DBCAH
Library Unit. |
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Natchez Trace Collection Supplement,
1775-1965, The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of
Texas at Austin.
This collection was processed by
Laurel Rozema, February 2009.
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Thaddeus Lyman maps,
1775 |
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Creator's sketch: |
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Thaddeus Lyman is numbered among the
first Anglo settlers of what became known as the Natchez District, then a small
outpost in the British province of West Florida. He, his brother Phineas Lyman,
Roger Enos, and Israel and Rufus Putnam organized the Company of Military
Adventurers made up of Connecticut veterans of the Seven Years' War and
received vast land grants in the Natchez District from the British Crown.
Thaddeus Lyman is most famous for being a British leader in the Natchez
District, a haven for British loyalists during the American Revolution, along
with Anthony Hutchins. Both men had their lands and property raided and
plundered by James Willing, an American who had descended the Mississippi River
aboard the Rattletrap with a hundred or so American patriots, adventurers, and
rowdies. |
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On April 16, 1778, Hutchins and Lyman assembled British
settlers and sympathizers to confront Lt. Reuben Harrison and his American
supporters at White Cliffs (earlier known as Ellis' Cliffs) about five leagues
below “the Natchez,” as settlers called it. Firing first, the British
contingent succeeded in defeating the Americans, having killed Harrison and
four others and taking the remainder as prisoners. For his bravery and
leadership at the Battle of White Cliffs, Thaddeus Lyman was awarded a
captain's commission, and was authorized by crown to raise two companies to
help the established ones defend Natchez from the Americans. Weeks after their
victory, Col. Hutchins and Capt. Lyman became embroiled in conflict over
leadership with Capt. Michael Jackson, who was sent by British officials from
Pensacola. They considered Jackson to be a horse-thief and rogue and had him
arrested. In turn, Lyman found himself under the arrest of Jackson after the
latter officer rallied his supporters. Eventually, Jackson was replaced by
Capt. Anthony Foster, who reestablished stability. In the spring of 1779, Lyman
and Hutchins regretfully disbanded their “companies,” consisting mostly of
officers and non-commissioned officers, according to the order of British
officials at Pensacola. In 1781, after suffering their own defeats at the hands
of the British, the Spanish in the lower Mississippi Valley succeeded in
wresting power from their colonial adversary. |
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See D. Clayton James,
Antebellum Natchez (1968) and Robert V. Haynes,
The Natchez District and the American Revolution
(1976). |
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Scope and contents: |
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Note that these maps actually pre-date the official laying out of
the town at the Natchez landing in February 1776, and they also pre-date the
Natchez settlers' representation in the West Florida Assembly at Pensacola
granted by the Crown in 1778. |
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A dated 1775 map of the British land grant of 20,000
acres on Bayou Pierre originally granted by the Crown to Thaddeus Lyman.
British West Florida, Bayou Pierre [pre-Natchez District],
February 14, 1775 |
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Scope and contents: |
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A 9” by 14” simplistic
hand-drawn map on the left half of a large 20” by 16” sheet. A simple “C A” or
“G A” watermark on the paper. This manuscript map represents the huge land
grant of 20,000 acres on Bayou Pierre granted to Thaddeus Lyman by the British
colonial government of the Natchez District. It is entitled at the top “20,000
Acres granted by M.D. to Thadeus [sic] Lyman.” It shows 10,000 acres that once
belonged to Thaddeus Lyman, and land reserved to Lyman that includes 4,000
acres to Oliver Lyman, 1,000 each to Eleanor and Experience Lyman, and 3,000
acres to Thompson Lyman. There are five other lots designated, each with the
name of an early colonial Mississippi settler. A representation of Bayou Pierre
appears in the map, and although it is not named as such - it is called Bayou
Piere on the companion map listed below. It is dated 14th Feby 1775, and is
apparently among the earliest British hand-drawn maps of land in the colonial
Mississippi Valley in existence. |
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The companion map of the Lyman British land grant of
20,000 acres of land on Bayou Pierre in the Natchez District during the
American Revolutionary era. British West Florida, Bayou Pierre [pre-Natchez
District],
[circa 1775] |
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Scope and contents: |
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A 16” by 10” hand-drawn map of
the property entitled, “Plan of 20,000 Acres of Land Originally granted to
Thaddeus Lyman and divided by Deeds represented in the Plan surveyed by Silas
Crane.” It shows 11,000 acres designed as belonging to Thaddeus Lyman, 4,000
acres to Oliver Lyman, 1,000 each to Eleanor and Experience Lyman, and 3,000
acres to Thompson Lyman. What makes the map so special is that it features a
simply drawn representation of the waters inscribed above the drawing as “Bayou
Piere Creek drawn by estimation” complete with the “South Fork.” The paper is
watermarked with a crown and “G B” with “B” below. It seems plausible that the
“G B” refers to Great Britain, and that although undated, this is the
contemporary companion map to the 1775 map of the same tract of land featured
above. Like the map above, this map is of singular importance in the history of
the settlement of British loyalists at Natchez during the British colonial and
American revolutionary eras. |
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Stephen Duncan Land Indenture,
1776 |
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Creator's sketch: |
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Stephen Duncan was one of the first
settlers of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, having received an indenture of land
himself from King George III. A successful merchant, he became involved in
local politics and government, and raised nine children with his wife, Ann Fox.
His son John married Sarah Eliza Postlethwaite, in 1785, and the couple was
blessed with five children, including the future Dr. Stephen Duncan of Natchez.
In 1793, shortly before Stephen's sixth birthday, his father John was killed in
a duel with James Lamberton over a political dispute. By 1850, Dr. Stephen
Duncan of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, had become the largest cotton planter in the
world. He resided at his mansion Auburn, located just outside of Natchez where
he built a personal empire on cotton and slavery. Through his business
connections with financiers Charles and Henry Leverich of New York, Duncan sold
his cotton to British factors in Liverpool and elsewhere. |
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See the recent
biography by Martha Jane Brazy, An American Planter:
Stephen Duncan of Antebellum Natchez and New York (2006). |
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A land grant from Cumberland County, Pennsylvania,
signed twice by Stephen Duncan, great-grandfather of Dr. Stephen Duncan of
Natchez,
March 25, 1776 |
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Scope and contents: |
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This 15” by 19” indenture is
partly printed, dated 25 March 1776, and signed by John Armstrong, his wife
Rebecca Armstrong, William Lyon, and Stephen Duncan. In the indenture John
Armstrong of Middleton Township in Cumberland County in the Province of
Pennsylvania and his wife Rebecca sell to William Armstrong, a 200-acre tract
of land in Derry Township in the County of Cumberland for the sum of five
shillings. |
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Andrew Ellicott Letter,
1788 |
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Creator's sketch: |
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Born in 1754 in Bucks County,
Pennsylvania, the largely self-taught Quaker, Andrew Ellicott, received a
commission to survey the southwestern boundary of disputed land in New York in
1784. In 1791, he surveyed out the ten square miles ceded by Maryland and
Virginia for the creation of Washington, D.C. Following the 1795 Pinckney
Treaty that approved the establishment of the frontier boundaries between the
United States and Spanish Florida, Ellicott spent the next four years tramping
the forests, fields, and swamps of Mississippi toward the Atlantic. He became
embroiled in conflict with Governor Manuel Gayoso of Natchez in 1797 because of
the Spanish administration's unwillingness to implement the transfer of the
Natchez region to the Americans. For a short time, he served as one of the
leaders of a self-governing group of men at Natchez who defied both Spanish and
American authorities. Fortunately the Spanish finally ceded what became the
Mississippi Territory without bloodshed, and Ellicott went about his work
having escaped censure from his own federal government. In the first decade of
the nineteenth century, Ellicott worked to survey the boundary between South
Carolina and Georgia, but when the government refused to compensate him
adequately, he retired from public service. During the War of 1812, Ellicott
accepted a position on the faculty at West Point where he taught until his
death in 1820. |
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See Andrew Ellicott, The Journal of
Andrew Ellicott (Philadelphia, 1803; reprinted, Chicago, 1962). |
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Andrew Ellicott writes a financial-related letter
referencing “State Paper in Bank Notes,” Baltimore,
1788 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Approximately 6” by 8” one-page
letter on single sheet possible separated from its postal cover. Addressed to a
“Dear Sir,” Ellicott mentions “Hard-Money,” but is willing to accept a payment
of 22.10 in “State Paper or Bank Notes, - The discount on so small a sum I am
willing to lose.” He also states, “Note By the Old Line of Stages Letters are
carried Gratis.” |
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Mississippi Territorial Era Manuscripts,
1797-1817 |
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General David Forman Will,
1797, 1800 |
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Creator's sketch: |
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General David Forman was the
brother of Ezekiel Forman, an early sponsor of Natchez Settlement, and father
of Sarah Marsh Forman, wife of William Gordon Forman. The Forman family members
helped obtain well over a thousand acres of land granted by Governor Gayoso
under the Spanish regime. The family hails from New Jersey, but this branch of
the family was in Kent County, Maryland. |
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Scope and contents: |
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The will of General David
Forman, written in Kent County, Maryland, with attached document signed by
William Dunbar. Natchez, 1797, 1800. Dated 18 August 1797, it bears the
attested signature of David Forman with paper-and-wax seal affixed. Also
affixed by wax, is a separate document beautifully datelined “Natchez 10th June
1800,” and signed by William Dunbar, the most famous Natchezite of the frontier
era. Another notation on the document indicates that William Gordon Forman, an
executor, attested to the authenticity of the will of “General David Forman
late of Kent County deceased.” The will begins, “In the Name of God Amen David
Forman of this Town in the County of Kent and State of Maryland Gentleman being
in health of Body and of sound mind memory and understanding, praised be God
for the same, do make this my last Will and Testament in manner follow. . .”
The document stipulates how Forman divides his property among his named
daughters and mentions David's brother Ezekiel. |
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Thomas Tyler Papers,
1799-1808 |
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Indenture that describes a 100-acre tract of land on
the Mississippi River a mile from Fort Rosalie [described as “Natchez Fort”].
Natchez,
August 10, 1799 |
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Scope and contents: |
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The indenture, made on the
10th August 1799, “between Thomas Tyler of the town of Natchez in Adams County
and Mississippi Territory of the one part, and William Wikoff Junior and
William G. Garland both of the City of New Orleans, in the Province of
Louisiana, Merchants, of the other part.” Tyler, for a debt of $600, mortgages
his property to the men. The land being used as collateral is described as
“containing one hundred Acres French Measure, Situate, lying & being in the
Territory aforesaid one mile below Natchez Fort and bounded as follows . . .”
The Mississippi River was the western boundary of the property. The indenture
is also signed by the judge William McGuire, and by the prominent settler and
merchant, John Henderson, as recorder. Thomas Tyler signs at the bottom of the
page and seals it. |
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Document that describes Thomas Tyler's property in the
Mississippi Territory,
1808 |
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Scope and contents: |
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It provides considerable
detail of lands, and mentions places like the “Natchez Fort,” “the River
Mississippi,” “the then County of Pickering (now county of __),” “Bayou
Pierre,” and “the waters of Cole's Creek.” |
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Abijah Hunt Papers |
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Creator's sketch: |
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Abijah Hunt, a native of New
Jearsey, formed a business partnership with his brothers Jeremiah and Jess
Hunt, and Elijah Smith. He came to Natchez in 1798 as a sutler, or licensed
merchant, for the United States Army stationed along the lower Mississippi
River. Hunt received shipments of goods from his brothers, imported, made
purchases and transactions in New York, Philadelphia, and Cincinnati, and
gained a good reputation as a reputable man of business. Hunt began planting
cotton, and with Smith opened several stores and cotton gins at Natchez,
Washington, Greenville, Port Gibson, Big Black, and his original base of
operation, Bayou Pierre. Hunt eventually acquired a 3,645-acre plantation in
Adams County, and even larger tracts of land in Jefferson and Claiborne
Counties. He used vertical integration as a business philosophy, growing
cotton, ginning it at his own gins, brokering cotton for himself and others,
ang charging a commission of 10% of the cotton to planters for processing it.
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The three Hunt brothers gained direct financial ties to England and
became one of the largest commission mercantile entities on the southwestern
frontier, supplying planters with all of their needs. They dealt in large
quantities of cotton and contracted sales to British industrial consumers on
behalf of their customers. Jeremiah would sometimes travel to Natchez to make
plans with brother Abijah for the sale and shipment of hundreds of thousands of
pounds of cotton to England. |
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Hunt was also involved with the
incorporation of the Bank of the Mississippi in 1809 after receiving a charter
from the territorial legislature. He received an appointment as Deputy
Postmaster from United States Postmaster General Joseph Habersham in the fall
of 1799, establishing mail services “to that distant portion of the Union.”
Hunt, who began sending the mail in January 1800, was responsible for the
service along the Natchez Trace from Natchez to Nashville about 500 miles away.
Hunt immersed himself in local politics as an outspoken Federalist, and became
embroiled in a conflict with George Poindexter, a Democratic Republican who
later became Governor of Mississippi. The two fought a duel on the west bank of
the river opposite Natchez in 1811, resulting in his own death. |
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Abijah Hunt Papers,
1802-1819 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Eleven of these 14 manuscripts
relate to legal matters about the estate of Abijah Hunt, and include details
about his business connections, referencing stores at Natchez, Loftus Heights,
and the Walnut Hills. Two of the documents involve land acquisitions, including
a detailed 1817 document that mentions Jerermiah, Abijah, and David Hunt. |
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Business document,
1803 |
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Scope and contents: |
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An 1803 two-page document
signed by the prominent and controversial merchant, Anthony Glass, indicating
that “in the year 1799 a certain Mr. Vorhies did business at the Walnut Hills
under the firm of Abijah Hunt & Co.,” and indicates that Glass contracted
with Hunt at Loftus Heights for goods remaining at the Walnut Hills. |
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Document about store goods |
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Scope and contents: |
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One-page legal-size document
signed by Benjamin Seamons, an employee of J. & A. Hunt's store at
Cincinnati, who indicates that Hunt sent considerable quantities of goods from
the store at Cincinnati to the one at Natchez, and that there was a 15% charge
on “goods imported from the Eastward which was sent to Natchez.” |
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7 |
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Document about store goods |
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Scope and contents: |
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A two-page over-legal sized
manuscript signed by Micheal [sic] Crozier, who worked with Hunt in 1798 and
early 1799, referencing his job in making a record “of the numbers of the
barrels boxes & packages sent from the Store at Natchez to the Walnut Hills
under the Care of Vorhies.” |
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A Tract of Land on St. Catherine Creek in Adams County
is claimed by David Hunt and Jeremiah Hunt on behalf of the Estate of Abijah
Hunt, deceased. Natchez,
May 4, 1817 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Five pages of manuscript text,
including a legal-size page dated 4 May 1817 and signed by Peter A. Vandorn and
attached to a larger lettersheet. The information relates to members of the
Wright and McCoy families. The land transaction goes back to 1810 or earlier,
and the piece of property was once owned by Daniel Maggett. The property was
originally also possessed by Abijah Hunt, deceased. |
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A lot of eight manuscripts, that relate to a lawsuit
involving Hunt, one dated as early as 1802, and a few being signed by famous
Natchez attorneys Murray & Duncan and Lyman Harding. |
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Two legal-size manuscripts, documenting a land
transaction in 1809 involving Hunt, Frazier & Mygatt, and Charles F. McCoy,
1819 |
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Scope and contents: |
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There are references to the
land being on St. Catherine's Creek adjoining land of the late James McIntosh;
some dealings made at Abijah Hunt's residence in Natchez and his “counting
room;” land owned formerly by Joseph Pannill; a description of part of the land
being “Woodland,” making it more valuable; reference to an adjacent plantation;
and a reference to the land sellers having “received a negro woman of . . .
Abijah Hunt in part pay.” One of the documents has a signature of Elijah
Smith. |
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Three documents about a land ownership dispute in Adams
County between William Nichols and James Bolls. Natchez,
1802 |
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Scope and contents: |
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One document dated at Natchez
is signed by the prominent early settler, David Ker, au verso. Several early
settlers are mentioned. |
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Two documents from Archibald Lewis to Catherine Surget
and Charles Surget. Natchez,
1803 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Two legal-size documents from
the clerk of the Court of Equity in the Adams District of Mississippi Territory
inform the Surgets of their required presence at the Court House in Natchez
where the case between them and Anthony Calvit and others is being heard. Both
documents are issued to them personally, not to their legal representatives,
and are signed by Archibald Lewis. |
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A document relating to “a Suit of Samuel Hindmand [sic]
Trustee for Nancy Oxbury otherwise called Nancy Nicholas.” Mississippi
Territory, Adams District,
1803 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Legal-size one-page document
issued to Richard Beale and signed by A. Lewis. |
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Two documents relate to Thomas Austie's mortgage for
600-acre property “on Coles Creek about five Miles eastward of Huntstown” to
John Allen, a Philadelphia merchant, for a debt. Jefferson County, Mississippi
Territory,
1803 |
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Scope and contents: |
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The mortgage is signed by
Austie who affixes his seal, and attested and signed by James Wallace and James
Dunlop. The second document is signed by Edmund Hall. |
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Colonial and Territorial Jefferson County, Mississippi
records documenting the sale of land and slaves,
1804 |
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Scope and contents: |
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These original leaves, including
transactions as early as 1768 and as late as 1804, were once part of a complete
ledger that was apparently a hand-written copy made in the first decade of the
19th century of records that dated from that time as well as from the British
colonial period. The volume of these early records was unfortunately broken
apart and its pages dispersed among workmen when it was discarded following a
fire in part of the Jefferson County Courthouse facility. |
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Thomas Rodney Papers,
1804, 1810 |
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Letter explaining why Rodney continued as a Judge in
the Mississippi Territory, from Delaware State Supreme Court Judge John Fisher,
Dover, to Honorable Thomas Rodney, Natchez, Mississippi Territory,
March 6, 1804 |
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Document from The Mississippi Territory of the United
States, bearing the printing, “WITNESS, the Honorable Thomas Rodney, first
Judge of our said Court at the Town of Washington . . .“,
May 31, 1810 |
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Robert and James Moore Papers,
1804, 1811, undated |
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Creator's sketch: |
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Brothers Robert and James Moore
were prosperous early merchants in Natchez at the turn of the nineteenth
century. Robert operated at least three cotton gins—one at Washington, another
at Selsertown, and one on his own farm near Natchez. He took his ginning
business seriously, once suing a man who had told several planters that ginned
cotton at Moore's facility would not pass inspection in Europe, nor would it
sell in Natchez. Moore asserted that he ginned cotton for neighboring planters
to their great satisfaction. |
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Scope and contents: |
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Documents, including copies made
by Adams County court clerk Theodore Stark, relate to a dispute over notes and
debts involving the Moores and merchants, Montfort Calvit and William
Hutcheson. |
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Natchez Hospital records,
1805, 1823 |
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Audit of the Natchez Hospital for appropriations it
received of over $3,300 from the Territorial Treasury, signed by Theodore
Stark. |
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Memorial of the General Assembly of Mississippi,
Praying A Donation of Public Land, for the Benefit of the Natchez Hospital,
February 12, 1823 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Ordered to be printed,
together with the accompanying act, for the use of the Senate. Washington:
Printed By Gales & Seaton, 1823. |
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Eight-page document about a mortgage of land in the
“Town of Huntston or (Greenville)” involving William Clark and William B.
Cotton of Jefferson County, Mississippi Territory,
1805 |
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Scope and contents: |
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The document, which is signed
by Natchez attorney Lyman Harding, is a detailed discussion of how Cotton owes
Clark, and the mortgage of property in Huntston currently occupied by Mordecai
Throckmorton. |
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Letter from William Clarke to Beverly R. Grayson about a
legal matter in the Supreme Court of the Mississippi Territory,
1806 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Au verso addressed to Grayson
and apparently hand-delivered. |
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Letter from Horatio Jones, Philadelphia, about business
to Cyrus Williams of Charleston. Philadelphia,
March 2, 1806 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Jones mentions that “There are
a number of fine young Gentlemen here from Charlestown with some of whom you
will become acquainted.” |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
20 |
|
Land indenture mortgage and promissory notes for 70
acres on St. Catherine Creek, signed by numerous early Natchezites; and
promissory notes for land. Natchez,
1807-1808 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
John Pearce mortgages the
property to Benjamin Hoke that is indicated as being originally granted to
James Stoddard by the Spanish government in 1788. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
21 |
|
Document recording a debt owed by Ebenezer Rees to
Charles Norwood, Executor for John Turnbull, deceased,
1807 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Document signed by territorial
judges Thomas Rodney and Walter Leake indicating that a tract of land should be
advertised in two Natchez newspapers and sold to satisfy a debt owed by Rees to
the estate of John Turnbull. |
|
22 |
|
Adams County, Mississippi, legal records,
1807-08, 1819 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Two 1807 legal-size documents
signed by Beverly Grayson with several names mentioned; two 1808 documents
referencing William Connor and others; and an 1819 pre-printed and filled-in
document signed by J. T. Griffith. |
|
23 |
|
Joseph Dilworth of Philadelphia settles in Claiborne
County as a merchant who is indebted to his Philadelphia connections. Adams
County, Mississippi Territory,
1807-1811 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The documents contain detailed
information, from men including Daniel D. Elliott, that reference early
merchandising in the Mississippi Territory, namely the settling of Dilworth
there, his purchase of land in Claiborne County, his business connections with
Philadelphia, and the discrepancy over money that he owed for merchandise. |
|
24 |
|
Letter from Nathaniel Wilson Merrell to his grandmother
Mrs. Sarah Merrell indicating that his “Papa” bought an enslaved woman and her
four-year-old son, Washington, Kentucky,
January 17, 1808 |
|
25 |
|
Benjamin Kitchen papers, related to unwillingness to
sell a slave to satisfy a debt as indicated in documents signed by him, Thomas
Rodney, Charles B. Green, and Cowles Mead, Adams County, Mississippi Territory,
1808 |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
26 |
|
Letter from Eleazer Allen, Jr., a New Bedford sailor in
New Orleans, to his father about his voyage and business,
January 29, 1810 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Allen writes his father that he
has safely delivered boats to Captain Allen at the Belize. He reports that
“William is well likewise all the rest on Board,” and that stormy weather has
delayed him in taking on cargo at New Orleans. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
27 |
|
The Nathaniel Knight Gibson estate papers,
1810-1822 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
Orphaned as a youth, Nathaniel
Knight Gibson lived with his uncle and aunt, Stephen and Patty Gibson, until
his life was cut short in November, 1810, by illness before his twenty-first
birthday. He spent his young life in the Warren County region of the
Mississippi Territory. Port Gibson in Claiborne County is named for his family,
who were involved in cotton agriculture and slavery. |
|
27 |
|
|
Document stating last wishes of Nathaniel Knight
Gibson,
November 26, 1810 |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy of the January 1811 estate inventory,
1822 |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy from court records in Warren County, Mississippi,
of an 1811 document regarding steers that were part of the Gibson estate,
1822 |
|
27 |
|
|
Document about the estate given by James Knowland,
undated |
|
27 |
|
|
Document with information from Martha Sharkey (wife of
John Sharkey) about the Gibson estate, referencing the deceased youth's
circumstances prior to his death, how he had been an orphan, his familial ties,
and other details,
1818 |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy of an 1810 legal document regarding the case of
James Gibson et al. v. Martha Gibson et al., issued by a court clerk of Warren
County,
1822 |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy of “An Inventory of the Goods and Chattels of
Nathaniel Knight Gibson deceased sold March 16th 1811,”
1822 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Early Mississippi names
include Stephen Gibson, William Bay, Robert Galloway, Claudius Rawls Abel
Wright, Timothy Hatcher, and Johnson Sweet. |
|
27 |
|
|
Document providing considerable detail about the
estate of Nathaniel Knight Gibson,
1816 |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy of “An Inventory of the Crop of Nathaniel K.
Gibson deced sold in 1811 by the undersigned [Stephen Gibson Admr],”
1822 |
|
27 |
|
|
Detailed account by Stephen Gibson of all the expenses
and loans incurred by his nephew Nathaniel K. Gibson,
[circa 1815] |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy from court records, “A further Inventory of the
Goods & Chattels of Nathaniel K. Gibson Decesd Appraised May 29th 1811 by
the undersigned [Stephen Gibson, administrator, and named appraisers]”,
1822 |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy of an 1816 document about the Gibson family
estate dispute,
[ca. 1820s] |
|
27 |
|
|
Document about the exact ownership of the slaves
claimed by Nathaniel K. Gibson,
undated |
|
27 |
|
|
Copy of the “Deposition of Claudius Rawls” about the
Gibson estate,
[ca. 1810s-1820s] |
|
27 |
|
|
Fragmentary copy of a document relating to the estate
of Gibson,
undated |
|
27 |
|
|
Legal-related letter to James Gibson et al. from
Patrick Sharkey about the Gibson estate case,
undated |
|
|
|
|
|
Au verso contains the autograph of Anthony Glass. |
|
27 |
|
|
13 assorted documents connected to the Gibson estate
and with attorney Edward Turner,
1818-1819 |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
28 |
|
Deed to Looe Baker for property of James Stout on Coles
Creek twelve miles east of Natchez once owned by tavern-keeper Patrick
Connelly, Mississippi Territory,
1810-1811 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
29 |
|
Summons for John and Christiania Pearce to answer charge
by Benjamin Hock, signed by D. Sea, Sheriff of Adams County, Mississippi
Territory,
1811 |
|
30 |
|
Document signed by Andrew Marschalk and David Kennedy
with a newspaper clipping attached to it regarding the Estate of William
Caldwell, deceased. Natchez,
1811 |
|
31 |
|
Two letters by William Kenner & Co. to Triggs &
Morgan of Natchez about the sale of 64 bales of cotton and shipment of
groceries. New Orleans,
1812 |
|
32 |
|
Bond for William Brooks and Ferdinand Claiborne to
merchants Samuel Postlethwaite and William Shipp. Natchez,
1812 |
|
33 |
|
Document about a mortgaged piece of property made up of
1.5 lots on Main Street at Washington, Mississippi Territory,
1812 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Details the testimony of Clinch
Gray about a legal matter between him and Pierson and Martha Lewis over a debt
and mortgage. |
|
34 |
|
Document about attorney fees for William Brooks in a
suit against Samuel Postlethwaite and William Shipp, signed by Cowles Mead and
Theodore Stark in Adams County, Mississippi Territory,
1812 |
|
35 |
|
Document pertaining to a legal dispute between Andrew
Burt and William Sharp, signed by Anthony Campbell and others. Adams County,
Mississippi Territory,
1812 |
|
36 |
|
A document in which John Lombard of Ireland petitions
for American citizenship in the Mississippi Territory,
1814 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Lombard renounces his
allegiance to "his majesty George 3.rd King of Great
Brittain [sic] & Ireland." |
|
37 |
|
Five tavern-keepers' petition documents from Greenville,
Unionville, Bluff Springs, Petit Gulf, and Rodney, Jefferson County,
Mississippi Territory and Statehood,
1815-1828 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Tavern-keepers including Sarah
Waters & John Odom, Michael Laughman, Armstrong Ellis, the Goosey brothers,
and Philip Dixon, petitions governors like David Holmes and Gerard C. Brandon,
putting forth the bond for the application. |
|
38 |
|
A document signed by J.E. Clark, Jeremiah Watson, and
Walter Leake about dispute over ownership of a tract of land sold by the United
States Land Commission in Jefferson County, Mississippi Territory,
1817 |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
39 |
|
Document about how Wilford Hoggatt's property is
scheduled to be sold at auction to pay a loan that he contracted with the
President, Directors and Company of the Bank of the Mississippi. Natchez,
October 21, 1813 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
40 |
|
A document about the estate of Fleeharty. Warren County,
Mississippi Territory,
1813 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
It is signed by Thomas DeWitt,
Bartlett Shipp (who signs with an “X”), and John Evatt who post a bond for
DeWitt, who is to act an executor in appraising the estate of Fleeharty. It is
also signed “A. Glass,” by Anthony Glass, who underlines his own name. |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
According to Robert M. Coates, author of the
historical-fictional The Outlaw Years: The History of the Land Pirates of the
Natchez Trace (1933), Anthony Glass was a prosperous merchant who also “filled
the double rôle of ‘fence' and informer” for the notorious Samuel Mason Gang
who robbed and murdered travelers along the Natchez Trace. |
|
41 |
|
The will of Kentucky settler, Samuel Rogers, who
bequeaths property to his wife Martha and stipulates that his minor sons John
and James are to receive schooling. Bath County, Kentucky,
1814 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The will stipulates that the
children will each receive an equal share of the estate if Martha Rogers
remarries. |
|
42 |
|
Document in which Luke Carrol, a planter, pledges on his
duties as a constable in Adams County, Mississippi Territory,
1814 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
One page legal-size document
bearing the signatures of Luke Carrol, James B. Madden, and Robert Turner – all
early Natchez settlers. |
|
43 |
|
A large document signed by Theodore Stark and Walter
Leake that mentions a dispute over a sale of merchandise in Adams County,
Mississippi Territory,
December 26, 1814 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The document is “a true copy of
the proceedings had in a certain cause” between William Tharp and Alexander S.
Lyle involving an unpaid loan for goods, wares, and merchandise. Signed by both
Theodore Stark and Walter Leake |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
44 |
|
Sixteen folio leaves recording the sales of land and
slaves in Jefferson County, Mississippi Territory,
1815-1816 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The earliest date for a
transaction recorded is 30 March 1815 in which Abraham Scriber and his wife
Jamima Scriber sells property on the waters of Fairchilds Creek. There are also
parcels sold near the middle fork of Coles Creek, on Bayou Perre [Pierre], and
other places. Parties involved in the transactions include Edward Turner, James
Cowdon, David Ker, James C. Wilkins, Joseph and Samuel Bullen, Charlotte J. H.
Claiborne, Joseph Calvit, Rush Nutt, Robert Cochran, Joseph Dunbar and others.
One 1815 sale involves a piece of land on Chubbys Fork of Coles Creek that was
originally granted to Anthony Hutchins by the Spanish government. In addition
to property sales, there are a couple of people sales. Jane James sells “one
Negro Woman named Betty or Bet and Child named Jack, the woman supposed to be
twenty years of age, and child betwixt one and two years old” guaranteed as
“slaves for life” to James Brown. Elizabeth Pervienne bequeaths her itemized
property, including “six Windsor Chairs,” to Emily and Mary Jane McAlpin. In
February 1816, George Forman gives his children “one negro Boy named Kit
(alias) Christopher Eleven Years of age” along with cattle, oxen, horses, and
plantation tools. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
45 |
|
Estate records of William Gordon Forman. Adams County,
Mississippi,
1816-1817 |
|
45 |
|
|
Legal document directed to Joseph Forman,
administrator of the Estate of William Gordon Forman, and others. Signed by
Theodore Stark, Adams County, Mississippi Territory,
1816 |
|
45 |
|
|
Document of recorded testimony given and signed by
Gabriel Tichenor, about his knowledge of a controversy in which he sold over
$12,500 of personal property from the estate of William Gordon Forman to
Charles B. Green, one of the agents of the estate. From the papers of attorneys
Green & Rankin. |
|
45 |
|
|
Document with information from Tichenor in response to
the complainants that include Margaret Forman and others,
[circa 1817] |
|
45 |
|
|
Document detailing Charles Green's knowledge about the
property transaction from Forman's estate,
[circa 1817] |
|
45 |
|
|
Document referencing information provided by Green
about the Forman estate. Mentions numerous individuals involved,
[circa 1817] |
|
46 |
|
Acts Passed at the Second Session
of the Fourteenth Congress of the United States that contains an Act
allowing the Establishment of a Constitution and State Government in the
Mississippi Territory, and Treaties with Indians. Washington, D.C.,
1817 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
A nicely bound copy of
approximately 120 pages of federal legislation. The outer blue cover is
inscribed “Clerk Com. Pleas Washington.” |
|
47 |
|
Document connected with Mississippi families. Trenton,
New Jersey,
November 29, 1817 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Involves people including
Benjamin Price, Joseph Write, Matilda Wright, and five other named people. |
|
48 |
|
Document from the Territory of Arkansas signed by early
settlers who pledge to appraise the Estate of Isaac Runnell, deceased.
Hempstead County, Arkansas Territory,
1820 |
|
49 |
|
Letter to William Lehman, apothecary at Natchez, from
James Caesar. Philadelphia,
[circa 1820] |
|
50 |
|
Legal-related document signed by James A. Girault and
mentioning Benjamin Lewish and Chapman White from the Western District of
Mississippi Court. Natchez,
1821 |
|
51 |
|
Business letter to merchant William Brune at Natchez
from Burk & Krumbhaar. Philadelphia,
March 20, 1821 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
William Brune, the recipient of
the letter, was a native of a German city-state. He made a fortune as a Natchez
merchant, ultimately returning to his native land where he purchased a
barony. |
|
52 |
|
Letter written by “Uncle Sam,” who mocks religion and
the Church Revival, and who inquires whether Titus L. Bissell, Jr., has been
having fun in Charleston with prostitutes. Savannah, Georgia,
April 24, 1821 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
|
53 |
|
Letter from a recent settler, John Grounds, in the new
State of Missouri to Jacob Flander reporting on life there including the
purchase of a slave. Madison County, Missouri,
June 9, 1821 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Grounds writes his brothers and
sisters about family matters, and about his life in Missouri. He writes: “I
have Bought a negro man of twenty 6 years of age at four hundred seventy
dollars.” He names his children, indicating their ages, and indicates that, “My
son John has sould out to move to the Spanish Dominion Where they can get Land
give to them.” He also writes a lengthy religious poem on the third page. |
|
54 |
|
Letter to John Forsyth at Natchez requesting his
“Opinion aboute Flower and Negros,” from William Ater. Lexington, Kentucky,
1821 |
|
55 |
|
A record of Louisiana and Mississippi boys in the
Catalogue of the Officers and Students of the University in Cambridge.
October 1821 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Disbound pamphlet from Cambridge
University includes the names of undergraduates Jephthah A.T. Bynam of
Alexandria, Wikoff of Opelusas, Daniel C. Relf and Hilary B. Cenas of New
Orleans, and Robert D. Percy of St. Francisville, Louisiana, and Robert Thomas
Dunbar, John F. Bingaman, and Alexander C. Dunbar, and Calvin S. Smith of
"Natches". |
|
56 |
|
Legal document regarding the Estate of William Gordon
Forman from attorneys Turner & Metcalfe. [Adams County, Mississippi],
1822 |
|
57 |
|
Document signed by James A. Girault who served as
Chancery Court Clerk. [Adams County],
1822 |
|
58 |
|
Letter to Michael Fortier of New Orleans from F. A.
Browder stating that he has “Delivered over the Negro Boy Tom” to a man named
Tennent. Jackson, Louisiana,
April 23, 1822 |
|
59 |
|
Bill for fabric, ribbons, buttons, and other things
purchased from Foote, Huntington & Co. by Israel Smith with a document
signed by Andrew Marschalk. Natchez,
1822 |
|
60 |
|
A pre-printed document summoning Peter P. Schyler, Jacob
Eiler and Frederic Staunton [Frederick Stanton?] to attend Chancery Court.
Adams County, Mississippi,
1822 |
|
61 |
|
Letter from the early capitol of Jackson from Will P.
Puckett to Sheriff Elias G. Myers of Yazoo County, requesting the sheriff pay
Perry Cohen [or Cohea?] out of money collected from two named men. Jackson,
Mississippi,
1824 |
|
62 |
|
Letter from Cora Giovanoli of New Orleans, an Italian or
Sicilian woman, to G. Powell, a Natchez commission merchant about a debt owed
to the Estate of J. B. Duplantier. New Orleans,
June 30, 1825 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Giovanoli indicates payment of
a debt owed to the estate of J. B. Duplantier, and Powell autographs a note on
the back of the letter, indicating that he has received payments from Woodson
Wren, the administrator of the estate, for J. J. Fox's account, and Giovanoli's
account. |
|
63 |
|
Letter to Mrs. Harriet O. Emerson of Natchez from her
sister Pamela full of family news. Salem, Massachusetts,
1826 |
|
64 |
|
Letter from E. Kingman of Washington, D.C., to John Peck
& Co. of Fredericksburg, Virginia, detailing politics including a speech by
John Randolph about the subject of divorce. Washington City,
1826 |
|
65 |
|
Letter settling a debt owed to Daniel Bradford, a
Lexington, Kentucky bookbinder, from James McDaniel representing an anonymous
sender. Natchez,
April 9, 1827 |
|
66 |
|
Letter from John H. Esty referring to a man named
Cammack as a "Rascal" to Felix Huston that
mentions Isaac Ross, Jr. Natchez,
1828 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Content includes:
"It seems he [Cammack] afterwards obtained a
certificate from you and produced that with my receipt to Ross who paid him the
money and I still hold Ross's note. If the Rascal is in Natchez I wish you
would have him arrested in Ross's name and held to bail, and also criminally
for deceit and swindling." |
|
67 |
|
Letter from a gentleman in Charleston, S.C., to Nehemiah
Cleaveland, Esqr., Newbury (Byfield), Mass., a man who may be his foster or
adopted child living in New England,
March 16, 1828 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The writer pens a long letter
to Cleaveland, whom he refers to as "Dear
Child." The letter is of a personal nature, with details about his
prospective plans to settle in Brooklyn, New York, spiritual advice, and other
subjects. |
|
68 |
|
Business letter to George Howard of Mt. Sterling,
Kentucky, from Woodson Wren, concerning a balance in favor of the recipient on
the books of Perkins & Wren. Natchez,
1828 |
|
69 |
|
Bill for barrels of sugar, lading, commission, and
interest issued to the Estate of Jeremiah Hunt by Breedlove Bradford &
Robeson. New Orleans,
September 15, 1825 |
|
70 |
|
Transcript copy of an 1823 marriage license issued to
Thomas Stone and Amelia Watkins and signed by Peter A. Vandorn. Claiborne
County, Miss.,
May 18, 1829 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The marriage was celebrated by
John H. Esty, Justice of the Peace, on 9 January 1823. |
|
71 |
|
Six printed leaves of reports on the commodities market
in Liverpool issued by Baring Brothers & Co. Liverpool,
1830 |
|
73 |
|
Document that gives a detailed description of John T.
Garner, accused of stealing a slave named Tom Porter and two horses. Pike
County, Mississippi,
1833 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
James L. Smith, who signs it,
indicates that Garner was from Yazoo County, and that he “had been commited to
jail in that county on a charge of Grand Larceny and had broke out of jail some
time last spring, and that he was retaken and from information in possession of
Gen. Runnels steed horse was brought back and put in prison again and was
afterwards taken up by a negro a waggoner who supposed he was in the act of
robbing his wagon and from the Best information was taken to Manchester and
thence to Ben jail again and broke out again . . . he is a man of notorious ill
fame as a dishonest man in the County of Yazo and . . . believes him to be a
Renagade from that County.” |
| box |
lot |
| 3So38b |
74 |
|
Publications about Senator Henry Clay,
1831-1853 |
|
74 |
|
|
Prentice, George D. Biography of
Henry Clay. Hartford: Samuel Hanmer, Jr. and John J. Phelps,
1831 |
|
74 |
|
|
The Life and Speeches of Henry
Clay. Vol. I. Philadelphia: J. L. Gihon,
1853 |
|
74 |
|
|
Speech of Mr. Clay, of Kentucky,
in Support of His Propositions to Compromise on the Slavery Question. Revised
Edition. In the Senate of the United States, February 5, 1854.
[Washington, D.C.]: Towers,
[1850] |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
75 |
|
Letter from Aaron Stockton, Nashville, to William
Tompkins, Kenhawa lake [?], Virginia, that reports "Mr. Abston is in the lower country with negroes,"
referring to the huge slave trade in the Deep South, Nashville,
January 14, 1832. |
|
76 |
|
A letter from James M. Daniels, Saint Moor Amherst
[Va.], to Philip St. George Ambler, Richmond, that reports on the tobacco crop,
and “on the Subjects of Mares & Colts, Fencing, Clover Seed Rye &
Negroes.” Saint Moor, Amherst, near Lynchburg, Virginia,
March 3, 1832 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
After commenting on having
planted a group of trees, Daniels writes: “The Negroes are all well at this
time though they have complain.d very much heretofore with colds – I seeded
fifteen bushels Rye – I have had one end of the new house finished . . . .” He
also refers to poplar and pine flooring, then continues: “The Colts are in good
order and grow as fast as could be expected – the Sir Charles Colt has no Tumor
or swelling about him . . . I have nearly done striping Tobacco and all that I
can say is that it is a sorry crop. When I came to strip, it was much more
fired than I expected, the quantity I cannot will come at but think there will
be 7 or 8 hogsheds ˆ I have not yet carried Patsey to the horse as I think it
Rather early to put ˆ I am convinced that the Timothy seed will never come up .
. . The wheat looks very well. I did send for any Dr to see York neather did I
think it necessary ˆ I have no dout about Susan being with foal ˆ I suppose I
have cleared ten thousand Tobacco hills ˆ I always intended to put the flats in
Corn above the Mill and I think I shall be able to make corn enough to serve
the place. I wish to put the green bottom in Tobacco as I do not think I will
have enough without ˆ” The remaining two paragraphs relate to his
administration of an estate. |
| box |
lot |
| 3So38b |
77 |
|
Fourteen literary novels from the libraries of
Mississippi slaveholding planters Richard T. Archer of Anchuka, and S. Sprague
– and Dr. Stephen Duncan – whose home Auburn still stands near Natchez,
1832-1842 |
|
77 |
|
|
Eugene Aram. A Tale (Vol. 1)
by the Author of "Pelham",
"The Disowned", "Devereaux", &c. New York
(1832) |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Blank page at the front bears
the autograph of Richard T. Archer (who built Anchuka near Vicksburg featured
in a photograph in Mary Carol Miller's Lost Mansions of
Mississippi (1996)) |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb27 |
77 |
|
|
Recollections of a
Chaperon (Vol. 1) edited by Lady Dacre, New York
(1833) |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Inscribed “Duncan Auburn” |
|
77 |
|
|
Tom Cringle's Log (Vol.
3) no author indicated, Philadelphia
(1834) |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
The title page bears a ms.
"Sprague" [local family name] notation |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
77 |
|
|
Salmagundi. Second Series
(Vol.1) by Launcelot Langstaff, New York
(1835) |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Bears Ex Libris plate of
Lucius Bryan Dabney of Vicksburg (the collector noted for assembling the large
Natchez Trace Collection) and the penciled inscriptions
"Salmagundy lay off my hand Turk Sprague," and
"Sturges Sprague Winchester." |
| box |
lot |
| 3So38b |
77 |
|
|
Lives of Cardinal De Retz, Jean
Baptiste Colbert, John De Wit, and the Marquis de Louvois (Vol. 1) by G.
P. R. James, Philadelphia
(1837) |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Penciled inscription
"Frank Winchester Natchez Mississippi Venton [?]
Stanton" and "Thos. B. Kempe 1838" |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
77 |
|
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The Dutchman's Fireside. A
Tale (Vol. II of two) by the author of "Letters from the South," the
"Backwoodsman," and "John Bull of America," New York,
1837 |
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Scope and contents: |
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|
Bears Ex Libris plate of
Lucius Byran Dabney, and a 19th-century penciled inscription
"Sprague & Winchester Adams Co. Natchez
Miss." |
|
77 |
|
|
Lights and Shadows of Irish
Life (Vol. 2) by Mrs. S. C. Hall, Philadelphia
(1838) |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
|
Inscribed
"Duncan" |
|
77 |
|
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Kate Leslie (Vol. 1) by
Thomas Haynes Bayly, Philadelphia,
1838 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Inside the front cover is the
penned inscription "S. H. B. Black / Natchez
1838" |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb27 |
77 |
|
|
The Wife Hunter, By the Moriarty
Family (Vol. 1) edited by Denis Ignatius Moriarty, Philadelphia
(1838) |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Inscribed
"May 8th 1854 [signed] S. Duncan, Jr. Auburn Natchez
Mississippi" |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
77 |
|
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Marian; Or, A Young Maid's
Fortunes (Vol. 2) by Mrs. S. C. Hall, New York
(1840) |
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Inscribed
"Duncan Auburn" |
|
77 |
|
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Corse de Leon: Or, The Brigand.
A Romance (Vol. 2) by G. P. R. James, New York
(1841) |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Penciled
"Rowley" name on the cover page |
|
77 |
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The Ancient Régime. A
Tale (Vol. 2) by G. P R. James, New York
(1841) |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
|
Inscribed
"Duncan Auburn" |
|
77 |
|
|
Alice; Or, The Mysteries
(Vol. 1) by the Author of "Pelham",
"Rienzi", "The
Student", "Eugene Aram",
"Leila", &c., &c. New York,
undated |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Inscribed
"D. R. Sprague Natch[ez]" and
"H. G.[?] Lawrence" |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb27 |
77 |
|
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Cecil, a Peer, a Sequel to
Cecil, Or the Adventures of a Coxcomb (Vol. 2) by
"the Same Author," Philadelphia
(1842) |
|
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Inscribed
"Duncan Auburn Jan'y 24th 1860" |
|
77A |
|
Encyclopaedia Americana,
edited by Francis Lieber, assisted by E. Wigglesworth. Vol. I-XIII.
Philadelphia: Carey & Lea,
1830 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Complete set of encyclopedias,
each volume bearing the large bookplate of the Duncan plantation. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
77B |
|
Postcard featuring Auburn, residence of Stephen Duncan,
about visiting colonial mansions in Natchez, sent to Mrs. D. McIntyre of Waldo,
Wisconsin, from Paul [Buelle?],
November 28, 1924 |
|
78 |
|
W. W. Calmes, the jailor of Adams County requests from
the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Amite County a transcript of the State case
against N. F. Felder as a voucher for the account of the prisoner's sustenance.
Natchez,
July 1, 1833 |
|
79 |
|
Letter from . G. H. McAllister,
"Cottage" [Savannah, Georgia], to George W.
Harris Esq.r, Harrisburgh, Pennsylvania, full of social and political
discussion including the "Slave Question," the
"Tariff Question," and education for blacks in
the antebellum South. "Cottage," Savannah,
Georgia,
August 8, 1833 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
In this long letter, McAllister
touches in some detail on the controversial topics of the day:
"I am altogether pleased, in sum and substance, with
Mr. Websters views on the slave-question-, and will be yet more gratified, if
he and his admirers, act in accordance with them. . . ." He then
discusses what he terms "the Tariff question"
and its constitutionality. ". . . you ought not to be
so much surprised, if the people of the South should be somewhat incredulous,
as to the infallibility of Mr. W's opinions – or, tardy in admitting that
eastern politicians are exclusively the friends of the Union. I most cordially
unite with you on the subject of Slavery, and believe it to be, a stain on our
National Character. . . ." He continues with fascinating comments on the
“slave question” as it relates to North and South, then changes the subject to
education for Blacks: "I cannot imagine a more
interesting sight, than to enter a negro infant school room, and their to
witness the Mistress of a family, or her Daughter, surrounded by 30, 40 and
sometimes, 50 black children, humanely and affectionately instructing them in
their duty to their God and to each other. Their proficiency, oftentimes, is
wonderful, and their talent, for singing well, is proverbial. I have not
mentioned this injustification of Slavery (or principles, I know no individual
who pretends to justify it) but to give you some idea of their moral sate, and
advantages with us, and that we are not ignorant of the very great
responsibility attached to our situation. . . ." |
|
80 |
|
Document being a beautifully penned United States land
grant to Joseph and Mary Vidal [of Vidalia] for 422 acres on Lake St. Joseph in
Concordia Parish, Louisiana,
1833 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
A 16” by 10” vellum document
pre-printed "The United States of America . .
." with the customary stipulations for a land grant issued by the
"Register of the Land Office at Opelousas in the
STATE of LOUISIANA." The land grant to the Vidals – the founding family
of the Vidalia region – bestows a little over 422 acres in the Parish of
Concordia on Lake St. Joseph. It bears the seal of the General Land Office in
Washington, D.C., and is dated 1 November 1833 and signed
"Andrew Jackson" by his secretary, A. J.
Donelson. It is also signed by Elijah Hayw ard, Commissioner of the General
Land Office. Small torn off lower left corner, otherwise in beautiful condition
in bold attractive pen with a serrated paper seal with the impression of an
eagle and inscription over red wax on vellum that still has a relatively fresh
appearance. |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
81 |
|
Mortgage deed/indenture record of 1,311-acre Smithland
Plantation and 40 named slaves by John T. Griffith to David Hunt, arguably the
largest slaveholder in the Old South. Jefferson County, Mississippi,
February 1834 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
A folio type page (approximately
10” x 16”) from an old ledger. It is the record of a mortgage deed/indenture
made in February 1835 between John T. Griffith and David Hunt. Griffith owes
$26,000 to Hunt and mortgages a 1,311-acre plantation
"in the County of Jefferson . . . on the margin of
the Mississippi River . . ." The exact location is stipulated.
Additionally, Griffith mortgages "the following forty
negro Slaves for life towit Bell, Ailey, Henry, Dick, Judy, Jim, Nancy, . .
." and other enslaved individuals. Also included is
"the stock of Mules horses Oxen and cattle belonging
to said plantation which property is called and known by the name of the
Smithland Plantation . . ." The text takes up most of both sides of the
page and is in beautiful easily readable manuscript. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
82 |
|
A letter about $1,000s in business from Z. B. Toulmin to
A. Bell & Co. of New York. Mobile,
1834 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Relating to finances connected
with the cotton economy. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
83 |
|
The Works of Mrs. Sherwood.
Uniform Edition (vols. 1, 3, 5 and 7), New York,
1834-1837 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Four green-cloth volumes of
literature from the Auburn home of Dr. Stephen Duncan of Natchez. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb27 |
83A |
|
Six volumes from the Auburn home of Dr. Stephen Duncan
of Natchez,
1825, 1834-1849 |
|
83A |
|
|
Astronomy and General Physics /
Considered with reference to Natural Theology, by Rev. William Whewell,
London,
1834 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
8 pp. advertising supplement
of "Publications by William Pickering" bound in
at front. |
|
83A |
|
|
On the Adaptation of External
Nature to the Physical Condition of Man..., "Treatise II, Fourth Ed.", by John Kidd, London,
1836 |
|
83A |
|
|
Second copy of On the Adaptation
of External Nature to the Physical Condition of Man... ,
1836 |
|
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Bears the Ex Libris plate of
Lucius Bryan Dabney of Vicksburg |
|
83A |
|
|
The History of the French Revolution,
Vol. II, by M.A. Thiers, Philadelphia: Carey and Hart,
1842 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Inscribed
"H.P. Duncan" |
|
83A |
|
|
The Works of the Rev. Richard
Cecil, M.A., Late Rector of Bisley, and Vicar of Chobham, Surrey; and Minister
of St. John's Chapel, Bedford-Row, London: with a Memoir of His Life.
Arranged and revised by Josiah Pratt, B.D. F.A.S., New York: John P. Haven.
Broadway; Boston: Crocker and Brewster,
1825 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Bears Duncan bookplate. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
83A |
|
|
History of Spanish
Literature, Vol. II, by George Ticknor. New York: Harper and Brothers,
1849 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Inscribed
"Duncan, 'DM
[Cansby?]'" |
|
83A |
|
|
Transactions of the New-York
State Agricultural Society, with an Abstract of the Proceedings of the County
Agricultural Societies; and of the American Institute, Vol. VI – 1846.
Albany: C. Van Benthuysen and Co., Public Printers,
1847 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Faint inscription, possibly
includes "Dr. Duncan." |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
84 |
|
Letter from Daniel Brown, an Ohio man who goes to
Natchez to get away from his creditors to Messrs Hubbell & Sweney, Eaton
Preble County, OH. Natchez,
March 5, 1835 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Content includes:
"After being satisfied that my Creditors would not
give me an opportunity to do anything I have thought best to do as I have. I
might have staid at home have taken the jails bound or the benefit of the
insolvent act, have been teased, perplexed, dimed [sic], tormented, &c
&c &c and not have given satisfaction to half my creditors at
last." He leaves what is left of his assets back home to his creditors
including his share in a lottery ticket. |
Return to the Table of Contents
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|
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| |
Leverich Correspondence |
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
Charles P. Leverich (1809-1876) born
at Newtown, Queens County, New York; cotton factor, commission merchant, and
banker, most notably for planters Stephen Duncan, William J. Minor, and Francis
(Frank) Surget of Natchez. Surget was one of the wealthiest men in the
antebellum South, owning thirteen plantations in Arkansas, Louisiania, and
Mississippi, and over a thousand slaves. With his brother Henry S. Leverich,
the firm of Leverich & Co's. business had two distinct but related
components: the first was its activity as commission merchants. In this
capacity, the firm arranged the import and export of goods between the United
States and Europe, and the shipment from New York of domestically produced
goods to other ports within the United States. The second component was its
activity as cotton factors. In this capacity, the firm arranged the shipment
and sale of Southern agricultural products to purchasers in the Northern states
and in Europe, and in turn acted as purchasing agent for its clientele of
Southern planters. The firm also provided financial services, investing money
in the stock market on its clients‚ behalf. Two other brothers, William E.
Leverich and James H. Leverich, were successful merchants and bankers in New
Orleans. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
85 |
|
Fifteen letters from the New York Leverich & Company
with cotton and sugar planter-clients,
1835-1870 |
|
85 |
|
|
James H. Leverich & Co., New Orleans, to Charles
P. Leverich, New York, with pre-printed "New-Orleans
Wholesale Prices Current," August 29, 1835 |
|
85 |
|
|
Letter from F. Rernondy, New Orleans, to Charles P.
Leverich, New York,
February 17, 1838 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Comments on the sugar market,
the Bank question, and the weather. |
|
85 |
|
|
L. Millandon, New Orleans, to Charles P. Leverich, New
York,
September 25, 1838 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Content relating to sugar and
cotton. |
|
85 |
|
|
L. Millandon, New Orleans, to Charles P. Leverich, on
a financial matter, New York,
July 9, 1839 |
|
85 |
|
|
J. H. Leverich & Co., New Orleans, to Charles P.
Leverich, New York,
January 3-4, 1840 |
|
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
|
Detailed content about several
named customers‚ business, the shipment of hundreds of barrels of sugar, the
cotton market in England, "fine prices" for
cotton in New Orleans, and more. |
|
85 |
|
|
Samuel S. Boyd, Natchez, to Charles P. Leverich, New
York,
August 4, 1841 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
|
Requests the acceptance of a
draft and forward of it to Dr. John Merrill in Portland, Maine. |
|
85 |
|
|
Joshua M. Johnston, New Orleans, to Charles P.
Leverich, New York,
January 18, 1843 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Writer adds to his previous
order a request for $1,200-1,500 of "Woolsey &
Woolsey's Fluted White Loaf Sugar. " |
|
85 |
|
|
George E. Payne, New Orleans, to Charles P. Leverich,
New York,
May 8, 1848 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Relates to the dull cotton and
sugar market, indebted customers, banking throughout the nation, and concludes
with, "I think our cotton market is likely to become
worse than has been seen for years. – I really hope you have been able to work
off my sugar & will succeed in selling my tobacco very soon – as I would
like to know how I stand before I take hold again." |
|
85 |
|
|
Business letter from Robert L. Martin, Philadelphia,
to H. C. Leverich, New York,
December 9, 1848 |
|
85 |
|
|
Leverich & Co., New Orleans, to C. P. Leverich,
New York,
March 4, 1850 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Content about the cotton and
sugar clients referencing specific clients including Mrs. Williams, who is
described as "a good manager" who has 700 acres
of cane planted that will yield a 1,000 barrels of sugar, and 800 acres of
cotton planted as well. These are large plantations being referenced. |
|
85 |
|
|
William Taylor Palfrey, Parish of St. Mary's, to
Charles P. Leverich, Merchant, New York,
May 1, 1851 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
|
Palfrey writes about business
and comments that a New York watchmaker has "humbugged" him in not repairing his watch, and that
he would no longer let him do the work, even if offered his services for free.
Palfrey was a planter, sheriff, and a judge, and also served as a state senator
from St. Mary's Parish. |
|
85 |
|
|
J. P. Parker, Port Gibson, to C. P. Leverich, New
York,
December 12, 1854 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Report on the cotton crop and
a shipment of cotton. |
|
85 |
|
|
Katherine S. Minor, Natchez, to Messrs. Leverich &
Co., New York,
January 22, 1867 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Content includes:
"Charlie D. L. has gone to the Attakapas & speaks
of investing in a sugar place I hear. I only wish he would come to Natchez an
invest in one of our cotton place[s]. Our part of the world requires some of
your energetic northern men among us to arouse our people now." |
|
85 |
|
|
Mary L. McMurran, St. Paul, Minnesota, to Charles P.
Leverich, Bank of New York,
August 27, 1870 |
|
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Report on the cotton season
and business, and comments on the terrible effects of the European War.
Mentions Mrs. Minor and Miss Beauchamp. |
|
85 |
|
|
Mary L. McMurran, St. Paul, [Minnesota], to Charles P.
Leverich, New York,
September 28, 1870 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Reports on her pleasant trip
in St. Paul coming to a close, her anticipated trip back home, and expenses
incurred including her hotel bill. References a great deal of rain that has
hindered cotton picking, and mentions Miss Beauchamp and the Minor family. |
|
86 |
|
An Act to Establish Boards of
Police, and Define Their Powers and Jurisdiction, and for Other
Purposes, printed by Stanton and Besancon. Natchez,
1836 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
This 18-page 5” by 8” booklet
provides details of how the board meets, and the duties of overseers of the
roads. |
|
87 |
|
Letter from S. Holbrook, Danville, Va., to his wife
Eliza Holbrook, Westborough, Mass., about the Holbrook Family that includes
references to health, education, a financially-stressed family member's desire
to take "his negroes" to the Southwest, and
more. Danville, Virginia,
November 14, 1836 |
Return to the Table of Contents
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| |
Map and Description of Vicksburg,
1836 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
88 |
|
Early map of Vicksburg and a 56-page document that
detail the history of the founding of that city in the early 1820s with much
information about the Vick family. Warren County, Vicksburg,
1836 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
These documents provide
revealing details about the foundation and organization of the city of
Vicksburg. One statement comes from the executor of Newit Vick's estate who was
involved in the implementation of the will in 1821. He mentions
"that part of the City of Vicksburg known and
represented as Commons on the Map of said City – that in August 1819 said Newit
Vick made a will and soon after died leaving Elizabeth his wife Executrix &
Hartwell Vick & Willis B. Vick, his Executors. The said Elizabeth died in a
few minutes after her husband . . ." The document is brimming with much
description of the survey of the town, the most valuable lots, the layout of
the various named streets, property in its proximity to Front or Levee Streets
along the river, names of people who bought lots, references to the level of
the land and flooding, the prices paid for lots in the new city, and activities
that take place in the Commons and Levee Streets where occurs
"the discharging and loading of boats and occupied by
wagons, Drays & Carts." These are the recorded testimonies of the
people who were present when Vicksburg was laid out in the early 1820s, and
consequently of tremendous value in understanding the foundation of that famous
city. It is signed by Sargent S. Prentiss, famous attorney, orator and
politician from Vicksburg. The Mississippi River is shown along with the
numbered lots, named streets of Vicksburg like Washington, Mulberry, and Levee
Streets, and a "C. deep Ravine" and
"Glass Bayou." |
Return to the Table of Contents
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| |
Assorted documents |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
90 |
|
Lot of 7 items from the Charles C. Peck correspondence.
Natchez,
1837-1840 |
|
90 |
|
|
Elizabeth Peck, Cincinnati, to her husband Charles C.
Peck, to Care of Mitchell & Montgomery, Natchez,
February 2, 1837 |
|
90 |
|
|
Elizabeth, Cincinnati, to Charles, Natchez,
February 3, 1837 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
References family and
children, relatives, church, a marriage and dinner party. |
|
90 |
|
|
Henry Clark, Cincinnati, to Charles, Natchez,
January 30, 1838 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
About business, friends and
health, and several names mentioned. |
|
90 |
|
|
R. C. Wetmore & Co., New York, to Charles,
Natchez,
March 9, 1840 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
"Free M. H. Grinnell M C" notation. References a
received letter that was franked by A. S. Brown, a Member of Congress from
Mississippi, and discusses business. The writer also states that
"We hope that the State of Mississ.i will come to the
conclusion to sustain the Union Bank, the currency Bank of the State Else we
fear there will be great difficulty in coll.g . . . There is but little doing
here. The Spring is fairly opened no ice in the river, yet little or no trade.
Two or three Tuscaloosa Merchants are in . . ." |
|
90 |
|
|
H. E. Peck, Cincinnati, to his brother Charles,
Natchez,
May 10, 1840 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Charles's brother reports that
he is relocating to Vincennes, Illinois, where he will operate a store.
References to family. |
|
90 |
|
|
Business-related letter from F. H. Conkling for J. W.
& R. Leavitt, Vicksburg, to Charles, Natchez,
March 7, 1841 |
|
90 |
|
|
D. C. Hitchcock Del. J. Archer S.c. Middleton Printer,
[circa 1840] |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Image on an octavo-size leaf
entitled "Cincinnati," and showing the city and
steamboats lined along the riverbank. |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
91 |
|
Indenture documenting the sale of 843 acres along the
Mississippi River in Bolivar County, Mississippi,
December 1, 1837 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
"Sold by
Wm. H. Fox, Natchez" – Fox operated a prominent druggist business at
Natchez. |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The indenture is between Isaac
W. Arthur and Margaret W. Arthur, New York City, and Zenas K. Fulton, Natchez,
on the one part, and George W. Adams, Scott County, Kentucky, on the other
part. The Arthurs sell Adams “that tract or parcel of Land laying on the
Mississippi River in the County of Boliver . . .” containing about 843 acres
for $17,000. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
92 |
|
Report from the Congressional Record referencing Indian
Affairs in 1831 in Lowndes County, Mississippi. Washington, D.C.,
1838 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Extracted pages from the 25th
Congress, 2d Session, House of Representatives printed reports. Included is a
report entitled "The Committee on Indian Affairs, to
which was referred the petition of John L. Allen, of the county of Lowndes and
State of Mississippi." The brief report references John Walker and
Marshall Goodman, merchants and partners, who are accused of illegal
trafficking in the Indian trade in 1831 following a complaint from Chief
Tishomingo of the Chickasaw Nation. |
|
93 |
|
"Memorandum in Relation to
Marriage Contract" between Henry A. Girault and his soon-to-be wife, the
former Jane Dunbar. Adams County, Mississippi,
1838 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Apparently some kind of
prenuptial contract that references a piece of property and cites precedents in
Virginia law. |
|
94 |
|
Pre-printed receipt from the Barnard Family for the jail
fees of Robert, a runaway slave. Natchez,
1838 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
"To S.
B. STUTSON, Jailor of Adams County, To jail and other fees for Robert a
runaway, committed on 11th day of June 1838 Dr. . . ." The receipt is
made out to Mrs. Barbara Barnard, the owner of Robert, the runaway. |
|
95 |
|
James A. Montgomery correspondence. Woodville,
1838-1839 |
|
95 |
|
|
Goble & Earl, New York, to James A. Montgomery,
Woodville,
August 24, 1838 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
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|
Pre-printed and filled-in
lettersheet with a ship vignette in the upper left corner, and an inventory of
trunks and footwear purchased from them and shipped aboard the ship called
Kentucky bound for New Orleans. |
|
95 |
|
|
Benjamin H. Lillie, Natchez, to J. A. Montgomery,
Woodville,
May 16, 1839 |
|
97 |
|
Letter to Captain J. J. James of Mississippi River
Steamboat Ambassador from passengers aboard the boat on a trip from New Orleans
to Louisville, including former Mississippi Governor George Poindexter, Henry
Austin of Texas, and planter Isaac R. Ross of Natchez. Steamboat Ambassador,
June 10, 1839 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Content includes:
"Sir, The undersigned after a delightful passage from
New Orleans and intermediate points to Louisville in your Boat, take occasion
before leaving to express to you their high sense of the good order and
discipline which characterizes the management thereof. . . . and, do most
cordially recommend, the ‘Ambassador' as a Boat of the ‘first class' either in
respect to the ability or the accommodations . . ." |
|
98 |
|
Business letter from D. B. Downing, Vicksburg, to his
brother J.C. Downing, New York,
June 23, 1839 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Content relates to the Benedict
case and the difficulty of collecting debts. |
|
99 |
|
R. G. Ramsden & Co., a New Orleans factor, purchases
from John Stewart, Richmond, 363 bales of Mississippi cotton for the account of
a customer but delays filling the remainder of the $20,000 order until he has
received the accounts of Queen Victoria of Great Britain. Natchez,
January 27, 1840 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Contents include:
"We are disposed to go to the extent of your order
say $20000, but after due deliberation have decided to wait the receipt of the
'Queens' accounts before we enter into any
further operations for you, so as to give you the chance of any further decline
. . . On receipt of the British Queens a/cs we shall advise you of our further
proceedings . . ." |
|
100 |
|
Love letter from William, New Orleans to his cousin,
Katherine C. Glidden, New Castle, Maine, long and intimate, stating that if he
has to go to Texas, he will not go without her. New Orleans,
February 25, 1840 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Content includes:
"The next Item of importance is that you had been to
the dancing (I wont say – waltzing) school! Did you really have a
'nice time'? – I wish I had been there. You
know I never dance but I do think I should have been tempted on such an
occasion! . . ." He mentions that he has children, so he must be widowed,
remarking of Kate that, "I know Cousin Kate will
think this a very silly letter – but tell her I have now as much confidence in
her & as full and concise a belief in her charity &c. as I can ever
have – & loving her, as I do, with a whole heart! Am I not right? . .
." He appears to be in the shipping business, as he tells some of his
affairs, referencing Mobile. |
|
101 |
|
Transcription of a record from the Land Office,
Ouachita, that certifies the purchase of 250 acres of land on Red River by
Samuel Davis for $1.25 per acre. Natchez,
1840 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Bears seal of James K. Cook, a
Justice of the Peace and Notary Public of Adams County, Mississippi. |
|
102 |
|
Letter from Elias Ogden, Natchez, to H. Mosley,
Princeton near Lake Washington, Mississippi, about a debt owed by the Ogden
Estate. Princeton, near Lake Washington, Mississippi,
March 4, 1840 |
|
103 |
|
Steamboat record for the shipment of “Twenty Square
Bales Cotton” to Harwell Stewart & Co. Montgomery, Alabama,
June 5, 1840 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
"FROM
W. T. BIBB'S WARE-HOUSE, by T. S McFarley in good order, on board the Steam
Boat called the John Duncan whereof Bullard is at present Master, now lying at
MONTGOMERY, and bound for Mobile, to say: Twenty Square Bales Cotton. . .
." Signed by James H. Marsh. |
|
104 |
|
John L. Lobdell, a West Feliciana attorney, writes Hon.
Lafayette Saunders, the judge at Clinton, La., and provides him with a list of
witnesses in the case of Perry & Wife. West Feliciana,
January 13, 1841 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
|
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|
The letter includes a list of
thirteen people who are being called as witnesses for Lobdell's client. |
|
105 |
|
Family letter from T. Dwight, Trinidad, to his sister
Clarissa Dwight, New Orleans,
January 30, 1841 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The content refers to family and
personal matters that include passing references to the recipient's deceased
baby, Caroline in New Haven, the presidential question, and the weather. |
|
106 |
|
Document that describes the sale of interest in the
Steamboat Leander involving Pennsylvanians.
Natchez,
March 16, 1841 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Copy of contract between
"I Andrew Gregg of the Borough of Greenfield
Washington County Pennsylvania . . . for and in Consideration of Five thousand
two hundred and fifty Dollars in hand paid" sells his seven-sixteenths
interest in the "Steam Boat called the Leander
together with the seven sixteenth of all and singular her Engine Tackle apparel
and Furniture as they now are . . ." to Joseph Buffington of the same
place |
|
107 |
|
Letter from S. F. Shipley, a professor at the College of
Baton Rouge [later Louisiana State University], offering a position to his
friend Charles H. Cragin Esq, Washington, D.C., in the French & Philosophy
Departments. Baton Rouge,
April 28, 1841 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Shipley writes,
"An am authorized by the President of the College of
Baton Rouge to say to you that you can doubtless get the appointment of
Professor in said College if you can be here soon. I was in the college about a
year found pretty hard work but still not disagreeable – you will be required
to take charge of the French department and Philosophy &c. the boys are not
very far advanced so that there is nothing frightful – . . ." |
|
108 |
|
Letter from Gab. Winter [?], a Donaldson, La., planter,
to attorney Louis Sanders, Natchez, with political and economic references to
John A. Quitman and “the Infernal Set,” being the Democrats in this case,
August 19, 1841 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Content includes:
"I think that the Opposition you will meet with in
attacking Quitman will be very great for it is like attacking all those who
have lately been at the head of power and influence in the State. All the
Infernal set who have bro‚t the Country to the brink of Ruin all those who
would Countenance Swindling in all its various Branches so that on your part I
trust that your Patriotism will be enlisted." |
|
109 |
|
Letter from A. S. Swearinger, Louisville, Kentucky, to
J. T. Swearinger, Saint Louis, detailing how William Swearinger became deranged
while traveling aboard a steamboat on the Mississippi River accompanied by his
16-year-old "Negro Boy." Louisville, Kentucky,
October 29, 1841 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Swearinger writes that
"a Mr. William Swearinger formerly from Virginia but
now residing in Missouri arrived here on tuesday morning last from Virginia. He
had with him a negro boy about 16 years of age and I also learn‚d he had
several trunks or boxes of goods which he shipped on board of the Lebanon and
intended taking passage himself but from some cause or other he has become
entirely deranged. He was taken up as a lunatic and confined in prison. . .
." |
|
110 |
|
William M. Rives, Raymond, correspondence about the
business of Vicksburg-area estates, including that of John W. Jones and a Mr.
Pendleton, featuring references to the sale of slaves. Raymond, Mississippi,
1842-1843 |
|
110 |
|
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William M. Rives, Raymond, to John M. Chilton,
Vicksburg,
April 28, 1842 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
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|
The letter refers to some
issues that could "affect the lien on the negroes
sold,""the ill health of Mr. Mills" who
is "confined at my house, and is so much affected by
a high fever," and indicates that "Dr. Jones
informs me, that the thirty bales of cotton have been shipped sent to Messrs.
Gwin & Aiken." |
|
110 |
|
|
William M. Rives, Raymond, to John M. Chilton,
Vicksburg,
January 19, 1843 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
The letter refers to money to
be dispersed to the children of Jones. "I shall be
greatly pleased, & my trustees will consent, to settle the whole claim in
land & negroes at fair prices." He also makes reference to his
attempt to secure a "negro owned by Tidence [?]
Lane." |
|
111 |
|
Eliza R. Morris, who moved to Natchez in 1836, writes to
William Imley, Allenton, N.J., about business and conflict with a stepson.
Natchez,
August 10, 1842 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
In addition to references to
business, a sale of property, and a guardianship, contents include:
"Mr. Paul Morris has been very ungentlmeny [sic] with
me . . . When I new him he was quite a boy, but his Father was a good man, and
so was his Brother, but him I never wish to know, again. He thought, I presume
that I was left a widow, with out friends, in a Land of strangers . . ."
She talks about her move to the South, first to South Carolina, then to
Natchez, and gives the chronology. |
| box |
lot |
| 2.116/OD1223b |
112 |
|
Map of Mississippi by surveyer A. Downing entitled
“Diagram of the Surveying District South of Tennessee,”
dated October 12, 1843 [possibly later 19th century
printing] |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
It shows Choctaw and Chickasaw
lands and boundary lines, detailed areas including Honey Island, and numerous
town names. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
113 |
|
A letter from the Richard T. Archer correspondence.
Natchez, 1843. Samuel S. Boyd, Natchez, to Richard T. Archer, Port Gibson,
April 2, 1843 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
The content is business and
financial-related, connected to a debt collected from Smith & Farrar. There
is also the interesting notation that may refer to slaves:
"Note by R. T. Archer the above fee was for suit by
Garland for amt. purchase of Louisa & Julia by S. G. A." |
|
114 |
|
Letter from Post & Main, New York, to Isaac W.
Arthur, New Orleans about their latest business partnership,
May 6, 1843 |
|
115 |
|
Letter from John R. Marshall, Natchez, to John McCrea,
Houma, Parish of Terre Bonne, La., about debt and discrepancy over ownership of
the "Bowie." Place purchased from Mr. Barnard
by John McCrea. Natchez,
June 6, 1843 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Contents include:
"When in N. Orleans Mr. [Ludlow?] informed me that
none of your lands had ever been offered for Entry nor had any one ever been
told that preemptions could locate on any of the lands owned by you or any one
else called the Bowie or Mortimer grants. So you see not one of the squatters
can have the least shadow of a right to one inch of your lands purchased of
Barnard and you are ought therefore to order them off at once which I trust you
will do without fail." |
|
116 |
|
Letter from college student William Terrell, Staunton,
Va., to his father Richmond Terrell Esqr, Charlottesville, Va., that tells of a
fatal alcohol-related carriage accident that killed the driver and injured
children who were passengers. Staunton, Virginia,
September 15, 1843 |
|
117 |
|
Letter from S. Claiborne, Member of Congress, about a
legal case, to C. Dabney of Lynchburg. Charlottesville, Virginia,
October 17, 1843 |
|
118 |
|
Extract of letter by prominent merchants and cotton
commission brokers, Buckner & Stanton of New Orleans. [Natchez],
January 2, 1844. |
|
119 |
|
Letter from Samuel R. Dunn to G. B. Kinkead of
“Versails,” Kentucky, about estate matters of Samuel Parish, deceased, formerly
of Washington County. Bachelor's Bend (near Vicksburg), Mississippi,
1844 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Outer side also bears the stamp
of Ben Edwards, Jr., apparently a philatelic collector. |
|
121 |
|
"Naval Depot and Armory.
Memorial of Citizens of Natchez and Adams County, Miss., asking the location of
the contemplated naval depot and armory at that place," printed document
from the United States House of Representatives, 28th Congress, 1st Session,
February 15, 1844 |
|
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Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Previously bound with other
acts., this document contains a detailed letter datelined City Hall, Natchez,
January 2, 1844, with a report by Colonel James C. Wilkins, chairman of the
sub-committee. It states that, "The harbor of Natchez
and the landing, for the space of a mile in front of the bluffs on which the
city is built, are not surpassed by any on the Mississippi river in depth of
water, good anchorage, or the permanency and security of its banks. . .
." The document is very detailed about the depths of the river at various
points, the question of health at Natchez with a "Schedule of the statistical data on which the report of
the physicians, in regard to the health of the city of Natchez, is
founded" with population and mortality numbers from 1824-1843. It is
signed in print by John R. Stockman, Chairman of the committee; Thos. S. Munce,
Secretary, and 174 men of Natchez deemed "Selectmen
of the city of Natchez." |
|
122 |
|
Letter by James J. Rowan, a known slave-trader, to
Messrs Doremus, Suydan & Nixon, New Orleans, about a legal matter connected
with the Estate of William Chambers, deceased. Natchez,
February 19, 1844 |
|
123 |
|
Letter from C. McLaurin, Covington County, Miss., to
Col. J. F. Foute at Jackson about a legal case. Covington County, Miss.,
March 8, 1844 |
|
124 |
|
Letter from anonymous author in Charleston to James
Gordon Bennett, Esq., of New York with attached newspaper clipping alleging
that the Superintendent of a Georgia Female Institute took
"Improper Liberties" with girls there.
Charleston,
May 4, 1844 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
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|
The letter reads,
"The accusation against 'Bishop' Fay is that he has taken improper liberties
with Bishop Elliott's daughter and with the daughter of a Member of
Congress." The 4” clipped newspaper articles gives the details that
include: "The fathers of the young ladies now members
of the school, ought to probe matters to the bottom. They are deeply and
fearfully interested in maintaining the purity of the institution." |
|
125 |
|
Letter from president John P. Walworth and cashier H. D.
Mandeville of the Planters Bank to a court clerk in Hinds County about
judgments in favor of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund. Natchez,
June 6, 1844 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Attached is a copy of a letter
from Governor A. G. Brown to Walworth and Mandeville from the Executive
Chamber, City of Jackson, 2 June 1844, discussing pay of clerks. |
|
126 |
|
Letter from H. Parker, Washington, D.C., to Mrs. Abigail
Parsons, Gloucester, Mass., tells of a visit to the President, the ascendancy
of Polk, a visit to the Slave Market, and a poignant description of an enslaved
woman without her children. Washington, D.C.,
December 31, 1844 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The writer reports to a friend
about their recent travels returning to Washington. Content includes:
"I am to call on the present With other friends being
new years day, went to the Capitol at opening of Congress. I saw some grate men
come into office and a few speeches. . . . Washington seems alive. I sopose
that Mr. Parsons has heard that Jimmy Polk is to be president. I sopose he will
be as good as Johny Tylor but it does not trouble me Much who reign, if they do
right, to day is New Year. . . ." Parker then describes his visit
"to the Presidents House. We was introduced to the
President and his young and Beautifull Wife. . . ." He continues about
his visit, describes his home and accommodations, then writes:
"The house, well is one I will tell you a bout.
Servants for so they are calld here you we and with Slaves here we have three
in the family A Cook and a Nurse a Woman that takes care of Children is all
ways Calld Nurse then we have a grate Black man to take car[e] of the horse And
Cow and tend table and such like thing, and these are all Slaves. The gentelman
[sic] that lives in the other house has twelve house-Servants. . . ." The
writer mentions that the "gentleman" owns 60
slaves who are "Off the Collage [sic]," then
continues about local slavery in detail. Then, the writer reports:
"Mr. Bacon shew me the Market where they sold slaves
oh I thought what a dreadfull thing for one Man to sale another these poor
things that we have got cant Take any of their Ernings[earnings] . . .""The Cook that we have is brought Away from all her
Children and never Expects to See them again. . . ." The writer includes
considerable family news as well. |
|
127 |
|
Members of the Standing Committee of the Diocese of
Mississippi of the Presbyterian Church attest to the moral and temperate life
led by the Reverend Alonzo Potter, D.D. Natchez,
[circa 1845] |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
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|
Standing Committee of the
Diocese of Mississippi with signatures of David Page, Daniel H. Deacon, Ayres
P. Merrill, and Joseph Dunbar, Natchez, to Rev. Benjamin Door, D.D., President
of the Standing Committee, No. 376 Arch Street. Upon the occasion of Potter
being considered for Bishop, the members acceded to a pre-printed oath that
indicated that Potter was not a person of "evil
report," and that "he hath, as we believe, led
his life for three years last past, piously, soberly, and honestly." |
|
128 |
|
Letter to to Mrs. Francis Sprague, near Natchez, from a
Mrs. Tetter who writes about her family life and gives some details about
specialized slaves.
September 24, [circa 1845-50] |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Tetter writes about moving to a
new home and her new baby, repeatedly inquires of Mrs. Dunbar to whom she sends
her love, and reports on her desire to find a good, honest cook whom she will
pay wages. Mrs. Tetter mentions that her 15-year-old slave Jane is a good
worker. She also writes: "Mr. Tetter wants you to ask
Mrs. Dunbar if she still wants a good waiter. If so there is one at Mr. Beards
for sale; he is a fine party cook dancing room servant & carriage driver.
He is considered one of the best in the [city/state?] although they ask a large
price, one thousand dollars. He can be had on trial for a few weeks." |
|
129 |
|
Letter from T. P. Bancroft, New Orleans, to Robert H.
Ives, Providence, RI, about the cotton market in Liverpool and a reference to
recovered health as a result of bloodletting. New Orleans,
February 15, 1845 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Content includes:
"I am now quite well except I am hardly as shiny as
ever & have lost some weight but by aid of bloodletting & calomel have
entirely recovered from the disease which attacked towards the end of the
year." |
|
130 |
|
Letter from Thomas P. Bancroft, New Orleans, to E.
Chadwick, Boston, about the market consumption of the crop of 1845. New
Orleans,
March 18, 1846 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The lengthy letter details a
1,000-bale cotton order and the cotton markets in on the eastern seaboard and
in England. |
|
131 |
|
Letter from D. J. Gilbert, Wilmington, NC, to Messrs
Boggs & Southmayd, New York, concerning the production and shipment of
turpentine. Wilmington, N.C.,
April 17, 1846 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The first part of the letter is
business related, and Gilbert complains that he has run out of groceries and
needs a resupply. The other half is concerned with the shipment of turpentine,
and how "Mr. Grant is in a place where he sells more
goods for Turpentine per mnths &c which he cannot get to market only when a
vessel is sent around there." |
|
132 |
|
Letter written from T. Davidson, Woodville, [Texas], to
Quincy Davidson, Victoria, Texas, shortly following the Statehood of Texas.
Woodville,
April 27, 1846 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Davidson writes his kinsman
about steamboat travel, business, and personal matters. He discusses courtship,
Woodville, "The Animal Show," and more. |
|
133 |
|
Letter from Ann Seymour, Natchez, to Mr. A. G. Washbon,
Esq., North New Berlin, New York. Natchez,
June 4, 1846 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
She needs to sell her farm back
in New York, and indicates that the Mexican War has affected her prospects for
success. |
|
134 |
|
Mary H. Ivey, Vicksburg, writes a personal letter to her
friend back Miss Jane Jessup, Westhampton, New York,. Vicksburg,
August 4, 1846 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
A chatty letter about her
personal life and mention a rumor about a friend getting married. |
|
135 |
|
Letter from E. B. Fuller, a Natchez member of the
Presbyterian Church, to the Missionary Chronicle in New York regarding his
contributions, desire to receive the Missionary Chronicle free of Charge, and
referencing Natchez Presbyterian Church official John Henderson. Natchez,
August 5, 1846 |
|
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|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Fuller indicates that he does
not wish to pay for a subscription to the Missionary Chronicle, believing that
he should receive it without charge. To justify his assertion, he enumerates
his contributions to the Presbyterian organization since 1843, and his
contributions to the Presbyterian Church at Natchez. |
|
136 |
|
Letter from J. L. Shuck, Nashville, to Rev. W. Cary
Crane, Columbus, Mississippi, that references the Baptist Church in
Mississippi, including a negative critique of the congregation at Vicksburg.
Nashville,
August 23, 1846 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Shuck describes his recent
travels home, reports about family through letters received from Virginia, etc.
|
|
137 |
|
Edward Bissell, New York, writes R. M. Latimer of
Canton, Mississippi, about confusion over shipping the wrong parts for a
"Buggy Waggon." Wall Street, New York,
September 14, 1846 |
|
138 |
|
Two items from the papers of Aylett Buckner, prominent
Natchez businessman, attorney and planter, consisting of a bill for legal fees
due Buckner & Stuart by Van Winker & Potter, and a promissory note for
$300 written out to Winker & Potter datelined Natchez but unsigned. Jackson
and Natchez,
1846 |
|
140 |
|
Maria Lancaster, Jackson, writes her cousin Miss
Louisiana Ferrell, Gallatin, TN, a lengthy letter about the family, a marriage,
a family quarrel, and the incidental occurrences in her life. Jackson,
April 17, 1847 |
|
141 |
|
Cotton commission merchant Whitaker & Sampson,
Mobile, reports to Jon.a Thompson, New York, about Spring business. Mobile,
April 24, 1847 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Content includes: “We have
passed through a dull week. The sales of Cotton barely reach 5000 Bales. . . .
We have now a better supply of Am. Ships in port then for a long period &
they have been much wanted for the Havre freight.” |
|
142 |
|
Bills of sale issued by slave-traders to Samuel Campbell
for an enslaved woman, girl, and baby, who are described by name, age, and are
warranted by the sellers. Rutherford County, Tennessee,
1847 and 1856 |
|
142 |
|
|
Bill of sale for a slave |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Bill of sale datelined
Rutherford Co. Tenne. Rec.d, and recording the sale of
"a Negro Girl (Caroline) aged about nine years slave
for life. . . ." She is warranted as being "sound & sensible." Signed by the slave-trader
John E. Dromgoole and attested by J. E. Campbell. |
|
142 |
|
|
Bill of sale that records Campbell's purchase of
slaves,
August 4, 1856 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Bill of sale that records
Campbell's purchase of"a negro woman & Chile the
woman name Ellen about thirty Two years old & Chile name Sam Thirteen
months old the Said negroes I warrant Sound in body and mind and Slaves for
life this 4th day of August 1856." Signed by the slave-trader M. H.
Brady, and attested by C. M. Brooks and J. W. Binford. |
|
143 |
|
A. F. Cochran, New Orleans, writes to Mess Silas Peirce
[sic] & Co., Boston, about shipments of raisins aboard the Brigs Argo and
Sunbeam. New Orleans,
May 31, 1847 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The whole letter relates to the
business of raisins including 162 boxes that were damaged and had to be sold at
a lesser price. He writes, "We are now receiving
these from the 'Sunbeam' they are in good order
& a good article." |
|
144 |
|
John Brownson, New Orleans, writes his wife Mrs.
Caroline Brownson, Brooklyn, about his business affairs in south Louisiana. New
Orleans,
June 3, 1847 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Brownson indicates that he has
been at St. Martinsville and is now attending court at Lower Vermillion where
he will be detained several days before starting for home via the
"Southern route." He expresses concern for his
daughter's health, mentions financial matters, and gives his greetings to
friends and family, particularly his children. |
|
145 |
|
Letter from . H. S. Eustis, Natchez, to Messrs. A. &
J. Dunnestown & Co., New Orleans, about shipping cotton from the Bluff
Place on Cole's Creek and the need for supplies for that plantation. Natchez,
August 20, 1847 |
|
146 |
|
Financial-related letter from druggist W. H. Fox,
Natchez, to Messrs. Lindsay & Blackston, Philadelphia. Natchez,
August 3, 1847 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The druggist informs the
recipient that there is a balance on his books in their favor, and that he
encloses his check on the Phenix Bank of New York to settle the debt. |
|
147 |
|
Two letters from the Robert C. Hamer correspondence.
South Carolina and North Carolina,
1847 and 1857 |
|
147 |
|
|
Edward B. Wheeler, Marion C.H. [Courthouse], S.C., to
R. C. Hamer, Marion, S.C.,
December 30, 1847 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Wheeler writes Hamer on behalf
of Capt. Godbold, the sheriff, about the settlement of a claim between Hamer
and Godbold. |
|
147 |
|
|
J. H. Hamer, University of N.C., to his father R. C.
Hamer, Little Rock, S.C.,
March 23, 1857 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Hamer complains that he does
not receive nearly as much correspondence from home as he sends and talks about
his health, a dying student, and asks for money, explaining why he needs
it. |
|
149 |
|
Priestly & Mosby (Canton, Miss., druggists)
correspondence,
1848 |
|
149 |
|
|
Mitchell & Rammelsberg, Cincinnati, to Priestly
& Mosby, Canton, Miss.,
May 29, 1848 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
The document records the
shipment of furniture about the steamboat Martha Washington via their agent,
Laughlin Searles & Co. at the Port of Vicksburg. |
|
149 |
|
|
D. Hausbrough, Graefenberg Company, New Orleans,
writes about the shipment of medicine to Priestly & Mosby, Canton, Miss.,
December 19, 1848 |
|
150 |
|
Planter's Bank President H.D. Mandeville of Natchez to
R. S. Holt, Benton, Miss., discusses bank stock and the books of the bank
branch at Manchester, Mississippi. Natchez,
September 4, 1848 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Mandeville provides testimony
about his knowledge of the business affairs of John Colglazer, a stockholder in
that institution. |
|
151 |
|
Harrison & Babington of Springfield, La., inform
their customer, N. Baylies, Greensburg, La., that the box containing “the
Banner” has not yet arrived by Steamer. Springfield, La.,
September 7, 1848 |
|
152 |
|
Jas. E. Heath, Richmond, reports to Revd. John Cooke,
Aetna P.O., Hanover, Va., the death of a friend in New Orleans from cholera,
and discusses the baffling symptoms of cholera, a telegraphic message that he
sent, and the mourning of the loss of their friend. Richmond,
April 10, 1849 |
|
153 |
|
Letter from M. C. Blair, Springhill [Mobile], to Mrs.
Mary Ann Nicholson, New Orleans, that references the cholera epidemic in New
Orleans. Mobile,
December 28, 1849 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
|
154 |
|
Letter from Dudley C. Hall, New Orleans, to George Howe,
Boston, about the cotton crop of 1848 and quotes on freights to Liverpool and
Boston. New Orleans,
January 15, 1849 |
|
155 |
|
Letter from William C. Comfort, Memphis, to Mrs. C.
Miller, Panola, Miss., recommending Dr. Brian for his skills and pain-free
methods in dental work. Memphis,
February 11, 1850 |
|
157 |
|
Letter from John C. Joor, headed home to Louisiana, to
his wife Mrs. Alice S. Joor, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York, about Ohio
and Mississippi River travel aboard steamer William Noble,
"25 miles above Vicksburg." Mississippi River
near Vicksburg,
June 17, 1851 |
|
158 |
|
Letter from S. G. Hillyer, Secretary of the Faculty,
Mercer University, Penfield, GA, to Thomas Ferguson, Cairo, Edgefield Dist.,
So. Ca., that includes the printed progress report of Whitfield Ferguson of the
Scientific Class while attending Mercer University. Penfield, Georgia,
December 15, 1851 |
|
159 |
|
Maryland Colonization
Journal, Vol. 6, No. 13. Baltimore,
June 1852 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Among the articles are
"State Convention of the Free People of Color of
Maryland,""Emigration of the Colored
Race,""Address to the Free Colored Population
of Maryland,""Free Negroes in Virginia,""Mr. Stanley's Bill,""Latest from Liberia,""Negro Preaching,""Slave Trade on the Eastern Coast of Africa,""Slave Trade on the West Coast," etc. |
|
160 |
|
Letter from William S. Thomas, Lexington, Mo., heading
to Jackson County, that references cholera and his life lately, to Col. Robert
Bartu of Town House, Va., a father figure to him. Lexington, Missouri,
June 1832 |
|
161 |
|
Letter from M.O.L., a woman at the Cumberland Iron Works
in “Bell Vue”, Tn., to her cousin Martha, which provides a detailed account of
widespread cholera outbreak in the area that killed several people including
the cook, Aunt Sarah, whom she described as “Lady like” and a “faithful
Servant.” Bell Vue, Tennessee,
July 8, 1852 |
|
162 |
|
Three documents about estate advertising issued by the
Yazoo Democrat and the Yazoo City Whig newspapers. Yazoo City,
1853-1856 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Newspaper clippings attached of
the estates of the Nicholas O'Reily, Lester Lamb, and Benjamin Lewis. |
|
163 |
|
Letter from A. M. Bigelow, Richmond [Virginia], to Miss
Mary A. Smith, Wayland Female Institute, Upper Alton, IL, that references a
duel and details about a slave cook who was accused of setting houses on fire,
Richmond,
January 15, 1854 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Content includes:
"While I was at Mr. Royalls Roberts house was fired.
My loss was more than a hundred dollars. The cook whom they suspected told me
if I had been at home it would not have happened. It was thought she fired the
house of the Gentleman she lived with the years before. She would have been
emancipated if Eliza had gone to Court. She done it for no bad treatment. They
were to easy with her & when E. told her to do such & such things she
did not do them so R. told her she must mind his wife or he would punish her.
She was kindly treated. She told the Court she never was better treated in her
life but she was so dirty I could not eat her cooking." Much family news
including a report that the writer's brother-in-law has died, leaving his
sister an estate worth $30,000. |
|
164 |
|
Letter from William D. Gagger, Mobile, to his nephew,
describing a visit made by former President Millard Fillmore to Mobile,
Alabama,
April 7, 1854 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Contents include:
"I have seen your cozin Millard Filmore and see the
countenance and features of your father wich broat to mind youthful Days that
never will return . . .Every one speek of his Being a fine looking man and
mutch pleased with his address To the people in Mobile . . . ." |
|
165 |
|
Letter from Mary M. Pugh, [Charleston, S.C.], who writes
to her sister [Sue E. Furman], family news including reports of the loss of
"one negro Cholera," plans for Fourth of July,
"an interestting Sabbath School both for whites &
negroes," and the Baptists in Charleston. [Charleston, S.C.],
June 5, 1854 |
|
166 |
|
Sale record of nearly $5,500 worth of sugar mill
equipment from the succession of Alvarez Fisk by auctioneer George Palfrey. New
Orleans,
1854 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Purchasers of the property
included Bayard Milligan, Laurent Millandon, Robert Ferguson, and Thompson
Harrison. The sale occurred in New Orleans at the Bramah Cotton Press. |
|
167 |
|
Letter from William Staples, Chicago, to Dr. D. L. Broom
to Dr. D. L. Broom of Woodville, Miss., giving an update on his own family.
Chicago,
August 14, 1854 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
A young man writes that his
father is unwell with a sore hand and unable to write, and he indicates that
five people, mostly emigrants, have died in Chicago within the past day. |
|
168 |
|
Letter written by O. C. Powell, Caddo, La., to his
friend Dr. J. Pownall, Motezuma [sic], CA, about local news and inquires about
his success "in the Land of Gold." Keachie,
Louisiana,
September 22, 1854 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
He mentions marriages at
Keachie Methodist Church, the recent deaths of elderly neighbors, crops, and
inquires about his friend's life in California, noting that
"Your gold Stories look like tales of fiction more
than fact. I should like to know how much of the shining metal my old friend
could command and call his own." |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
169 |
|
Broadside advertising the sale of an estate belonging to
the Huggins Brothers, minors, by their guardian Hugh Torrance. Coffeeville,
Mississippi,
November 18, 1854 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The broadside indicates the
description of the auction and what is to be sold including 680 acres, farm
animals, “farming utensils,” and crops. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
170 |
|
Five printed anti- or pro-slavery speeches. [Washington,
D.C.],
1855-1863 |
|
170 |
|
|
"Speech of Hon. Erastus
Brooks, In The Senate, Feb. 7th, 8th, and 13th, 1855, The Lemmon Slave Case and
Slavery – Secret Societies and Oaths – Grounds of Opposition to Mr. Seward –
The Common Schools of New York – The Bible in our Schools – The Pure Franchises
– A Better System of Naturalization ˆ American Ambassadors Abroad – American
Rulers at Home" |
|
170 |
|
|
"Speech of William H.
Seward, Against Mr. Douglas‚ Second Enabling Bill, And In Favor Of The
Immediate Admission of Kansas into the Union, In The Senate Of The United
States, July, 2, 1856," Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard,
Printers,
1856 |
|
170 |
|
|
"Are Working-Men
"Slaves?" Speech of Hon. Henry Wilson, Of
Massachusetts, In Reply To Hon. J. H. Hammond, Of S. C., in the Senate, March
20, 1858, on the Bill to Admit Kansas under the LeCompton
Constitution." |
|
170 |
|
|
"Speech of Hon. Thomas L.
Clingman, Of North Carolina, Against The Revolutionary Movement Of The
Anti-Slavery Party, Delivered In The Senate of fhe United States, January 16,
1860. " |
|
170 |
|
|
"Unconditional
Loyalty," by Henry W. Bellows, D.D. New York: Anson D. F. Randolph, No.
683 Broadway,
1863 |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
171 |
|
Sale record of the estate of Patrick Murphy, deceased.
New Orleans,
1855 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The auction was held by George
Palfrey at Banks Arcade on Magazine Street on Saturday, March 31, 1855. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
173 |
|
Letter from R. McInnis of the Office of the True Witness
and S.W. Presbyterian to David Jones about a subscription. Jackson,
1855 |
|
174 |
|
Documents of the brothers George and Daniel Rathbone,
who attend the Kentucky Military Institute, near Frankfort,
1855-1857 |
|
174 |
|
|
Bill for George's school uniform,
1855 |
|
174 |
|
|
Bill for George's socks, a toothbrush, sundry items,
“Book of Sports,” and a towel |
|
174 |
|
|
Report card for Daniel for the session ending November
17, 1855 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Contains detailed information
about the curriculum and environment of the institute. |
|
174 |
|
|
Report card for George for the session ending June
14, 1856 |
|
174 |
|
|
Report card for George for the session ending January
26, 1856 |
|
174 |
|
|
Letter from D. W. Morgan, Military Institute, KY, to
Hon. S. I.[?] Ghalson about the good progress of Daniel and the poor progress
of George, partly due to ill health,
June 26, 1856. |
|
174 |
|
|
Report card for George for the session ending 23
January 1857. |
|
174 |
|
|
Report card for Daniel for the session ending 19
January 1857. |
|
175 |
|
Female education collection, Mississippi and Louisiana,
1855-1891 |
|
175 |
|
|
Part of a letter to Mr. Jno. P. Darden from an
administrator of Franklin Female College in Holly Springs, Mississippi,
September 20, 1855 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Includes 4” x 3” steel-plate
engraving of the actual building at Franklin Female College, as well as
carriages, men, and women. |
|
175 |
|
|
Three receipts for the December 1858-February 1859
tuition and enumerated expenses of Miss Louise, issued to Mrs. Johnson, from
the Young Ladies' Institute, [New Orleans]. Expenses include an English
literature book, a pattern, stamps, coal, songs, and guitar picks. |
|
175 |
|
|
Receipt for the expenses of Lizzie issued to Mr. E. F.
Moody from Bascom Female Seminary, Grenada, Mississippi,
July 11, 1859 |
|
175 |
|
|
Expense sheet from Hubert P. Lefebvre to Mr. Wm.
Bataille for the expenses of his daughter that include board, washing, fuel and
lights, use of piano, English tuition, etc. [New Orleans, La.?],
October 11, 1860 |
|
175 |
|
|
Pamphlet from the Presbyterian Female Collegiate
Institute of Pontotoc, Mississippi, printed by Public Ledger Steam Job Printing
House, Memphis,
1869 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Information includes members
of the board of trustees and faculty, description of female education, the
school, and its policies, religious influence, boarding, dress, and the rates
for various classes and expenses. |
|
175 |
|
|
Letter written from “Cousin Kate” to her “dear
Brother” A. K. Couger on a pre-printed lettersheet of the Presbyterian Female
Collegiate Institute, Rev. J. D. West, Principal. Pontotoc, Miss.,
January 22 and 25, 1870 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Kate writes of her visit home
over Christmas, her health, and frustrations over her possibly leaving Pontotoc
and not continuing to study music. |
|
175 |
|
|
East Mississippi Female College commencement program,
1882 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Includes names of the eight
graduates, exercises, guest speakers and where they are from and their topics.
Printed by Methodist Print, Meridian, Miss. |
|
175 |
|
|
Receipt acknowledging payment of $10 for
"3rd Quarter in Music for Venia Tarn[?]."
Issued by Irwin Miller, Secretary of the Board of Trustees. Walnut Grove,
Miss.,
May 21, 1883 |
|
175 |
|
|
Letter to Mr. E. M. Witherspoon of Tupelo, from the
accountant of Poplar Springs Normal College, Poplar Springs, Mississippi,
March 30, 1891 |
|
176 |
|
Letter from Eleanor J. Gwin, Jackson, to Edward D.
Hicks, Nashville, about purchasing a servant man for $600 on credit and
repaying the debt for a slave. Jackson,
November 27, [circa 1855-60] |
|
177 |
|
R. C. Pearson, Jr., Morganton, N.C., writes his cousin
Sam about a beautiful woman's visit, love gossip, and cockfighting during the
Christmas season. Morganton, North Carolina,
January 6, 1855 |
|
178 |
|
Letter from J. T. Walker, Pettis Co., Mo., to Turstil
[I.?] Carter Esq., Adams Mills, Pulaski Co., KY, that describes the massacre of
pro-slavery settlers by John Brown in Kansas. Pettis County, Missouri,
July 8, 1856 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
He also discuss his opinion of
emigration to Kansas and Missouri, and is very descriptive of the country. |
|
179 |
|
Two letters from Nallo Summers & Co. of N.O. about
cotton sales and account information to W. B. Prewitt, a Lake Bolivar,
Mississippi cotton planter. New Orleans,
1856 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The factor informs Prewitt of
cotton prices, the sales of his cotton, a $2,000 debit balance, and the payment
of two drafts to a Mr. Perkins. |
|
180 |
|
Letter from Felix Huston by E. F. Huston, near Natchez,
to Mr. Godbold, Port Hudson, La., and hand-carried by the slave Harry. Natchez,
July 14, 1856 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
Felix Huston was a lawyer,
military adventurer, Commanding Officer of the Army of the Republic of Texas,
and a Mississippi secessionist. |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Felix is “dangerously ill” and
refers to the administration of his property. |
|
181 |
|
Twelve items from Francis Surget, a 4,000-bale planter
worth over $2 million at his death. Natchez,
1857-58 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
Surget, once described by an
Arkansas newspaper editor as the "nabob from
Natchez" [who was] "as rich as Croesus,"
was also given the description of having been "the
most extensive and successful planter Mississippi had ever seen,"
according to Mississippi historian J. F. H. Claiborne. For brief profile of
Surget, see David G. Sansing, Sim C. Callon, and Carolyn Vance Smith,
Natchez: An Illustrated History (1992). |
|
181 |
|
|
11 bank checks drawn on W. A. Britton & Co. of
Natchez on the account of the estate of Francis Surget. The checks are
pre-printed and filled-in by either sons, Francis II "Frank" Surget or Eustace Surget. These are to
different people and entities including Luke & Dononhue, Walker &
Collins, the Concordia Intelligencer, the Natchez Ferry Association, to A. C.
Ferguson for taxes in Mississippi, to Frank himself, and others. |
|
181 |
|
|
Envelope addressed "Francis
Surget Esqre, New York Hotel" in beautiful ink pen, and a pencil notation
on the side indicating "Arkansas Lands." |
|
182 |
|
Letter from J.M. [Crudd?] the leading cypress tree
lumberman who gives a report on business, fear of charges of
"Cruelty to Animals,""a Murder of a Negro by a Negro," and the local
"Negro Ball" of enslaved Africans referred to
as "the Darkies," to his friend Alfred. Moss
Point, [Mississippi],
1859 |
|
184 |
|
Letter from C. B. N., Washington, D.C., to Thomas E.,
that refers to the Kansas issue "Lecomptonism,"
the tariff, and political losses in Pennsylvania, as well as a Charleston,
Missouri, friend's visit. Washington, D.C.,
October 29, 1859 |
|
185 |
|
A stampless cover to Hon. Alexander K. Farrar at
Kingston, near Natchez, Mississippi.
Summer of 1860 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
This envelope bears an
inscription “Gus. H. Wilcox 1860.” |
|
186 |
|
Letter from Surge Flournay of Flournay & Caste,
Austin, Texas, to Col. D. W. Bozman, Central Institute, AL, mentions the dry
weather and bad crops throughout most of the state during the last Summer
before the Civil War. Austin,
August 3, 1860 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Content includes:
"We are all making very poor crops of corn &
cotton all over Texas, except in the Northern part of the State." During
the summer before the breakout of the Civil War, he writes that
"Politics are quite high here. Just now our election
comes off next Monday." |
|
187 |
|
Aventine Plantation records. Adams County, Mississippi,
1862-1868 |
|
|
|
Creator's sketch: |
|
|
|
Aventine Plantation on Second
Creek in Adams County, Mississippi, was once part of Francis Surget's vast
cotton barony. It became the property of Major Gabriel Shields, who married
into the family. Shields was the wealthiest of four sons of William Bayard
Shields, a former Mississippi Supreme Court Justice. He resided at his mansion
estate "Montebello" near Natchez, and Aventine
furnished food and goodsfor him there, as well as shoes for Confederate
soldiers. In recent years, historian Winthrop Jordan documented the now-famous
slave conspiracy along Second Creek in Tumult and Silence
at Second Creek: An Inquiry into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy (revised
edition, 1995). Charles Sauters, a native of the Netherlands, worked as
overseer on the plantation partway through the Civil War. |
|
187 |
|
|
Overseer's book of handwritten medical cures,
1868, undated |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Some of the cures are quite
detailed. There are recipes for cures to treat ailments and diseases like
“fever for a child,” “bowel complaint,” nettle rash, “colic in horses,”
dyspepsia, dysentery, small worms, chapped hands, yellow fever, cholera, and
much more. Two affixed newspaper clippings bear an 1868 date. |
|
187 |
|
|
Small note about "Leather
for Negro Shoes," signed by Gabe B. Shields,
January 7, 1862. |
|
187 |
|
|
Small note to Mr. Schroder from [T.S.?] Metcalfe about
corn for Ingleside Plantation,
October 31, 1862 |
|
187 |
|
|
Slave pass for Willis to go between Aventine and
Montebello, signed by Charles Sauters,
Deceber 18, 1862 |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
188 |
|
A Shiloh-Mississippi Valley related large Civil War
document from the 63rd Regiment of Ohio Volunteers under Captain Charles E.
Brown listing their arms, accoutrements, and ammunition on hand in the last
quarter of 1862. Corinth, Mississippi,
April 6, 1863 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
This document, entitled
"Return of Ordnance and Ordnance Stores received,
issued, and remaining on hand in Company (B) Sixty-third Regiment Ohio
Volunteer Infantry, for the Quarter ending December 31st 1862," is signed
by Charles Brown, Captain Commanding Company. |
|
189 |
|
Vellum diploma for Sophia Steadman from the Natchez
Institute, founded 1845 by Alvarez Fisk, with a vignette of the building during
the Civil War. Natchez,
July 25, 1863 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Engraved and printed by C.
Craske, New York, the diploma is signed by president Josephus Hewett,
superintendent Alexander G. Wilson, and secretary John Fleming. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
190 |
|
Press-printed blank "Oath of
Allegiance to the Union," purportedly found in Alabama,
1864 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The famous language on it is as
follows: "I, ________, do solemnly swear in presence
of Almighty God that I will henceforth faithfully support, protect, and defend
the Constitution of the United States and the Union of the States thereunder;
and that I will in like manner, abide by and faithfully support all acts of
Congress passed during the existing rebellion with reference to slaves, so long
and so far as not repealed, modified, or held void by Congress, or by decision
of the Supreme Court; and that I will in like manner abide by and faithfully
support all proclamations of the President made during the existing rebellion,
having reference to slaves, as long and so far as not modified or declared void
by decisions of the Supreme Court. So help me God. Sworn and subscribed before
me, this ____ day of ____ 1864." There are also two blanks where
witnesses signatures would appear on a filled-in document. |
|
191 |
|
Statistics of the Operations of
the Executive Board of Friends‚ Association of Philadelphia and its Vicinity,
for the Relief of Colored Freedmen. Philadelphia: Inquirer Printing
Office,
1864 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
33 pp. Includes
"Report of Samuel R. Shipley, President of the
Executive Board, of His Recent Visit to the Camps of the Freedmen on the
Mississippi River," which gives the estimations of freedmen encamped at
30 places along the Mississippi River and describes in detail the living
conditions of freedmen. Shipley writes that, "A
voyage down the Mississippi is at all times one of interest, but since the war
has placed its indelible marks on the country through which it flows, it is
more so than ever. Frowning fortresses and earthworks, gun-boats, and here and
there a long line of dismantled plantations, soon made it evident that I was
entering upon the theatre of war." There are details about the situations
of specific plantation camps. Helen James, in her printed letter, relates how
the freed women no longer wear thick, gray-flannel dresses:
"The negroes have a great repugnance to wearing them,
especially those who have been for sometime free. They will not buy them,
preferring to give the same money for a half-worn garment, of different fabric,
that would not do one-quarter of the service. We can give them away to those
who have just come into our lines; but they do not give the comfort that a
cotton dress would, made of strong material, that would cost no more than this
stuff. The reason why they dislike this material is, because they have worn it
as slaves. They say, 'We's free now, missis, isn't
we? Den we don wan to war dat kind o' stuff no more. We's allers had to war
dat, and we wans to dress like de white folks now.'" |
| box |
lot |
| 3W115 |
192 |
|
Carte de visite by photographer N. H. Black. Natchez,
[circa 1865-1870] |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
This CDV portrays a young woman
standing next to a young man who is seated in a chair. There is a penned
inscription that reads "Miss Nona Schrober's Mothers
Cousin Rodney, Miss." |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
193 |
|
Letter written during Reconstruction by B. P. Williamson
to his brother Beverly Williamson, Clarksville, Va., that describes the loss of
his shops by fire, believed to be arson. Raleigh, North Carolina,
July 19, 1867 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
194 |
|
Life and Death in Rebel Prisons:
Giving a Complete History of the Inhuman and Barbarous Treatment of our Brave
Soldiers by Rebel Authorities, Inflicting Terrible Suffering and Frightful
Mortality, Principally at Andersonville, GA., and Florence, S.C., Describing
Plans of Escape, Arrival of Prisoners, with Numerous and Varied Incidents and
Anecdotes of Prison Life. By Robert H. Kellogg, Sergeant-Major 16th
Regiment Connecticut Volunteers. Prepared from his Daily Journal. Hartford: L.
Stebbins,
1867 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
195 |
|
Obituary for Roberta (Young) Brown, widow of Mississippi
governor Albert G. Brown,
[circa 1886] |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
198 |
|
Original presentation copy of the
"United States Senate Journal for the First Session
of the Forty-Fourth Congress" (1875-76) given by Senator J. R. West of
Louisiana to Charles H. Fontaine, Justice of the Peace of Vicksburg during the
1880s. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office,
1876 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
199 |
|
Letter from Miss Carrie Webster, near Lexington, Holmes
Co., Miss., an impoverished woman who makes a heart-rending plea to another
woman, Mrs. A. S. Stewart, for help. Holmes County near Lexington, Mississippi,
April 27, 1875 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Carrie, whose parents are
deceased, writes that she suffers from neuralgia and cannot work. She makes an
emotional plea for money to have her roof repaired and
"old clothing the crumbs from your table, anything to
help me live." |
|
200 |
|
M. & A. Fischer, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
General Merchandise, Bayou Sara, write a brief business letter referencing
Mayer Weis & Co.'s N.Y. check to E. D. Hicks, Nashville. Bayou Sara,
January 3, 1878 |
| box |
lot |
| 3W115 |
201 |
|
Photograph of 24-year-old E. C. Crockett taken in
Jackson,
June 30, 1878 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Au verso is the pre-printed and
filled-in information indicating that the image was taken for himself and his
wife in the "Photographic Studio of Seutter, Jackson,
Miss." |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
202 |
|
Letter from James of Franklin, NC, to his cousin Addie,
[Hope, Arkansas?], that references 4,000 cases of Yellow Fever in Memphis.
Franklin, NC,
September 21, 1878 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
In addition, James provides
family news and making anticipatory plans for visiting family over the upcoming
Christmas holidays. |
|
203 |
|
Lizzie Moulds writes her mother, via Thomas Walker of
Water Valley, Miss., about the yellow fever epidemic, hog-killing season, and
the cotton-picking season. Enterprise, Mississippi,
November 23, 1878 |
|
204 |
|
Receipt from Lawrence & Bunning, New Drug Store for
Chas. Dana's purchase of a German syrup. Natchez,
February 19, 1879 |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
205 |
|
"A Year of Wreck. By a
Victim" by [George C. Benaham]. New York: Harper,
1880 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
472 pp. viii. A colorful and
detailed account of the life and experiences of a couple of
"carpet-baggers" following the Civil War on
Hebron Plantation and along the Mississippi River. |
| box |
lot |
| 3W115 |
206 |
|
Cabinet card of a bearded man. Natchez,
[circa 1880s-1890s] |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
The card bears the back-stamp
"H. C. Norman, Jr. 525 Main Street, Natchez,
Miss." |
|
207 |
|
Three cabinet card photographs of children taken by
local photographers. Natchez,
[circa 1880s-1890s] |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Each one is an individual
standing portrait of a young boy; each wear bowties, and two have their hair
bottle-curled in the little lord Fauntleroy style. The unidentified lads appear
to be around six or seven years of age. Two of the cards bear the from marking
of H. C. Norman, Natchez, and the other has a back marking of L. D. Simmons,
Natchez. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
208 |
|
Report of the Commissioner of
Education for the Year 1882-83. Washington: Government Printing Office,
1884 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
872 pp. Book on education owned
by W. W. Matthews, Bayou Sara, La. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
209 |
|
Letter written by N. M. Clark, a Mississippi Methodist
evangelist, to Miss Joe with good social content. Williamsburg,
November 6, 1885 |
|
210 |
|
Eagle & Phoenix Mfg. Co. correspondence |
|
210 |
|
|
Business letter from Adolph Rose, Wholesale Dry Goods,
Vicksburg,
December 2, 1886 |
|
210 |
|
|
Business letter from Francis Murphy, Manufacturer
& Jobber of Men's and Boys' Clothing, Charleston, S.C.,
January 10, 1887 |
|
211 |
|
Funeral notice for Kate Marlow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
J. Marlow. Crystal Springs, Mississippi,
October 20, 1887 |
| box |
lot |
| 3So57 |
212 |
|
Property deed for taxes by Isidor Gross, a Jewish
resident and merchant of Canton, Mississippi,
1889 |
| box |
lot |
| 3W115 |
213 |
|
Mounted photograph of Creole lady identified as Miss
Bedou of New Orleans,
[circa 1890] |
|
214 |
|
Two cabinet cards, each of an African-American boy; one
is by A. W. Judd, Chattanooga, TN, and the other C. A. Brownell, Cincinnati,
Ohio,
[circa 1895] |
| box |
lot |
| 3S231 |
215 |
|
Jefferson Military College (J.M.C.) photographs.
Washington, Mississippi,
[circa 1890-1895] |
|
215 |
|
|
Photograph, labeled "Norman
Natchez, Miss.," of the twelve-man J.M.C. baseball team, including two
African-American boys. |
|
215 |
|
|
Cabinet card of Wilmer Gideon, Clondike, Louisiana, in
J.M.C. uniform, by "H. C. Norman, Jr. Natchez
Miss.," undated |
|
215 |
|
|
Cabinet card of unidentified J.M.C. student by
"H. C. Norman, Jr. Special Natchez, Miss.," undated |
|
215 |
|
|
Cabinet card of E. S. Davenport in J.M.C. uniform.
Inscribed "From E. S. Davenport to Miss
Watson." |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
216 |
|
Advertising notebook from liquor dealer J. Livelar &
Co. Canton,
[circa 1900] |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Contains someone's figures,
shopping lists, and little notations. The red cover is printed
"J. Livelar & Co. Canton, Miss. W. L. Williamsons
Old Long Horn and Rose Glen Whiskies. Louisville Kentucky." |
|
217 |
|
Postcard from Day & Bailey Grocer Co., with picture
of little boy, addressed to C. L. West, executor, Saltillo, Miss. Memphis,
December 26, 1900 |
|
218 |
|
Handbill advertising a reward offered by parents, for
the "Capture" of their 13-year-old son Everett
Smith, who apparently ran away from home. Meridian, Mississippi,
April 14, 1904 |
|
219 |
|
Nine letters and receipts from W. H. Pritchartt &
Co., Wholesale Grocers, to the Rayville Mercantile Co. in Louisiana. Natchez,
1913 |
| box |
lot |
| 3S231 |
220 |
|
Three large photographs of the Cotton Ginnery and
Compress of Jewish merchants, the Cohn Brothers. Lorman, Mississippi,
[circa 1915] |
|
220 |
|
|
Photograph of building bearing the letters
"COHN BRO'S. IMPROVED GULLETT GINNERY, AND MUNGER
COMPRESS." In the background can be seen another building, railroad
tracks with an Illinois Central Railroad car, stacks of cotton bales, wagons of
cotton, and men. |
|
220 |
|
|
Photograph of the same buildings from a different
angle. |
|
220 |
|
|
Close-up photograph of an Illinois Central Railroad
car that bears the "Central Mississippi Valley
Route" logo, packed full of cotton bales, stopped at the loading dock by
five African-American men. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
221 |
|
Postcard entitled "A Group of
Maskers on Canal Street During Carnival." New Orleans,
[circa 1915-1920] |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
This hand-tinted photo postcard
portrays about a dozen revelers dressed in their colorful Mardi Gras costumes
with onlookers in the background. Published by J. Scordille, New Orleans, La.
|
|
222 |
|
Sheet music for a vocal solo, entitled
"Li'l Black Nigger", Copyrighted by E. Morris
Music Co., New York City,
1924 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Illustrated with a caricature of
a frightened little boy portrayed in stereotype, in bed surrounded by scary
Halloween characters. Bears owner's inscription from Chicago, Ill. |
|
223 |
|
Document called a "Crop
Note," in which W. L. Holt borrows $45 against his entire upcoming cotton
crop and pledges "1 mouse-colored mare mule named Ada
about 10 yrs. Old" to J. R. Newman as collateral. Tallapoosa, County,
Alabama,
November 2, 1926 |
|
224 |
|
"Fifth Negro Fair"
booklet, full of advertising and African-American genealogical information.
Jefferson County, Fayette, Mississippi,
1930 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
84 pp. It is full of
advertisements of both white and black merchants, and includes a photograph of
H. D. Moore, the President and Promoter. It is officially entitled
"Premium List Rules and Regulations Fifth Negro Fair
– held in – Jefferson County – at – Fayette, Mississippi Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, NOVEMBER 20th, 21st, and 22nd, 1930." Several of the
advertisers were descendants of former large slave-holding cotton planters like
Stowers, Wade, and Bisland. The booklet is filled with dozens of
African-Americans‚ names and the categories of agriculture that they won at the
fair, everything from cattle, pigs, chickens, vegetables, sheep, pantry goods,
crochet, and much more. |
|
225 |
|
Joe Louis memorabilia collection |
|
225 |
|
|
Copy of the African-American magazine
The Negro South (formerly The Sepia Socialiste) with article
"Joe Louis By A.K.O. In 5th Is Prediction"
about Louis's victory over Billy Conn. New Orleans,
June 1946 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
Other articles include
"The South's Blues Singer" about bluesman Joe
Turner, "Forum: Negroes should leave the South –
Negroes should stay South & work" article with letters from numerous
African-Americans, "Is it True what They Say about
Dixie" about Madame Frances Joseph Gaudet, a Black social reformer of New
Orleans, socio-political comics, and local businesses' advertisements. The
cover shows Joe Louis and a headline "White Students
on Racial Outlook." |
|
225 |
|
|
Chesterfield cigarette card featuring the Louis,
undated |
|
226 |
|
Illustrated menu from the "Eola Hotel Grill Natchez Mississippi,
'Where the Old South Still Lives.'"
Natchez,
[circa 1950] |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
This document gushes
pseudo-nostalgia: "NATCHEZ . . . history has made her
rich in romantic and colonial reminders . . . gracious with the splendor of
breath-taking mansions. Here was the first capitol of the State of Mississippi.
Above her walls have flown the flags of six nations. While here, take time . .
. and enjoy the enchantment of America's golden past." The cover shows
Auburn, the home of Dr. Stephen Duncan, while the back features other
antebellum Natchez homes |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb26 |
227 |
|
Forty issues of a White Citizens' Council publication,
entitled The Citizen. Jackson, Mississippi,
1961-1965 |
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
Some issues are devoted to an
exclusive report or theme, while other issues contain numerous articles from
segregationists like Governors George C. Wallace and Ross R. Barnett. They also
contain photographs and advertisements for racist books and signs. |
|
227 |
|
|
November 1961 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Race and Reason Day in Mississippi!" and
"Full Text of Carleton Putnam's Address" ("Mistress of the Mansion" front cover), 46 pp. |
|
227 |
|
|
December 1961 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Why The ‘Freedom Rides' Failed Newburg Vs. The
Welfare State" (Front cover photograph of the interior of the Mississippi
Capitol rotunda entitled, "Patterns" by William
A. Bacon) |
|
227 |
|
|
January 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"There Is No Substitute For Victory! By Gen. Edwin A.
Walker" (Front cover photograph entitled, "Maj.
Gen. Edwin A. Walker speaks to a cheering crowd in Jackson, Miss.") |
|
227 |
|
|
February 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Special In This Issue – How Memphis Is Organizing To
Combat The Mixers!" (Front cover photograph of "Mississippi's ‘Miss Hospitality,' Joan Watts, with a
Colonel in the Mississippi Greys on lawn of Governors Mansion in
Jackson," wearing a Confederate uniform and hoop skirt respectively) |
|
227 |
|
|
March 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"The Councils and Politics" (Front cover
photograph of boy reading a Confederate monument, cannon in the foreground,
entitled, "Tourists find rich heritage of history in
the South, as one small boy discovers at monument marking 1864 battle at
Brice's Cross Roads in Northeast Mississippi") |
|
227 |
|
|
April 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A New Orleans Catholic Tells The Real Story Of His
Excommunication!" (Front cover photograph of speakers on a stage
addressing a crowd, entitled, "Thousands of indignant
New Orleans residents attend Citizens‚ Council rally to protest plans to
integrate the city's Catholic schools") |
|
227 |
|
|
May 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Comprehensive Study of Negro Migration And
Population Trends" (Front cover photograph of two young men walk on a
pier as four other young men dock a sailboat, entitled,
"In sailboat and seaplane, vacationers frolic on
Mississippi‚s famed Gulf Coast") |
|
227 |
|
|
July-August 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Carleton Putnam Discloses New Evidence On Evolution
And Race!" (Front cover photograph entitled "Vacation time is fishin‚ time! And this youthful
Mississippian is an apt subject for the cover of our combined July-August
summertime issue") |
|
227 |
|
|
September 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Mississippi Still Says ‘Never'! by Governor Ross
Barnett" (Front cover photograph of a jubilant, open-mouthed Barnett
waving a Confederate flag entitled, "Governor Ross
Barnett of Mississippi acknowledges cheers from Ole Miss boosters who greeted
him with Rebel yells at the Ole Miss-Houston football game") |
|
227 |
|
|
October 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Minister Tells Why – Oxford Clergy Wrong In
Calling For ‘Repentence'!" (Front cover photograph entitled
"Negro Army sergeant leads white troops at Oxford,
Miss., in bayonet drill during Federal occupation of University of Mississippi.
James Meredith insisted that negro troops be used in this manner, despite fact
that their presence inflamed residents of Oxford area," Photo by Selma
(Ala.) Times-Journal) |
|
227 |
|
|
November 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Judge Points Out – ‘Integration Amendment' Was
Never Legally Adopted!" (Front cover photograph of Ole Miss campus
building entitled, "The historic Lyceum at the
University of Mississippi. This is the building which U.S. Marshals surrounded
needlessly before they incited a riot by shelling students with gas")
|
|
227 |
|
|
December 1962 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Three Authorities Look At Africa" (Front cover
photograph of winter scene on the Natchez Trace near Jackson entitled,
". . . and may all your Christmases be white!")
|
|
227 |
|
|
January 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Methodist Declaration Of Conscience On
Segregation" (Front cover photograph of church with a high steeple
entitled, "A Symbol of Faith") |
|
227 |
|
|
February 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Can Conservatives Unite To Save Our Nation?"
(Front cover photograph of man ascending a ladder to a petrol-chemical tank
entitled, "Southern Industry On The Move!")
|
|
227 |
|
|
March 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Three Significant Addresses By Carleton
Putnam" with bizarre speeches about "superior
evolution" of whites compared to blacks (Front cover photograph of
flamingos in Florida) |
|
227 |
|
|
April 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Case History Of Racial Agitators At Work"
(Front cover photograph of statue of Jefferson Davis in front of the Alabama
State Capitol, Montgomery) |
|
227 |
|
|
May 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"The Black Muslims: A Critical Analysis" (Front
cover photograph of white couple canoeing among cypress trees at Ponce de Leon
Springs near Deland, Florida) |
|
227 |
|
|
June 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"The Un-American Revolution!" (Front cover
photograph of people enjoying Lido Beach, near Sarasota, Florida) |
|
227 |
|
|
July-August 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Communist Involvement In Racial
Demonstrations!" (Front cover photograph of fishing at dawn on Suwannee
River, Florida) |
|
227 |
|
|
September 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"What The ‘Civil Rights' Bill Would Do To You!"
(Front cover photograph of Mississippi's State Capitol Building, Jackson) |
|
227 |
|
|
October 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Northerner's Views On Race!" (Front cover
photograph of autumn sunset off Marquesas Key, Florida) |
|
227 |
|
|
December 1963 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Strength Through Unity" by Governor Ross R.
Barnett and "Highlights Of The Leadership
Conference" (Front cover photograph entitled "After the Snow Storm," snow on a split rail fence
along the Natchez Trace near Jackson) |
|
227 |
|
|
January 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"More Highlights Of Leadership Conference"
(Front cover photograph of winter scene in Jackson, Mississippi) |
|
227 |
|
|
April 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"How The ‘Civil Rights' Bill Would Affect Your
Life!" (Front cover photograph of Georgia Confederate monument,
Chickamauga National Military Park, Georgia) |
|
227 |
|
|
May 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"More On The ‘Civil Rights' Bill And Its Impact On
Your Life!" (Front cover photograph of Stanton Hall mansion, Natchez)
|
|
227 |
|
|
June 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Community Plan To Defeat The Agitators!"
(Front cover photograph of boating enthusiasts on the Mississippi Gulf Coast)
|
|
227 |
|
|
July-August 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Ross Barnett Tells Why The South Will Win!"
(Front cover photograph of summer circus clown) |
|
227 |
|
|
September 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"How To Start A Private School!" (Front cover
photograph of sunset over boat off the Florida shore) |
|
227 |
|
|
October 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Governor Wallace Tells Why – We Must Regain Control
Over Our Public Schools" (Front cover photograph entitled,
"Goodbye to Summer. A shapely Alabama miss strikes a
pensive pose at lakeside as she is silhouetted by an early Autumn sun")
|
|
227 |
|
|
November 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"What Does The Election Prove?" (Front cover
photograph of hunter sending his black retriever into the water from his duck
blind, Florida) |
|
227 |
|
|
December 1964 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Close-Up Look At COFO In Mississippi" (Front
cover photograph of Governor's Mansion in the snow, Jefferson City, Missouri)
|
|
227 |
|
|
January 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Noted Scientist Says Mixed Schools Harmful!"
and "Visiting European Journalists Say South Africa's
Blacks Never Had It So Good!" (Front cover photograph of Balboa Park, San
Diego, California) |
|
227 |
|
|
March 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Highlights of the Leadership Conference"
(Front cover photograph of Governor George C. Wallace and former Governor Ross
Barnett shown waving to the CCA Leadership Conference, Montgomery, standing
behind the logo that features the American and Confederate flags) |
|
227 |
|
|
February 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"The Communist Plot To Take Over Mississippi"
(Dunleith, an antebellum mansion outside Natchez) |
|
227 |
|
|
April 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Why the Reds Say Mississippi Must Go!" (Front
cover photograph entitled, "The Shadows,"
antebellum home and draping Spanish moss, New Iberia, Louisiana) |
|
227 |
|
|
May 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Northern Professor Lists Reasons for
Segregation" and "Senator Eastland Reveals More
Detailed Proof Of Communist Involvement In The Mississippi Invasion"
(Front cover photograph of "Hi Rebels!"
featuring a little white boy waving a Confederate flag and Civil War adult
re-enactor on a cannon at Fort Morgan, Mobil Bay) |
|
227 |
|
|
July-August 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"The School That Can't Be Mixed" (Front cover
photograph of classroom scene at Council School No. 1, Jackson, Miss.) |
|
227 |
|
|
September 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"The Majority Must Mobilize!" and includes
"LBJ: Architect of Anarchy?" by Jesse Helms
(Front cover photograph of man fishing at Bald River Falls, Tennessee) |
|
227 |
|
|
October 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"Noted Educator Reveals What Mixing Really
Means!" (Front cover photograph of Williamsburg) |
|
227 |
|
|
November 1965 |
|
|
|
|
Scope and contents: |
|
|
|
|
featuring
"A Preview of the 1966 CCA Leadership
Conference" (Front cover photograph of Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga,
Tennessee), 16 pp. |
| box |
lot |
| 4Zb25 |
228 |
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Copy of "ASPECT," A
Project of the Information & Education Committee Jackson's Citizens'
Council, May 1965 Bulletin, Vol. II, No. 10, that contains the names of 75
officers of the racist organization. Jackson, Mississippi,
1965 |
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Bears the logo portraying the
American and Confederate flags with the inscription, "Citizens' Councils • States' Rights • Racial
Integrity." This report of the 10th Annual Meeting of the Jackson
Citizens' Council contains a list of people deemed "outstanding citizens of Jackson [who] were elected to
serve on the board of this cities [sic] largest organization as directors for
1965-1966." |
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Mississippi River Valley Addenda |
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228A |
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Newspaper clipping about Confederate Capt. Jno. Shorter,
upon his capture near Jackson, Miss. Possibly from a Columbus (Ga.?)
newspaper. |
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228B |
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Two letters about life in Mississippi |
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228B |
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Chesterfield, Miss.,
September 29, 1897 |
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Scope and contents: |
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"I
see yellow fever is steadily on the increase in New Orleans, and as it has at
least six weeks or two months yet to spread there...I believe now the disease
will become epidemic in the city...Better run out to Atlanta or St.
Louis...." |
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228B |
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December 22, 1912 |
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"Dear children...I have my hands full. Killed some of my
hogs...We went to Coxburg...& Talarville...I fear we will have a dull Xmas.
It has been raising a day & night, and oh how muddy Old Santa will have bad
weather...John is with us...He told us of his narrow escape Tues. night in
Starksville when that Hotel burned...He got his clothes and dressed on the
street...." |
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228C |
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Booklet, Natchez, Mississippi,
U.S.A., Natchez imprint,
[circa 1935] |
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Scope and contents: |
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"Land
of Romance - Home of Eternal Spring - Above her walls have flown the flags of
six nations...." 12 pp. |
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228D |
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"Bill of complaint"
concerning Walnut Grove Plantation in Wilkinson County. Litigated in Adams
County, Miss.
October 8, 1844 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Commercial Bank of Natchez and
West Feliciana Rail Road Co. among parties. Involves land, and that defendants
refrain from "selling 300 bales of the cotton raised
during the present year, on the lands described as follow...," this being
1,275 acres in Wilkinson County, Miss., "generally
known as the 'Walnut Grove
Plantation.'" |
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228E |
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Promissary note to pay Carradin & Newman $533.32 in
six months, "payable at the Agricultural Bank of
Natchez," signed by merchants,
March 30, 1839 |
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228F |
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The Comprehensive Bible;
containing the Old and New Testaments..., third ed., Robinson &
Franklin, N.Y.,
1839 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Belonged to the Outlaw family,
The Cedars Plantation, Starkville, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi, and contains
"Family Register" with marriages, births,
deaths, and newspaper obituaries. The earliest marriage recorded is that of
(Rev.) D.A. Outlaw, in 1835, whose signature appears on front flyleaf; his 1870
obituary is pasted on the opposite page. The earliest birth recorded was in
1811, the last in 1979; the earliest death recorded was in 1837, the last in
1959. Twentieth-century typescript of information from headstones in Oaklaw
family cemetery. |
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| 3W115 |
229G |
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Seven photographs of Old Port Gibson, Miss.,
[circa 1878-1890s] |
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229G |
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Cabinet photo of "Kelley's
Store, Port Gibson, Miss." |
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Scope and contents: |
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In pencil on verso,
"Store operated by Robert Capers in Port Gibson
1880-1895. Man with arms folded is John J. Kelley. Man with hands on hips is
Geo. Naasson (Jr.)." |
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229G |
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Photograph of Port Gibson,
1878 |
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Scope and contents: |
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Photograph identified in
pencil on verso, "Main St., Port Gibson in snow,
1878." |
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229G |
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Tintype of R.C. Kelley of Old Port Gibson.
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229G |
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Cabinet photo of R.C. Kelley, by Souby Art Gallery,
New Orleans. |
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229G |
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Cabinet photo identified in pencil on verso as
"Tom Foot(e) & Nat Day." |
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229G |
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Cabinet photo identified in pencil on verso as
"Mr. & Mrs. Foote, Port Gibson, Miss.,"
likely the parents of the preceding Tom. |
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229G |
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Cabinet photo identified in pencil on verso as
"A School in Port Gibson," showing an
assortment of 23 men, women, boys, and girls. |
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| 4Zb26 |
229H |
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The Mississippi River and its
Source. "A Narrative and Critical History of
the Discovery of the River and its Headwaters, accompanied by the results of
detailed hydrographic and topographic surveys." By Hon. J.V. Brower,
Minneapolis,
1893 |
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