Displaying 501 - 520 of 759
-
New Orleans Municipal Records, 1765-1898 (bulk: 1790-1837). 7.3 linear ft. Location: T:55-60, OS:N. Records consist of financial and legal papers created by the city governments of New Orleans. The papers are primarily the work of the City Council (or Conseil de Ville) and mayor. Some records date to the Spanish colonial Cabildo; most are from later years. A majority of the papers are in French, with a smaller amount in either Spanish or English. Financial papers pertain to public finances, including receipt and disbursement of monies, levy and collection of taxes, collection of fees on vehicles, markets, street peddlers, butcher shops, and city lots, and pay rolls for various public employees such as police and light service. Legal papers consist of resolutions and ordinances, which include records of legal matters settled by the council, and communications between the council and mayor regarding municipal affairs; and contracts and public works records, which include contracts for sale of property, agreements for the purchase of raw materials for street paving and other projects, and a small amount of material pertaining to the contract and purchase of fire protection equipment and services for the city. License bonds were issued for tavern keepers, boarding house owners, cart or dray drivers, and a small number of cabarets and coffee houses. Mss. 719, 721, 726, 734, 737, 742, 792, 795, 805, 824, 852, 902, 908, 1189, 1190, 1198, 1436.
-
New Orleans payment mandate, 1819 March 2. 1 item. Location: Misc:N. Payment for forty-three days' work performed by M. Bauduc's slave Thomas. In French. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 4174.
-
New Orleans photograph album, circa 1895. 12 photographic prints, 6 albums pages, 12 copy prints. Location 65:5. Some prints are of identified places and structures (Bayou St. John, Metairie Cemetery, Chalmette National Cemetery, the Old Duelling Grounds in New Orleans City Park, and the Orleans Parish Prison), while other prints are of unidentified places and structures (a "negro cabin" with children and a man sitting outside of it, a house on a bayou, an old Spanish house, and oaks at sunset). Copy prints are of the original photographic prints. Mss. 4237.
-
New Orleans property assessment sheet, circa 1800-1865. 1 item. Location: OS:N. Property assessment sheet including the following information: names of taxable persons, number and size of lot, value of real estate, number and value of slaves, income over $1000, and furniture over $500. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 4055.
-
New Orleans tax assessment book, 1857. 1 volume. Location: O:22. The volume, from the Orleans Parish Board of Assessors, contains the New Orleans property tax rolls for the 4th Municipal District, Assessment District 11, volume 2 for the year of 1857. The rolls give the location and size of each property, the name of the owner, the value of the real estate, and the number of slaves on the property and their value. Mss. 5263.
-
Newport, Robert W. Papers, 1823-1837. 6 items. Location: Misc. Resident of East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. Papers pertain to the mortgage of land and slaves. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 668.
-
Newton, John. Log book, 1861-1863.1 vol. Location: F:10. Marine aboard the Union blockade ship U.S.S. FLAG in the Charleston, South Carolina, harbor during the Civil War. Logbook recording activities aboard the FLAG. Included are views on Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, the status of African Americans, and Admiral Dupont's command decisions during the Ft. Sumter blockade. The volume contains manuscript maps of Confederate and Union positions at Charleston and Port Royal, South Carolina; and Savannah, Georgia; and a list of ships captured by Union forces. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3782.
-
Nichols, Irby C. and family. Papers, 1862-1972. 15 linear ft. Location: 45:15-20, 44:26-27, OS:N. Louisiana State University professor of mathematics. His wife, Pauline Wright Nichols, studied art and design at Newcomb School of Art and the Chicago Art Institute. After they married she continued her design work. Correspondence, printed items, financial papers, legal documents, memoirs, journals, pedagogical materials, and photographs document the professional, business, and personal lives of the Nichols family, primarily Irby C. and Pauline Nichols. Sketches and other graphic materials reflect the artistic career of Pauline Nichols. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3798.
-
Nobles Family Papers, 1825-1990 (bulk 1863-1876). 0.3 linear ft. Location: V:1. The Nobles and related families were farmers of Louisiana, Texas and Alabama. Levi Nobles was a Confederate soldier with the 57th Alabama Infantry, married to Mary Elizabeth Massey. The collection relates to the Nobles and related Henry and Massey families. Early papers consist of photocopies and transcriptions of Henry family correspondence and legal documents (1825-1851). Papers include a receipt for the slave, Isaac (March 6, 1835). Civil War and post-war letters are those of the Nobles family, written primarily to Mary E. Nobles and Lou "Babe" Nobles. They relate Levi Nobles' wartime activities and his instructions to Mary on the use of their land (1863). Letters also relay condolences to Mary on the death of Levi (July 5, 15, 18, 1863). Post war letters are written from family and friends in Texas and her brother in Alabama. They discuss family matters, health and crop production. Mary's brother comments on the participation of African Americans in the presidential election (Dec. 9, 1876) and her sister Sarah Smith comments on race relations in Texas (April 1878). Several letters relate to the courtship of Lou "Babe" Nobles. The collection also contains Robert Henry family genealogical material (1979, 1990, undated). Mss. 5163.
-
North Carolina slave sale document, 1803. 1 item. Location: Misc.:N. Bill of sale for a male slave sold by Abner Willeford to Lodowich Jenkins in Bertie County, N.C. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2954.
-
Norwood, Abel John, 1818-1896. Papers, 1844-1897.34 items, 6 ms. vols. Location: G:18, Misc:N, Mss.Mf:N. Judge and planter of Hollywood Plantation near what is now Norwood, East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. Norwood also owned several firms in the parish, was the proprietor of a commissary, a cotton gin, and a sawmill, and was a cotton factor. Manuscript ledgers and a cashbook reflect Norwood's activities as a planter, store owner, and commission merchant. Included are volumes relating to the estates of Elias and Catherine Norwood; J. and N. Nettles; and David E. Brunson. Diary of Hollywood Plantation records details of daily plantation management including accounts of the weather, the conditions of slaves, work done on the plantation, and the capture of runaway slaves. Available (with some omissions) on microfilm: University Publications of America Records of Southern Plantations from Emancipation to the Great Migration, Series B, Part 2, Reel 15, or Records of Ante-Bellum Southern Plantations from the Revolution through the Civil War, Series I, Part 2, Reels 12-13. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1373.
-
Olivier, André A. Papers, 1843-1977 (bulk 1924-1977). 1 linear ft. Location: 52:, OS:O. Native of St. Martinville and known as the historian, guide, and ambassador of Evangeline and Teche country. Papers include correspondence, writings on local history topics, a writ of seizure and sale (written in English and French; 1843), printed materials, visitors' books from Olivier's Evangeline Museum, postcards, photographic prints, illustrations, a sketch, a scrapbook, and artifacts (buttons). Materials of interest include broadsides from Olivier's New Army Store, postcards of various buildings and structures in St. Martinville, and photographic prints from the set of the movie "Evangeline" (circa 1929). Mss. 3156.
-
Opelousas bounty receipt, circa 1805-1865. 1 item. Location: Misc.:O. Receipt for the capture and return of a runaway slave in Louisiana. The undated document lists the expenses incurred by the slave catcher, and is signed F. Cullum, Jailor, Parish of St. Landry. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3108.
-
Opelousas Post Records, 1776, 1788. 44 items. Location: A: 72. Legal documents, most of which were written in the presence of Nicolas Forstall, commandant of the Poste des Opelousas, and deal with property and work transactions, sale and emancipation of slaves, assorted legal matters, and an investigation into a murder. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 4581
-
Opinion in the case of the brig Josefa Segunda, 1832 Jan. 4. 1 manuscript. Location: Misc. The Spanish slave brig Josefa Segunda was seized in the Mississippi River by custom house officers and taken to New Orleans. The District Court of Louisiana condemned the brig and the slaves and effects found on board to the United States in violation of the constitutional prohibition against the international slave trade. This manuscript draft of a court opinion concerns claims made on the proceeds from the sale of the brig Josefa Segunda and the slaves on board. Mss. 3921.
-
Osband, Embury D., d. 1866. Letter, 1864 Jan. 8. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Embury D. Osband was colonel of the Third United States Colored Cavalry. Osband describes raids by Confederate forces in western Mississippi and Confederate plans to supply ammunition to Shreveport, La. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3189.
-
Paille, Clara. Copy book, 1911. 1 ms. vol. (on microfilm). Location: Mss. Mf.:P. Student of St. Joseph's Academy in Baton Rouge. Copy book containing essays on various subjects including race, Louisiana history, geometry, and architecture, illustrated with original drawings. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2711.
-
Paine, Halbert Eleazer. Speeches, 1865. 2 items. United States Civil War general and member of the U.S. House of Representatives 1865-1871. Speeches address the passage of the 14th amendment, Reconstruction and restoring the Southern states to the Union. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3860.
-
Palao, Rosalie Andry. Document, 1813. 1 item. Location: Misc. Resident of St. James Parish, Louisiana. Ale of land and slaves (in French) by Rosalie Palao of St. James Parish, Louisiana, to Evariste Villiavasse. In French. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 668.
-
Palfi, Stevenson J. Papers, 1960-1997. 9 items. Locations: MISC:P, OS:P. Music documentarian originally from Chicago, Illinois. Papers include a concert poster, three photographic prints, three picture postcards, a letter, and a Christmas card. Concert poster shows Allen Toussaint, Tuts Washington, and Professor Longhair (circa 1983). Picture postcards are advertisements for an airing of Palfi's "Piano Players Rarely Ever Play Together" documentary. Photographic prints are of Palfi with Toussaint, Glen Campbell, and Martin Sheen. Mss. 5344.
Pagination
Tile Cover
Ask Us
Tile Short Summary
Check our FAQs, submit a question using our form, or launch the chat widget to find help.