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Displaying 4461 - 4480 of 4866
  • Turner, Edward and family. Papers, 1767-1878 (bulk 1811-1878). 173 items, 1 volume. Location: S:120, OS:T, VAULT:1. Judge and planter of Natchez, Mississippi. Collection includes family correspondence, legal and business papers, plantation documents, poems, photographs, a specimen of currency (1778), and an issue of the newspaper Southern Watch Tower (1843). For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1403.
  • Turner, Edward, 1778-1860. Family Papers, 1767-1878. 173 items, 1 ms. Vol. Location: S:120. Judge and planter of Natchez, Mississippi. Collection includes family correspondence, legal and business papers, plantation documents, poems, photographs, a specimen of currency (1778), and an issue of the newspaper Southern Watch Tower (1843). For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1403.
  • Turner, M. Jane. Scrapbooks, 1838-1894. 3 volumes. Location: N:2. Resident of Algiers, Louisiana. Scrapbooks containing newspaper clippings, chiefly poems and short stories, from Southern newspapers including the Louisville Bulletin, Southern Advocate, Mobile Mercury, The Jeffersonian, Home Journal, and the Southern Field and Fireside. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 842.
  • Turnipseed and Babcock. Ledger, 1827-1828. 1 vol. Location: G:7. Merchants doing business in West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. Ledger (indexed) of Jesse Turnipseed and Dudley W. Babcock. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1100.
  • Turpin, Jean Baptiste. Promissory note, 1814. 1 item. Location: Misc.:T. Resident of New Orleans. Promissory note by Turpin to the order of B. Tremoulet. In French. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1919.
  • Turpin, White. Letter, 1813 Dec. 31. 1 item. Location: Misc.:T. Last sheriff of the Mississippi Territory and the first sheriff of Adams County, Miss. Letter informs Capt. Daniel T. Patterson, a U. S. naval officer commanding the New Orleans Squadron, of the legal action and the Court decision regarding a runaway slave by the name of Moses. He also tells him of the court order sale of the slave. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 5070.
  • Tuttle, Isaac O. Letter, 1840. 1 item. Location: Misc.:T. Resident of or visitor to Franklin, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana. Letter to his cousin Miss Maria E. Seeley, of Fairhaven, Connecticut. Tuttle comments on the social customs of the Southern people, and describes the natural beauty and graciousness of Creole ladies at a plantation ball. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 872.
  • Twenty-Fifth Colored Infantry Regiment letterbook, 1869. 1 volume. Location: Misc: T. Sixteen letters of Captain Frank M. Cone to Captain George Baldey, an adjutant with Army Headquarters in New Orleans, detail acts of violence and lawlessness by the Ku Klux Klan of St. Landry Parrish especially towards members of the 25th, and the local government's inability to contain the violence and punish the perpetrators. Letters also concern the administration and living conditions of the regiment. Includes local newspaper articles on the regiment and violence. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 4912
  • Twiggs, David Emanuel, 1790-1862. Letter, 1861 June 1. 1 item. Location: Misc.:T. Confederate army general in charge of the District of Louisiana in the Civil War. Letter to Twiggs from a former western businessman living in New Orleans stating opinion in the West on the free use of the Mississippi River for trade. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2461.
  • Twitchell, Franklin S. Letter, 1863 April 19. 1 letter. Location: MISC:T. Union soldier serving in Louisiana during the Civil War. Letter written to his sister describing a battle near Clinton, La. in the vicinity of Port Hudson. Mentions Brigadier Generals Godfrey Weitzel and Cuvier Grover's maneuvers against Confederate troops. Discusses scarcity of food. Mss. 3744.
  • Twitchell, Franklin S. Letter, 1864 April 3. 1 item. Location: MISC:T. Union soldier serving in Louisiana during the Civil War. Letter from Twitchell to his sister describing camp conditions and the advance of Union forces in Louisiana. He writes of the plunder by Confederate and Union soldiers, murders of Union officers, and freedmen cheering Union soldiers. Twitchell refers to a lack of religion among the men and the absence of a chaplain in the regiment. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3367.
  • Tyler, Jerry E. Interviews, 1972 July 12, 25. 2 items. Location: Misc.:T. Interviews conducted by Tyler with Luis Quintanilla, former Mexican charge d'affaires in Washington, D.C. (1934-1940); and with Silva Herzog, an economist, sociologist, and historian. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2756.
  • Tyson, Robert A. Diary, 1863-1864. 1 vol. Location: M:18. Union soldier in the 46th Indiana Regiment stationed in Louisiana during the Civil War. Tyson re-enlisted as an officer in the Corps d'Afrique and participated in the Red River Campaign of 1864. In a diary purchased in New Orleans in December 1863, Tyson relates his experiences with black troops and contrabands during the Red River Campaign. He also writes about being commander of Company F, U.S. Colored Troops, at Morganza, Louisiana. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1693.
  • U. S. Quartermaster Patterson. Letters, 1864-1865. 3 letters. Location: Misc.:U. Quartermaster for the U.S. Army 1st Texas Cavalry during the Civil War. Letters signed “your brother Patterson” tell of duties as U.S quartermaster, the presence of small bands of Confederate troops near Morganza, difficulties in the cotton market, the landscape and local civilians. He describes farmlands and the plantation house occupied by his regiment in West Pascagoula, and he comments on the plantation labor system and freedmen. For further information, see online catalog record. Mss. 5198.
  • U.S. Army. Thirtieth Division. Souvenir booklet, 1918. 3 items. Location: E-74. Souvenir booklet recounts the military activities of the 30th Division in World War I. Included t are transcripts of letters written by military officials and the mayor of Busigny, France, a hand-drawn map of the Hindenburg Line; and a cartoon depicting the consternation of German troops reeling from the assault of the 30th. Accompanying the booklet are clippings of two newspaper stories pertaining to the 30th Division. Part of the United States Army Collection. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2890.
  • U.S. Army District of Vicksburg General Orders no. 7, 1864 May 18. 1 item. Location: E:Imprints. Orders of Major General H. W. Slocum pertaining to regiments of African American troops. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3092.
  • Uhler, John Earle. Papers, 1921-1960 (bulk 1931-1959). 13.4 linear ft. Location: 79:22-32, OS:U, 98:U. John Earle Uhler was an English professor at Louisiana State University from 1928-1961. His teaching and research interests included Shakespeare, 18th century English drama, English Renaissance literature, and linguistics. A public controversy over Uhler's novel Cane Juice, published in 1931, led to his removal from the faculty, and reinstatement six months later.  Papers include personal and professional correspondence; published and unpublished literary and academic manuscripts; and printed material, including newspaper clippings, newspapers, and periodicals related to Uhler's writing and interest in political events. There are also teaching materials from Uhler's tenure at LSU, and a small number of photographs and pencil drawings. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1902.
  • Ulrick, George. Papers, 1859-1860. 26 items. Location: Misc:U. Resident of Washington, St. Landry Parish, Louisiana. Collection contains business and personal correspondence and statements of accounts for merchandise, including letters from business correspondents in Le Havre, France. Partly in French. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1143.
  • Ulster County, New York draft certificates, 1864. 2 items. Two certificates issued by the Provost Marshal's Office of the 13th Congressional District in Ulster County, N.Y., pertaining to the draft ordered by President Abraham Lincoln on July 18, 1864. The first certifies that Dewitt C. Overbaugh of Saugerties, N.Y., has found a substitute to serve in his stead. The second confirms that Moses Schoenfeld, also of Saugerties, has been mustered into service. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1997.
  • Uncle Sam Plantation papers, 1805-1914 (bulk 1880-1911). 12.5 linear feet, 183 volumes, 6 microfilm reels. Location: UU:217-228, P:11-13, OS:U, MSS.MF:U. Plantation built by Samuel Fagot of St. James Parish, Louisiana, in the 1840s; it produced sugar cane and was known as Constancia Plantation prior to 1864. The plantation store operated circa 1875-1914. Collection includes business records, correspondence, slave and free labor records, and plantation store records and scrip. Later papers include payroll accounts and labor statistics for Cypress Knee Plantation. Some correspondence in French. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 408, 602, 1252.
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