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Displaying 2561 - 2580 of 41199
Description
Schwartz, John C. Papers, 1810, 1848-1932 (bulk 1865-1911). 4.5 linear ft., 66 volumes, 1 microfilm reel. Location: A:19-21; J:20-23; OS:S; R:22; R:26; MSS.MF:S. Schwartz owned and operated a retail hardware store in Natchez, Mississippi. Beginning around 1892, he worked in partnership with R. H. Stewart. Consists chiefly of business letters, receipts, orders, price lists, freight receipts, steamer bills of lading, and hardware advertising letters. Bound volumes include two cashbooks (1875-1881), 25 daybooks (1865-1891), twelve invoice books (1867-1895), four ledgers (1871-1890), and ten letter books (1885-1898). Mss. 385, 4732.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 385, 4732
Manuscript Topic
Business
Natchez, Mississippi
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1810
Manuscript Collections Whitney, William H. Letters
Description
Whitney, William H. Letters, 1863-1864. 34 items. Location: B:16. Officer in the 38th Massachusetts Volunteers during the Civil War. Letters describe civilian life in Baton Rouge under Union occupation, the daily life of a soldier, guerrilla warfare by Confederate troops, and the impressment of African Americans into the Union army. Whitney also writes about the Port Hudson battlefield after the siege, his unit's march to Shreveport from Alexandria, and the Union retreat after the Battles of Mansfield and Pleasant Hill. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1043, 1046.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 1043, 1046
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
Baton Rouge
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1863
Manuscript Collections Thomason, Matthew D. Diary
Description
Thomason, Matthew D. Diary, 1861-1863. 1 volume (contains 1 loose item), 1 microfilm reel. Location: MISC:T; MSS.MF:T. Itinerant Methodist minister assigned to the southeastern district of Louisiana, and later a farmer near Mobile, Alabama. Diary kept by Thomason records his work among whites and African Americans in Louisiana during the Civil War and his return to his native Alabama to farm. The loose item is a letter (1828) to Thomason from his wife Sarah. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 781.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 781
Manuscript Topic
Religion
Women
Civil War
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1861
Manuscript Collections Recios, T. M. Letter
Description
Recios, T. M. Letter, 1844 Apr. 22. 1 letter. Location: Misc:R. T. M. Recios (?) in Bellefonte, Alabama, writes John J. Walker of Huntsville, Alabama, about rash claims he made about Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, suffrage for free people of color, and other political matters, asking for any proof that might help him defend his positions. Mss. 4097.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 4097
Manuscript Topic
Politics
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1844
Description
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.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 4055
Manuscript Topic
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1800
Description
Gayoso de Lemos, Manuel. Passport, 1797 June 6. 1 passport. Location: Misc:G. Manuel Gayoso de Lemos was the Spanish Governor of the Natchez District (1792-1797). This passport, issued at Natchez, grants permission for John Orr, Edward Newcom, and William Buchanan to pass unmolested to the United States with seven horses. Form printed in Spanish but completed in English. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 4285.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 4285
Manuscript Topic
Spanish
Natchez, Mississippi
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1797
Manuscript Collections Gayoso de Lemos, Manuel. Papers
Description
Gayoso de Lemos, Manuel. Papers, 1792-1799. 41 items, 1 microfilm reel. Location: Vault:7, MSS.MF:G. Spanish governor of the Natchez District (1792-1797). Major Stephen Minor was a planter of Natchez, Mississippi. Letters of Manuel Gayoso de Lemos to Major Stephen Minor concerning general administrative issues and personal matters in the closing years of Spanish rule of the Natchez District. Includes a document by Gayoso titled 'Instructions for my commission to the Chocta Nation' (1792) and a proclamation calling for the reestablishment of peace at Natchez (1797). Partly in Spanish. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 157, 859, 1673, 3099.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 157, 859, 1673, 3099
Manuscript Topic
Spanish
Politics
African Americans
Natchez, Mississippi
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1792
Manuscript Collections Causey, R. J. Correspondence
Description
Causey, R. J. Correspondence, 1863. 4 items. Location: Misc:C. Letters from Causey's wife comment on a riot near Tickfaw involving African Americans, Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana; Confederate farm taxes; and transportation difficulties of sending cotton to Baton Rouge. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2133.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 2133
Manuscript Topic
Transportation
Women
Civil War
Baton Rouge
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1863
Manuscript Collections Sanborn, John E. Letters
Description
Sanborn, John E. Letters, 1862-1865. 20 items. Location: A:119. Resident of Rockport, Massachusetts, prior to enlisting in the 27th Iowa Infantry in 1862 as a surgeon. His wife and children resided in Epworth, Iowa, during the Civil War. Letters written to Sanborn's wife depicting his service in Tennessee, Arkansas, and Mississippi. Some letters concern Sanborn's problems with superior and fellow officers who prevented him from fulfilling his duties as he saw fit. Sanborn describes illnesses and injuries of soldiers and his treatment of them. One letter refers to the arrival at Fort Snelling of two opposing parties to decide the fate of the Indians. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3736.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 3736
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
African Americans
Medicine
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1862
Description
Gurley, John W. Papers, 1858-1866. 81 items. Location: U:145. Attorney of New Orleans. Gurley and his wife Rosa were registered as enemies of the United States during the Civil War but were excused after they signed oaths of amnesty. The majority of letters are from Edward G. Stewart, a planter of Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. Papers of the Civil War period include claims the Gurleys were enemies of the United States, their oaths of allegiance, and letters confirming their loyalty. Available on microfilm 6061: University Publications of America Confederate Military Manuscripts Series B Reel 6 and Records of Ante-bellum Southern Plantations Series I, Part 2, Reel 13. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 507.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 507
Manuscript Topic
Plantations
New Orleans to 1861
New Orleans in the Civil War
New Orleans 1866+
Civil War
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1858
Description
Bond, Priscilla Munnikhuysen. Papers, 1858-1908 (bulk 1858-1866). 98 items, 3 volumes, 16 microfiche. Location: B:15, OS:B, MICROFICHE 2729. Resident of Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. Collection consists of correspondence, diaries, poems, and photographs. Diaries record Bond's daily activities and observations relating to plantation life, runaway slaves, social activities, hypnotism, and Civil War experiences and thoughts, including participation by African American soldiers. Available on microfilm 5750: America Southern Women and Their Families in the 19th Century: Papers and Diaries Series E, Reel 33. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 2155.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 2155
Manuscript Topic
Plantations
Women
Civil War
African Americans
Literature
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1858
Manuscript Collections Golsan Brothers. Papers
Description
Golsan Brothers. Papers, 1845-1876 (bulk 1866-1876). 15,645 items, 102 volumes. Location: UU:199-210, G:8-10, OS:G. New Orleans cotton factors and agents for the DuBois cotton gin, doing business with merchants, and commission firms in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York, Tennessee, and Texas. Business papers of Golsan Brothers consisting chiefly of bills and receipts for merchandise, printing, and advertising; waybills; invoices for cotton purchased; bank checks; trial balance sheets; telegrams; statements of account; and correspondence. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 501.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 501
Manuscript Topic
Plantations
New Orleans to 1861
New Orleans 1866+
Business
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1845
Description
Montgomery, Joseph. Papers, 1806-1886 (bulk 1866-1868). 0.3 linear ft.; 1 volume, 1 microfilm reel. Location: U:240, H:13, MSS.MF:M. New Orleans cotton broker, owner of Belmont plantation near Port Gibson, Mississippi, and husband of Amelia Smylie. Papers of the Montgomery and Smylie families. Joseph's document financial matters; Amelia's written from Belmont relate to family matters, rumors of civil war, slaves, African American laborers, shortages, and plantation management during Reconstruction. Available on microfilm 6061: University Publication of America Records of Southern Plantation from Emancipation to the Great Migration, Series B, Part 4, Reel 10. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1019.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 1019
Manuscript Topic
Plantations
New Orleans to 1861
Women
New Orleans 1866+
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1806
Manuscript Collections New Orleans photograph album
Description
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.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 4237
Manuscript Topic
New Orleans 1866+
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1895
Description
Hursey, Asa H. and family. Papers, 1824-1903 (bulk 1824-1899). 589 items, 2 microfilm reels. Location: UU:249, MSS.MF:H. Postmaster and sawmill operator of Pearlington, Mississippi. Correspondence and personal papers discuss the Civil War and include a military map and Confederate currency. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1458.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 1458
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1824
Description
Baines, Henry. Papers, 1796-1905. 184 items. Location: C:55, 65:, MSS.MF:LESTER, GEORGE M. Planter of Bains, West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, and a member of London's Royal College of Surgeons. Baines was related to the McDermott and Maynard families. Collection contains papers and letters of the Baines, McDermott, and Maynard families related to the cotton trade, medical education, the Civil War, and financial dealings. Includes a Spanish land grant of West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. Available (with some omissions) on microfilm 5735: University Publications of America Confederate Military Manuscripts Series B, Reel 1. Part of the George M. Lester Collection. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 1209.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 1209
Manuscript Topic
Spanish
Plantations
Civil War
African Americans
Medicine
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1796
Description
Knighton, Josiah and family. Papers, 1793-1909 (bulk 1861-1896). 270 items, 4 volumes. Location: E:21. Resident of Clinton, East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. Family member James H. Knighton was a private in the 4th Louisiana Infantry during the Civil War. Personal papers of the Knighton family consist chiefly of correspondence. Civil War letters of James H. Knighton describe Camp Neafus, Camp Lovell, Confederate deserters, campaigns at Vicksburg and Atlanta, and the Battle of Shiloh. Letters (1867-1886) describe the Chinese population of Lake Providence, East Carroll Parish, Reconstruction, and African American voters. Available (with some omissions) on microfilm 5735: University Publications of America Confederate Military Manuscripts Series B, Reel 11.For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 651.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 651
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1793
Manuscript Collections Jonas, Rosalie, M. Letters
Description
Jonas, Rosalie, M. Letters, 1905-1909. 3 letters. Location: Misc:J. New Orleans poet. In her letters to illustrator, Frederick Dorr Steele, poet Rosalie M. Jonas writes about octoroon balls in New Orleans, Louisiana and compliments Steele on his work. She asks him to illustrate her "Negro verses" because only he "feels sympathetically about the Negro." For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 3775.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 3775
Manuscript Topic
Women
New Orleans 1866+
African Americans
Literature
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1905
Manuscript Collections Crane, Andrew E. Papers
Description
Crane, Andrew E. Papers, 1835-1917. 1,016 items, 6 volumes. Location: U:45-47, F:16, OS:C. Carriage maker in New Orleans and planter in St. James Parish, Louisiana. Early papers (1835-1845) pertain to Crane's business interests as a carriage maker. Other materials relate to Crane's purchase of a plantation in St. James Parish (1849) and to a partnership (circa 1864) with C. R. Kuneman to cultivate a plantation. Correspondence (1874) with William Little of Galveston, Texas, discusses timber interests. Later material relates to Zachary Crane and the St. Michael Corporation. For further information, see online catalog. Mss. 89, 1361.
Manuscript Number
Mss. 89, 1361
Manuscript Topic
Plantations
New Orleans to 1861
New Orleans 1866+
Business
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1835
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