This agreement shows that Chamberlain rented his 65-acre plantation, known
as Park Place, and also his 110-acre plantation, known as the Robertson
Place, both in Cherokee County, to Williams, a refugee from Louisiana,
for the year 1865.
In these brief notes from November 1864, J. B. Miller, a salt maker at
Neches Salt Works in Texas, asks Richard L. Pugh, a refugee planter from
Louisiana who was working at the saline, to send orders of salt to him and
another named buyer in…
Miller writes from Kickapoo instructing Pugh, who is at Neches Saline, to
give Henry Day, the superintendent of the Government Iron Works, the amount of
salt he requests. Miller also asks Pugh to "sell for us our dry salt to any
person" at five…
Writing on behalf of C. G. Young, Maples asks Pugh to send some salt "by the
boy Sampson" and also gives instructions about an account with Mr. Wafford.
This account sheet shows that Richard L. Pugh, a Louisiana refugee, had
purchased merchandise from the Chapell Hill Iron Works in Texas in 1865. He
paid the company with salt, but still owed $500 for previous purchases.
This letter by John Williams instructs a Mr. T. Brady to deliver salt to
Mrs. M. D. Wofford. The delivery relates to an arrangement Williams has made
with Wofford and a Mr. McKeller concerning the hired labor of slaves named
Aleck, Tyler (or Tyla),…
Mary W. Pugh writes from Rusk, Texas, after a recent trip with her father back to Louisiana. He is leaving again in the morning and she wishes to send a letter to her husband Richard. She notes that with all the white men leaving, "there is no one…
W. R. Johnston, superintendent of the Confederate States Chemical Laboratory
in Tyler, Texas, requests corn from Williams and Pugh, Louisiana refugees
living in Cherokee County.
Martin reports from Mansfield, Louisiana, about the recent movement of her father, William Littlejohn, to Texas "with his Negroes & wagons," adding that he planned to "haul salt from the salt works in Texas to Shreveport & take cotton & tobacco &c…