Browse Items (64 total)

  • Collection: Weeks Family Papers

Alfred Weeks to Bill, June 25, 1863.pdf
Writing to "Bill" (William F. Weeks?), who had been in Houston recently, Weeks reports that heavy rains and rising water have "upset all our calculations," apparently referring to crops that had been planted. Reporting on uncertainty of Confederate…

Alfred Weeks to John Moore, August 6, 1862, Weeks and Family Papers, Series I, Part 6, Reel 17, Frame 707-708.pdf
Weeks has heard from Franklin that "two negroes belonging to one of us" have been captured and put in jail in Lafourche, one badly shot and unlikely to recover. Weeks suspects they are "William & Charles."

Alfred C. Weeks to John Moore, September 10, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 160-161.pdf
Writing from Parish St. Mary, he has apparently seen Mary Weeks at the home plantation, and reports that "this country is again virgually abandoned by our troops." He does "not know when I shall return to Texas. Say in about 3 weeks. Mean time one of…

Alfred C Weeks to WF Weeks, November 6, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 221-225.pdf
Weeks updates "Bill," presumably his brother about what he saw on a recent return to Louisiana and also discusses various arrangments for hauling cotton and hiring out slaves. Several named slaves are mentioned.

Alfred C. Weeks to John C. Moore, November 16, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 232.pdf
Weeks writes Moore from Houston about his plans for hauling cotton and selling sugar. He also mentions the impact of the Union occupation of Brownsville on the city.

Alfred C Weeks to John Moore, January 13, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 286-289.pdf
Weeks writes from Washington, Louisiana, to inform Moore of the details of Mary Weeks Moore's death, and also relates what federal forces have taken from his and his brothers' plantations. "Our country I fear is destined to starve."

BW Howell to John Moore, September 25, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 177.pdf
Reports from Shreveport on prices of sugar and molasses, noting that "the market ... is quite limited." Also, "in regard to Texas, evry place of value seems to be taken so far as my observation and enquiries led in the section that I visited. There…

Ben Prescott to John Moore, January 28, 1863, Weeks and Family Papers, Series I, Part 6, Reel 17, Frame 820-821.pdf
Writing to his grandfather, Ben Prescott discusses his business partnership with Col. Offutt, who thinks they could make good profits by running salt up Red River from "the Island" and selling it for 15 or 20 dollars a bushel. He wonders if doing so…

Ben Prescott to John Moore, September 11, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 162-163.pdf
Writing from Sun Flower Plantation, Ben Prescott, Moore's grandson, reports that "we expect to leave here for Texas about the last of the month as I hope by that time the health of the Negroes will admit of it. I have now on this place the measles,…

CC Weeks to John C. Moore, February 14, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 335.pdf
Weeks writes to his stepfather about a contract he has secured with the Confederate state government to haul "salt, sugar, or whatever I choose" on his own account, while his mules would be fed by the government.
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