Stewart, a former store keeper and trader in slaves, writes to Texas's first Reconstruction governor about fears of a "negro insurrection" near Waverly and Danville, sparked by rumors among freedpeople about a general distribution of property around…
An anonymous soldier writes the governor of Texas to encourage him to adopt
policies favorable to the introduction of manufacturing in the state. He
compares the progress that Texas has made on factories unfavorably to the
progress of neighboring…
An old friend of Murrah's reports on how his administration has been received in the state and on local developments in Marshall, which is now "filled with Govt functionaries, Govt details, and men, and families, whose misfortunes, have driven them…
Governor Murrah writes to Hutchins to justify his State Plan for purchasing
cotton and to explain that he intends not to undermine the Confederate
Cotton Bureau.
Murrah writes to Nichol to explain his State Plan for purchasing cotton,
stressing the need to harmonize with Confederate officials while also
pursuing the state's own "liberal policy."
Members of the Bosque County court complain to the governor about rising
prices for foodstuffs caused by the rates that a local quartermaster is
willing to pay to haul corn from 40 or 50 miles away. The court suspects
that the quartermaster is…
In this undated document, two formerly enslaved parents in Cherokee County,
Texas, petition Governor Andrew Jackson Hamilton for help in recovering
their children from "the former owner by force of arms" after they were
"taken out of the petitioners…
A special order directed to the Confederate engineer Col. Lea instructs him
to take "the negroes in his charge" to destroy the railroad between Lavaca
and Victoria. Detailed instructions about where to bring th enslaved laborers
and how to equip them…
Atchison writes from Navasota in Grimes County to ask that the charter of the Brazos Manufacturing Company, first incorporated by a special law in November 1863, be approved by the governor with himsel and Thomas F. Lockett in charge. He argues that…