Weeks reports on the health of her daughter, who has been badly burned;
favorable reports of Texas by Harriet Weeks (now Weightman); and her
husband C. C. Weeks's difficulties with enrolling officers.
Weeks writes to Moore about the prospects of his crop being raised in
Walker County, Texas, and his views about the best way to dispose of money
on hand at a time when Confederate currency was rapidly depreciating. Weeks
also appears to think that…
This certificate, signed by W. W. Morris, General Superintendent for the
Texas & New Orleans Railroad, indicated that Weeks and Alfred C. Weeks, his
brother, had "sixteen (16) negro male hands between the ages of 17 & 50
years" at work on the…
Weeks writes to his brother from near Mansfield about the difficulties he
has had securing a contract to haul in Texas, as well as the troubles
caused by the escape of three enslaved men while on the road to Moscow.
Writing from San Antonio, White informs he has received one of Moore's
enslaved men sent by a Mrs. Gillmore, how has gone on to Laredo. White is
willing to hire the man in San Antonio, and notes in a postscript that a
Major Washington is willing to…
In this article, the New York Herald takes notice of a letter from Gen, Godfrey Weitzel to Department of the Gulf headquarters about "Four Hundred Wagonloads of Negroes" left behind by evacuating Confederates in Brashear City. Although Weitzel's…
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.
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),…