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…
This letter, most likely written by Margaret "Maggie" Weeks, wife of Charles C. Weeks, was sent from Wood Park in Desoto Parish Louisiana. She tells "Bud," who may be William F. Weeks, that she is glad of his safe arrival in Texas, especially given…
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 console Moore on the death of his wife, and also to inform
him that Charlie is still in Texas waiting to haul government stores to
Shreveport. Before Mary Weeks Moore's death, she writes, "her servants left
her, & gave her much…
Maggie writes of the business activities of her husband, Charles C. Weeks,
in Texas, and other local news in Mansfield. "Charlie is almost making
himself sick, he is so desirous to get into business & be making money," she
writes. "According to his…
In a brief note, Maggie Weeks, wife of C. C. Weeks, asks John C. Moore to
lend her a mule for driving her carriage and hauling wood. She is "afraid
the Yankees will get us & separate me from Charlie." She also writes about
"three negro women & five…
Writing from the "P House," Lilly and Maggie [M.S.W.] give updates on the area, including the actions of runaway slaves and the efforts to secure some of them in jails in Louisiana. Maggie expresses concerns about another Yankee invasion of the area,…
Writing to his uncle, Moore asks for advice about what to do with "these negroes." Ben Prescott is speaking of "going on to Texas where he can hire out his negroes" while "the Col." speaks of staying in Louisiana. Moore will go on to Texas unless he…
An account of Civil War events in Assumption Parish, LA, during 1862, focusing on how Union occupation disrupted slavery and plantation operations in the area.