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…
Weeks writes urging Moore to attend to the needs of his family. He has not
been able to visit them in Louisiana because a contract he had been promised
to haul to Shreveport fell through. He and his teams are now in Polk County
working with the…
C. E. Gregory, an agent for Weeks in partnership with John Mills, writes from Houston to update Weeks on arrangements he had previously made to hire out one or more of his slaves as coopers. A Major Richardson now says that "he does not expect to…
A letter from a Mr. Mills to Weeks reports on the escape of two of Weeks's
"negroes," one of whom was named Charles, from government service and their
subsequent appearance on a Texas plantation.
Weeks reports from Houston on some arrangements he has made to hire out enslaved people and also discusses recent military movements at Sabine Pass and elsewhere. He also expresses his surprise at learning that "one of my negroes" was among "the…
Harriet C. Weeks Meade writes to Moore about plans for removal from
Starrville in Smith County to Freestone County in Texas. News about various
family members also included.
Harriet C. (Weeks) Meade wonders why she has not heard from Moore and
updates him on plans to move to Freestone County, where her "negroes" have
been relocated.
Harriet C. (Weeks) Meade again wonders why she hasn't heard from Moore and
provides more particulars about the move of her "negroes" to Freestone
County, though she has not yet heard from Mr. Rawlins about their arrival
there.
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.