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…
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.
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…
This notice issued at Harrisburg states that William F. Weeks was making
barrels for the government, though this probably refers to slaves that he
had hired out to do the work.
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.
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…
In these brief notes from November 1864, J. B. Miller, a salt maker at
Neches Salt Works in Texas, asks Richard L. Pugh, a refugee planter from
Louisiana who was working at the saline, to send orders of salt to him and
another named buyer in…
This account sheet shows that Richard L. Pugh, a Louisiana refugee, had
purchased merchandise from the Chapell Hill Iron Works in Texas in 1865. He
paid the company with salt, but still owed $500 for previous purchases.
Receipt for John Carlock acknowledging payment of 160,000 lbs of salt for "the hire of twenty-seven negroes and five wagons and teams for eight months at the State salt works in Jordan's Saline." Another receipt from 1865, not included here, records…