Browse Items (171 total)

Alfred C Weeks to John Moore, January 13, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 286-289.pdf
Weeks writes from Washington, Louisiana, to inform Moore of the details of Mary Weeks Moore's death, and also relates what federal forces have taken from his and his brothers' plantations. "Our country I fear is destined to starve."

Alfred C. Weeks to John C. Moore, November 16, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 232.pdf
Weeks writes Moore from Houston about his plans for hauling cotton and selling sugar. He also mentions the impact of the Union occupation of Brownsville on the city.

Alfred C Weeks to WF Weeks, November 6, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 221-225.pdf
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.

DFA1D16E-A2D0-4568-959C-9C71AB39F440.pdf
Richardson was a resident of Van Zandt County, Texas, who enlisted in the 22nd Infantry in Texas but then deserted in Louisiana in 1863. He spent the remainder of the war with his brother-in-law in Clark County, Missouri, but then applied for amnesty…

Analysis of Salt at Avery Island, 1862, Avery Family Papers, Records of the Antebellum Southern Plantations, Series J, Part 5, Reel 11, Frame 581.pdf
A brief memo showing an analysis of the concentration of sodium chloride in salt excavated from Avery Island. The analysis was conducted sometime in 1862 by Eugene W. Hilgard, the Mississippi state geologist.
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