Browse Items (171 total)

Receipt for Goods Purchased with Salt by Richard Pugh, 1865, Pugh-Williams-Mayes Papers, Reel 7, Frame 287.pdf
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.

JC Maples to CG Young, January 2, 1865, Pugh-Williams-Mayes Papers, Reel 7, Frame 284.pdf
Writing on behalf of C. G. Young, Maples asks Pugh to send some salt "by the boy Sampson" and also gives instructions about an account with Mr. Wafford.

JB Miller to RL Pugh, December 12, 1864, Pugh-Williams-Mayes Papers, Reel 7, Frame 283.pdf
Miller writes from Kickapoo instructing Pugh, who is at Neches Saline, to give Henry Day, the superintendent of the Government Iron Works, the amount of salt he requests. Miller also asks Pugh to "sell for us our dry salt to any person" at five…

Receipts for Salt Produced by Pugh at Neches Saline, Pugh-Williams-Mayes Papers, Reel 7, Frame 281.pdf
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…

Rental Agreement between John Williams and Chamberlin, 1864, Pugh-Williams-Mayes Papers, Reel 7, Frame 191.pdf
This agreement shows that Chamberlain rented his 65-acre plantation, known as Park Place, and also his 110-acre plantation, known as the Robertson Place, both in Cherokee County, to Williams, a refugee from Louisiana, for the year 1865.

ILNv43p216.jpg
This artists' sketch depicts Confederate refugees in the woods outside of Vicksburg and was published not long after the city's fall. It shows women receiving letters about the fates of soldiers on the battlefield, while an African American woman…

17439.pdf
In this September 1863 broadside, the Office of the Chief Quartermaster in the Trans-Mississippi Department calls for Confederate slaveholders in Louisiana, Arkansas, and Texas, to hire out 2,000 to 3,000 "able-bodied men" to the government,…

5A6CC4E2-FC3C-4FF0-9A6D-79D802491769.pdf
These images were selected from the Confederate Citizens File records for J. S. O. Brooks and detail his sale of salt to Confederate military officials early in the war. The selection also includes exchange certificates for new issue currency later…

37BA77CD-3B57-475E-8D17-1CEDDFD8089C.pdf
Richardson was a Van Zandt County resident who enlisted in the Texas 22nd Infantry but had deserted by December 1862, if not earlier. This record from the NARA indicates that he was labeled as a deserter in the regimental return for that month.
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