Browse Items (171 total)

List of Slaves Owned by Estate of DW Magill, April 16, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 399.pdf
This inventory, drawn up by the estate executor John C. Moore, shows the names and ages of approximately 92 enslaved people: men, women, and children.

John Moore to WF Weeks, June 6, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 465ff.pdf
Moore begins with a lengthy discussion of the accounts of W. F. Weeks & Co., and then shares his plans to go to Shreveport soon to "settle with C. S. officers for the hire & loss of slaves working on the Public Works." While some of the officers he…

John Moore to WF Weeks, June 27, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 484-486.pdf
Moore writes to Weeks about his intention to keep most of his "hand" in Desoto Parish, sending a few back to the Teche to raise a crop if possible there and on the Magill plantation. He is confident that Weeks's "reasoning in relation to the detail…

John F Leigh to John Moore, November 7, 1862, Weeks and Family Papers, Series I, Part 6, Reel 17, Frame 769-771.pdf
Leigh talks of a recent three-week trip he has made to Texas (Crockett?) and the illnesses that his wife, Addy, and others suffered on the way. He "did not succeed in any of my enterprises," finding that there were no hogs good enough to be driven…

John F Leigh to John Moore, October 30, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 198-199.pdf
Leigh informs his father-in-law about how he and his family have fared. Includes comments about his "negroes" and plans to hire them out.

John Leigh to John C Moore, March 8, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 361-3630000.pdf
Leigh reports to Moore that he has rented 140 acres of "the best of Brazos bottom land," planted with corn, in Sterling, Robinson County, Texas, for which he paid one third of his yield. He had also hired out all of he hands at $25 per month for men…

John Leigh to John Moore, July 15, 1864, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 513ff.pdf
Leigh reports to his father-in-law about an upcoming trip to visit some refugee friends living in Millican, a railroad depot on the Central in Grimes County. He also describes the corn crop in Texas as one of the best he has ever seen, and is…

John Moore to JA Johnson, July 7, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 116f.pdf
Moore writes from Starrville, Smith County, Texas, about a recent letter received from W. F. Weeks about opportunities for hiring out slaves to do railroad and other work in the Houston area.

John Moore to William Lourd, July 29, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frame 130.pdf
Moore, writing from near Mansfield, asks Lourd on his next visit to the Magill plantation to "bring away all the slaves that you may think worth saving, leaving such only as you may think will stay and take care of the property."

John Moore to WF Weeks, October 2, 1863, Weeks Family Papers, Reel 18, Frames 181-182.pdf
Writing from Mansfield to Weeks (in Houston), Moore reports of news that the federal troops sent to Berwick Bay are destined for Texas on the Red River. "Col. Offutt & the Prescotts are in the Parish of Sabine near Mary looking out for places for…
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