An old friend of Murrah's reports on how his administration has been received in the state and on local developments in Marshall, which is now "filled with Govt functionaries, Govt details, and men, and families, whose misfortunes, have driven them…
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.
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.
Murrah writes to Nichol to explain his State Plan for purchasing cotton,
stressing the need to harmonize with Confederate officials while also
pursuing the state's own "liberal policy."
Murrah writes to clarify with Luckett the names of those agents authorized
by the Brazos Manufacturing Company to sell cotton along the Mexican border.
The Governor, writing as president of the Military Board, instructs Abney not to take orders from any Confederate officer or county official other than the state military board, and urges him to report more often.
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…
Wheat and Fletcher, formerly of the Brazos Manufacturing Company, have
written to the board asking for detail exemptions from the draft for a list
of men in their employ. The Board replies approving most of their requests
but specifying the terms on…