documents
Item set
Clark Series 768: Box 949, Folder 02
Document
Items
Letter from J. E. Pernett to Confederate Secretary of War James A. Seddon; December 28, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from J. E. Pernett to Confederate Secretary of War James A. Seddon, Pernett, who is an acting master in the Confederate Navy, proposes to transport arms and ammunition across the Mississippi River.
Letter from Robert Edmundson to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 23, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Robert Edmundson at Macon, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, offering to deliver 40,000 cotton cards and 10,000 wool cards for $100,000.
Letter from W. C. Turner to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 31, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from W. C. Turner at Enterprise, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning an effort to obtain salt for the state of Mississippi.
Letter from R. Seal to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 14, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from R. Seal at Columbus, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the shipment of cotton to Europe.
Letter from Norman and Company to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from the firm of Norman and Company at Decatur, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, regarding their contract and operations to provide salt for the state of Mississippi.
Letter from Mississippi Governor Charles Clark to W. C. Watson; December 21, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, to W. C. Watson, giving his agent his thoughts on cotton and wool cards, use of state troops, foreigners in the military, impressed enslaved persons, military supplies, and soldiers fit for service.
Letter from Mississippi Attorney General T. J. Wharton to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 21, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Mississippi Attorney General T. J. Wharton at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the legality of the conscription laws.
Letter from Mississippi Attorney General T. J. Wharton to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 18, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Mississippi Attorney General T. J. Wharton at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning a plan to obtain cotton cards for the state.
Letter from Lieutenant Colonel James B. McRae to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 29, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Lieutenant Colonel James B. McRae at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning a contract to supply cotton cards to the state of Mississippi.
Letter from Lieutenant Colonel James B. McRae to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 29, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Lieutenant Colonel James B. McRae at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning a contract to supply cotton cards to the state of Mississippi.
Letter from John Condon to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 26, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from John Condon at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, offering to deliver $100,000 worth of cotton and wool cards for three dollars a pair.
Letter from John Condon to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 20, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from John Condon at Hazlehurst, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Columbus, Mississippi, offering to sell cotton and wool cards to the state of Mississippi at $10.00 per pair, if he is allowed to ship 3,000 bales of cotton.
Letter from James M. Haynes to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 24, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from James M. Haynes at Macon, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning a blockade runner in Mobile, Alabama, that proposes to bring in goods for the state of Mississippi.
Letter from James B. McRae to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 26, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from James B. McRae to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, regarding a plan to ship cotton out of the Confederate States of America to pay for cotton and woolen cards.
Letter from J. J. Smylie to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 21, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from J. J. Smylie at Macon, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, offering to supply the state with 40,000 cotton and wool cards in exchange for $100,000 and shipping cotton to New Orleans, Louisiana, en route to Europe.
Letter from G. F. Neill to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 13, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from G. F. Neill at Columbus, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, recommending A. S. Humphries to procure wool or cotton cards for the impoverished people of the state.
Letter from Colonel Arthur E. Reynolds to Colonel Harvey; December 21, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Arthur E. Reynolds, colonel of the 46th Mississippi Infantry, at Macon, Mississippi, to Colonel Harvey, concerning a regiment raised by Major Davenport and Colonel Harrison.
Letter from Captain W. B. Brown to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 31, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Captain W. B. Brown of Stephen Davenport's Cavalry Battalion at Fulton, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, complaining that the unit was illegally turned over to Confederate Brigadier General Gideon J. Pillow.
Letter from Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 23, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from the firm of Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company at Columbus, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning their contract to supply cotton cards.
Letter from Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 15, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company at Columbus, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, proposing to supply the state of Mississippi with 15,000 pairs of cotton cards in return for shipping cotton along the Mississippi River. (Document is related to mdah_768-949-02-05).
Letter from Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company to Colonel M. D. Haynes; December 23, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from the firm of Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company at Columbus, Mississippi to Colonel M. D. Haynes at Macon, Mississippi, authorizing Haynes to act on their behalf regarding their firm's proposition to provide cotton cards and other articles to the state of Mississippi.
Letter from Baskerville and Whitfield to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 18, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Baskerville, Whitfield, and Company at Columbus, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning their offer to supply cotton cards to the state of Mississippi, in light of a mercantile business setting up a branch in Memphis, Tennessee. (Document is related to mdah_768-949-02-03).
Incomplete letter from Mississippi Attorney General T. J. Wharton to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 28, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Incomplete letter from Mississippi Attorney General T. J. Wharton to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, offering his opinion concerning the writ of habeas corpus.
Damaged letter from Lieutenant Colonel James B. McRae to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 26, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Damaged letter from Confederate Lieutenant Colonel James B. McRae at Macon, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning a plan to smuggle cotton out of the Confederacy to pay for cotton and woolen cards.
Copies of letter from D. S. Pattison to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; December 24, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Two copies of a letter from D. S. Pattison at Port Gibson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the settling of his accounts as salt agent for the state.