documents
Item set
Clark Series 768: Box 950, Folder 02
Document
Items
Petition from Sarah Garrett to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 10, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Petition from Sarah Garrett at Canton, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, asking that she be pardoned for her crime of allowing enslaved persons to trade as freemen.
Contract between C. T. Merlis and the state of Mississippi; October 28, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Contract between C. T. Merlis and the state of Mississippi to produce cotton cards.
Letter from General Richard Taylor to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 8, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Confederate Lieutenant General Richard Taylor at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, giving his thoughts on the punishment to be given to Confederate deserters who return to their units.
Incomplete letter from Captain A. Q. Withers to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 28, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Incomplete letter from Confederate Captain A. Q. Withers, commander of a company of state troops at Holly Springs, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, asking that his troops remain in Marshall County, Mississippi.
Voucher to Laura Carter; October 10, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Voucher showing that Laura Carter had received one hundred dollars from Thomas Jones, the Commissioner of the Milldale District of Warren County, Mississippi.
Sworn statement from John W. Boyd; October 6, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Sworn statement from John W. Boyd and others in Sunflower County, Mississippi, offering a bond of $5,000 as required for his license as dispenser of spirituous liquors.
Statements and bond; October 31, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Document containing a statement from several officials of Yalobusha County, Mississippi, that Henry H. Gorin is qualified to be dispenser of spirituous liquors, as well as the bond of Gorin and his sureties L. Newburger and Marshall Newberry. The document also includes a sworn statement witnessed by William Cook, a justice of the peace, certifying that Newburger and Newberry are respectively worth $5,000. A final statement, also witnessed by Cook, certifies that Gorin will carry out the duties of dispenser of spirituous liquors.
Statement from T. D. Barbour, H. H. Fulty, and James Reedy; October 17, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Statement from T. D. Barbour, Judge H. H. Fulty, and Sheriff James Reedy at Lexington, Mississippi, certifying that John A. Durden of Holmes County, Mississippi, is qualified to carry out the duties of dispenser of spirituous liquors.
Statement from H. E. Lee and A. B. McLemore to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; November 10, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Statement from H. E. Lee, clerk of the probate court of Perry County, Mississippi, and A. B. McLemore to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, that McLemore was elected ranger of the county and requesting an exemption from Confederate Army service.
Statement from Doctor L. A. Campbell; October 28, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Statement from Doctor L. A. Campbell at Kemper County, Mississippi, certifying that William Bostick needs a half gallon of spirits for medicinal purposes.
Report from John Duncan to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 1, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Annual report from John Duncan at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, on the operations of the Mississippi Institution for the Blind.
Receipt from Mississippi Governor Charles Clark to Mississippi State Treasurer M. D. Haynes; October 10, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Receipt from Mississippi Governor Charles Clark to Mississippi State Treasurer M. D. Haynes, showing that Haynes had received the treasury warrant from Clark for two hundred and sixty-seven dollars.
Receipt from L. H. Parker to Thomas C. Jones; October 26, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Receipt from L. H. Parker to Thomas C. Jones, for Jones receiving one hundred and fifty dollars.
Receipt from F. LaBueve to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 4, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Receipt from F. LaBueve, representing J. T. Patterson and Co., to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark for a warrant from the Mississippi State Treasury for $1,725 to pay for printing bonds and an engraving plate.
Receipt from F. LaBueve to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 27, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Receipt from F. LaBueve of J. T. Patterson and Company at Macon, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, for his requisition from the Auditor of Public Accounts, two hundred and twenty-five dollars for expenses on a business trip to Augusta, Georgia.
Printed statement from Colonel E. S. Fisher; October 18, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Printed statement from Colonel E. S. Fisher at Grenada, Mississippi, asking to be provided with a list of men liable for militia duty who failed to report.
Petition; November 8, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Petition from Yalobusha County, Mississippi, officials that S. B. Hartley is qualified to be dispenser of spirituous liquors.
Petition to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 12, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Petition from several citizens of Holmes County, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, asking that John A. Durden be appointed dispenser of spirituous liquors.
Petition from P. A. Ruttand to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 19, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Petition from P. A. Rutton to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, requesting that his conviction for horse stealing be pardoned so that he can join the Confederate Army.
Letter from W. S. Cook to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; November 1, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from W. S. Cook at Bolivar, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the desperate need for salt in Bolivar County, Mississippi.
Letter from W. H. Dameron to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; September 30, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from W. H. Dameron in the office of Mississippi Chief Commissary at Meridian, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the exemption request of Albany J. Wright.
Letter from W. A. Strong to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; November 8, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from W. A. Strong to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, giving a report on the operation of his distillery.
Letter from Robert Kells to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 27, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Robert Kells, superintendent of the Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the arrest of asylum employees.
Letter from Robert Kells to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; October 15, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Robert Kells, superintendent of the Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, protesting that his workers are being conscripted into the Mississippi Militia.
Letter from Mississippi Governor Charles Clark to Mr. Baskerville; September 27, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, to Mr. Baskerville concerning the extension of his contract.