From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Doctor W. G. Williams in Claiborne County, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, urging the state to bring in needed goods through the United States Navy's blockade.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from J. M. Haynes in Macon, Mississippi, to A. M. West, offering to sell the state supplies that have been run in through the blockade in exchange for a contract.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from T. G. Brooking at Boonville, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, complaining about local citizens taking their cotton to Tennessee and trading it to the United States Army.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from T. L. Martin at Lamar, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, requesting permission to trade with the United States Army to obtain supplies.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from S. M. Ashe at Mobile, Alabama, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, offering a proposal to supply the state of Mississippi with wool and cotton cards.
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.
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.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from Mrs. William L. Harris in Bogue Phalia, Mississippi, informing Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus that the Lieutenants Montgomery and Lawler have been arrested.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from W. J. Rankin at Fordsville, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus concerning a smuggling ring moving cotton to the United States in New Orleans, Louisiana.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from R. P. Guyard regarding a plan to obstruct the Mississippi River with pilings.