documents
Occupations is exactly
Carriage and Wagon Makers
Petition to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames; March 17, 1875
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Petition to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames, asking for the pardon of Paul Koler, who was convicted of petit larceny.
Receipt from Sheriff John D. Moore; January 1871
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Receipt from Sheriff John D. Moore of Lincoln County, Mississippi, to the State of Mississippi. Moore submitted this receipt for expenses for going to Port Gibson, Mississippi, to retrieve James Dyas, who was charged with the assassination of the mayor of Brookhaven, Mississippi.
Letter to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; May 22, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from an unnamed person (possibly Z. A. Philips, general salt agent for Mississippi) onboard the steamboat "Admiral" to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, concerning the use of Mississippi's convicts for labor in Alabama. (mdah_768-949-06-33 is the "enclosed document" referred to.)
Letter from Joshua Green and A. MacFarland to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; September 24, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letters from Joshua Green and A. MacFarland, both at Jackson, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark at Macon, Mississippi, on the same document, concerning the use of enslaved persons as teamsters.
Receipt from William to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; January 10, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Receipt from William, a station agent at the Mobile, Alabama, station of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, for hauling one sack of salt from Macon, Mississippi.
Letter and list from Matilda Sharkey to Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey; September 4, 1865
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Sharkey Collection. Letter from Sharkey Matilda at Brownsville, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey, asking for Sharkey's aid in obtaining compensation for the damage allegedly done to her property by the United States Army. Included is a list of the property damaged.
Letter from Z. A. Philips to Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey; July 28, 1865
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Sharkey Collection. Letter from Z. A. Philips, the general salt agent for the state at Meridian, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey at Jackson, Mississippi, concerning the sale of the mules, wagons, and harnesses used by the agency.
Letter from G. M. Wincoff to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus; October 30, 1862
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from G. M. Wincoff in Abbeville, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus, asking to be relieved from militia duty as he has a wagon shop and a blacksmith shop.
Letter from Superintendent Z. A. Philips to O. H. Crandall; February 17, 1870
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Letter from Superintendent Z. A. Philips of the Mississippi State Penitentiary to O. H. Crandall, recommending a pardon for William Brennan.
Letter from Superintendent Z. A. Philips to O. H. Crandall; December 22, 1869
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Letter from Z. A. Philips, Superintendent of the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Jackson, Mississippi, to O. H. Crandall, informing him of the good conduct of James Bradley, a prisoner convicted of larceny in February 1868 by the Circuit Court of Desoto County, Mississippi.
Letter from Superintendent Z. A. Philips to O. H. Crandall; December 16, 1869
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Letter from Superintendent of the Mississippi State Penitentiary Z. A. Philips to O. H. Crandall, providing the names, physical descriptions, birthplaces, and sentences of escaped men from the Mississippi Asylum for the Blind.