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Letter from Mrs. William Hoover to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames; May 20, 1874
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Letter from Mrs. William Hoover to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames, containing a resolution by the maternal association of Summit, Mississippi, thanking Ames for his support of temperance.
Letter from William H. Garland to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames; May 1, 1874
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Letter from William H. Garland to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames, recommending Reverend William Hoover for Superintendent of Pike County, Mississippi, schools with a newspaper article attached.
Letter from V. B. Waddell to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames; April 25, 1874
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Ames Collection. Letter from V. B. Waddell to Mississippi Governor Adelbert Ames, stating that levees are holding in Tunica County, Mississippi.
Letter from George Fletcher to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn; January 19, 1871
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from George Fletcher, an African American man in Washington County, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, expressing his concern with the ability of African American people to make a living off the land when they are being charged $10 for an acre or two for rent. Fletcher asks Alcorn if he could make some arrangement for relief.
Letter from Captain W. E. Montgomery to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark; January 26, 1864
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Clark Collection. Letter from Captain W. E. Montgomery, commander of the Herndon Rangers (Mississippi Militia, Cavalry Battalion, Second Reserves), to Mississippi Governor Charles Clark, informing Clark about attempted United States Army cavalry raids in his area of operation, as well as soldiers that may need to be released from service. Montgomery also writes on the health and safety of his family, as he claims that United States soldiers have threatened to capture and hold them hostage.
Ration return of Lieutenant Franklin Force; August 16, 1865
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Sharkey Collection. Ration return of Lieutenant Franklin Force, acting Provost Marshal of Freedmen, requesting ten days rations to be issued for one man and nine women, all impoverished African Americans, at Brandon, Mississippi. The return is approved by Captain Samuel A. Cooper of the 50th United States Colored Infantry, thus authorizing the Assistant Commissary of Subsistence to issue the requested rations.
Letter from Gustavus Wilcox and J. S. Vaughan to Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey; July 22, 1865
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Sharkey Collection. Letter from Gustavus Wilcox and J. S. Vaughan, both justices of the peace at Rodney, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor William L. Sharkey at Jackson, Mississippi, asking for instructions on how to legally "get rid of the nuisance" of supposed "vagrants" allegedly resulting from the influx of African Americans into the town.
Letter from Henry A. Pope to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus; July 1, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from Henry A. Pope at Columbus, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus, requesting exemption from military service.
Letter from Robert F. Clute to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus; February 7, 1863
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from Robert F. Clute, rector of Grace Church at Okolona, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus asking for an exemption from serving in the state militia.
Letter from Gus H. Wilcox to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus; December 10, 1861
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from Rodney, Mississippi, concerning Jefferson W. Cook, arrested for allegedly fomenting a slave revolt in Jefferson County, Mississippi.
Letter from John Handy to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus; October 16, 1861
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Pettus Collection. Letter from Canton, Mississippi, seeking a nursing job for Mrs. Mary J. Terry, a widow.