From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Incomplete letter to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, addressing accusations made against him and stating that these allegations are "wholly unjust and untrue".
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from H. Mask and O. Davis to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, reporting on the prosecution of several men charged with violations of the Ku Klux Klan Laws.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from Mayor William Price of Grenada, Mississippi, to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, recommending clemency on behalf of Tom Hanks of Grenada. Included is a note from H. F. Hewson, Alcorn's private secretary, giving a summary of Price's letter.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Receipt from James F. Cunningham, for $200.00 to be used in the pursuit of F. B. Mooney, who has been charged with murder in Tallahatchie County, Mississippi.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from F. M. Price, concerning the deposition of Mr. Martin, Justice of the Peace in Warren County, Mississippi, concerning the theft of a horse by Felix Stone, a resident of Madison Parish, Louisiana.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from A. D. McLindon to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn's private secretary H. F. Hewson, requesting to know if the reward money that has been paid to John D. Moore, Sheriff of Lincoln County, Mississippi, was paid out of the Secret Service funds for the capture of James Dyas, who is charged with murder.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from A. W. Dowling to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, informing Alcorn that M. Eskridge was in jail on the suspicion of having murdered a Mr. Brantly in Macon, Mississippi but was seen out with several town law enforcement officials last night.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from Judge Jehu Amaziah Orr to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, concerning H. T. Hill esq., who seems to have been assassinated. The letter details how Hill had been lured away from Columbus, Mississippi, by his college friend and then ambushed by four men.
From the Mississippi Department of Archives and History Governor Alcorn Collection. Letter from Z. C. Fairman to Mississippi Governor James L. Alcorn, asking Alcorn for an interpretation of the law concerning the commission of the Justice of the Peace. Fairman believes that him being Mayor of Crystal Springs, Mississippi could fill said position without having been duly commissioned.