Special Collections

Department of Archives & Special Collections

Small Manuscripts<br /> MUM00400<br />

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Small Manuscripts


MUM00400

PURL

http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00400/

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Summary Information

Repository
University of Mississippi Libraries
Creator
University of Mississippi. Dept. of Archives and Special Collections
Title
Small Manuscripts
ID
MUM00400
Date [inclusive]
circa 1750-2008
Extent
37.26 Linear feet 92 boxes (A-1 thru A-3) + 18 boxes (H-15)
Abstract:
Contains individual items and small collections. Small Manuscripts at the University of Mississippi Department of Archives
and Special Collections was assembled through the collecting activities of the Department over the past thirty years. The
collection documents unique and discrete individual moments of history associated with the State of Mississippi. A variety
of material formats can be found in the collections including individual diaries, ledgers, corporate records, correspondence,
and broadsides.

Prefered Citation

(Item Name). Small Manuscripts (Box #), Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, The University of Mississippi

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Collection History

Since 1976, additions have been made annually to Small Manuscripts. In 2010, the entire collection was assessed for preservation
with boxes merged to eliminate unnecessary empty space. In addition to rehousing parts of the collection, materials were selectively
removed for inclusion in the J.D. Williams Library catalog.

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Arrangement

This collection is arranged chronologically by year of acquisition. Additionally, the following series were added based on
material type: Lobby Cards, Movie Stills, and Pressbooks; Broadsheets and Broadsides; and Ephemera.

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Administrative Information

Publication Information

University of Mississippi Libraries 2010

Revision Description

 Finding aid revised in Archivists’ Toolkit by Susan Ivey. 2014

Access Restrictions

Items in Small Manuscripts are open for research.

Copyright Restrictions

The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions
of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a
photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used
for any purpose other than private study, scholarship or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy
or reproduction for purposes in excess of “fair use”, that user may be liable for copyright infringement.

Additions

Additions are made annually to Small Manuscripts.

Alternative Formats

Several items in Small Manuscripts collections have been digitized and are available online.

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Related Materials

Resources at the University of Mississippi

Since Small Manuscripts represents every topical subject area collected by the University of Mississippi Archives & Special
Collection, view our
subject guides to locate more resources on select topics.

Separated Material

In 2010, approximately 300 items were removed for inclusion in the Library Catalog. This material consisted primarily of publications,
including Mississippi Territorial Documents and early State and Federal Documents relating to State of Mississippi. For a
listing of materials removed for cataloging, contact Archives and Special Collections.

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Collection Inventory

Small Manuscripts 1976 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Rev. N.G Augustus. Notes on Methodist Church in MS. 

Folder 2: Rev. N.G Augustus letters and Correspondence with librarian(s). (1 of 6) 

Folder 3: Rev. N.G Augustus letters and Correspondence with librarian(s). (2 of 6) 

Folder 4: Rev. N.G Augustus letters and Correspondence with librarian(s). (3 of 6) 

Folder 5: Rev. N.G Augustus letters and Correspondence with librarian(s). (4 of 6) 

Folder 6: Rev. N.G Augustus letters and Correspondence with librarian(s). (5 of 6) 

Folder 7: Rev. N.G Augustus letters and Correspondence with librarian(s). (6 of 6) 

Folder 8: Rev. N.G Augustus pamphlets and newsclippings 

Folder 9: Rev. N.G Augustus newsclippings 

Folder 10: Rev. N.G Augustus Methodist Episcopal Church Correspondence 

Folder 11: [No Folder] 

Folder 12: G.W. Bachman “Biography in Memorial 

Folder 13: G.W. Bachman “Sketches and Incidents of Life” (1 of 4) 

Folder 14: G.W. Bachman “Sketches and Incidents of Life” (2 of 4) 

Folder 15: G.W. Bachman “Sketches and Incidents of Life” (3 of 4) 

Folder 16: G.W. Bachman “Sketches and Incidents of Life” (4 of 4) 

Folder 17: J.B. Barry Xerox of Transcript, Letter. J.B. Barry to Jesse K. Barry (18 March 1859) 

Folder 18: J.B. Barry Original Letter, Letter. James K Barry to Jesse B. Barry (18 March 1859) 

Folder 19: A.O. South Letter Xerox of Transcript, Letter. A.O. South to his friend. (7 August 1861) 

Folder 20: A.O. South Original Letter, Letter. A.O. South to his friend. (7 August 1861) 

Folder 21: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (1 of 8) 

Folder 22: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (2 of 8) 

Folder 23: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (3 of 8) 

Folder 24: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (4 of 8) 

Folder 25: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (5 of 8) 

Folder 26: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (6 of 8) 

Folder 27: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (7 of 8) 

Folder 28: A.L. Bondurant “Hopewell Church” and the history of the Presbyterian Church in Mississippi (8 of 8) 

Folder 29: [No Folder] 

Folder 30: A.L. Bondurant, Letter (with envelope). Dan I. Sultan to Mrs. A.L. Bondurant (14 September 1941) 

Folder 31: [No Folder] 

Folder 32: A.L. Bondurant Letter. Pat Harrison to Mrs. A.L. Bondurant (26 April 1935) 

Folder 33: A.L. Bondurant Letter. Helen Keller to Kate A. Skipwith (4 January 1943) 

Folder 34: A.L. Bondurant Letter. Helen Keller to Frances A. Means (20 August 1942) 

Folder 35: [No Folder] 

Folder 36: [No Folder] 

Folder 37: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. President of College of Charleston to A.L. Bondurant (19 October 1927) 

Folder 38: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. Arthur Brisbane to A.L. Bondurant (7 October 1931) 

Folder 39: A.L. Bondurant. Letter (with envelope). Lamar Hardy to A.L. Bondurant (4 January 1937) 

Folder 40: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. G.G. Chiavari to A.L. Bondurant (31 March 1937) 

Folder 41: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. Philip Beugreet to A.L. Bondurant (Undated) 

Folder 42: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. Unnamed to A.L. Bondurant (16 December 1933) 

Folder 43: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. A. West to A.L. Bondurant (26 February 1935) 

Folder 44: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. Louis Johnson to Mrs. Bondurant (29 April 1933) 

Folder 45: A.L. Bondurant. Letter. Dr. E. Norden to A.L. Bondurant (1918) 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Burton-Butler. Papers Xerox copies from Holly Springs Historical Society. Letters, 1853-1854. Loyalty oath, 1865 

Folder 2: Clark-Freeman. Papers Letters, photographs, and phila-telic collection, 1857, 1940s 

Folder 3: Jerome Cochran. Biographical information on Dr. Cochran, born 1831, and early medical practice in Mississippi 

Folder 4: Craft-Fort. Papers. Papers, 1820-1878. Correspondence photocopies. (1 of 6) 

Folder 5: Craft-Fort. Papers. Papers, 1820-1878. Correspondence photocopies. (2 of 6) 

Folder 6: Craft-Fort. Papers. Papers, 1820-1878. Correspondence photocopies. (3 of 6) 

Folder 7: Craft-Fort. Papers. Papers, 1820-1878. Correspondence photocopies. (4 of 6) 

Folder 8: Craft-Fort. Papers. Papers, 1820-1878. Correspondence photocopies. (5 of 6) 

Folder 9: Craft-Fort. Papers. Papers, 1820-1878. Correspondence photocopies. (6 of 6) 

Folder 10: E.D. Clark. Memo for Vicksburg Bar Association Manuscript (Xerox copy). 

Folder 11: William Lockwood. Letters, 1885 (Photocopied) 

Folder 12: E.D. Clark. Play, “Joan of Arc,” undated (PC) 

Folder 13: Kate W. Freeman. Correspondence, 1846-1864, manuscript on election of Lincoln death noticies. Original copy of
poem (1849) and memory book. 

Folder 14: Kate W. Freeman. Journal entry: Holly Springs, 6 November 1860) 

Folder 15: Kate W. Freeman, Letter. Mary to Kate W. Freeman (1 September 1864) 

Folder 16: Kate W. Freeman, Writings on the History of Christ Church in Holly Springs, MS. 

Folder 17: Kate W. Freeman, Letter. Robert Jossilyn to Kate W. Freeman (30 April 1847) 

Folder 18: Kate W. Freeman, Letter. Robert Jossilyn to Kate W. Freeman (23 December 1846) 

Folder 19: Bobbie Gentry Clippings, music magazines, work-sheets, scores and correspondence (1 of 4) 

Folder 20: Bobbie Gentry Clippings, music magazines, work-sheets, scores and correspondence (2 of 4) 

Folder 21: Bobbie Gentry Clippings, music magazines, work-sheets, scores and correspondence (3 of 4) 

Scope and Contents note

Contains handwritten version of
“Ode to Billy Joe”
with unrecorded lyrics

Folder 22: Bobbie Gentry Clippings, music magazines, work-sheets, scores and correspondence (4 of 4) 

Box 3 

Folder 1: Robbie Eades. Clippings, manuscript, 1896, 1900s, 1968 

Folder 2: William Sylvester Dillon. Typescript of Civil War Diary. 12 April 1861 – 25 June 1865 

Folder 3: J.A. Bigger. Note pertaining to his diary dated 30 April 1862 to 12 May 1865. Letter mentioning the diary. James
to Rose (17 March 1962) 

Folder 4: J.A. Bigger. Partial diary in typescript. (Begins 30 May 1862, 30 April thru 12 May 1865, 22 February – afterward
(MISSING)) 

Folder 5: J.A. Bigger. Diary in typescript. (30 April 1862 to 12 May 1865) 

Folder 6: J.A. Bigger. Diary in typescript. (30 April 1862 to 12 May 1865) 

Folder 7: A. Eugene Cox Papers, 1953-1968. Articles, writings, booklets, and pamphlets re: Delta Cooperative Farms. 

Folder 8: A. Eugene Cox Papers, 1953-1968. Articles and booklets re: agricultural workers and labor systems in the United
States and the South. 

Folder 9: A. Wigfall Green. Paper pertaining to collection contents. Letter. Harry Harrison Knoll to Mr. Green (30 November
1932) 

Folder 10: A. Wigfall Green. Letter. James Street to Mr. Green (19 June 1940) 

Folder 11: A. Wigfall Green. Miscellaneous articles and booklets written by Mr. Green. 

Folder 12: A. Wigfall Green. Various letters that regard Mr. Theodore Bilbo. 

Folder 13: A. Wigfall Green. Booklet entitled “Acceptance and Unveiling of the Statue of Theodore Gilmore Bilbo” 

Folder 14: A. Wigfall Green. Thigpen articles. Letter. S.G. Thigpen, Senior, to Mr. Green (12 March 1964) 

Folder 15: A. Wigfall Green. Report regarding the South Central Modern Language Association. Correspondence with various universities. 

Folder 16: Dr. Joseph Goldberger. Notes on medical history, especially nutrition and pellegra. Biography of Goldberger by
his great granddaughter; Pellagra research at Mississippi State Prison (1914-1915) 

Folder 17: Reverend John B. Gray. Letter. John Grey to Rose Stetinius, Montgomery (17 June 1861). Handwritten copy enclosed. 

Folder 18: Luella Gray, probably of Union Female college. Correspondence regarding 1886 letters. 

Folder 19: Luella Gray, probably of Union Female college. Letter (with envelope). Mother to Luella Gray (25 April 1886), Gray’s
Mill, MS 

Folder 20: Luella Gray, probably of Union Female college. Letter (with envelope). Mother to Luella Gray (14 March 1886)Gray’s
Mill, MS 

Box 4 

Folder 1: Alain Dunlap. Manuscript of his book “Behind the Bamboo Curtain” (1956). Letter regarding manuscript. John L. Kennedy
to Evelyn J. Price. (12 October 1971) 

Box 5 

Folder 1: Holly Springs Female Academy, Papers, documents and board minutes of HS Female Academy (photocopies). Dated 1836
– 1901. (1 of 2) 

Folder 2: Holly Springs Female Academy, Papers, documents and board minutes of HS Female Academy (photocopies). Dated 1836
– 1901. (2 of 2) 

Folder 3: John L. Hudson. Papers and speeches, of Hudson, UM student, legislator and CSA captain 

Folder 4: Rev. Joseph Ingraham. Biographical information and pages from Christ Church (Holly Springs) register (photocopied). 

Folder 5: Rev. Thaddeus McRae. Autobiography and original articles by McRae, 1831 – 1880 (Photocopies). (1 of 2) 

Folder 6: Rev. Thaddeus McRae. Autobiography and original articles by McRae, 1831 – 1880 (Photocopies). (2 of 2) 

Folder 7: H.W. Walters. Journal of travel through N. MS, 1856. Letters, 1861-1878. Other papers 1878-1881. Photocoped from
Holly Springs Hist. Society 

Folder 8: Russell Jones. Photocopies of Civil War letters, 1861-1862 

Folder 9: Samuel McCorkle. Papers, 1834-1854. Photocopied from Holly Springs Hist. Society 

Box 6: L.Q.C. Lamar Letters 

General note

Detailed finding aid available for the L.Q.C. Lamar Papers at :
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM01174/

Folder 1: Finding Aid for L.Q.C. Lamar Collection.Finding Aid for L.Q.C. Lamar Collection. 

Folder 2: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar to Clark, re: suppress letter from appearing in the newspaper. Typescript
available. 

Folder 3: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar to “Yates,” re: the Governor. 

Folder 4: Photocopy fragment of handwritten letter signed from Lamar to Clark, re: offering law partnership to Clark, Seymour
& Blair nomination, General Walthall. Typescript available. 

Folder 5: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar to Clark, re: resignation, request to accept the presidency of Emory
College in Georgia, Miss Freeman, Miss Carey, Featherston, Watson, Harris, Manning, Falkner, Parker; handwritten notation
by Clark. Typescript available. 

Folder 6: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar to Clark, re: employment of Joshua Morris, Ames. Typescript available. 

Folder 7: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar to Clark, re: General Walthall moving to Oxford, law partnership
with Lamar, Lamar’s work habits, Lamar’s health; handwritten notation by Clark. Typescript available. 

Folder 8: Photocopy handwritten document entitled “Memo for settlement with Lamar & Clark, Oxford, Miss.”, re: accounts of
law firm. circa 1869 

Folder 9: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Clark to “My darling Cary,” re: sentiments of love, marriage, prayer,
the Lamars, Miss Lillie Pegues, commencement, taking Miss Tillie Marshall to a play. 12 June 1870 

Folder 10: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Tillie Marshall to Clark, re: acceptance of invitation to go to the play.
Typescript available. 

Folder 11: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Lamar’s health crisis, speaking at Corinth,
canvassing the District, Lamar’s epitaph, speaking at Vicksburg, Prentiss, oratory. Typescript available. 19 October 1872 

Folder 12: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Russell, Navy Engineers, armed services academies,
Col. Phillips (Washington lawyer), General Walthall, friendship, politics, Lamar’s health, Alcorn, Mississippi’s gubernatorial
contests, 13th-15th Amendments, Radical Republicans, president, African American voters. Typescript available. 14 October 1873 

Folder 13: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: politics, last Mississippi gubernatorial election,
reconstruction, General Ames, freedmen, socio-economic classes, General Alcorn. Typescript available. 16 October 1873 

Folder 14: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: introduction to R. Milton
Speer of Pennsylvania with the Committee of Investigation in Vicksburg. Typescript available. 21 December 1874 

Folder 15: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: U.S. House Members Spee &
O’Brien, Speaker Blaine, House Committee investigation in Vicksburg, Ames, Crosby, Board of Supervisors & bond, Grand Jury
indictments for embezzlement and forgery, African Americans, corrupt officials, Davenport, Cardoza, McCardle, Walthall, Harris,
George, Nugent. Typescript available. 21 December 1874 

Folder 16: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Grant, Republican Party, war against South,
Miller, Shannon, Governor Humphreys, McCardle, Vicksburg, Ames, Crosby, Cardoza, Davenport, Beck Randall, Yates & Linda,
Iuka Gazette & other newspapers, McKee, existence of Southern Army. Typescript available. 23 December 1874 

Folder 17: Original of photocopy letter in 13. 

Folder 18: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: previous letter, Col. McCardle, Yates & Linda,
Governor Humphreys,
Iuka Herald,
 Oxford Falcon, Calhoun newspapers,
 Southern States,
 Columbus Democrat, newspaper editors, McKee. Typescript available. 24 December 1874 

Folder 19: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar J. Randall to [Lamar], re: Republican Committee, Vicksburg
investigation, Speer & O’Brien. Typescript available. 25 December 1874 

Folder 20: Photocopy handwritten letter dated from [Lamar] in Washington, DC to Clark, re: L.J. Randall letter (from Folder
16), Vicksburg investigation, Speer & O’Brien, Crosby bond, McCardle, Hurlburt, Grant. Typescript available. 26 December 1874 

Folder 21: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Committee in Vicksburg,
Vicksburger newspaper. Typescript available. 26 December 1874 

Folder 22: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Vicksburg. Typescript available. 11 January 1875 

Folder 23: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Vicksburg, Blaine, Speer, southern outrages,
murder of African Americans, southern politics, President Grant, Reconstruction. Typescript available. 1 February 1875 

Folder 24: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from L[amar] to Clark, re: Lamar’s chairmanship of caucus, Kerr, Cox,
Randall, L.Q Washington, Banks, Payne of Ohio, Adams, Crittenden, Lamar’s chairmanship of the Committee on the Pacific Rail
Road, Holman’s Resolution, Vicksburg, Col. Basil Duke, Calhoun, Col. McCardle,
New York Times, travel to Jackson, Lamar’s election, Gibson, McCallum, Hicks, Bob Miller. Typescript available. 28 December 1875 

Folder 25: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Blanche K. Bruce from Mississippi, race relations
in Mississippi, Reconstruction, carpetbaggers, Alcorn, Vicksburg Post Office patronage, C.K. Marshall, African Americans.
Typescript available. 15 March 1877 

Folder 26: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Northern Democrats, distribution of federal
patronage, Pease, Vicksburg appointment, Edwards, Marshall, South versus North, Republicans, Evarts McCrary, President Grant,
Morton, Chamberlain, Hampton, African Americans, Reconstruction, Carl Schurz, Key, Alcorn, politics, Mexico, Cuba, Department
of State, Hayes, Blaine, Morton, Nicholls, Lamar’s health. Typescript available. 30 March 1877 

Folder 27: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Wright, next senatorial election, Democratic
Party in Mississippi, Chalmers, Gill, Vicksburg, McCardle, Hill, African Americans, Bruce, Pease, General Walthall, Sam Cox.
Typescript available. 20 February 1878 

Folder 28: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from N.L. Lamar in Oxford, MS to Clark, re: article in
Vicksburg Herald, Lamar, Parke, Mayes, Barr, “Sister Fannie,” General Walthall, family news, Mrs. Freeman. Typescript available. 1 May 1878 

Folder 29: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Mrs. Kate Freeman in Holly Springs, MS,
re: Lamar’s relationship with Freeman. Typescript available. 15 January 1879 

Folder 30: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re:
Vicksburg Herald articles, Sheppard, relief of children in Mississippi made orphans by the yellow fever,
 Sun,
 New York Star, Jefferson Davis, Dana, Montgomery Blair, Polk, Calhoun, Hunter, Mason, Gibson, Hewitt, Captain McCarthy of Richmond, VA,
Judge Black, Beck, Gordon, Thurman, Bayard, slander in newspapers, Douglass of Virginia, Wright, electoral count, Tilden,
Democratic Party, Hendricks, Randall, Hancock, election, Lamar’s upcoming political speech at medical college in New Orleans,
Vicksburg, Senate committee chairmanships, appointment of a clerk. Typescript available. 3 February 1879 

Folder 31: Photocopy handwritten letter dated from [Lamar] in Washington, DC to [Clark], re: Walthall as Bruce’s successor
in senate, Barksdale, Chalmer, Singleton, Mississippi politics, relations of Mississippi to federal government, Democratic
Party, patronage; handwritten notation from “G.Y.F.”, re: Senator Lamar, Manning, publication in
Clarion. Typescript available. 18 February 1879 

Folder 32: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar to Clark, re: Wright, publishing Lamar’s letters, private
secretaries, reporters. Typescript available. 20 February 1879 

Folder 33: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Wright, presidential appointments,
Edmunds, Vicksburg Postmaster, patronage, Bruce, Pease, Russell. Typescript available. 4 April 1879 

Folder 34: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Mississippi River Commission
bill, Brookhaven visit, Vicksburg, Lamar’s family, Mississippi canvass, Wright, Lamar’s health, General Walthall’s election
to Senate. Typescript available. 18 June 1879 

Folder 35: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Lamar’s health, political
canvass, General Walthall’s election, Edmunds, Carpenter, Cankling, silver policy, finances, banks. Typescript available. 31 August 1879 

Folder 36: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Oxford, MS to Clark, re: report of Lamar’s speech in Herald,
Jefferson’s Inaugural for second term, Lamar’s depression. Typescript available. 3 October 1879 

Folder 37: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Clark to “Gen’l” [Walthall], re: Lamar’s depression, Oxford report
of Lamar’s speech, Lamar’s house in Washington, Parke & Murray, silver question, Hirsch the lawyer, General George. Typescript
available. 4 October 1879 

Folder 38: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Grenada, MS to Clark, re: Lamar’s sick son, Yates, article
in Commercial, article of “Old Tyler” in
Holly Springs South, views of candidates for U.S. Senate, Barksdale & Singleton, greenback money, national debt, National Democratic Party Platform,
Resumption Act, instructions of state legislator, coinage of silver, General Walthall, Lamar’s conduct, Helen Jones Whitaker.
Typescript available. 26 December 1879 

Folder 39: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from L[amar] to Clark, re: above letter. 

Folder 40: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar in Grenada, MS to Clark, re: Lamar’s presence in Jackson, General
Walthall’s election to senate. Typescript available. 

Folder 41: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Oxford, MS to Clark, re: Banks, Lamar’s health, George’s
election, Barksdale, Lamar’s election loss, Cooper, Mrs. Freeman. Typescript available. 28 January 

Folder 42: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: enclosed draft payment for
Fleet Cooper, family weddings, Lamar’s health, General [Walthall], Wright, Barksdale; envelope. Typescript available. 7 March 1880 

Folder 43: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to General [Walthall], re: Otto’s case,
Kellogg case, Hill’s speech, Hampton’s report, Butler, Grant’s nomination, Blaine, Bayard, Manning, Muldraw, Tate, Shands,
Taylor, Hull, election, Yates, Howry; handwritten note by [Clark], re: Kellogg’s case & constitutional question, Boyd vs.
Ala. Typescript available. 25 May 1880 

Folder 44: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from E.C. Walthall in Grenada, MS to Clark in Vicksburg, MS, re: Clark’s
trip to Cincinnati, Bob Taylor, Judge Shafford, Lamar, Bruce, Kellogg & Louisiana, newspapers, 3 June 1880 

Folder 45: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Kellogg matter, Wright, Chalmers-Lynch
contest, elections; envelope. Typescript available. 17 December 1880 

Folder 46: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Grenada, MS to Clark, re: Lamar’s health, General [Walthall],
C[halmers] in Washington, Democrats in Washington, Garfield, Reagan, Blaine, General Woodford, Conger, Wright, National Republican
Party, Ames, Lynch’s speech, Filden campaign, differences between Lamar & Chalmers, defense of Jefferson Davis, Blair, Conkling,

New York Herald interview,
 Vicksburg Herald, 3-1/2 percent bond, taxation & public credit, 3 percent bill, General George, Clark’s family. Typescript available. 15 July 1881 

Folder 47: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Oxford, MS to Clark, re: convention, Dr. Isom, Featherston,
Lowery, Banks, Barksdale, Lamar’s election, Taylor, Holder, General [Walthall]. Typescript available. 18 August 1881 

Folder 48: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Oxford, MS to Clark in Vicksburg, MS, re: Clark’s troubles,
Lamar’s public career, health of Lamar’s wife, George’s speech, the law & lawyers. Typescript available. 12 May 1882 

Folder 49: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Cleveland, Lamar as Secretary of
the Interior, offering Clark first Assistant Secretary of the Interior, land office, Paine as Commissioner of Patents, Vicksburg
& African Americans. Typescript available. 

Folder 50: Photocopy telegram dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: authorization to make offer to Clark of Assistant
Secretary of the Interior; envelope. 20 May 1884 

Folder 51: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Clark, re: Clark in Washington; envelope. 2 March 1885 

Folder 52: Photocopy handwritten letter dated from Clark in Jackson, MS to Carey Clark, re: Lamar’s offer of Assistant Secretary
of the Interior to Clark, appointment of Lamar’s successor in Senate. 6 March 188[5] 

Folder 53: Photocopy telegram dated from Lamar to Mrs. Carey Freeman, re: confirmation of Clark as Assistant Secretary of
the Interior. 18 March 1885 

Folder 54: Photocopy telegram dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to G.M. Freeman, re: Clark’s health; envelope. 18 March 188[5] 

Folder 55: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to “My dear Grand-daughter” [Mary Mayes],
re: family news, Mary’s classes, Lamar’s grandchildren. 15 April 1881 

Folder 56: Photocopy handwritten letter signed dated from Lamar in Washington, DC to Mary [Mayes] in Oxford, MS, re: family,
Washington, game chickens & pheasants; envelope. 5 May 1881 

Folder 57: Photocopy engraved announcement from Lamar & wife of the marriage of their daughter Jennie Longstreet to William
Harmony Lamar on ; envelope addressed to Mrs. Cary Clark in Holly Springs, MS. 21 July 1887 

Folder 58: Photocopy handwritten letter signed from Tillie Marshall to Clark, re: attendance at event; envelope addressed
to Cary A. Freeman in Holly Springs, MS. 

Folder 59: Newspaper clipping of E.C. Walthall’s “A Beautiful Tribute to the Memory of the Late Justice Lamar.” 

Folder 60: Newspaper clipping “Washington. The Debate on the Chandler Resolution in the Senate. The People of Mississippi
Warmly Defended by Senators Walthall and George. The Whole Matter Regarded as a Conspiracy against Mr. Lamar. All Doubts of
His Confirmation Removed.” 

Folder 61: Newspaper clipping “Mississippi. General Walthall Withdraws His Name from before the Democratic Caucus – General
George Is Then Substituted. Two Ballots Taken – Barksdale Still in the Lead – The Ship Island Road – J.L. Powers Is Elected
State Printer.” 

Folder 62: Newspaper clipping “Senator Lamar,” re: Lamar’s support of General Walthall in election. 

Folder 63: Newspaper clipping “Gen. E.C. Walthall,” re: transcript of private letter from Lamar on Walthall. 

Folder 64: Newspaper clipping “The Clarion’s Bottled Wrath against Lamar. The Nature and Quality of It. And the Extent of
the Offence.” Jackson, MS
Comet (). 27 January 1880 

Box 7 

Folder 1: Gov. Winthrop Sargent. Photocopied information on MS governor from Sargent family 

Folder 2: Christopher Longest. Dissertation from University of Chicago, 1914 on Robert Southey 

Folder 3: A.B. Longstreet. Printed copy of inaugural address, 1840, Emory College, Atlanta, GA 

Folder 4: Oration, 1809 Photocopy of printed text. Speaker unknown. Auditors unknown. Possibly South Carolina 

Folder 5: Mrs. John R. Rayburn. Photocopied Correspondence, 1971. Information on Vanderbilt and Emory Universities and Dr.
Alexander Means 

Folder 6: Peter Patterson. 1844 Math ledger and biographical information (1 of 2) 

Folder 7: Peter Patterson. 1844 Math ledger and biographical information (2 of 2) 

Folder 8: Eleanor Richmond. Newspapers, 1902-1911, with articles on Woodrow Wilson 

Folder 9: North Mississippi Presbyterian College. Two catalogues, photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society, 1897
and 1899 

Folder 10: General Charles Nelms. Papers, 1849-1885. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society. Bills of sale (slaves),
accounts and letters 

Folder 11: Pass Christian Institute. Catalogue, 1887-1889, photocopied from Clark Museum, Holly Springs 

Folder 12: Harriet S. Pegues. Daybook, 1848. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society. 

Folder 13: Josiah M. Stephenson. Case #768, Congressiona, 1871. Claim of Stephenson concerning appropriation of private property
by U.S. Army. 

Folder 14: [No Folder] 

Folder 15: Alfred H. Stone. Information sheet related to inventory. 

Folder 16: Alfred H. Stone. Biographical information sheet 

Folder 17: Alfred H. Stone. “Abstracts”, a Civil War diary (original) and typescript page of information 

Folder 18: Alfred H. Stone. Writings on African-Americans in the South. (1 of 5) 

Folder 19: Alfred H. Stone. Writings on African-Americans in the South. (2 of 5) 

Folder 20: Alfred H. Stone. Writings on African-Americans in the South. (3 of 5) 

Folder 21: Alfred H. Stone. Writings on African-Americans in the South. (4 of 5) 

Folder 22: Alfred H. Stone. Writings on African-Americans in the South. (5 of 5) 

Folder 23: Alfred H. Stone. Article entitled “Political Effects of the War”. 

Folder 24: Alfred H. Stone. Reprint of article entitled “Civil Rights, States Rights, and Reconstruction”. 

Folder 25: Alfred H. Stone. Article concerning the French Treat with America of 1778 (original). 

Folder 26: Alfred H. Stone. Article entitled “A South Carolina Rice Plantation”. 

Folder 27: Alfred H. Stone. Miscellaneous writings, articles, and booklets. 

Folder 28: Lt. Jesse Roderick Sparkman. Typescript Diary, 17 June 1861 – 31 May 1865. Typescript Jeff Davis Legion 

Box 8 

Folder 1: Belle Strickland. Diary, 1864-1869, 1871-1877. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society (1 of 4) 

Folder 2: Belle Strickland. Diary, 1864-1869, 1871-1877. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society (2 of 4) 

Folder 3: Belle Strickland. Diary, 1864-1869, 1871-1877. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society (3 of 4) 

Folder 4: Belle Strickland. Diary, 1864-1869, 1871-1877. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society (4 of 4) 

Folder 5: A.J. Tully. Miscellaneous papers, 1849-1860 and 20th century business letters. Reproduction of sheet music for “Dixie’s
Land”, signed by Daniel Emmett 

Folder 6: Alfred H. Stoner. Sheet of biographical information 

Folder 7: Alfred H. Stoner. Handwritten notebook (original). “Revealment of Hamlet” 

Folder 8: Alfred H. Stoner. Typed manuscript on Shakespeare. 

Folder 9: Alfred H. Stoner. Manuscript and letters on Shakespeare. 

Folder 10: Alfred H. Stoner. Book review article from
The Clarion Ledger, 24 July 1955. 

Folder 11: Edward A. Thorne. Letters, 1862-1864. Photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society 

Folder 12: Gen. Absalom West. Papers, 1857 – 1870, photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society. Letters, Civil War records,
MS Central railroad papers (1 of 2) 

Folder 13: Gen. Absalom West. Papers, 1857 – 1870, photocopied from Holly Springs Historical Society. Letters, Civil War records,
MS Central railroad papers (2 of 2) 

Folder 14: Charles Stubblefield. 1853-1856 and 1939-1943, Photocopies of Bilbo letters 

Folder 15: Charles Stubblefield. Manuscripts (photocopies) 

Box 9 

Folder 1: Robert D. Webb. Family record , published 1894. 

Folder 2: William H. Wilson. Typescript of article titled “Wagonyard,” with references to Mississippi, [1960]. 

Folder 3: Ann Caufield Winston. Manuscript for “Climbin’ Up De Golden Stair” 

Folder 4: Yellow Fever epidemic, 1878 Photocopies of newspaper account of 1878 epidemic in Holly Springs. Newspaper accounts
of epidemic in Jackson area, 1897 

Folder 5: Galli Campi/Cliff Robertson. A.L.S. Campi to Robertson, 1956 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1977 

Box 1 

Folder 1: William E. Duncan. Typescripts of Civil Wars letters, 1861-1863 

Folder 2: Civil War Rosters (Reprints): Lafayette Guards, Lamar Rifles, University Greys 

Folder 3: R.A. McLemore. Galley of McLemore’s
History of Mississippi, Volume II, pp. 123-571 (1 of 4) 

Folder 4: R.A. McLemore. Galley of McLemore’s
History of Mississippi, Volume II, pp. 123-571 (2 of 4) 

Folder 5: R.A. McLemore. Galley of McLemore’s
History of Mississippi, Volume II, pp. 123-571 (3 of 4) 

Folder 6: R.A. McLemore. Galley of McLemore’s
History of Mississippi, Volume II, pp. 123-571 (4 of 4) 

Folder 7: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; first section – letter, doctor’s notes, checks 

Folder 8: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; second section – book-keeping, notes, papers 

Folder 9: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; third section – document of railroad company (photocopy) 

Folder 10: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; fourth section – genealogy; Senatobia Centennial Program (photocopies) 

Folder 11: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; fifth section – Tate County Chancery Court documents (photocopies) 

Folder 12: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; sixth section – Panola County Chancery Court documents (photocopies) 

Folder 13: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; seventh section – Tate County Deed of Trust (photocopies) 

Folder 14: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; eighth section – Pontotoc County Deed of Conveyance (photocopies) 

Folder 15: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; ninth section – Pontotoc County Deed 1881 (photocopies) 

Folder 16: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; tenth section – Tate County, Indenture 1874, 1890 (photocopies) 

Folder 17: Hunter Family. Genealogical material; eleventh section – Panola County, Deed of Trust and Indenture 1883 (photocopies) 

Folder 18: Hunter Family. New Additions – 7 June 1984 (photocopies) 

Folder 19: John C. Cameron. Autograph manuscript, 1874, of address delivered on becoming superintendent of Sabbath School
& Letters pertaining to donations. Manuscript – 1874. 

Folder 20: James Boyd Campbell. Newcomen Society speech “For the Public Good” and related papers, 1963-1964 

Folder 21: Turner Catledge. Typescript of 2 March 1967 speech at University of Arizona 

Folder 22: [No Folder] 

Folder 23: Sheffield Clark, Jr. Manuscript “Saga of the Chickasaws” (typescript) 

Folder 24: [No Folder] 

Folder 25: A.F. Farnsley. Autograph letter, signed, 1856-1858 (original) 

Folder 26: [No Folder] 

Folder 27: Jefferson Davis. Xeroxed letter – 1869 

Folder 28: [No Folder] 

Folder 29: T.F. Dibdin. Autograph letter signed, 1822 (original) 

Folder 30: John Duncan. 1868 Diary (Jackson, MS) and letters in typescript (original) 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Elmer V. Adams. Family history / background information, pictures (xeroxes), postcard (original), and letters (original) 

Folder 2: Betty Allen. Transcripts of notes of Dorothy Oldham re: to Betty Allen and property rights of married women in 1839 

Folder 3: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (1 of
7) 

General note

Several letters in these 7 folders mention author Joseph H. Ingram (ALS 1855)

Folder 4: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (2 of
7) 

Folder 5: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (3 of
7) 

Folder 6: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (4 of
7) 

Folder 7: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (5 of
7) 

Folder 8: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (6 of
7) 

Folder 9: David H. Bishop. Correspondence from 1908 (typescript and handwritten, envelopes, and Postmaster receipt). (7 of
7) 

Folder 10: David H. Bishop. Essay on Wordsworth’s “Tintern Alley” (typescript) [1953?] 

Folder 11: Nathaniel and Noel Bouton. Letters, 1845 (photocopies) 

Folder 12: Rufus Breland. Two letters to Breland, 1906 from Wiggins, MS. Family letters (originals) 

Folder 13: [No Folder] 

Folder 14: Dr. W.H. Anderson. Correspondence and photocopied text for “When Old Tucker Made History” 

Folder 15: A.B. Amis. Typed manuscript “Two Great Land Trades” and photocopied biographical information. 

Folder 16: Fred Zollicoffer Browne. Typescripts of “Heroic Death in Battle of Confederate General Felix Kirk Zollicoffer”,
“Segregation or Integration – which?” and “The University Greys”. Also, photocopied biographical information 

Folder 17: Maude Morrow Brown. Autograph manuscript of “William C. Faulkner, Man of Legends,”
Georgia Review, Volume 10, pp. 421-438. 

Folder 18: Maude Morrow Brown. Handwritten manuscript of “Shakespeare’s Art in the Use of Dialects” (bound booklet) 

Folder 19: Maude Morrow Brown. Original Correspondence, 1921 

Folder 20: Maude Morrow Brown. Typescript of “Longstreet and Womenfolks” 

Folder 21: Wittner Bynner. ALS, 1913 and 1915. Announcement, 1927 re: poetry prize 

Folder 22: [No Folder] 

Folder 23: William C. Byers. Letter from Civil War prison, Rock Island, Illinois, 1864 

Folder 24: John C. Hall. “You Are Drafted – Period” (typescript). History of WWII Draftee, copyright 1948 

Folder 25: Mrs. John H. Hurd. Poem: “Mississippi”, 29 October 1959 (typescript) 

Folder 26: Charlie Kendrick. Typescript of Civil War letter, 1863 (camp on Rapidan two miles below Racoon Ford) 

Folder 27: Edward McCrady. “The Charleston Museum: Its Origin and History” manuscript (typescript) 

Folder 28: MS State Teachers Association. Proceedings, 1877. Delegates listed 

Folder 29: Dr. Hillary Moseley. Journal of personal Civil War experiences (typescript) 

Folder 30: Robert Muldoon. 1870, Letter from Muldoon to his wife, Oxford. (original & photocopy) with envelope. 

Folder 31: Brigadier General Joseph Stockton. Excerpts from Civil War diary, US Army. Oxford and university material (typescript) 

Folder 32: W.L. Kennon. “A Tribute to the Womanhood of the Confederacy” speech (typescript) 

Folder 33: P.H. Wright, Sr. Photocopy of article containing info on the life of captured Confederates at Rock Island prison 

Folder 34: William Wordsworth. Typed copy of letter from Wordsworth to S.S. Prentiss, 23 March 1843 

Box 3 

Folder 1: Gus J. Requardt. Typescript of journey through Mississippi, 14 June 1968 with envelope 

Folder 2: Lillian Fort Meeks. Autograph copies of poetry 

Folder 3: Mississippi 150 Years Ago (typescript). Re: Mississippi in 1817. [Author Unknown] 

Folder 4: Charles Seidenglory. Promise of payment, bill of sale and check, 1884-1891 

Folder 5: Francis B. Sayre. ALS by daughter of Woodrow Wilson evaluating works about him, 1920 

Folder 6: M.D.L. Stephens. Photocopied information on Col. Stephens of the 31st Mississippi Regiment and the Battle of Franklin,
1864 

Folder 7: Pioneer Teachers. Bibliographical information concerning early school teachers in Mississippi 

Folder 8: E. Strickland. Manuscript of “Power of Emotion” (typescript) 

Folder 9: Henry Van Dyke. Correspondence from Van Dyke to Mrs. L.M. Montgomery regarding her manuscript, 6 February 1933. 

Folder 10: “Steamboat Bill”. Words as sung by Mrs. John Pearson, Jr. of Rosedale, MS. 

Folder 11: J.D Whitney. #1 of a set. Original letter from Whitney dated 1849 (Boston, MA) 

General note

No Folder (#2 in Whitney materials)

Folder 13: J.D Whitney. #3 of a set. Original letter from Whitney dated 1849 (Boston, MA) 

Folder 14: J.D Whitney. #4 of a set. Photocopied letter from Whitney dated 1849 (Boston, MA) 

Folder 15: E.R. Beadle. Original letter dated 10 February 1849. 

Folder 16: E.R. Beadle. Xerox of letter dated 10 February 1849. 

Folder 17: Frederick Sullens, editor of
Jackson Daily News. Autograph. 

Folder 18: Sgt. Wood and Order. Order issued in Natchez, 23 June 1845, requiring Wood to collect money for napsacks 

Folder 19: J.H. Fox. “A Plea for Feeble Minded Children” photocopied booklet. Biographical info on Fox. 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1978 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Order of the Eastern Star. Minutes, 1842 of John Cain Lodgue (1872-1889). (Original) 

Folder 2: 1890 Constitutional Convention of Mississippi. Autograph book with signatures of delegates (original) 

Folder 3-6: [No Folder] 

Folder 7: Pearl S. Buck. Correspondence and article in which Buck discusses her relatives in Mississippi, 1972 (typescript
and photocopy) 

Folder 8: Ida Campbell. Presbyterian Female Collegiate Institute, Pontotoc (school record). Proof of military service for
John Campbell in Civil War from MS Archive 

General note

Original UM Commencement Program, 26 June 1873, was moved to UMSMMSS b14

Folder 9: [No Folder] 

Folder 10: Frederick Conn, Yazoo City, MS. Humanitarian Service Records and Correspondence about Mr. Conn. 

Folder 11: Confederate Half Dollar. Typescript historical notes on coin. 

Folder 12: Alice M. DeBiere donations. Misc. war documents from Kentucky, dated 1861 and 1907. (Originals) 

Folder 13: Alice M. DeBiere donations. Newspaper clippings and envelopes. (Originals) 

Folder 14-16: [No Folder] 

Folder 17: John H. Petrea. Civil War Letter, 20 September 1862. 

Folder 18: John H. Petrea. Civil War Letter, 27 May 1863. 

Folder 19: Red Springs Mineral Water broadside. 1912 typescript advertising the medicinal / health benefits of the water from
springs near Stewart, MS 

Folder 20: Stamp commemorating the 150 anniversary of Mississippi statehood, 1967. 

Folder 21: Alonzo Phelps. Information and poem about “The Rob Roy of MS”. Phelps was shot and killed by sheriff in 1834 

Folder 22: “Vicksburg Round the Bend”. Folksong sheet music. 

Folder 23: Phil Stone. First grade poetry exercises (typescript) 

Folder 24: Phil Stone. Baby book with christening announcement, 1940 

Folder 25: C.L. Marquette. Maps by John Faulkner with American History I instructions on reverse. 

Folder 26: Dodge’s Perfect Plow. 1868 advertisement and testimonials 

Folder 27: Confederate Money. Facsimile of $500 note. 

Folder 28: Letter. Samuel C. Burr, Clerk of the Committee, invites the “Board of Directors” to accompany the Mayor in meeting
with Jefferson Davis during his visit to Boston, 1858 (original) 

Folder 29: French armband and postcards (originals). Undated. 

Folder 30: J.G. Deupree. Clippings: letters written to MS newspapers shortly after Civil War. One clipping, 1862, concerns
Confederate Ironclad Merrimac 

Folder 31: H.A. McGusty. Photocopy of Sketches on My Plantation published in MS, 1915 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Lathrop & Wilkinson Catalogue. Lathrop and Wilkinson sales catalogue, 1860. Contains fold- out map of Manhattan
and remedies for various illnesses. Original leatherbound book. 

Folder 2: Sanders Taylor. Real estate deed, Marshall County c. 1840. 

Folder 3: Sanders Taylor. Deed of gift, signed by President Tyler’s secretary c. 1844. 

Folder 4: Union Female College. Programs from various exercises, UFC, Oxford, MS 1877-1880 

Folder 5: Andrew Marschalk. Photocopies of “Orphan Boy” and “Galley Slave” putatively pub. by Marschalk 

Folder 6: Ray Fulton. Publications and materials regarding history of Kemper County, MS. (1 of 6) 

Folder 7: Ray Fulton. Publications and materials regarding history of Kemper County, MS. (2 of 6) 

Folder 8: Ray Fulton. Publications and materials regarding history of Kemper County, MS. (3 of 6) 

Folder 9: Ray Fulton. Publications and materials regarding history of Kemper County, MS. (4 of 6) 

Folder 10: Ray Fulton. Publications and materials regarding history of Kemper County, MS. (5 of 6) 

Folder 11: Ray Fulton. Publications and materials regarding history of Kemper County, MS. (6 of 6) 

Folder 12: Jefferson Davis. Photocopied materials related to affairs after the war, 1866-1867. 

Folder 13: Henry S. Clubb. Typescripts of Civil War letters from Union Captain, Clubb of Michigan. 

Folder 14: French Essay. Handwritten essay in French concerning Catholic schools in the 19th century 

Folder 15: John F. Kennedy. Original teletape from Lexington, Mississippi radio station re: JFK assassination 

Folder 16: [No Folder] 

Folder 17: Farmers Almanac, A.L. Scovill & Co., 1864. 

Folder 18: German Ledger, Unidentified, Undated 

Box 3 

Folder 1: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (1 of 13) 

Folder 2: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (2 of 13) 

Folder 3: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (3 of 13) 

Folder 4: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (4 of 13) 

Folder 5: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (5 of 13) 

Folder 6: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (6 of 13) 

Folder 7: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (7 of 13) 

Folder 8: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (8 of 13) 

Folder 9: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (9 of 13) 

Folder 10: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (10 of 13) 

Folder 11: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (11 of 13) 

Folder 12: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (12 of 13) 

Folder 13: Ed King. Manuscript on Civil Rights movement in MS and related materials (13 of 13) 

Box 4 

Folder 1: Walter Wilson Murphy. Family papers of Smith-Jarratt and Allied families. (1 of 2) 

General note

Badly water damaged

Folder 2: Walter Wilson Murphy. Family papers of Smith-Jarratt and Allied families. (2 of 2) 

Folder 3: M.P. Lowery. Scrapbooks containing clippings concerning Gen. Lowery, Gen. W. T. Sherman the Whitten Family, and
others. (2 books. Green & Black) 

General note

Photocopies housed in 1978.7f14-f15

Box 5 

Folder 1: A.E. Moore. Letter to A. Withers dated 6 January 1874. Original and photocopy. 

Folder 2: Robert Augustus Moore. Diary. Volume I 

General note

Digitized in the Civil War Archive

Folder 3: Robert Augustus Moore. Diary. Volume II 

General note

Digitized in the Civil War Archive

Folder 4: Robert Augustus Moore. Diary. Volume III 

General note

Digitized in the Civil War Archive

Folder 5: Lizzie Craft Diary. Civil War diary, Holly Springs, MS, and related materials describing contents 

Folder 6: Marvel Ramey Sisk. Typed essay “Crime Drama in Oxford” by Sisk c. 1971 (photocopy). 

Folder 7: M.O. Falkner. Receipt signed by Falkner, 1922 

Folder 8: Judge and Mrs. J.W. Clapp. Account of travels in Cuba and Holly Springs, MS. 

Folder 9: Hugh Lawson Bedford. “Idle Pastime” poetry volume. Handwritten. 1856-1861. 

Folder 10: Judge and Mrs. J.W. Clapp. Address to Franklin Female College, 1873. Photocopies. 

Folder 11: Judge and Mrs. J.W. Clapp. Public addresses in Holly Springs, MS and Memphis, TN, 1840. 

Box 6 

Folder 1: Emily Morrison Boundurant. Remoiniscenes of life, 1946. (In binder) 

Folder 2: W.J. Cunningham and the Galloway Church, “Agony at Galloway”. Documents related to inventory and donation. 

Folder 3: W.J. Cunningham and the Galloway Church, “Agony at Galloway”. Miscellaneous Correspondence. 

Folder 4: W.J. Cunningham and the Galloway Church, “Agony at Galloway”. Clippings related to Cunningham and the Galloway Church
& Civil Rights movement. 

Folder 5: W.J. Cunningham and the Galloway Church, “Agony at Galloway”. Documents related to the Galloway Church & Civil Rights
movement. 

Folder 6: D.H. Miller. Xeroxes of letters. 

Folder 7: D.H. Miller. Handwritten copy of letters (not the original copy). 

Folder 8: D.H. Miller. Original letter from Miller to a friend in Indiana from Camp Vicksburg, 14 August 1863. 

Folder 9: D.H. Miller. Original letter dated 2 June 1863. 

Folder 10: J. Thompson. Photocopy of typed letter from Thompson to Walter Goodman and Richard Bolton dated 5 February 1838. 

Folder 11: John Pilkington. Folio cut galleys of Pilkington’s
Henry Blake Fuller, 1970. Original. 

Folder 12: Groucho Marx. Letter to Mrs. John Williford of Oxford, 7 March 1968. Laminated original with envelope. 

Folder 13: William Heath. Revolutionary War letter, 26 December 1781. Original. 

Folder 14: Oscar F. Bledsoe. Typed letter, October 1951, concerning segregation. 

Folder 15: William Bowden. Letter to his sister. Dated 1864. Typescript. 

Folder 16: W.R. Burris. Civil war letters written by his father (original) and photocopies of biographical information and
letters, 1865. 

Folder 17: Rosa L. Ingraham. ALS from Ingraham to Mrs. John B. Gray re: death of Col. Prentiss Ingraham. 

Folder 18: Hill’s Southern Almanac. Original booklet. Dated 1919. 

Folder 19: Samuel Dewoody. Civil War Loyalty Oath. Dated 1965. 

Folder 20: U.S.S. Mississippi. 1909 Itinerary (original booklet) 

Folder 21: Robert E. Lee. Letter to S.W. Sommerville, 28 June 1870. Original. 

Folder 22: J.V. Harris. Civil War telegram, 1863 (facsimile) 

Folder 23: J.S. Hartin. Letter to Dr. Hartin re: Mr. Dozier, whose books were sent to Dr. Hartin. Written by Mr. Dozier’s
granddaughter. 11 July 1962. Original. 

Folder 24: William Heath. Revolutionary War letter dated 26 December 1781. Typed transcript. 

Folder 25: William Heath. Typescript Correspondence describing his life and role in Revolutionary War. 

Folder 26: Henry Daggett Boch. “An Essay on the Use and Advantages of the Fine Arts”. Original. 

Folder 27: Lowndes County, Mississippi. Broadsheet from Winston Realty Co., Undated 

Folder 28: Walter Malone. “Opportunity,” a poem by Mr. Malone. Original. 

Folder 29: Mississippi Official State Song. Pamphlet announcing the adoption of “Go Mississippi” as the state song, 1962,
in
The Bel Tel News. Original. 

Folder 30: Civil War Letter. Notifiying Union occupation of Mississippi, 1865. Special Orders #127. 

Folder 31: T.V. Noland. Copy of letter to his daughter dated 22 September 1907. Typed copy. 

Folder 32: Civil War notice. General Orders No. 123 – Release of all Confederate Prisoners of War, 1863. 

Folder 33: Otto H.F. Vollbehr. Memorandum No. 11 – “Message from Appomattox,” 1936. Offering of Peace during Civil War 

Box 7 

Folder 1: Duncan McCall. Copy of document appointing McCall to 1st Lieutenant of Mississippi Territory, 1814. 

Folder 2: Duncan McCall. Copy of document appointing McCall Associate Justice, 1824. 

Folder 3: Duncan McCall. Copy of document appointing McCall to Quartermaster, 1820. 

Folder 4: S.H. Clark, Attalaville, MS planter. Miscellaneous business papers. Dated 1855-1873. Originals. (1 of 4) 

Folder 5: S.H. Clark, Attalaville, MS planter. Miscellaneous business papers. Dated 1855-1873. Originals. (2 of 4) 

Folder 6: S.H. Clark, Attalaville, MS planter. Miscellaneous business papers. Dated 1855-1873. Originals. (3 of 4) 

Folder 7: S.H. Clark, Attalaville, MS planter. Miscellaneous business papers. Dated 1855-1873. Originals. (4 of 4) 

Folder 8: Mississippi / Oxford Women’s Book Club booklet, 1921-1923. 

General note

Two items have been removed for cataloging. Remaining item is: Year Book. Progressive Study Club. Ensley, Alabama, 1921-1922

Folder 9: Artesian Water Company of Mtitleis, Tennessee. Pamphlet of report by Company, 1888. Original. 

Folder 10:
Southern Business Educator. Pamphlet, 1911. Original. 

Folder 11: Tobacco advertisment. Lithograph c. 1880. 

Folder 12: Rebel States Envelopes. For MS, AL, FL, and SC. 

Folder 13: University Training School. Miscellaneous documents and pamphlets, 1907-1909. Originals. 

Folder 14: M.P. Lowery Brown Scrapbook photocopies (original housed in 1978.4) 

Folder 15: M.P. Lowery Green Scrapbook photocopies (original housed in 1978.4) 

Folder 16: F.B. Furr. Business ledger. “F. & H.”, 1893. Original. 

Oversize 

Folder 1: “The Future Relations of North and South” in the
New England Loyal Publication Society 

Scope and Contents note

Copy of article in the January 26, 1866 edition of the
New England Loyal Publication Society The article addresses the issues surrounding the Reunification of United States after the Civil War.

Folder 2: “Meet Barry Goldwater” from the 1960 Presidential Informational campaign newspaper published by The Republican National
Campaign Committee to elected Barry Goldwater and Bill Miller. The publication contains photos, articles, interviews, and
advertisements for Barry Goldwater’s campaign 

Folder 3: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (1
of 8) 

Folder 4: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (2
of 8) 

Folder 5: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (3
of 8) 

Folder 6: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (4
of 8) 

Folder 7: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (5
of 8) 

Folder 8: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (6
of 8) 

Folder 9: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (7
of 8) 

Folder 10: Senator Kennedy’s 1976 Re-Election Petition Re-nomination petition for Edward M. Kennedy, Democratic Party candidate
for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. The document contains signatures and addresses of Massachusetts residents in 1976 (8
of 8) 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1979 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Aaron Burr. Character sketch of Burr, by Judge George Adams, Undated (original and Photocopy) (1 of 2) 

Folder 2: Aaron Burr. Character sketch of Burr, by Judge George Adams, Undated (original and Photocopy) (2 of 2) 

Folder 3: Lectures notes, unidentified, 1924. (1 of 2) 

Folder 4: Lectures notes, unidentified, 1924. (2 of 2) 

Folder 5: A.B. Cullen.Typed essay on Mississippi Waterways, 1965. 

Folder 6: Louis Cochran Papers – Correspondence 1931.
Collection removed from Small Manuscripts, available:
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00950/
 

Folder 7: Goodloe Warren Buford. Diary, of Buford, from NE MS, 1850 (photocopied typescript). (1 of 4) 

Folder 8: Goodloe Warren Buford. Diary, of Buford, from NE MS, 1850 (photocopied typescript). (2 of 4) 

Folder 9: Goodloe Warren Buford. Diary, of Buford, from NE MS, 1850 (photocopied typescript). (3 of 4) 

Folder 10: Goodloe Warren Buford. Diary, of Buford, from NE MS, 1850 (photocopied typescript). (4 of 4) 

Folder 11: Carla Callaway. “The Successful Experiment: The Establishment and Early Years of Coeducation at the Univ. of MS.
1882-1906”. Typescript paper dated 8 May 1978. 

Folder 12: Prize Poems. Original newspaper clippings related to prizes. Fifteen total clippings. Dated 1910s and 1920s. 

Folder 13: Exercise Books, unidentified, 1854 and 1856 (1 of 2) 

Folder 14: Exercise Books, unidentified, 1854 and 1856 (2 of 2) 

Folder 15: I.M. Partridge. Correspondence and writings, 1850s (1 of 4) 

Folder 16: I.M. Partridge. Correspondence and writings, 1850s (2 of 4) 

Folder 17: I.M. Partridge. Correspondence and writings, 1850s (3 of 4) 

IFolder 18: .M. Partridge. Correspondence and writings, 1850s (4 of 4) 

Folder 19: Daniel Brent. Daniel Brent / Thomas Braidwood letters, 1818 (1 of 2) 

Folder 20: Daniel Brent. Daniel Brent / Thomas Braidwood letters, 1818 (2 of 2) 

Folder 21: Calvin Brown. Archaeological photographs, submissions for poetry contest, and clippings, 1920s. Photos and negatives
removed to Collection Photographs. 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Margaret Galloway. Cookbooks/Scrapbook kept by Margaret Galloway, 1896; one published by the Methodist Ladies of
Oxford (1 of 2) 

Folder 2: [Empty Folder] 

Folder 3: Margaret Galloway. Cookbooks/Scrapbook kept by Margaret Galloway, 1896; one published by the Methodist Ladies of
Oxford. (2 of 2) 

Folder 4:
Military Annals of Mississippi. Typescript of pages from annals (1 of 3) 

Folder 5:
Military Annals of Mississippi. Typescript of pages from annals (2 of 3) 

Folder 6:
Military Annals of Mississippi. Typescript of pages from annals (3 of 3) 

Folder 7: Lafayette County, Mississippi. Carbon copy of “Some Early History of Lafayette County,” compiled by the David Reese,
D.A.R. Chapter, 1944 (1 of 3) 

Folder 8: Lafayette County, Mississippi. Carbon copy of “Some Early History of Lafayette County,” compiled by the David Reese,
D.A.R. Chapter, 1944 (2 of 3) 

Folder 9: Lafayette County, Mississippi. Carbon copy of “Some Early History of Lafayette County,” compiled by the David Reese,
D.A.R. Chapter, 1944 (3 of 3) 

Folder 10: John Dollard. Miscellaneous clippings, letters and documents. 

Folder 11: Eva Ellzey. Freedom Foundation Award. 

Folder 12: Vachez Lindsay. “American Billboards to the Sky” poetry collection. 

Box 3 

Folder 1: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (1 of 8) 

Folder 2: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (2 of 8) 

Folder 3: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (3 of 8) 

Folder 4: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (4 of 8) 

Folder 5: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (5 of 8) 

Folder 6: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (6 of 8) 

Folder 7: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (7 of 8) 

Folder 8: Minnie Holt. Typed manuscript and photocopies of Holt, “History of Oxford and Lafayette County” (8 of 8) 

Folder 9: Emergency Conservation Work. Camp reports of Oxford, MS camps. Xeroxes. 

Folder 10: W.J.B. Lonsdale, Asst. Commissioner of Immigration. ALS. W.J.B. Lonsdale, ca. 1875. 

Folder 11: Caroline Millis. Application for Confederate Widow’s Pension. Dated 1892. 

Folder 12: Varina Howell Davis. A.L.S. Davis to Mrs. Gregory, 16 January 1893 (original and transcription). 1 folder. 

Folder 13: Noah Farnham Morrison. Catalog of books and pamphlets re: The American Civil War and Slavery, circa 1900. 

Folder 14: Charles A. Lindbergh. “Program from Complimentary Dinner to Captain Charles A. Lindbergh”, London, 1927. 

Folder 15: University of Alabama. Pamphlet concerning organization of UA, 1871. 

Folder 16: Homestead Exemption. Application for Homestead exemption filed by Fulton Abney, Toccopola, MS, 1942. 

Folder 17: W.P. Meriwether. Presidential pardon, signed by Andrew Johnson (photocopy), 1865. 

Folder 18: Book of Presidents. Scrapbook kept by [Nellie] O’Callaghan, 1889 with clippings regarding U.S. Presidents. 

Folder 19: John Perkins. Journal kept by Perkins, Professor in the Theological Seminary, Presbyterian Church, Columbia, S.C.,
1868 Loose. 

Box 4 

Folder 1: Iranian Revoltion. Broadside, “The Iranian Islamic Revolution: An Appeal to the American People,” circa 1979. 

Folder 2: “My Pauline”. drawings by William Preachen 

General note

Removed for cataloging : Pauline Francis Stephens. “The Blow Off,” poem by Stephens, 1973

Folder 3: Eric Washington. Invitation in French to wedding, 1973. 

Folder 4: Franklin Square Library. Newspaper, 1888. 

Folder 5: Order of the Eastern Star. Miscellaneous papers, 1925. 

Folder 6: J.D. Henderson, Justice of the Peace. Miscellaneous documents, 1895-1926 (1 of 3) 

Folder 7: J.D. Henderson, Justice of the Peace. Miscellaneous documents, 1895-1926 (2 of 3) 

Folder 8: J.D. Henderson, Justice of the Peace. Miscellaneous documents, 1895-1926 (3 of 3) 

Folder 9: Hal Freeland. Xerox of ancestor’s marriage license. 

Folder 10: Notice of Sale of Land & Negroes. Photocopy (1 page) Notice of sale of 1383 acres of land, 25 people, seven mules,
farming utensils, stock hogs, corn, fodder, etc. on April 17 and 18, 1837, “at the Clark Plantation, on Woodson’s Ridge, six
miles north-east of Oxford.”. 

Folder 11: Reverend Ike Newsletter. Printed newsletter, 4 pages, and 4 printed “God’s Blessing BankChecks.” This is a marketing
tool from Reverend Ike’s Prayer Tower, G. P. O. Box 50, New York, NY. 10001. By filling out the God’s Blessing BankChecks
and sending a donation, Rev. Ike can make your prayers come true. 

Folder 12: Investigation by the Senate of the State of Printed booklet. 501 pages. “It is the subject of notorious Mississippi
of the Charges of Bribery in the rumor that Senator (Theo. G.) Bilbo has stated that he Election of a United States Senator,
Session received from L. C. Dulaney a sum of money as a bribe for his vote in the recent Senatorial caucus of 1910. 

Folder 13: Oxford, Mississippi Ridicule. July 27, 1878. Printed document. 4 pages. Vol. 1, No. 1 of a presumably comedic newspaper. 

Oversize 

Box 5 

Folder 1: The Stars and Stripes, November 15, 1918, May 2, 1919, May 23, 1919, May 30, 1919, June 6, 1919, June 13, 1919 (pictorial
supplement) 

Folder 2: New York Herald (Paris edition), November 12, 1918, November 26, 1918, December 14, 1918, December 15, 1918, February
20, 1919, May 2, 1919, May 30, 1919, and June 24, 1919 

Folder 3: Excelsior, July 15, 1919 

Folder 4: Chicago Tribune (Paris edition), November 14, 1918, June 24, 1919, and July 15, 1919 

Folder 5: Natchez Democrat, May 8, 1919 

Box 6 

Folder 1: “Carriers’ address to the patrons of the Vicksburg Carriers’ address printed on a pink, silk cloth. Dated January
1, 1862. Daily Whig” 

Folder 2: Muster Roll of the 27th Mississippi Infantry Contains a short history of the company along with an original muster
roll. (1) History of the “27th Miss. Vols.” (2) The muster roll reads ” Muster Roll of Colonel ? A. Campbell from the 30th
day of April 1863, when last mustered, to the 30th day of June, 1863; Company 6 of the 27th Regiment of Miss. Vols.” 

Folder 3: J.D. Henderson-Justice of the Peace Certificate Document certifying that J.D. Henderson was elected as Justice of
the Peace in Yazoo County, December 13, 1919 

Folder 4: Platform of Charles Scott Two copies of “Platform of Charles Scott; Regards Governorship the highest honor, and
when his term shall expire, will devote remainder of his life to agriculture. Will give Practical Business and Non-fac-tional
Administration. He Belongs to No Man or Set of Men, and Will Favor Liberal Appropriations for the Education of the White Boys
and Girls of the State.” 

Folder 5: William T. Allen Collection Various payroll records from the Civil War. (1) Piece of envelope from the “Official
Records of the Union and Confederate Armies.” To R.S. Maxey, Esq., Brandon, Miss. (2) Payroll of the Company from April 2-June
30, 1864. Written in pencil is “12 Miss Cavalry.” (3) Document that reads, “Pay Roll continued” includes names and numerical
figures. (4) Pay roll document; includes names and numerical figures 

Folder 6: Seventeenth and eighteenth century printing examples 

Scope and Contents note

Various printing examples. (1) Display #1, original leaf dated 1765 A.D. “In Modum Catecheseos.” pages 329 and 330. (2) Display
#2, original leaf dated 1768 A.D. “Siebendes Buch. Liber II. Macbabeorum.” Pages 421-422. (3) Display #3, original leaf date
unknown. “An Account of the final Destruction of Jerusalem.” Pages 673-674. (4) Display #4, original leaf dated 1702 A.D.
“Elymas the Sorcerer Struck Blind Acts Ch 13th” plate 64 no. 33. (5) Display #5, Journals of the House of Lords, “Journals
of the House of Lords” pages 437 and 438. (6) Photocopy of Latin document dated 1707, transcribed into English at the bottom
of the page. (7) Broadsides where the previously listed documents were originally housed.

Folder 7: Faulkner Prints (Not author William Faulkner) “Prints, 3 each, in portfolio. No connection with William C. Faulkner
of Oxford, Mississippi. The William Faulkner prints in the portfolio are done by a man whose actual name is “William Faulkner.”
Burn Porter promotes the selling of these prints without making it clear these have no connection with the Faulkner of literary
renown.” 

Folder 8: Catholic Action of the South. Issue of theCatholic Action of the South dated October 14, 1937. Publication includes
articles, advertisements and announcements concerning the Catholic faith in the South 

Folder 9: “Greenwood Leflore-Last Chief of the Choctaws” Page from a newspaper dated 26 August 1928. The article contains
drawings, photographs, articles, and other biographical information about Greenwood Leflore 

Box 7 

Folder 1: Society of Cincinnati certificate signed by President. Folder includes the diploma which was signed by George Washington
(donated by Robert D. Filter) at Mount Vernon, Virginia, on October 31, 1784; a history of the society; information about
William Huston; and history of the diploma for the society 

Folder 2: Document signed by John Pettus, Gov. appointing Thomas A. Burgin to 1st Lt. Oktibbeha Minute Men, 1862. Certificate
from the State of Mississippi recognizing the election of Thomas A. Burgin to the office of 1st Lieutenant of the Oktibbeha
Minutemen and Infantry company of Mississippi Militia. (elected August 6, 1862; signed by Governor Pettus October 1, 1862) 

Folder 3: “The House That Jeff Built” Satire depicting the life of Jefferson Davis. “Entered according to act of Congress
in the year 1863 by D. C. Johnston in the Clerks office of the District Court of Massachusetts 

General note

Available digitally in the Civil War Archive

Folder 4: Robert Holt Hindman. tombstone rubbing. Tombstone rubbing from the grave of Robert Holt Hindman from the Hindman
Cemetary, Ripley, MS, rubbing by Tommy Covington, 1976 

Folder 5: Walthall Clippings. Various obituary notices and articles. Some articles on L.Q.C. Lamar 

Folder 6: Series of sketches published in newspapers during the American Civil War 

“Cutting the Canal Opposite Vicksburg” by Mr. Theodore R. Davis in the August 2, 1862 issue of
Harper’s Weekly 

“Scene in Front of Washington Hotel, Vicksburg, Mississippi.” [no other information given] 

“View of Vicksburg, Mississippi.” [no other information given] 

“Siege of Charleston-Attack on Fort Wagner by the Union Troops Under General Gillmorf, July 24th and 25th” by ‘our special
artist’ and “Opening of the Mississippi-Occupation of Natchez, Miss, July 13, by Brig. Gen. Ransom, of M’Pherson’s Corps”
by Fred B. Schell, in
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, August 15, 1863 

“Rail-Road Junction Near Corinth,” “Corinth from Beauregard’s Head-Quarters” and “Beauregard’s Head-Quarters. Corinth, Mississippi,
Now in Possession of Our Troops” from sketches by Mr. Theodore R. Davis, in the June 21, 1862 issue of
Harper’s Weekly 

“Railroad Depot,” “Rebel Armory” and “Holly Springs, Mississippi” from sketches by Mr. A. Simplot, in the January 10, 1863
issue of
Harper’s Weekly 

“Scenes and Incidents of the Mississippi Floods” from photographs by W. A. Stanton, Vicksburg, in the April 26, 1890, issue
of
Harper’s Weekly 

“The Civil War in America: Train with Reinforcements for General Johnston Running Off The Track in the Forests of Mississippi,”
from a sketch by ‘our special artist’ and “The Civil War in America: Re-Occupation of Jackson, Mississippi, by the Confederates”
from a sketch by ‘our special artist’ in the August 8, 1863 issue of
The Illustrated London News 

Folder 7: “Fellow Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives” Publication, circa 1847, for members of the U.S. Senate
and House of Representatives. This issue was addressed to Hon. Hugh White, Representative, W. City (Washington), D.C 

Folder 8: Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America.Certificate of Membership
Charter into the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America for the Oxford,
Mississippi, Chapter. April 1, 1951 

Folder 9: Ordinance of Secession 

Facsimile of Mississippi’s Ordinance of Secession 

Published announcement of Secession by Power & Cadwallader, Jackson, Miss 

Folder 10: Public land sale documents 

Certification that Blake Jackson of Montgomery County, has purchased land from the land office in Cahaba, Alabama, March 1826,
signed by President John Quincy Adams 

Certification that Wiley C. Person of Sumpter (?), Alabama, has purchased land from the land office in Columbus, February
27, 1841, signed by President Martin Van Buren 

Certification that Abner Smith of Yazoo County, Mississippi, has purchased land from the land office in Jackson, Mississippi,
September 1, 1826, signed by President John Quincy Adams 

Certification that Joseph Slocum Sr. of Madison County, Mississippi, has purchased land from the land office in Mount Salus,
Mississippi, December 1, 1830, signed by President Andrew Jackson 

Certification that Austin Elvy Moore assignee of James Parker Peters, has purchased land from the Land office in Pontotoc,
August 2, 1838, signed by President Martin Van Buren 

Folder 11: “Rules Relating to Pupils & Janitors of St. Louis Township Public School,” adopted by Board of Education, Jan.
3, 1873 

Folder 12: “Opportunity” by Walter Malone. Copy of Walter Malone’s poem, “Opportunity.” 

Folder 13: Commission to the Army of the Mississippi Certificate recognizing Thomas G. Clark as 1st Lieutenant of the Army
of Mississippi on December 11, 1861. (Photostat-May 27, 1959) 

Folder 14: Charles G. Bell. Delta Return Corrected forward to Charles G. Bell’s. Delta Return, Santa Fe, N. M. 1986 

Folder 15: Dr. Thomas H. Somerville. Various scholastic documents of Dr. Thomas H. Somerville 

Certificate of membership in the Alumni Association of Washington and Lee University” 

Diploma from Washington College. Virginia granting Somerville the title of “Proficient in Chemistry”, June 23, 1870 

Diploma from Washington & Lee University, Virginia, granting Somerville a Bachelor of Law, June 27, 1872 

Folder 16: Edward VII, King of England. (3 Posters) 1910 

(1) “The Last Token: Queen Alexandra Placing A Rose in the Hands of Her Beloved Husband, King Edward” published as a supplement
to “The Illustrated London News,” June 4, 1910. The original drawing was created by A. Forestier. 

(2) “The Last Sleep of the Guardian of England’s Welfare” published as a supplement to “The Illustrated London News,” May
28, 1910. The original drawing was created by Mr. Albert Bruce-Joy. 

(3)”Edward The Peacemaker.” This copy of “Frank Haviland’s Great Portrait of His Late Majesty, King Edward VII” was printed
as a supplement to the “Illustrated London News,” May 28, 1910 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1980 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Prentiss Normal and Industrial Institute. Printed documents. 2 pages. Entitled, “Leading Whites flier. August 25,
1925. Endorse the Campaign to Raise $15,000 for the Institution,” and lists a number of contributors to the fund. Also included
is a form to be enclosed with mailed donations to the Institute, “For the Training of the Negro Youth Into a Better and More
Useful Citizenship.” 

Folder 2: Poll Tax Receipt. Bolivar County. Printed form, filled in by hand. 1 page. December 16, 1878 

Folder 3: “The Legend of the Tallahatchie,” by Clovis M. Printed document, 1 page. 2 copies, one printed on paper, Taylor,
Jr. 1972. the other printed on cardboard 

Folder 4: No. 27. January 7th, 1811. House of Printed document. 3 pages. “A Bill for the Relief of Representatives. Richard
Tervin, William Coleman, Edwin Lewis, Samuel Mims, Joseph Wilson, and the Baptist Church, at Salem Meeting House, in the Mississippi
Territory.” 

Folder 5: E.E. Holman. Holly Springs, MS, ALS. 2 pages. Holman requests action on war claims April 25, 1871, to J. W. Denver,
Washington, in his own behalf and on behalf of several others. D. C. (labeled Folder #6) 

Folder 6: ALS. Irvin S. Cobb. New York, NY, 20 December (2 pages) 

Scope and Contents note

Cobb gives permission for the inclusion 1922, to Dr. Blauche Collin Williams. (sp?) of his story “Snake Doctor” in the “proposed
volume for 1922 of the O. Henry Memorial Award Commission.” (labeled Folder #7)

Folder 7: 1856 Henderson Indenture (encapsulated) 

General note

Moved to Oversized SMMSS 2000-2-4

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1981 

Box 1 

Folder 1: ALS. 19 Marzo 1798, “Pedro Camer, Juan P. Walker y Andres A. Ellicott…” (letter in Spanish) 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1982 

Box 1 

Letters and Memorandum Notes written by Landon Cabell Garland, President, North East & South West Alabama Railroad Company,
1854 – 1855 & South West Alabama Railroad Company. Typewritten copies of the 43 letters in the old letter book used by Landon
Cabell Garland for preserving copies of letters he wrote while he was president of the North East (Vol. I) 

“Landon Cabell Garland Letters. Typewritten transcriptions of 17 letters written by Landon concerning Vanderbilt University.”
Landon Cabell Garland between 22 October 1873 and 15 October 1874 regarding the founding of Vanderbilt University 

Copies of Fifteen Garland letters deposited with Vanderbilt University. Typewritten transcriptions of fifteen letters primarily
by Landon Cabell Garland, written between November 10, 1829 and July 1, 1893.   (2 volumes)

Folder 1: “Thomas Wolfe: His People and His Printed document. 6 pages. An index and description Homeland,” by Richard Reed,
Associate Professor of 34 color slides. (slides missing) of Literature, University of North Carolina at Asheville 

Folder 2: Holland Collection. TLS. from John Ciardi, Poetry Editor, Saturday Review 

Folder 3: Holland Collection. TLS. from Gerald Walton, English Department, University of Mississippi.   4 folders

Folder 4: Holland Collection. TLS. from William Alexander Percy to Robert Holland, 6 September 1938, concerning Holland’s
poetry & Typewritten poem Entitled “To William Alexander Percy.” 

Folder 5: Holland Collection. Typescript 

Folder 6: W.W. Ramsey. “My Life in the Vicksburg Bar.” Typescript. 24 pages 

Folder 7: A.M. Clayton, Confederate Judge in Mississippi. ALS. in which Clayton states that he “drew up letter to Lida Perry,
October 25, 1887. the Bill for the organization of the Judicial system of the Confederate States.” 

Folder 8: A.M. Clayton, Confederate Judge in Mississippi. Photocopies and transcription of the letter; photocopy of the Clayton
entry from Memoirs of Mississippi (556-557) 

Folder 9: Josiah A.P. Campbell, Confederate legislator. ALS. dated January 9, 1890. 

Folder 10: Josiah A.P. Campbell, Confederate legislator. Photocopy, transcription, and the Campbell entry from Memoirs of
Mississippi (495-498) 

Folder 11: William T.S. Barry, Confederate. ALS. from Barry dated October 13, 1858 

Folder 12: William T.S. Barry, Confederate. Photocopy of letter, transcription, and the Barry entry from Congressman. Memoirs
of Mississippi (353-355). 

Folder 13: William L. Harris, Confederate Commissioner. ALS. from Harris to Mr. O. L. Keeler dated October 3, 1855. from Mississippi. 

Folder 14: William L. Harris, Confederate Commissioner. Photocopy and transcript of the letter 

Folder 15: Jack N. Stewart, Sr. 3 June 1983. Typewritten letter. The letter discusses a number of contemporary political contests,
including the race for a US Senate seat and the governorship 

Folder 16: The Southern Reposure(v1,n1.). Comedic newspaper that lampoons Summer, 1956. contemporary pro-segregation writing
by calling for the segregation of people of Scotch-Irish descent. Photocopies: Joseph L. Blotner, Faulkner: A Biography, pp.
1607-1610. P. D. East, The Magnolia Jungle, pp. 191- 203, in which the authors discuss P. D. East’s and William Faulkner’s
efforts to publish this single issue of The Southern Reposure 1 envelope 

Box 2 

Folder 1: William Ferris letter from the Smithsonian (photocopy) 25 January 1982, from Lynda Roscoe Hartigan, Institution.
Assistant Curator, 20th Century Painting and Sculpture 

Folder 2: Minutes of the Commonwealth Drilling and Oil Photocopied documents, hand- and typewritten. Company, Natchez, MS,
1915. (labeled Folder #5) 

Folder 3: “From the Russian Ghetto to the Mississippi Delta,” by A. Isaacson. Typewritten manuscript, parts I and II, 2-165
and 1-84. Copy 1 

Folder 4: “From the Russian Ghetto to the Mississippi Delta,” by A. Isaacson. Typewritten manuscript, parts I and II, 2-165
and 1-84. Copy 2 

Folder 5: Letter. Eudora Welty to Joseph Cornell, Photocopy of typewritten letter, photocopies of Flushing, Long Island, NY,
4 April 1945. photographs, photocopy of the envelope, photocopy of a Subscription form from The Magazine of Wall Street 

Folder 6: Letter. Eudora Welty to Charles H. Ford, Photocopies of typewritten letters. 16 January 1943; from C. H. Ford to
Joseph Cornell, January 31, 1943 

Folder 7: Unidentified magazine advertisement featuring (2) Welty snapshots; ad for The Golden Apples (photocopies) 

Folder 8: New York Times Book Review, April 14, 1946. Photocopies. “A Fine Novel of the Deep South,” re: Welty’s Delta Wedding 

Folder 9: Joseph Cornell, handwritten notes re: Welty’s Photocopy, transcription. letter of April 3, 1945 

Folder 10: Article by Welty, “Literature and the Lens” (photocopies), includes Welty snapshots 

Folder 11: New York Times Book Review of Welty’s The Ponder Heart (photocopies). 10 January 1954, with photographs of “Welty
Country.” 

Folder 12: The memoirs of Olivia Smith. Photocopies of typewritten manuscript and handwritten letters. (1 of 2) 

Folder 13: The memoirs of Olivia Smith. Photocopies of typewritten manuscript and handwritten letters. (2 of 2) 

Folder 14: The Civil War Diary of J. M. Love. Photocopies. 5-16 March 1862. Wirt Adams Cavalry Regiment, Company G. (photocopy
of typescript) 

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Small Manuscripts 1985 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Mississippi Trade Card. “This series consists of fifty cards, each one of which shows a correct map (properly bounded
– of one State, or Territory. The pictures illustrating the peculiar industries and scenery…” Arbuckle Brothers Coffee Company,
NY, 1889 

Folder 2: Dr. Nollie Wade Hickman. interview. Transcript of an interview with Hickman, conducted by Murella Hebert Powell
and Charles Sullivan on May 18, 1984 at Mississippi Gulf Coast Junior College, Perkinston, MS 

Folder 3: Ora Iona Dilly. “Why President Abraham Lincoln Was Assassinated and What Became of John Wilkes Booth.” Typewritten
manuscript in which Dilly claims Booth killed Lincoln because Lincoln refused to commute the death sentence of John Bell,
a former school chum of Booth’s, who was captured in New York and convicted of being a Confederate spy. 1984. 

Thomas G. Clark Letters are housed with the rest of the Clark Family Letters, available:
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00074/ 

Finkbine Lumber Company (Wiggins, MS) photographs moved to Collection Photographs 

Irwin Russell Collection photographs moved to Collection Photographs 

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Small Manuscripts 1986 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Alabama trade card. Dixieland Brand Trade card for Arbuckle Brothers Coffee Company, watermelons advertisement.
New York, c. 1890, features a map of the state and an image of black people picking cotton. Ad for Dixieland Brand features
a caricature of a young black boy 

Folder 2: Oxford Boys School. “Class Book For Recording Scholarship And Attendance In Oxford Male School,” 1875-1877 

Folder 3: Robert Tallant and Peggy Howerton. Letters and party invitations 

Folder 4: William R. Benet. Article about Louis Untermeyer. Typescript. Also, photocopies of pp. 425-426 of Contemporary Authors,
the Louis Untermeyer entry 

Folder 5: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, Undated 

Folder 6: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, Stamped & Dated 

Folder 7: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, 1879 

Folder 8: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, 1880 

Folder 9: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, 1888 

Folder 10: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, 1890 

Folder 11: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, 1891 

Folder 12: Ben Johnson. Photocopies of letters, 1900 

Folder 13: Caldwell Ballad. Several interdepartmental communications regarding the Caldwell Ballad; the actual Ballad is not
it this folder 

Folder 14: Arion Press Articles. Promotional literature re: Arion Press, “deluxe, limited editions.” 

Folder 15: H.M. Rice. ALS., from Rice to his father, 17 September 1860, regarding his experiences as a new student at the
University of Mississippi 

Folder 16: Ishmael Reed. ALS. to Amiri Baraka and TLS. 1975 

University of Mississippi Law Review   10 items

Theodore Bilbo. TLS. from Bilbo to “Honorable Jos. M. Howorth,” October 28, 1925 re: Quaterly Law Review of the University of Mississippi 

George H. Ethridge. ALS. from Ethridge to the Mississippi Law Review requesting a one-year subscription. March 30, 1922 

W. Holdsworth. ALS. re: Mississippi Law Review on All Souls College, Oxford. letterhead. Dated December 14. (no year) 

Louis M. Jiggitts. TLS. from Jiggitts to Howorth re: Dr. Holdsworth, his tutor, and a possible submission to the Review. St. John’s College,
Oxford, letterhead. 1922 

T.C. Kimbrough, Dean, University of Mississippi School of Law. ALS. from Kimbrough to Jos. M. Howorth inquiring about the Mississippi Law Review and congratulating Howorth on passing
the bar. July 10, 1923 

T.C. Kimbrough. ALS. from Kimbrough to Howorth re: Kimbrough’s comments on an article Howorth wrote for the Mississippi Law Review. March
2, 1923 

T.C. Kimbrough. ALS. from Kimbrough to Howorth, advising Howorth on particulars regarding the launch of the Law Review. July 26, 1922 

William Alexander Percy. TLS. from Percy to “The Mississippi Law Review” declining to contribute an article to the review on the grounds that he
didn’t have enough time to compose a quality article. December 14, 1922 

Chalmers Potter. TLS. from Potter to Howorth re: Howorth’s appointment To the “committee on the University Law School Review.” October 17,
1923 

Sydney Smith. TLS. from Smith to Howorth declining to submit an article to the Mississippi Law Review due to the demands of his “official
duties.” November 17, 1922 

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Small Manuscripts 1987 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Abraham Lincoln reading to Tad Lincoln (Image) 9 February 1864. Photo by Anthony Berger of Brady Studio 

Folder 2: “A History of the Randle Family Typed document 

Folder 3: Bobby Ray Watson. Typed document. “Childhood Memories of Oxford.” Transcription of an interview that Watson conducted
with his grandmother, Oxford native Ruby Sparks Watson, in 1987 

Folder 4: George Burns. TLS. concerning his inclusion in a tribute to George and Ira Gerschwin, 27 December 1977, & autographed
8×10 photograph 

General note

Photograph removed to Cold Storage for preservation.

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Small Manuscripts 1988 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Alice Clay Smith Photocopy of a privately printed history. “The Life and Stories of Dr. Thomas Franklin Clay.” 

Folder 2: Gillespie Family. Reminiscences. Photocopy of typed letter of 14 March 1988 from Mary A. Kuhn to Bill Ferris and
photocopy of a letter written by Mrs. John Bitting. Photocopy of typed transcription of that letter. Typewritten document:
“Recollections of Letitia Dabney Miller, Chicago, begun in August, 1926.” 

Folder 3: Joseph Ingraham. ALS. from Ingraham, dated 11 January 1842. Transcription included 

Folder 4: Thomas Park. Typed document, “Recollections of Ocean Springs, 1911-1919.” 

Folder 5: Elia Kazan.TLS. dated March 1978 from Kazan lauding the University of Mississippi for sponsoring an exhibit honoring
her friend John Steinbeck 

Folder 6: ALS. Elliot [B?] to Mr. Zecheriah Howes dated 26 August 1823 

Scope and Contents note

Establishment of mission schools for Choctaws in the Mississippi territory. Transcription included

Folder 7: Irwin Russell. ALS. dated April 21, 1878 to Mr. Roswell Smith concerning a newspaper article and illustration 

Folder 8: Alice Walker. Typewritten document. “Looking for Zora.” 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Varina Howell Davis. ALS. Davis to Col. Lucius B. Northrop concerning the public release of private letters between
Jefferson Davis and the Colonel without the permission of Mrs. Davis. 5 July 1890 

Folder 2: G.M.L. Johnson, Col. 13th, Ind. Cavalry. Printed document (1 page). General Orders, No. 1, assuming command of the
subdistrict of North East Mississippi, 18 June 1865 

Folder 3: Ball Printed Materials. I.H.H. & L.F. Co. “Grand Fancy Dress and Calico Ball”, 4 July 1885, Shieldsborough, MS. 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document (27 pages). “Mississippi in Fact and Fiction: A Bibliography of Works by Out-of-State Authors.” 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document. “Magnolia Parade: The Annotated Bibliography of Mississippi Literature with Thumbnail Author Biographies,”
January 1956 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document. “The Mississippi Avent*Garde [sic],” 1955. (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document (2 pages). “A Secret Thunder,” poems. (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document (6 pages). “Paperback Mississippiana,” a bibliography. (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document (50+ pages). “Magnolia Parade and Secret Thunder,” early drafts. (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. TLS. Two letter from Martin to J. S. Hartin, Director of Libraries at the University of Mississippi, July 11, 1957 and March
7,1957. (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document (12 pages). “Mississippiana Recommended by the Wilson Catalog Series.” April 24, 1956. (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed document (2 pages). “Out-of-State Authors Who Have Written About Mississippi.” (not in folder) 

Tillman L. Martin. Typed documents. Several more drafts of Mississippiana bibliographies 

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Small Manuscripts 1989 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Council on Human Relations (Oxford) Typewritten letters and reports of the Council on Human Relations’s efforts
to develop employment opportunities in Oxford. c. 1968 

L.Q.C. Lamar Society 

Scope and Contents note

“It is the object of the L. Q. C. Lamar Society to capitalize on the talents of some of the South’s more promising future
leaders by creating a non-political, non-partisan organization which can bring together native Southerners who are committed
to finding practical solutions to some of the South’s problems.”

Folder 2: Pamphlets & General Information 

Folder 3: School Desegregation 

Folder 4: Statistical Studies on Desegregation & Correspondence 

Folder 5: National Education Association Task Force on Desegregation 

Folder 6: Tom McCown. “The Heart of Dixie, Screenplay by Tom McCown from the novel Heartbreak Hotel by Anne Rivers Siddons,
First Draft – Revisions Draft, 18 February 1988.” (1 of 3) 

Folder 7: Tom McCown. “The Heart of Dixie, Screenplay by Tom McCown from the novel Heartbreak Hotel by Anne Rivers Siddons,
First Draft – Revisions Draft, 18 February 1988.” (2 of 3) 

Folder 8: Tom McCown. “The Heart of Dixie, Screenplay by Tom McCown from the novel Heartbreak Hotel by Anne Rivers Siddons,
First Draft – Revisions Draft, 18 February 1988.” (3 of 3) 

Folder 9: Tom McCown. “The Heart of Dixie, Screenplay by Tom McCown from the novel Heartbreak Hotel by Anne Rivers Siddons,
First Draft – Revisions Draft, 5 March 1988.” (2 of 3) 

Folder 10: Tom McCown. “The Heart of Dixie, Screenplay by Tom McCown from the novel Heartbreak Hotel by Anne Rivers Siddons,
First Draft – Revisions Draft, 5 March 1988.” (2 of 3) 

Folder 11: Tom McCown. “The Heart of Dixie, Screenplay by Tom McCown from the novel Heartbreak Hotel by Anne Rivers Siddons,
First Draft – Revisions Draft, 5 March 1988.” (2 of 3) 

Folder 12: Bell Irvin Wiley. Postcard of Jefferson Davis. Broadside entitled “The True Surrender,” depicting Grant surrendering
his sword to Lee 

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Small Manuscripts 1990 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Claude L. Robinson. Typed diary of memoranda, dates, times, and places concerning Robinson’s WWII experience. Also,
typewritten elaboration of the handwritten notes 

Folder 2: Lawrence A. Jones. Photocopies of newspaper articles and typewitten comments on Jones’s art 

Folder 3: Otis W. Coan. TMs. “Rocktown, Arkansas” 

Folder 4: Otis W. Coan. “Okie Boy,” 

Folder 5: Otis W. Coan. “Rebel Rousers.” 

Folder 6: Otis W. Coan. “The Regions Are Visible,” 

Folder 7: Otis W. Coan. “Freedom of Association in the South-1948, 1956, and 1961,” 

Folder 8: Otis W. Coan. “Four Bucks” & one copy of The Crisis: A Record of the Darker Races, February 1950, in which appears
an article Coan authored 

Byron Gayle Faust. TMs. “Precious memories of Byron Gayle Faust, 1916-1988,” 

Byron Gayle Faust. TMs. “Songs, Lyrics, and Music by Byron Gayle Faust, 1916- 1988.” 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1995 

Box 1 

Folder 1: St. Michael’s Farm for Boys. St. Michaels Newsletter Vol. 3, Issue 2 (summer 1958). St. Michael’s Farm for Boys,
Inc., Picayune, Miss 

Folder 2: Amtrak. Route Guide to City of New Orleans. This pamphlet lists the towns and cities from Chicago to New Orleans
served by Amtrak’s “City of New Orleans” train. (1994) 

Folder 3: Oxford Dramatic Association. Program, 1877. Printed handbill advertising “Entertainment Extraordinary” presented
by Oxford Dramatic Association at St. Peter’s Church February 9, 1877 

Folder 4: “The Writer in Mississippi” A photocopy of Dr. Louis E. Dollarhide’s article published in the December 1963 edition
of Mississippi College Bulletin 

Folder 5: “Revised List of Agencies and Associations TMs. Undated, unsigned. Rendering Technical Assistance in Mississippi” 

Folder 6: Mississippi Social Security. Mississippi Municipal News Vol. 2, Nos. 3-5, May 1, 1952 thru July 1, 1952. TMs. entitled,
“Answers to Most Questions That Come Up About Social Security.” 

Folder 7: Mississippi Folklore Society. Programs from the 1967, 1968, and 1971 meetings of the Mississippi Folklore Society,
and a typed list of folklore and folk music archives and related collections in the US and Canada 

Folder 8: Childcraft autograph book. A small bound notebook with some handwritten notes on books. (Undated) 

Folder 9: Yazoo: Its Legends and Legacies A promotional advertisement and order form for this book from Yazoo Delta Press,
1976 

Folder 10: “Life’s Little Tragedies”. This 1909 cartoon broadside depicts a romance gone awry 

Folder 11: Collegiate Challenge: the Collegiate Challenge is “The Official Organ of Campus Crusade for Christ, Inc.” Vol.
10, No. 4, 1971 

Folder 12: Robert Finch. “Demands to Secretary of Health, Educationand Welfare” TMs. prepared by “the Mississippi Coalition
to save Headstart. This coalition was formed on Feb. 27 [no year given] at a meeting of the Mississippi Council on Human Relations.
. .” 

Folder 13: Piano Recitals Programs from The Oxford Piano Teachers’ Association. Honors recitals, 1972-1976 

Folder 14: “A Bibliography of Mississippi Folklore,” 1967 T. Ms., compiled by Abu Saeed Zahurul Haque and prepared in behalf
of the Mississippi Folklore Society 

Folder 15: George McClean. Speech, “The Next 100 Years”. TMs. of McClean’s speech “The Next 100 years: First a Brief Look
Back – – Then a Long Look Forward, Finally a Deep Look within,” given 7 May 1970before the Annual Meeting of the Community
Development Foundation in Tupelo 

Folder 16: “The Witch of Oxford,” 15 July 1958 TMs. of a press release by Marvin Black of the University of Mississippi’s
Department of Public Relations re: Dr. Allen Cabaniss’s (U. of MS professor of history) article on the Witch of Oxford, which
appeared in the Southern Folklore Quarterly 

Folder 17: “Entertainment in Oxford since 1865,” by F. J. TMs. Gerred, 1955 

Folder 18: Mississippi-Miscellaneous Facts (Undated) TMs 

Folder 19: Lafayette County Post Office. 1940 TMs. Brief statements regarding the establishment of various post offices in
Lafayette County 

Folder 20: Ripley Rebel. Program, 2-3 July 1971 Two printed programs from the drama “Ripley Rebel,” written by Raymond Hagood,
words and music by Kay Graves 

Folder 21: Festival of the Recorded Word. Printed program. “Tougaloo College presents in honor of Mrs. Lucius R. Eastman The
Festival of the Recorded Word Commemorating The 500th Anniversary of the Printing of the First Book from Movable Type Invented
by Johann Gutenberg.” (2 copies) 

Folder 22: Program, “Visit the Jefferson Davis Casemate at Fort Monroe on (Undated) Old Point Comfort, Virginia.” 

Folder 23: Cuthbert M. Lagrone. Radio Announcement. TMs. Professor C. M. Lagrone, assistant professor of (Undated) history
at the State Teachers College presents a talk on, “Reconstruction of Tragic Era-that period from 1865 to 1877 a period which
has had lasting effects upon the Democratic party, especially in the South.” 

Folder 24: Pamphlet. “The History of the Descendants of the Jersey Settlers, Adams County, Mississippi”. Printed pamphlet
and advertisement for “this extensive work sponsored by the Descendants of the Jersey Settlers (Undated) as its United States
bicentennial project. . .” 

Folder 25: Lauderdale County History Project. TMs. “Project Director’s Report and Evaluation,” “Partial Railroads, 1988. List
of Scholar in Residence Activities,” Letter from Lauderdale County Department of Archives and History, Inc. Director Jim Dawson
to Mississippi Humanities Council Director Cora Norman, open letter from Jim Dawson, speech entitled “Here’s My View” written
and delivered by Jack Pace (retired Vice President of Southern Railroad), Interview with Mr. George Westbrook 27 May 1988,
Dr. Lloyd B. Lewis interview with Mr. Oscar Kent (Retired Engineer) and Mr. John N. Cole (Retired Bridge Foreman) 5 August
1988 

Folder 26: Sources of Information on Mississippi. T.Ms. An outline listing various organizations that may October, 1963 serve
as sources of information on various aspects of the state of Mississippi, including agriculture, natural resources, and industries 

Folder 27: Mississippi Cash Farm Statements, 1946-53. Typed forms from the Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank
of St. Louis reporting the monthly income of Mississippi cash farms 

Folder 28: William Howard Taft. Banquet invitation, 1909. Handsome embossed invitation to a banquet in honor of President
William Howard Taft by the citizens of Jackson 

Folder 29: The Burning of Oxford. Two T. Ms.’s, one entitled, “The Burning of Oxford,” which “Professor P. L. Rainwater, associate
in the Department of History at the university, has furnished us the following account of the burning of Oxford, Mississippi,
which appeared originally in the Falcon, first paper published in Oxford, in November 1865.” The second, entitled, “The Day
Oxford was Burned,” was written by Bill Jacobs and is dated August 5, 1971 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Handwritten list. “Ballads sung by Mrs. Charles Spruill Bruce, MS,” (Undated) 

Folder 2: J.H. Baxter. Oath of Allegiance, 1865. J. H. Baxter’s Oath of Allegiance to the United States signed by him July
28, 1865 and witnessed by the Probate Judge of Panola County, MS 

Folder 3: Charm(Feb. 1953) with article on Oxford, MS, Printed magazine, Charm: The Magazine for Women Who page 110 Work Includes
Judy Binder’s article, “I Work in a Small Town,” and photographs of Oxford by Bern Keating 

Folder 4: ALS. E.M. Riley (Camp of the 39th Mississippi). Soldier writes to his sister of the Regiment, Enterprise, MS to
Mrs. E. B. Riley, cold (the letter is in pencil because his ink froze overnight), 19 December, 1863. of Christmas, of a recaptured
deserter, of a romance, and of a letter he has from a “yankee lady” that he wishes to send to her. (transcription available) 

Folder 5: “The Burden of History and the ‘New Force’ in Mississippi Politics”. TMs. by Kevin Pierce Thornton, Yale College,
History Department, April 17, 1981. This was Thornton’s senior essay at Yale and was based on his experience as an intern
“in Governor Winter’s office last year.” The essay is accompanied by an ALS. to Bill Ferris thanking him for guidance and
support 

Folder 6: “The Battle of Brice’s Crossroads” TMs. by Howard Duvall, Jr. “A Term Paper in Mississippi History, The University
of Mississippi, march 1958.” 

Folder 7: Miscellaneous. Autographs TLS. from Mildred Spurrier Topp to “Miss Eggleston,” July 20, 1953. ANS. from Charles
(????) to “Mrs. Thompson.” Printed card of an engraving of Mary Queen of Scots signed on the reverse by Professor A. J. Qu…?
And J. B. Bryan 

Folder 8: Broadside advertising land for sale along the “Mississippi and Yazoo River Cotton Lands, for Sale,” Mississippi
and Yazoo Rivers Dawson’s Bayou and Grannicus Land, apply to W. H. Paxton, 74 Camp Street New Orleans or A. M. Paxton, Vicksburg.
Dated January 1, 1860 

Folder 9: Political handbill, Lena W. Wiley, 1995. “Vote Lena W. Wiley Justice Court Judge Northern District Republican Candidate
1995.” (Oxford) 

Folder 10: Article from the Memphis Daily Appeal re: Photocopy from the 26 December 1862 edition of the Daily Grant’s Army
Appeal, “From General Grant’s Army. The University of Mississippi The Oath of Allegiance Required Intensely Hostile Feeling
of the People Probability of a Battle at Jackson.” 

Folder 11: Miss Rotesee, Word and Music (Undated) Printed handbill with the words and music to Miss Rotesee, “‘a march in
military style'” by Saetre and Hays 

Folder 12: Mississippi Verse order form from UNC Press, This broadside announces the publication of Mississippi (Undated)
Verse, “and anthology edited by Alice James; with Introduction by Arthur Palmer Hudson,” including poems by William Faulkner,
Stark Young, William Alexander Percy, and Many others 

Folder 13: Jackson Chamber of Commerce. Program and Honor Guest List, 1965 

Folder 14: Copper engraving plate, 1921. The engraving plate was made for printing invitations to a wedding 

Folder 15: Opium records from Mississippi, Treasury Internal Revenue Service forms and requisition forms Department dealing
with the medicinal use of morphine, cocaine, paregoric, and codeine, 1923-1950 

Folder 16: Honorable T. V. Sisson. Notes for speech on the South (Undated). Handwritten notes on the back of an envelope advocating
the South. The front of the envelope is printed with “Speech of Hon. T. U. Sisson, of Mississippi, in the House of Representatives,
Monday, March 29, 1909.” 

Folder 17: Railroads. Photocopy of an article from the Oxford Eagle December 20, 1888, a Georgia Rail Road Conductor’s Check,
two editions of Sandhouse (November 1974 and March 1975; Sandhouse is the newsletter of the Mississippi Great Southern Chapter,
National Railway Historical Society), a TMs. written by John W. Brannon in 1981 re: Illinois Central Gulf railroad, and a
pamphlet re: The Illinois Central Railroad in Mississippi 

Folder 18: Oxford Wholesale Grocery, Inc. Preferred Stock. The ledger contains stock certificates from 1951 and 1952 

Folder 19: Mississippi Casualties in Korea Documents from State Veterans Affairs Commission listing “Mississippi Casualties
in Korea (As Reported by the Department of Defense) January 25, 1953 to April 13, 1953,” “April 19, 1953 to June 27, 1953,”
and “July 1, 1953 to August 12, 1953.” Also, T.L. from Bob DeKay, Commission of the State Veterans Affairs Commission, with
the heading, “Approximately 4000 Missing in Korea to be Declared Dead.” 

Folder 20: Acid Rain Photocopies of articles on acid rain from the Research and Development department of the Environmental
Protection Agency, Engineering Bulletin, the Acid Rain Foundation, Inc., and the Electric Power Research Institute Journal 

Folder 21: Department of Public Welfare. Various papers, 1949-1958 

Box 3 

Folder 1: William Terry Moore. Reminiscences A variety of newspaper articles (some original, some photocopied) relating to
Moore (born 1845, died 1914). A.D., Moore’s reminiscences, including his experiences during the Civil War where he saw action
during the defense of Vicksburg 

Folder 2: Family Friend handbill, c. 1850s Advertises the new Southern literary publication, the Family Friend 

Folder 3: Cyril Edward Cain. Advertisement for “Four Centuries on the Pascagoula, Volume I: History, Story, and Legend of
the Pascagoula River Country, Collected and Edited by Cyril Edward Cain.” Printed by Thomas J. Moran’s Sons, New Orleans,
1953 

Folder 4: Genealogy The Story of One of the Sloan Families, compiled by Lyra Schroeder of Roanoke, VA, 1977. Photocopy of
a kinship chart of the Thorowgood family of Princess Anne County, VA compiled by John Harrie Creecy, 1971 (includes ANS. from
Creecy). T. Ms., “Joshua Stephens Descendents with D. A. R. Lineage Connections through Bramletts (Mrs. A. C.)-(Ella Stephens
Troutman)-Lineage Chart of Bramletts.” 

Folder 5: Forest History Foundation, Incorporated. T.D., “Report to the Board of Directors and Donors of the Forest History
Foundation, Inc., June 18, 1955.” 

Folder 6: U.S.S. Mississippi. T. D., “USS Mississippi (BB-23).” A brief description of the the three U. S. S. that bore the
title “USS Mississippi.” 

Folder 7: Notebook (1860s). A small leather covered daybook filled with lists of names, grocery and dry goods lists, figures
and other various memoranda 

Folder 8: MS Awards Day Speech by Dr. Thomas F. Jones, 1965. Photocopy of a TMs. of Jones’s speech in which he ruminates on
the contemporary South by considering Arnold J. Toynbee’s A Study of History 

Folder 9: “The True Surrender” (broadside) A drawing of Ulysses S. Grant surrendering his sabre to R.E. Lee at Appomatox 

Folder 10: Civil War Commemorative Stamp set A collection of five stamps commemorating Fort Sumter, Shiloh, Appomatox, Gettysburg,
and “the wilderness.” 

Folder 11: Pre-Civil War Clippings Scrapbook. Newspaper clippings from several newspapers, including the Mobile Register and
the Mississippi Democrat, dating from as early as 1856 and dealing with the intensifying political imbroglio 

Folder 12: Southern Tenant Farmers Union. Partial transcript from Our Land Too, a film about the STFU. A photocopy of a letter
from H. L. Mitchell to Anne Mary Batey regarding Mitchell’s book Roll the Union On: A Pictorial History of the Southern Tenant
Farmers’ Union A photocopy of a review of Mitchell’s book 

Folder 13: Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. A printed invitation to the 50th anniversary celebration of the ratification
of the tribal constitution and re-establishment of tribal government for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians to be held
April 20, 1995 at the Pearl River Reservation Amphitheatre 

Folder 14: Stories of the Modern South proof cover, no A proof cover of this anthology of short stories by such notable date
Southern authors as Alice Walker, James Agee, William Faulkner, and Jayne Anne Phillips 

Folder 15: Fred W. Young. Speech, 1947 T. D., “Statement made by Fred W. young, representing the National Americanism Commission
of The American Legion on Federal Aid to Education, before the House sub- Committee on Labor and Education, Washington, D.
C., April 29, 1947.” 

Folder 16: Governor Sam Jones (LA). Speech, 1946. Jones delivered the speech before the National Farm Loan Association assembled
at Edgewater Gulf Hotel-Biloxi on September 12, 1946. The speech addresses the subject of the South’s abject poverty, and
how it might be overcome 

Folder 17: Mississippi Postage Stamps. Four postage stamps: one celebrating the Great River Road, one celebrating the ‘Mississippi
Territory, 1798-1948,’ one celebrating Mississippi’s statehood (1817-1967), and one celebrating Independence Day 1960 

Folder 18: Mississippi Folk Music / Folklore. T. D., “Mississippi Folk Music and Folklore in the Recorded Collections of the
Archive of Folk Culture,” Library of Congress 

Folder 19: “Mississippi in Archive of Folk Culture” 

Folder 20: City Grocery. Newsletter Summer 1995. City Grocery’s invitation to present a “Crawfish Festival” at the James Beard
Foundation in New York 

Box 4 

Folder 1: Mississippi Jews in the Civil War. Photocopies: Rev. Henry Cohen, “A Modern Maccabean,” in Publications of the American
Jewish Historical Society No. 6 (1897), 31-37. Simon Wolf, The American Jew as Patriot, Soldier and Citizen (Philadelphia:
The Levytype Company Publishers; New York: Brentano’s, 1895), 214-221 

Folder 2: Mississippi Prohibition, 1950s. TL. from the “Executive Committee of Mississippi Baptist Association Wilkinson and
Amite Counties,” to State Representative John L. Kennedy in opposition to “local option of liquor” (Undated). T. D. from E.
M. Sharp, Secretary of North Mississippi Conference of the Methodist Church resolving that legislation be enacted in the State
Legislature in 1958 repealing the “‘Black Market’ tax” on liquor sold in the state of Mississippi with a Federal Liquor Stamp,
thereby “the status of a dry state be assured to the people of Mississippi.” Pamphlet: “Beware of Repeal, Get the Facts (Inside):
Vote the Bottom Line AGAINST Legal Whiskey on August 26th,” postmarked 9 August 1952 

Folder 3: New Jersey Settlers Association. “Invitation to Attend the Seventeenth Annual Meeting of the ‘Descendents of the
New Jersey Settlers Association’ at the Kingston Methodist Church Adams County, Mississippi fifteen miles southeast of Natchez
Sunday April 8th at 10 A. M.” (1956) 

Folder 4: Mississippi Electric Power Associations. March of Progress: Mississippi and the South, published by Mississippi
Power Company: The Southern Company, Southern Services, Inc. (Undated). Helping Build Mississippi, Published by Mississippi
Power & Light Company; editions from February-March 1950, August 1956, June-July 1962, Winter 1974-1975. Broadside: “A Shirt-Sleeved
Democracy,” by Lonnie Sweatt, Chairman of the Board of the Mississippi Power Company (1958) 

Folder 5: Lumpkin Family. “Seven Drawings Researched and Made by Hugh Rather, Architect of Holly Springs, Mississippi to Record
the remains of the two homes of the Lumpkin Family in Marshall County, Mississippi.” Copyright 1979 by Ben Gray Lumpkin 

Folder 6: David E. Guyton. Poems.The Mississippi Woman’s Magazine Vol. 17, No. 2 (March-April, 1942), featuring several of
Guyton’s poems. Guyton was Professor of History and Economics at Blue Mountain College and President of the Blue Mountain
Bank at the time of this publication 

General note

Magazine removed to HQ1871 .M5

Folder 7: “When I Think of Columbus” A printed page taken from a larger work: “Verses form the OFFICIAL CENTENNIAL POEM written
by Mrs. Frances O. Jones Gaither.” 

Folder 8: Mississippi Highways. Printed advertisement and schedule: “The University of Mississippi Announces the Fourth Annual
Mississippi Highway Conference, February 20-21, 1958.” 

Folder 9: Colonel Columbus Sykes. Memorial Letter. Printed booklet: “Copy of a Memorial Letter by 1864, reprinted 1962. Colonel
Columbus Sykes to the Infant Children of his Brother, Dr. William E. Sykes. Dated November 28, 1864,” including a statement
by Eugene Lanier Sykes and an account by J. L. Collins of the death of Col. Columbus Sykes 

Folder 10: J.C. Zeller. Zeller was a scholar and minister. This native of Illinois spoke to an a crowd at the Yazoo County
Courthouse on July 20, 1924 as part of his campaign for Congressman of that district. The folder includes a press kit on Zeller,
reprints from the Yazoo County News re: his Congressional campaign, three issues of the Pacific Christian Advocate (1909-
1913) printed during Zeller’s career as President of the University of Puget Sound, and one copy of The Maroon published in
Tacoma, WA by the student body of the University Puget Sound (1910) 

General note

The Maroon &
 Yazoo County News prints moved to Oversize

Folder 11: Notable Mississippi Women. TD. List Mississippi women with brief notes re: their accomplishments 

Folder 12: The Michigan Railfan Vol. 32, No. 7 (July 1972) published by the Michigan Railroad Club. This issue’s cover story
is about Col. W. C. Falkner’s Ripley, Ship Island and Kentucky Railroad. Also included are photocopies of newspaper articles
re: Chancey Joseph Rogers, the sculptor who crafted Col. W. C. Falkner’s likeness for his tomb (1938, 1959); an article on
the dramatic performance of “Ripley Rebel,” a historical pageant (1971); a photocopy of a TLS. from Murry C. Falkner (1970);
and a photocopy of an ALS. from Col. W. C. Falkner (1887) 

Folder 13: Mississippi Poets. TMs. From Marjorie Jackson, L. J. Bruce, Catherine Naomi McFarlane, Mrs. Lamar Fontaine, And
many others. Some A. S. poems, and some poems printed in various journals. (c.1930s-1950s) 

Folder 14: Col. William P. Rogers. A printed pamphlet: “COL. Wm. P. Rogers by Eugene Lanier Sykes, President, First National
Bank, Aberdeen, Mississippi May 12, 1954.” This is a short biography of Rogers, “whose name is the only one on the Confederate
Monument in the Corinth Courthouse square.” 

Folder 15: Settlers of College Hill, Mississippi. TMs., M. H. Thompson, “Sturdy Immigrants First Built Church- Settlers of
College Hill, Miss., Arrived 84 Years Ago- Old Edifice Still Stands-Cemetery Holds Many Who Once Made History; Confederate
Soldiers Rest There, College Buildings Long Since Disappeared.” (Undated) 

Folder 16: Polish-American Heritage Day. Pamphlets and a souvenir coin from Polish-American Heritage Day in Kosciusko, January
17, 1981. On this Day the town celebrated the heritage of its founder, Thaddeus Kosciusko 

Folder 17: Livestock show programs. Program from the Central Mississippi Fair, Livestock and State Dairy Show (1952) sponsored
by the Kosciusko Chamber of Commerce and the Attala County Coordinating Council of Agricultural Workers. Two programs from
Attala County Farm and Community Development Program meetings (1953). One “Souvenir Catalog” from the “Sixth Annual Northwest
Mississippi Fair and Horse Show, Como, Mississippi” (1940) 

Folder 18: Reverend R.G. Porter. Eulogy TMs. N. G. Augustus, “Rev. R. G. Porter.” 

Folder 19: Greene County Board of Supervisors. TMs. prepared by the General Legislative Investigating Committee for the Honorable
J. P. Coleman, Governor, and Members, Mississippi State Legislature regarding “certain irregularities existing in the records
of the Board of Supervisors of Greene County” (1956). TMs. prepared by the Joint Senate and House Investigating Committee
for the Honorable J. P. Coleman, Governor, and Members, Mississippi State Legislature regarding Mrs. Ligon F. Gardner who
was discharged from the University Medical Center in Jackson “because she object to the bathing of Negro patients and because
she had a strong opinion as to segregation in a hospital.” 

Folder 20: Meridian Female College. Photocopy of pages 14 and 15 from a printed brochure about the Meridian Female College.
(c. 1870s-1890s) It stresses that in the aftermath of the Civil War, “If uneducated, they [our daughters] will in too may
cases be compelled to occupy the place of menials to a degree unknown hitherto in the South.” 

Folder 21: Union Female College. TMs., “Old Schools of Lafayette County,” by Miss Kate McGuire from “Some Early History of
Lafayette County Mississippi” compiled by David Reese D. A. R. (1922) 

Folder 22: Mississippi Civil War History. Newsletter from The Civil War Round Table of Mississippi (1965); TMs. re: bibliographic
essay on the federal ironclad Cairo by Mary W. Wynn (1974); humorous broadsides, “Hotel De Vicksburg Bill of Fare,” three
pages of menu items all consisting mainly of mule; General Orders No. 9 from Maj. Gen. E. Van Dorn, Vicksburg, 4 July 1862
(photocopy); “Circular to Sheriffs,” Macon, MS 16 November 1864 from Charles Clark, Governor of MS (photocopy); TMs. “Civil
War Activities- Yazoo County;” pamphlet entitled “What the Historians Say of The Claiborne Letter Books,” re: the papers of
Gov. William C. C. Claiborne 

Folder 23: Holly Springs. TMs., “The biographical data on the following men is taken from a thesis by William Baskervill Hamilton,
Holly Springs, Mississippi, to the Year 1878 Winfield Scott Featherston, Christopher Haynes Mott, Claudius Wistar Sears, Daniel
Chevellette Govan, Absolom Madden West, Thomas A. Falconer, Samuel Benton, Edward Cary Walthall, Alexander B. Bradford.” 

Folder 24: Thomas Garner James. TMs. “Relating the Social Sciences in a Study of Mississippi,” and “Mississippi and Her Resources.” 

Folder 25: Mississippi Utilities. Leaflet entitled “Proposed Sewage System and Disposal Oxford, Mississippi,” October 10,
1955. T. L. from Oxford Mayor Richard W. Elliott with a new schedule of water and sewer rates. Pamphlet Entitled “$365,000
City of Louisville, Mississippi Waterworks and Sewerage System 3 3/4 % Refunding and improvement Revenue Bonds,” (1952). A
brochure re: Bellsouth in Mississippi (1953). “The Bell Tel News,” (issues from 1954, 1955, 1958, 1961). Central: The Magazine
of South Central Bell, 1988 No. 4 

Folder 26: LePoint Smith. Several Letters and documents regarding education in Mississippi, particularly responses to the
Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision 

Folder 27: Noxubee County Petition, circa 1863 Handwritten petition 

Scope and Contents note

This document, signed by various members of Noxubee County, Mississippi, provides the police with the authority to levy a
tax supporting war efforts.

Folder 28: Tillatoba Note, 1837 “One Dollar” currency for Holly Springs, Mitchell’s Bluff, Coffeeville or Tillatoba 

Folder 29: Williams P. Young. TLS. from Carlton A. Sheffield to Williams P. Young, March 3, 1978 

Scope and Contents note

This letter congratulates Exhibit Coordinator, Williams P. Young, on his display commemorating the literary accomplishments
of John Steinbeck.

Folder 30: Blue Line Drug Store. Non-legal tender 

Scope and Contents note

This item is a twenty-five cent profit sharing certificate from the Blue Line Drug Store of Tunica, Mississippi.

Folder 31: J.N. Merrill. Personal diary 

Scope and Contents note

This two-volume journal kept by J. N. Merrill, details the life of a colonel in the Persian army from 1 January 1914 to 15
November 1915.

Folder 32: J.N. Merrill. Personal diary transcription 

Box 5 

Folder 1: Mississippi Poets (1 of 2). Photocopied “Data Sheet” and “Bibliography of Poems” re: Winifred H. Farrar (late 1960s).
Pamphlet re: Charles Lamar Nelson, “Poet of Oxford” (c. 1970s). Strophes Vol. 13 No. 1 (August 1976), published by the National
Federation of State Poetry Societies, Inc 

Folder 2: Mississippi Poets (2 of 2). Photocopied “Data Sheet” and “Bibliography of Poems” re: Winifred H. Farrar (late 1960s).
Pamphlet re: Charles Lamar Nelson, “Poet of Oxford” (c. 1970s). Strophes Vol. 13 No. 1 (August 1976), published by the National
Federation of State Poetry Societies, Inc 

Folder 3: Hurricane Camille. Broadside advertising the sale of “a portfolio of fifty-nine selected photographs of the damage
caused by Hurricane Camille” on the Mississippi Gulf Coast 

Folder 4: Constitutional Convention, 1868. Printed document from the Constitutional Convention of 1868: “Report of Committee
on County Boundaries Number 46.” 

Folder 5: Mississippi Taxation. Documents from the State Tax Commission ranging from 1941 to 1958 

Folder 6: Mississippi climate. U.S. Department of Commerce, Weather Bureau, Climatological Summary from the Biloxi Station,
Means and extremes for the period 1931-1960 

Folder 7: Mississippi football. “No. 6: I Challenge You,” a broadside advocating the economic benefits derived from the college
football: “College Football is Big Business.” 

Box 6 

Donald Price. Funeral Flag Large American flag used in a funeral ceremony, donated by Mrs. W. R. Parsons. 1 box 

Oversize 

Box 7 

Folder 1: Recruit, “Little Cigars” Stand-up cutouts of military personnel. “Recruit’ Little Cigars, All Tobacco, No Paper,
Not a Cigarette.” 

Folder 2: Various drawings of military uniforms 

Scope and Contents note

(1) “The Gay Adventures of the Old South Guards,” produced by Southern Comfort Corp. Includes copies of “Charleston Light
Dragoons,” “Norfolk Troop of Horse,” “Lexington Light Infantry,” and “Native American Battalion.” (2 copies of each) (2) “Military
Uniforms in America” produced by the Company of Military Collectors and Historians. Includes copies of “Glengary Light Infantry
Regiment (1812-1816),” “Boarding Party, U.S. Navy, 1815, Naval War with Algiers,” and “The 113th and 114th Polish Demi-Brigades
in Santo Domingo, 1803.” (3) Drawings of various types of military uniforms, Produced by J.H. Magruder, Maj. USMCR

Folder 3: “Welcome to Mississippi” Tourist poster from 1949. “Welcome to Mississippi: May is Hospitality Month.” 

Folder 4: This is Newton County Supplement to the >Meridian Star and The Newton Star, February 27, 1975. This publication
contains articles on the history, people and economy of Newton County, Mississippi 

Folder 5: Southern Coalition Report on Jails & Prisons Various newsletters and articles on the prison situation in the South.
(1) “Mississippi’s Women Prisoners” (2) Issues dating from 1977-1979 of the Southern Coalition Report on Jails & Prisons (3)
“Report of Penitentiary Committee on Inspection Tour of State Penitentiary at Parchman, Mississippi, January 17 and 18, 1958 

General note

Published reports have been removed for cataloging

Folder 6: Collection of Colonial American Documents Photocopies of various documents written during Colonial America 

Folder 7: Jefferson Davis Engraving Matted engraving of Jefferson Davis. “Engraved and Published by William Sartain, 728 Sansom
St. Philadelphia.” 

Folder 8: Jefferson Davis print Print of Robert P. McHugh’s “Jefferson Davis: An American Patriot,” and Three printed sheets
appealing to add Jefferson Davis to the roster of the National Hall of Fame   1 tube. Oversized material

Longstreet grave rubbing Rubbing of Civil War General, Longstreet’s, grave marker   1 tube. Oversized material

Folder 9: Mississippi Agricultural and Industry Board publicity releases 

Scope and Contents note

Various publications of the Mississippi Agricultural and Industry Board

“Fame of Natchez is result of idea developed in 1932” 

“Mississippi highway patrol chalks up excellent record” 

“New programs at Parchman pays off in men and money” 

“Mississippi TB sanatorium considered tops in nation” 

“Plans launched for huge shrine, gardens on coast” 

“Popular Mississippi coast coming back bigger, better” 

“Mississippi towns show promotion originality” 

“Biloxi will hold 250th birthday party in April” 

“Mississippi’s Future As Oil, Gas Producing State is Bright” 

“Tourist Dollars Can Mean Big Business” 

“New Industrial Booklet Shows State Advantages” 

“Legislature Helps State’s Bid for Industrial Gains” 

“State Makes Mighty Strides in ’48 to Balance Economy” 

“Communities Seeking Industry Must First Know Their Assets” 

“Mississippi Legislature Opens Door to Industry, Agriculture” 

“Prairie Training Institute is Supplying Industrial Need” 

“Historic First Capital Overlooked by Motorists” 

“Prizes Offered Communities In Tourist Programs Contest” 

“Travel tour Acquaints Writers AAA Managers With State” 

“State Launches its Biggest Program to Attract Tourists” 

“New 15-Story Mississippi Office Building Started” 

“Columbia is Example of BAWI in Action” 

“Iuka to Celebrate National Award in Ceremonies July 6th” 

“State Parks Expected to Draw Half-A-Million Visitors in ’46” 

“Growing State Park System to Draw 300,000 This Year” 

“Ship, Paint, New Factory Feature Last Month of ’47” 

“Mississippi’s Gulf Ports Going After New Business” 

“Record Year Being Chalked Up For Agriculture and Industry” 

“Industries Providing Jobs, More Income in Mississippi” 

“Mississippi on the March, Board’s Report Indicates” 

“South Mississippi Orchardists See $10,000,000 Tung Industry” 

“Much of State’s Progress Due To Good Transportation” 

“Tourist Business is Proving Boon to “Hospitality State” 

“State Program Attract Tourists Gets Good Results” 

“State Puts Hospitality to Work in Tourist Bid” 

“Hospitality Month Plan Calls for ‘Host’ Schools” 

“Travel Editors Discover fine Vacationland in Mississippi” 

“Mississippi’s First Travel Exhibit Proves Successful” 

“See Mississippi First…Through Eyes of Tourists” 

Yazoo County News. “The Fourth in Yazoo City” 7 July 1924 

Yazoo County News. “Dr. Zeller’s Speech”. 21 July 1924 

The Maroon (Tacoma, Wash.) Vol 1 no 5 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1991 

Box 1 

“Burning Roses” 

Scope and Contents note

Screenplay set at the University of Mississippi in 1987 exploring continuing racial tension on the anniversary of James Meredith’s
admittance. (author unknown)

Folder 1: First Text 

Folder 2: Chronology for Second Text 

Folder 3: Second Text (1 of 4) 

Folder 4: Second Text (2 of 4) 

Folder 5: Second Text (3 of 4) 

Folder 6: Second Text (4 of 4) 

Folder 7: Third Text (1 of 4) 

Folder 8: Third Text (2 of 4) 

Folder 9: Third Text (3 of 4) 

Folder 10: Third Text (4 of 4) 

Folder 11: Chronology for Third Text 

Folder 12: Final Text (1 of 2) 

Folder 13: Final Text (2 of 2) 

Folder 14: Notes (1 of 3) 

Folder 15: Notes (2 of 3) 

Folder 16: Notes (3 of 3) 

Folder 17: Lt. Lloyd L. Le Clair. Postcard from Le Clair to Dean Guest dated 1 September 1944. Le Clair and Guest were both
University of Mississippi students who left school to enlist. Le Clair was a Prisoner of War in Germany when the card was
sent 

Folder 18: Rick Bass. Press kit received by the Center for the Study of Southern Culture 30 January 1991, regarding Oil Notes,
and the new Winter: Notes from Montana 

Folder 19: Martha Lacy Hall. Louisiana State University Press. Book News re: Hall’s 1990 release of The Apple-Green Triumph
and Other Stories 

Folder 20: Scuppernongs Photocopy of a transcript of “Ho! The Scuppernong,” a letter written by James Marcus Taylor of Corinth
and published in Southern Cultivator (vol. 26, no. 10) October 1868. Accompanied by a letter written May 15, 1983 by Milton
Sandy, Jr., CPA, also of Corinth, considering the historical context of Taylor’s letter. Also accompanied by a Biography of
Dr. James Marcus Taylor and a Bibliography compiled by Stephanie L. Sandy 

Folder 21: Edgar Wiggins Waugh. T.D., “My Experiences as Editor of the Mississippian, 1922-23 by Edgar Wiggins Waugh, Professor
Emeritus, Political Science Eastern Michigan University.” TLS. from Waugh to Dr. Gerald W. Walton, Associate Vice Chancellor
for Academic Affairs, U. of MS, January 25, 1991. T. D. S. entitled “The Holy Jo Incident At Ole Miss-Fall of 1918.” TLS.
from Dr. Gerald W. Walton to Dr. Thomas Verich re: E. W. Waugh’s experiences 

Folder 22: Conde Nast. Traveler October 1990. “Southern Sojourns,” pp. 192-203, 215-17, including a blurb by William Ferris
on Smitty’s and Mrs. Isaiah’s 

Folder 23: Augusta Word Cole. T. D. A brief biography of Augusta Word Cole, a New Albany native, and comments on seven of
her paintings 

Folder 24: Clemma Dale. TLS. from Dale to Williams P. Young at the University of Mississippi’s library dated June 27, 1979.
Re: The Library’s Gershwin exhibit. Dale played Bess from Porgy and Bess in Performances and recordings 

Folder 25: Rick Bass. Press kit, 11 July 1989. In support of his release Oil Notes 

Folder 26: Calvin S. Brown, Chancellor, University of Mississippi. Photocopied correspondence, 1914, 1948 

Folder 27: The Yuppies of Mississippi. Photocopy of a Clarion Ledger article (December 6, 1984 vol. 148, no. 240, pp. 1) entitled
“Court fires Faulkner at deer spotlighters,” in which journalist Tom Brennan writes of the State Supreme Court decision affirming
the conviction of Milton V. Pharr on six misdemeanor violations of state game laws. Included are photocopies of “In the Supreme
Court of Mississippi No. 55,015, Milton V. Pharr v. State of Mississippi,” Justice James Robertson writing the majority opinion
for the court, and Justice Hawkins opining in dissent 

Folder 28: Miss [Elfida?] Barrow. ALS. from John Farrar to Barrow. ACS. to Barrow from Dorothy Heyward, postmarked December
29, 1924 

Folder 29:William P. Gould. Transcription of a letter written 14 February 1821 from “Choctaw Agency” to Eden Brashears in
Port Gibson, re: an annuity to be administered by Gould to Choctaws. Included are brief biographies of the men mentioned in
the letter 

Folder 30: The Southron Premiere Reissue, March 1991. Including articles by Willie Morris and Johnny shines, and interviews
with Shelby Foote, Rick Bass, and Barry Hannah 

Folder 31: Bill of Sale for a Slave. ADS. Written by L. John McThompson (sp?) conveying “a negro boy named Robert about twenty
or two years old” to James Davenport for “the sum of five hundred dollars.” Dated May 26, 1826 

Folder 32: Harriet Blanton Theobald. (1833-1886) Manuscript of the early history of Greenville (original) 

Folder 33: Blanton Theobald. (1833-1886) Manuscript of the early history of Greenville (typed transcriptions) 

Folder 34: Harriet Blanton Theobald. (1833-1886) History of Greenville 

Folder 35: Harriet Blanton Theobald. (1833-1886) Printed obituary notice for Theobald outlining her history and the gifts
given to the city. 

Folder 36: Harriet Blanton Theobald. (1833-1886) Greenville Early History 

Folder 37: Morris Dees. Steve Fiffer. TMs. “A Season for Justice.” (422 pages) 

Box 2 

Folder 1: David E. Galloway. Galloway’s memoirs, From the Jungle to the Arctic 

Folder 2: David E. Galloway. Typed letter from Galloway to William Ferris dated 19 December 1990. (Two photocopies) The letter
refers to a “parchment deed” given to Ferris and an excerpt from Galloway’s memoirs that refer to the deed. 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1992 

Box 1 

Folder 1: James “Cool Papa” Bell. Photocopies of biographical entries on Bell from Who’s Who Among Black Americans, 1990-91,
and two other books. A Clarion-Ledger article on the dedication of Cool Papa Bell Drive in Jackson, MS. A.C. S. from Bell
to Mr. Danny Schlesinger dated August 3, 1977. Bell played baseball in the Negro Leagues from 1922-50 and was inducted into
the Hall of Fame in 1974 

Folder 2: Rabb / Ferris Family. Typescripts and Correspondence, April 2, 1851-January 7, 1854. “My Family,” by E. B. Ferris,
including a genealogy linking Ferris to the Plantagenets. “My Travels Over a Long Span of Years,” also by E.B. Ferris. “Records
of the Past, January-1884,” written by Ann Tompkins Minor Trueheart. Correspondence, 1 July 1826 – 12 June 1882 (1 of 2) 

Folder 3: Rabb / Ferris Family. Typescripts and Correspondence, April 2, 1851-January 7, 1854. “My Family,” by E. B. Ferris,
including a genealogy linking Ferris to the Plantagenets. “My Travels Over a Long Span of Years,” also by E.B. Ferris. “Records
of the Past, January-1884,” written by Ann Tompkins Minor Trueheart. Correspondence, 1 July 1826 – 12 June 1882 (2 of 2) 

Folder 4: William Atwood Reconstruction documents. ALS., 26 November 1869. Printed documents: General Orders & Special Orders
No. 234 (Covington County), 236, 254, and 234 (Davis County) 

Folder 5: Dr. L.A. Wailes. Undated, photocopy of a TLS. in which Wailes recalls his Civil War service 

Folder 6: Petition to Pass Federal Anti-Lynch Law. The petition was to be returned to the National Negro Council in Washington,
D. C. Also reads, “Keep Bilbo Out of the Senate!” 

Folder 7: Amite County Marriage License. ADS. “Tho. Batchelor Clk,” licensing Isaac Vanduzor (sp?) and Constant Glascock (sp?).
23 February 1822 

Folder 8: The Oxford Chick “Oxford, Mississippi, Published when necessary, Necessary: January 1992 Second Issue.” Re: Conservative
viewpoints on cable television for the elderly and censorship 

Folder 9: Alexander Brisse. Leon de Rotrou. “The Draining of Lake Fucino Accomplished by his Excellency Prince Alexander Torlonia:
An Abridged Account Historical and Technical by messrs Alexander Brisse, Engineer in Chief of the Draining and Leon de Rotrou,
Late Chief Resident of the Administration.” Printed at the Propaganda Press – Rome, 1876 

Folder 10: Dubose Heyward. ANS. Christmas card, December 1929 

Folder 11: James Wilkinson. ALS. from Wilkinson to Governor Winthrop Sargent, [1 July 1799 ?] Complaining about pirates on
the Mississippi River pushing up the cost of freight from the Ohio River to the port of New Orleans 

Folder 12: Know Your State scrapbook. A scrapbook containing a series of Jackson Daily News articles that ran from January
1963 through May 1963. Each article gives a quick review of information for an individual county 

Folder 13: Grenada Bank. Photocopies of documents explaining why the FDIC now refers purchasers of failed banks to Grenada
Bank for direction 

Folder 14: Edmund Richardson. “A Lease of the Mississippi State Penetentiary [sic] to Edmund Richardson of Jackson, Mississippi:
Jackson, Mississippi 1868.” A. D. S 

Oversize 

Box 2 

Folder 7: “Know Your State” by Robert M. Thompson. Collection of newspaper articles, “Know Your State” compiled in a ledger
by E.O. Harder, 3418 Northview Drive, Jackson, Mississippi 39211. (2 copies) 

Folder 8: “Meeting Our Mississippi Neighbors” Collection of newspaper articles, “Meeting Our Mississippi Neighbors” from 1955-1975 

Box 3 

Folder 1: “Cotton Blockade at Meridian, Mississippi” in Drawings in the January 17, 1880, edition of Harper’s Weekly titled:
Harper’s Weekly “A Cotton Blockade at Meridian, Mississippi.” (from sketches by J.H. Moser) 

Folder 2: Glen Gordon Recreations by T.S. Hardee. “Glen Gordon, On the Tangipahoa-Chatawa, Miss. 92 miles from New Orleans.”
by T.S. Hardee, Philip Werlein, New Orleans, 135 Canal Street 

Folder 3: Duncan letters. Photocopy of letters written by members of the Duncan family dating July 22, 1840 

Folder 4: Autographed manuscript “Young America” This autographed manuscript, “Young America”, was written in 1856 as a prospectus
for a Know-Nothing Party newspaper in Vicksburg, MS 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1993 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Map of Old Wyatt ALS. from Mrs. J. N. Neville to Mrs. Elliott regarding a map. Dated October 24, 1932. ALS. from
the map’s original owner, Mr. M. J. Harmon (sp?) to Mr. Miller, to whom he gave the map. Dated July 25, 1901 

Folder 2: Petition of the South Oxford Congregational. ADS. Petition dated 14 December 1986 protesting Methodist Church “the
recent actions of the American Civil Liberties Union against the State of Mississippi,” “the recent actions of U. S. Dist.
Judge William H. Barbour, Jr.,” and favoring “the initial action of Gov. Bill Allain who ordered that the appropriate offices
of the Water Sillers State Office Building be lighted in order to form a cross” during the Christmas season 

Folder 3: David M. Fazio. TLS. David M. Fazio to Dr. John Pilkington, 21 June 1989 re: Pilkington’s help with Fazio’s paper
on the architect William McKnight Bowman. Included is a T. Ms., “A Small Survey into the Realm of Human Activity: An Essay
on the Art of Architecture.” 

Folder 4: David Reese Chapter, D.A.R. Photocopies of “Some Early History of Lafayette County Mississippi compiled by David
Reese Chapter, D.A.R., begun in October 1922.” (Original is Housed in Daughters of the American Revolution (David Reese Chapter,
Oxford, MS) Collection, Box 12) 

Folder 5: “Sons of the South” Filmstrip 

Conditions Governing Access note

Removed to Cold Storage for preservation

Folder 6: Henry Minor Faser, of the Lamar Life Insurance Company, Home Office, Jackson, Mississippi. TLS. on The Lamar Life
Insurance Company letterhead. From Faser to Henry Minor Faser, Jr., sending him “the dollar bill which was given you many
years ago at the A. & M. College, now Mississippi State.” Dated June 21, 1946. (Includes the 1917 dollar bill) 

Folder 7: Catalogue of the Officers and Students of Banner College (Banner, Calhoun County, Mississippi). 1887-1888. (2 photocopies
of the printed document) 

Folder 8: Southern Literary Festival. (1 of 4) 

Scope and Contents note

Printed programs from 1938 (hosted by Blue Mountain College) 1955 (hosted by Delta State College), and 1960 (hosted by Baylor
University). Various newspaper clippings, 1960

Folder 9: Southern Literary Festival. (2 of 4) 

Scope and Contents note

Printed programs from 1938 (hosted by Blue Mountain College) 1955 (hosted by Delta State College), and 1960 (hosted by Baylor
University). Various newspaper clippings, 1960

Folder 10: Southern Literary Festival. (3 of 4) 

Scope and Contents note

Printed programs from 1938 (hosted by Blue Mountain College) 1955 (hosted by Delta State College), and 1960 (hosted by Baylor
University). Various newspaper clippings, 1960

Folder 11: Southern Literary Festival. (4 of 4) 

Scope and Contents note

Printed programs from 1938 (hosted by Blue Mountain College) 1955 (hosted by Delta State College), and 1960 (hosted by Baylor
University). Various newspaper clippings, 1960

Box 2 

Folder 12: Ford Family Collection. ALS. from Uncle Jobus to Miss Nellie Ford dated 12 April 1893 & Printed document from the
State of Mississippi Executive Office assigning T. S. Ford as the District Attorney to the 7th Judicial District, dated 19
February 1877. 

Folder 13: Ford Family Collection. Photocopy of J. Ebenezer Ford’s will, 17 September 1859. Photocopied correspondence and
newspaper articles re: Ebb J. Ford’s winning of Mississippi’s first Rhodes scholarship. 

Folder 14: Ford Family Collection. Photocopies of photographs 

Folder 15: Key Brothers Collection Photocopies. Documents concerning the Key Brothers’s record setting 653 hour endurance
flight in 1935, including aircraft and engine logs 

Folder 16: Mississippi Academy of Science. Programs: lists of papers to be presented, and committee appointments, 1939-1942.
Handwritten and typewritten drafts of the organization’s constitution 

Folder 17: Mamie Lee Ratliff Finger. TMs. “Growing up Southern in the Mississippi Delta, 1918-1935.” 

Folder 18: Mahalia Saville. Four letters written to Saville giving her permission to include various poems in a poetry anthology.
Also, TMs. of “The Black Night,” by James Hopper 

Folder 19: Joseph Jeffer. ADS. A contract for the indentured servitude/apprenticeship of Joseph Jeffer of the County of N.
London to Edward Mott, to be served in Connecticut colony, 20 November 1769 

Folder 20: Robb Farm. Journal (all photocopies) AN., “ledgers of Bill Ferris’s ancestors.” Photocopies of scraps of paper
with handwritten recipes on them. Photocopies of ledger entries recording the weight of cotton picked by individual slaves
on individual days, 1839-1840. A variety of other ledger notes on produce, purchases, and activities through 1865 (1 of 4) 

Folder 21: Robb Farm. Journal (all photocopies) AN., “ledgers of Bill Ferris’s ancestors.” Photocopies of scraps of paper
with handwritten recipes on them. Photocopies of ledger entries recording the weight of cotton picked by individual slaves
on individual days, 1839-1840. A variety of other ledger notes on produce, purchases, and activities through 1865 (2 of 4) 

Folder 22: Robb Farm. Journal (all photocopies) AN., “ledgers of Bill Ferris’s ancestors.” Photocopies of scraps of paper
with handwritten recipes on them. Photocopies of ledger entries recording the weight of cotton picked by individual slaves
on individual days, 1839-1840. A variety of other ledger notes on produce, purchases, and activities through 1865 (3 of 4) 

Folder 23: Robb Farm. Journal (all photocopies) AN., “ledgers of Bill Ferris’s ancestors.” Photocopies of scraps of paper
with handwritten recipes on them. Photocopies of ledger entries recording the weight of cotton picked by individual slaves
on individual days, 1839-1840. A variety of other ledger notes on produce, purchases, and activities through 1865 (4 of 4) 

Folder 24: A.B. Longstreet, plaintiff’s attorney. ADS. October 25, 1830. Longstreet’s petition to the court and tH.R.sulting
summons to the defendants to appear in court in order to settle a debt 

Box 3 

Folder 25: Mamie Lee Ratliff Finger. TMs. of reminiscences regarding Mrs. Finger’s life experiences-her childhood and family
in Clarksdale and an in-depth account of her mother’s life, Cora Rodman Ratliff, a civil rights activist 

Folder 26: Mamie Lee Ratliff Finger. Promotional material from the Agnes Scott College, Decatur, GA, in which Mrs. Finger
is noted as a distinguished alumnus 

Folder 27: National Geographic, July 1963 This issue of National Geographic includes an article on Vicksburg, MS 

Folder 28: Lou H. Randle. TD. Provenance for Lou H. Randle’s diary/photo album 

Oversize 

Folder 1: Port Hudson, LA (Civil War) Lithographs 

“The Lower Mississippi Fleet, Led by Admiral Farragut in the Flagship Hartford, Running the Port Hudson Batteries Saturday
Night, March 14-U.S.S. Mississippi on Fire and Aground-Crew Escaping” in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, from a sketch
by our Special Artist, F. H. Schell 

“View of Springfield Landing, Below Port Hudson, LA A Depot of Supplies for Bank’s Army” from a drawing by Mr. J. H. Hamilton,
“The Siege of Port Hudson-General Paine’s Head-quarters at Chambers’s Sugar-House” and “The Siege of Port Hudson-Head-quarters
of General Banks at Riley’s Plantation.” 

“Opening of the Mississippi-Interior View of Port Hudson-From a sketch by our special artist, Fred G. Schell” and “Destruction
Of the U. S. Steamer, Mississippi, Saturday Night, March 14, in the Mississippi River, Below Port Hudson-Explosion of the
Magazine-From a sketch by our special artist, Mr. F. H. Schell” 

“Grand Assault of General Augur’s Division of the Fortifications of Port Hudson, 27th May, 1863-sketched by Mr. J. R. Hamilton” 

“The Bombardment of Port Hudson-The 100-pound Gun of the “Richmond” At Work-Sketched by an Officer of the Navy. 

“The Bombardment of Port Hudson-A Mortar Schooner at Work-Sketched by a Naval Officer” and “Scene of General Painps 

Assault on Port Hudson on June 14, 1868-Carrying off Our Dead and Wounded Under a Flag of Truce” 

“Opening of the Mississippi- View of the Rebel Batteries at Port Hudson-From a Sketch by our special artist Fred B. Schell”
and “Opening of the Mississippi-Ovation of the Inhabitants to the Sallie List, Descending the Mississippi. From a sketch by
our special artist, Fred B. Schell” 

“The Siege of Port Hudson-Birds-Eye View of the Great River Battery, Three Hundred Yards from the Rebel Citadel-Sketched by
Mr. J. R. Hamilton” 

“Port Hudson From the Opposite Bank of the River” and ” The Union Forces Entering the Breast-Works to Take Possession of Port
Hudson, July 9, 1863-From A Sketch by Mr. J. R. Hamilton” 

“Capture of Rebel Rifle-Pits, Three-Fourths Of a Mile from Port Hudson, Louisiana, by General Grover’s Division, May 24, 1863-Sketched
by Mr. J. R. Hamilton” 

“Saluting the Old Flag at Port Hudson, July 8,1863-Drawn by Mr. J.R. Hamilton” and “The Formal Surrender of Port Hudson-Drawn
by Mr. J. R. Hamilton” 

Folder 2: Reproduction of The Religious Remembrancer Reproduction of The Religious Remembrancer (1818) and later known as
the Christian Observer 

Folder 3: Land Certificate, Ellias Hines. United States of America land certificate signed by President John Tyler from Tippah
County, Mississippi. Also included is an article from the Southern Sentinel, February 25, 1993, claiming that President Bill
Clinton’s Grandparents were Tippah County natives 

Folder 4: Oxford Training School July 8, 1994 issue of the OTS Reunion Contains articles about the Oxford training school.” 

Folder 5: Miller Brewing Company “Gallery of Greats” calendar Twelve month calendar published by the Miller Brewing Company
to acknowledge the accomplishments of African-Americans 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1994 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Cliff Williams Machine Company. Business envelope. Company headquartered in Meridian, Mississippi. “We Build Best
4-6-8-Wheel Log and Lumber Wagons, Carts, Go-Devils on Earth Or Elsewhere. Will sell you a complete portable saw mill Rig
and take pay in lumber.” 

Folder 2: WPA Federal Writers’s Project. TL. from the UM librarian to Miss Eri Douglas, Director, “WPA Federal Writers [sic] Project,” dated May 26, 1938. TMs., press release re: the Writers’s Project publication, “Mississippi: A Guide to the Magnolia
State.” 

Folder 3: Charles A. Mills. TMs. “Holly Springs: A Portrait (1837-1878),” by Charles A. Mills 

Folder 4: Paul Harvey. Excerpts from Newscast. 26 January 1961 (Greenwood, Miss.) 

Folder 5: Colored Bar Association of Mississippi. Program for 1st Annual Meeting (Photocopy) 

Folder 6: “Thru Young Eyes: Historic Oxford 1994 “This calendar was created and designed by Oxford Middle Calendar” School
7th grade enrichment class.” The calendar includes a Collection of drawings depicting numerous historic buildings in town 

Folder 7: Grenada, Mississippi. Photocopies of 12 ALS. between family members, some in school in New York and some, presumable
still in Grenada. July 1840 

Folder 8: Jack Cook. TMs., “The Spirit of Red River,” 1992. “A journalistic analysis of the famous legend of the ‘Bell Witch’
of Adams, Tennessee taken from four years of research concentrating on existant [sic] historical records and family papers
from the eras of 1750 up to the present.” 

Folder 9: J.R.A. Shields. TLS. from Shields to Whitman Bennett of Bennett Book Studios regarding the possibility that Thomas
Hardy plagiarized a passage from A. B. Longstreet’s Georgia Scenes and placed it in The Trumpet Major 

Folder 10: Union ironclad gunboat, city class, U.S.S. Cairo. Correspondence and photocopies of photograph concerning raising
the U.S.S. Cairo from the bottom of the Yazoo River. 

Conditions Governing Access note

Photographs removed to Cold Storage for preservation

Folder 11: Garner James. from Jane Bourne Newspaper clippings and photograph re: cave paintings, the U.S. Coast Guard, aeronautics,
and lighthouses. (1930s-1940s) 

Folder 12: WWII Weekend, April 8-9, 1994 A printed program from the World War II Weekend Retreat Ceremony, April 9, 1994,
3:00 p.m. The event was sponsored by the University of Mississippi, City of Oxford, Ole Miss Alumni Assoc., Oxford Tourism
Council, Combined ROTC Units, and the Class of 1944 

Folder 13: German language travel pamphlets for visitors. Printed documents, “Mississippi, Eine Geographisch, to Mississippi
and Alabama. Statistisch, Topographische Gfizze fur Einwanderer und Freunde der lander, und Bolferfunde,” (1837) and “Mississippi
und Alabama. Zaschenbuch fur Einwanderer und Freunde der Lander, und Bolferfunde.” (1837) 

Folder 14: Montgomery Ward & Company. 1 April 1894 issue of Montgomery Ward & co.’s Price List of Groceries No. 384 

Folder 15: Salt-Works Press, Grenada, Mississippi. Circular from Salt-Works press re: poet Lyn Hejinian’s Redo 

Folder 16: C. Bruno & Son, 356 Broadway, New York. Printed advertisements for the sale of musical instruments and sheet music
for the autoharp and the Gem Roller Organ. c. 1930s 

Folder 17: Dr. Landsdowne’s Restorative Treatment and Developing Ointment Printed advertisement. The Restorative Treatment
and Developing Ointment, “which has been found to be wonderfully potent in enlarging the organs of generation when properly
used in conjunction with the restorative Treatment.” 

Folder 18: Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis R. R. Two printed circulars. One advertises fares to the Southern Baptist Kansas
City, Memphis & Birmingham R. R. Convention, Dallas, Texas, May 11-15, 1894. The second advertises local round-trip fares
(May 3, 1894) 

Folder 19: John M. Smyth Company, 148-166 West Madison St. Chicago. c. 1900. Printed catalog for this home furnishings dealers 

Folder 20: Walter P. Lewisohn. Correspondence between Lewisohn and R. Philip Hanes seeking the assistance of the Penland School
of Crafts in North Carolina in founding a craft school in the Virgin Islands. (1970) 

Folder 21: Charles Lovinggood. ALS. from Lovinggood to Miss Ruth Reynolds, both of Oxford, MS. (1889) 

Folder 22: Jefferson Davis Material. “Jefferson Davis: The Wisconsin Years,” in Wisconsin Then and Now 19:5 (December 1972)
published by the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Program from “Dedication, Jefferson Davis Statue, Confederate Park,”
October 4, 1964, in Memphis. Program from “Unveiling of Monument of Jefferson Davis Presented by the United Daughters of the
Confederacy to the State of Alabama,” in Montgomery, 13 November 1940 

Folder 23: Hodding Carter. “An informal call on Hodding Carter in Greenville, Mississippi,” in University: A Princeton Quarterly
25 (Summer 1965) by William McCleery. (Photocopy) 

Folder 24: Mississippi State Fair. TLS. to “All Members of Mississippi State Legislature” from N. S. Hand, Executive Secretary.
September 29, 1958. An invitation to the legislature to attend the Fair 

Folder 25: The Fund For the Public Bulletin. “An Independent Editor,” re: Hazel Brannon Smith of Lexington, April 1957 MS,
who was honored for “her forthright editorials and news reporting,” especially “during the recent outbreaks of race violence.” 

Folder 26: Mary Louise Newton. Poems Privately printed editions of Newton’s poems-seven slim volumes, 1923-1930, and a printed
card with a Christmas poem on it 

Folder 27: “Mississippi Makes a Movie” In Dixie Roto Magazine, published by The Times Picayune the week of November 9, 1953.
Re: the making of the movie, Jesse James’ Women 

Folder 28: Mississippi Military Helping Build Mississippi, Spring 1969. This issue of the magazine is devoted to Mississippi’s
military heritage and future 

Folder 29: Governor’s Day Review Program July 27, 1968. Alabama Governor Albert P. Brewer, State of Alabama Adjutant General
Alfred C. Harrison and others review various military units at Camp Shelby, Mississippi 

Folder 30: L.Q.C. Lamar. Two photocopied letters regarding a baby’s christening dress sewn by Mrs. L. Q. C. Lamar. “L. Q.
C. Lamar-Law Office,” a single page TMs. by Robert A. Linder re: his attempt to identify the location of Lamar’s law office,
1974. “L. Q. C. Lamar: A Great Mississippian and a Great American,” in
The Staple Cotton Review, “Official Organ of the Staple Cotton Cooperative Association, Published at Greenwood Mississippi,” Vol. 25, No. 3 (March
1947). Pamphlet, “Historic Old Oxford, Georgia.” 

Folder 31: Descendants of the New Jersey Settlers. Printed card announcing the “36th Annual Reunion [of] Descendants of the
New Jersey Settlers, Kingston, Adams County, Mississippi,” April 27, 1975 

Folder 32: “Manufacturing Development During the Civil Written by Victor S. Clark and “Reprinted from the The War” Military
Historian and Economist, Vol. 3, No.2, (April 1918) 

Folder 33: “Memphis Area Alternatives For A Multi-State Transportation System” (printed pamphlet) prepared for the Mississippi
Research & Development Center re: establishing Memphis as a connection point in “A multi-state, multi-mode transportation
corridor between Brunswick, Georgia, and Kansas City, Missouri.” 

Folder 34: Hurricane Camille. “Hurrincane Camille…One Year Later!” a supplement to The Commercial Appeal Suday, August 16,
1970. “Timber Losses form Hurricane Camille,” photocopied from Forest Farmer 

Folder 35: Mississippi National Guard. Pamphlet concerning Mississippi National Guard Office of Civil Defense Headquarters
in Jackson. Program from “Graduation Exercise, Military Academy, Mississippi Army National Guard, Class Number 2, 30 July
1960.” 

Folder 36: Southern Telephone News April 1958 edition, “The Mississippi Story,” by Ed Jackson 

Folder 37: Samuel Mills Meek of Columbus, MS. A collection of poems by Meek that appear to have been 1833-1901. copied by
hand from some other source 

Box 2 

Folder 1: “Articles Relating to Mississippi and Mississippians” in Illinois Central Magazine, June-June 1901-1931.” 

Folder 2: Oxford Annual Volunteer Award Luncheon. Printed program from the event, 1987-88 (?) 

Folder 3: Yalobusha County Historical Society, Inc. Various minutes, newsletters, and manuscripts, 1961-1980 

Folder 4: “Food Stamp Crisis” TMs., distributed by the Mississippi Hunger Coalition based in Jackson and Directed by Willeva
D. Lindsey. Includes a petition to help prevent the following: “President Ford wants to cut one-half of our people off of
food stamps.” 

Folder 5: Charles C. Flint, Jr. Diary. ORIGINAL. January-December 1865. Union soldier from Three Rivers, Michigan records
his experiences in the Civil War 

General note

Use photocopy from Folder 6.

Folder 6: Charles C. Flint, Jr. Diary. USE COPY 

Folder 7: Casey Jones Collection. Printed documents and photocopies of photograph regarding Casey Jones, a railroad engineer
who died in an accident on the tracks near Vaughan, Mississippi in 1900 

Folder 8: “Cultural Aspects of Mississippi: The Magnolia State.” TMs. is a kind of public relations publication with chapters
on education; religion; organizations, libraries, and literature; art and music; and social and recreational aspects of the
state written by individual female authors. The manuscript reflects the racism of the mid-1950s in un-calculated, Matter-of-fact
language 

Folder 9: James Nichols. Postcards and guidebook to Nichol’s photography exhibit that opened at the Icon Gallery in Washington,
D.C. on December 4, 1970. The photography exhibit focused on the Kappa Sigma fraternity at the University of Florida 

Folder 10: James Nathaniel Flowers. Program: “Unveiling of Portrait Honoring James Nathaniel Flowers, March 1965,” a prominent
attorney. 1870-1952 

Folder 11: Mississippi Native Americans. Undated, unsigned TMs., some photocopies of articles from books or journals, and
some typescripts copied from Office of Indian Affairs publications. Also, a collection of photocopied letters and documents
regarding, “the Allen case, 1837, that led to equal property rights for women.” 

Folder 12: Mississippi Archives. Photocopies. William D. McCain, “History and Program of the Mississippi State Department
of Archives and History,” in The American Archivist, Vol. 1 (January 1950), 27-34. Ernst Posner, American State Archives (Chicago:
The University of Chicago Press, 1964), 20-21, 159-164. Dunbar Rowland, ed., Encyclopedia of Mississippi History, v. 2 (Madison,
WI: S. A. Brandt, 1907), 578-79. Robert R. Simpson, “The Origin of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History,” in
The Journal of Mississippi History (1972), 2-13. William H. Weathersby, “The Preservation of Mississippi History,” in The
North Carolina Historical Review Vol. 5, No. 2 (April 1928), 141-50 

Folder 13: Mississippi Highways Pamphlet: “The County Unit Road System and What it Means to You,” from the Mississippi Economic
Council Committee on Public Administration and Taxation (MEC-CPAT), September 1956. Pamphlet: “Let’s Talk Sense About County
Roads,” from the MEC-CPAT, October 1956. Flier: “From Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. . . the Mississippi River Parkway,” c.
1970s. William Thomas, “A Southern Experience,”
The Commercial Appeal Mid-South Magazine, September 12, 1971, re: Highway 61. Pamphlet: “MEC for Better Government 23: A County Unit-A Way to Get Off ‘The Road to
Nowhere,” August 1964. Pamphlet: “MEC for Better Government 33: Why Highway Reforms Before Tax Increases,” September 1965.
Pamphlet: “Proposed Statute for County Unit System of Road Administration In Mississippi,” October 1965.
 Mississippi Public Transportation News 4:1 (May 1982). Published photograph of the Natchez Trace by Thomas Peters Lake 

Folder 14: Samuel B. Jones, Jr., “Mississippi Flora. V. The Mint Family,” reprinted from Castanea 41: 41-58, 1976 

Folder 15: Gettysburg Invitation. Two invitations addressed to the University of Mississippi Library from “His Excellency
William L. Waller Governor Of Mississippi” to the dedication ceremonies of the monument in honor of the Mississippi Confederate
Dead 

Folder 16: Mississippi Poets. “My Rose of Calvary,” by Martha Moss Johnson; “O God of Wisdom,” by Ada Neill Clark and Elta
Garnette Williams (hymn); “Symbolism,” by Anne Wilson Frye (A. Ms. S. along with a ALS. to Mrs. Thompson in the Mississippi
Room of the Library); broadside Entitled “America Circa 1974-1976,” by Sarah Peugh 

Oversize 

Box 3 

Folder 1: Stanley S. Slotkin. Various articles about Stanley S. Slotkin. Slotkin gave away $3 to $4 million worth of old Bibles 

Facsimile of The Holy Bible, Containing The OLD Teftament and The NEW: with Annotations, printed by Edinburgh: Alexander Donaldson
and John Reid 

Pages removed from facsimile: Historiae Lib XIIII Pages 245 and 246 

Pages removed from facsimile:
Bierte Dredig pages 453 and 454 

Facsimile of
A Catholic Bible 

Facsimile of portion of the Hebrew Bible, written in Arabic 

Facsimile of
The History of Great Britaine 

Facsimile of
The Works of the Reverend and Learned John Lightfoot D.D. printed by W.R. for Robert Scot in
 Little Britain, Thomas Baffet in
 Fleet-Street, Richard Chiswell in
 St. Paul’s Churchyard and John Wight on
 Ludgate-Hill 

Facsimile of
Missale Romanvm page 151 

Facsimile of El Sharkaway Aly El Tahrir’s
God Bless Him in His Tomb 

Facsimile of
Operaomnia 

Facsimile of
The Bible: That is Holy Scriptures 

Facsimile of
Bon Befahr ber Gbydnheit 

Facsimile of
La S. Bibla 

Facsimile of
Testamenti Veteris Biblia Sacra 

Facsimile of
Biblia Sacra Vvlgate ae Editionis: Sixti Qvinti 

Facsimile of
The New Testament of Ovr 

Facsimile of
Summa Jurisprudentiae Sacrae Universae, 

Facsimile of a Catholic Missal 

Facsimile of the
Koran 

Facsimile of
A Man of Many Talents: Doctor, Scientist, Historian and Admiral of the Fleet 

Facsimile of
La Sainte Bible 

Folder 3: Carroll Cloar Matted copy of the catalogue introduction for Carroll Cloar’s exhibit in the Alan Gallery, January
1956 

Folder 4: Ledger book assessing lands in Leflore Co., 1889. Leather bound ledger; “District No. 5” on the front cover. Includes
drawings of land boundaries, names of land owners, and divisions of the sections etc 

Folder 5: Harold and Diane Keith Letter. Letter from Harold and Diane Keith to “Librarian” which accompanied various pages
from books dating from the 15th to 18th Century, June 1977 

Folder 6: Poster 20th Anniversary Spring Festival Poster commemorating the 20th Anniversary Spring Festival, Saturday, April
20, 1996, Proceeds benefiting the Hoka 

Folder 7: “Last Days as a Rebel Town” by George Sisler 

Scope and Contents note

“This series of four articles was published in June 3-6 editions of the Commercial Appeaal as the ‘Old reliable’ noted the
centennial of the famous saga of journalism written by its ancestor, The Mtitleis Daily Appeal. The series is reprinted at
the request of many readers.”

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1996 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Dixie Debates uncorrected proof Uncorrected proof of Dixie Debates: Perspectives on Southern Culture edited by Richard
H. King and Helen Taylor 

Folder 2: “Broke” TMs. Poem, “Broke”, written by Langston Hughes for Rollin Greene 

Folder 3: Ship Island Soldiers Newsletter. Photocopy of Soldier’s NewsLetter (May 17, 1862) 

Folder 4: Jefferson Davis Memorial Ribbon. Correspondence between J.C. Hathorn and Dorothy Oldham. Also included are newspaper
articles concerning the discovery of a Jefferson Davis obituary ribbon 

Folder 5: “The Movement and Mobility” T. M. Copy of Kim Lacy Rogers’ paper “The Movementand Mobility: Federal Intervention
and Political Power in the Mississippi Delta.” 

Folder 6: Elizabeth Christie Brown. Diary. Original hand-written 

Folder 7: Elizabeth Christie Brown. Diary. Transcript 

Folder 8: John M. Anderson. Pocket Diary, 1854-1868 

Folder 9: John M. Anderson. Handwritten, autographed speech dated 1 April 1884 

Folder 10: John M. Anderson. Genealogical Notebook, 1847-1848 

Folder 11: John M. Anderson. Promissory Note, 18 January 1979 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1997 

Box 1 

Folder 1: “A Family Thing” script Typed script of A Family Thing by Billy Bob Thornton & Tom Epperson (March 10, 1995) and
a handwritten note to “Bill” from “Dish” (?) 

Folder 2: Norma Miller French.Letters to and from various individuals. Dates include March 26, 1856, March 30, 1860, March
4, 1862, April 9, 1862, June 8, 1862, January 16, 1863, October 1, 1864, and September 10, 1865. Also included is an enlistment
certificate from Charlotte, North Carolina, May 3, 1865, a newspaper clipping circa 1895, and a petition to join the Association
of Confederate Soldiers, Tennessee Division 

Folder 3: T.M. “The Holly Tree” Typed copy of “The Holly Tree” by Doris Kent LeBlanc. This short story relates an episode
in the life of Confederate General W. Leander Varnado. (1835-1917) 

Folder 4: “Ghosts of Mississippi” Various documents from the Jackson, MS, premier of “Ghosts of Mississippi” starring Alec
Baldwin, Whoopi Goldberg and James Woods. (December 12, 1996) 

Folder 5: Dillard and Coffin Co.Typed copy of the Government Ginners Report dated November 21, 1908, relayed by Dillard &
Coffin Co. Cotton Factors, Memphis, Tenn 

Folder 6: R.F. Crenshaw.Typescript letter from R. F. Crenshaw of Pontotoc, MS, to Miss Ella Austin of Elkton, Tenn. (December
13, 1860). The letter concludes that Mississippians are set on Secession, and the state will soon be out of the Union 

Folder 7: James Ford. Document. Handwritten bill of sale. Land sold from James Ford to H. J. Martin in Leflore County, Mississippi
(1876) 

Folder 8: Confederate Postcard. Portrait style postcard of Major Thomas G. Jones, C.S.A. Major Jones was the bearer of Lee’s
flag of truce to Grant. He was also Governor of Alabama from 1890-1894 

Folder 9: Walthall Brigade. Printed letter promoting the sale of Rev. E. A. Smith’s Records of Walthall’s Brigade (April 15,
1904). Added at the bottom of the page is a handwritten note from E. A. Smith to his brother suggesting Records of Walthall’s
Brigade be included in the “college library” 

Folder 10: Charlotte Capers. “A Requiem Eucharist” at The Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew in Jackson, Mississippi, for the
burial of Charlotte Capers (June 28, 1913- December 23, 1996) 

Folder 11: George Miller. Genealogical Materials 

Scope and Contents note

Correspondence concerning the donation of a letter from Hugh R. Miller to his son, George Miller. Letter from William Ferris,
Director of the University of Mississippi Center for the Study of Southern Culture to Don Manning-Miller (January 27, 1997).
Letter from Don Manning-Miller to Dr. Bill Ferris, Director of the University of Mississippi Center for the Study of Southern
Culture (January 10, 1997). Letter from Don Manning- Miller to Dr. David Sansing, Department of History (January 10, 1997)
Also included is a copy of the transcribed letter from Hugh R. Miller to George Miller of Oxford, Mississippi (March 14, 1861).
In the letter Hugh R. Miller reprimands his son, George Miller, for his habitual absences at the University of Mississippi.
The collection also contains bibliographic information about Russell Miller from
The History of Monroe County, Mississippi (1988) and George Miller from
 Heritage of Lafayette County, Mississippi (1998). Finally, “Cedar Hill Farm ca. 1852” from
 Faulkner, Fortunes, and Flames (1984) includes additional information on George Miller’s involvement in the “Grays”.

Folder 12: Utica Normal and Industrial School. Letter from Wm. H. Holtzclaw, Principal of the Utica Normal and Industrial
Institute for the Training of Colored Young Men and Women, to Miss. C. C. Ward (April 28, 1923) concerning the report for
the Principal and Treasure 

Folder 13: Civil War Living History. Promotional Broadside. “Civil War Living History, Arkabutla Lake May 31-June 1, 1997.” 

Scope and Contents note

This flyer promotes an opportunity for people to relive the everyday lives of Confederate soldiers. The demonstration includes
Confederate camps, weapons, tents, horses and marching drills.

Folder 14: 52nd Presidential Inaugural. Program. Program “The 52nd Presidential Inaugural: An American Reunion: New Beginnings,
Renewed Hope.” Photographs and short biographical sketches of Bill Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Al Gore and Tipper Gore.
Presidential inaugural schedule of events ( Sunday, January 17, 1993-Thursday, January 21, 1993) 

Folder 15: Karl Treen. Manuscript. Typed copy of Do YOU Remember 75 Years Ago? by Karl Treen. The work was created for the
celebration of the founding of Lamar County, Mississippi 

Folder 16: Church Women United. Manuscript. Typescript copy of “Struggling for Justice”: Church women United, Oxford, Mississippi,
1962-1991 by Lisa K. Speer. The document details the creation and activities of women’s mission groups in Oxford, Mississippi.
Typed transcription of Lisa K. Speer’s interview with Susie Marshall (October 29, 1991) 

Folder 17: ALS from Maddie to Percy, 1894 Letter written describing a relationship between a woman (Maddie), her daughter,
her daughter’s male suitor, and Mattie’s nephew (Percy) 

Folder 18: The Bruccoli Collection of F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896-1940 Thomas Cooper Library, University of South Carolina (Control
#97-73) 

Folder 19: Lee’s Sharpshooters; or the Forefront of Battle by William S. Dunlop (1899). Photocopied pages 

Folder 20: Report of Colonel Theophilus L. Dickey. Detailed report of the fighting between Confederate and Union soldiers
in and around Oxford (December 1-3, 1862), Water Valley (December 4, 1862) and Coffeeville (December 5, 1862) Mississippi 

Folder 21: League of the South. Printout from the website: http://www.dixienet.org/dnmain.html Contains background information
and activities concerning Dixinet, the League of the South, which supports the creation of a new Southern Republic 

Folder 22: B-Laws of Lafayette County Grange. Handwritten by-laws of Lafayette County Grange no. 10 c. 1874 

Folder 23: E. W. Hilgard. Field Notes. Handwritten field notes of geological and agricultural survey of parts of many MS counties,
April 6 to June 25, 1859. Bound copy Previously cataloged item QE 130 L4 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1998 

Box 1 

Folder 1: North Mississippi Herald Broadside. Published portion of a private letter from General Frank C. Armstrong to one
of his soldiers. The letter is a plea to support Charles Scott for Governor of Mississippi. (Scheduled election May 19, 1906)
(2 copies) 

Folder 2: Oxford Mercury, 3/14/1861 (Photocopy). Photocopy of an Oxford, Mississippi, newspaper. The newspaper includes articles,
advertisements and announcements. The topics discussed in this publication mainly pertain to the Confederate States of America
and the Civil War 

Folder 3: ALS. from Henderson, John to E. Dyer and Co. (Jan. 23, 1841) Letter written to an auction company concerning an
advertisement for the purchase of a “Valuable Dining-Room Servant…” Attached to the letter is a copy of the published auction
notice 

Folder 4: All-Negro Comics. Letter, 1947 T.L.S. from President of the All-Negro Comics Inc., Orrin C. Evans, to the principal
of Shady Grove School, Mattie Boyd. The letter is an attempt to encourage support for the first comic book written by African-Americans.
The letter includes N.A.A.C.P. member Roy Wilkens and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt as supporters of the publication. Also included
is an order-form for the magazine. (Dated October 31, 1947) 

Folder 5: Illinois Central. Tour Brochure (1931). Color brochure that outlines the events, activities and services offered
by the Illinois Central Railroad to the Mardi Gras festivities in New Orleans, LA. (February 6 to 12, 1931) 

Folder 6: “Private” John Allen Letter (circa 1911) Published document. “Private John” Allen Writes Open Letter to James K.
Vardaman: Offers to Donate $1,500.00 to Charity if Vardaman Will Answer Questions Suggested by the records.” Vardaman is asked
to respond to several issues: “The Secret Caucus”, “The Merger Bill”, the Mobile & Ohio Railroad, a free pass on the Gulf
and Ship Island Railroad, and “the hero battleship fund.” Printed by Hederman Bros., Jackson, Miss 

Folder 7: TDS. “To Ruth, Aged Six” By Ben Wasson Jr. Poem written to/about a child 

Folder 8: Misc. Business Records, 1870’s-1880’s 

Scope and Contents note

6 letters aND.1/or receipts for various materials. (1) Letterhead: Meyer- Bain M’f’g Co., St. Louis, April 5, 1881. Company
is a food supplier. (2) Letterhead: Chatfield & Woods, Cincinnati, February 26, 1876. Company is a wholesale paper dealer.
(3) Letterhead: Carneau, Hillard & Co., St. Louis, March 24, 1875. Company is a cracker manufacturer. (4)Bill of sale receipt
from the White, Biship & Co., August 13, 1871. Company is a tea merchant. (5)Bill of sale receipt from James Burnside, October
6, 1877. Company is an importer and manufacturer of corks. (6)Bill of sale receipt from the Missouri Pacific Railway Co, January
23, 1891. Company deals in cotton sales and transportation.

Folder 9: Cavalier Shoppe. Catalog. Catalog produced the Cavalier Shoppe in Bruce, MS, 1997-1998, Volume No. 5. Catalog offers
a variety of Confederate States of America and University of Mississippi items 

Folder 10: North Mississippi / North Alabama Fair Fan, 1925 Fan from the North Miss. / North Alabama Fair. The fair was held
in Tupelo, Mississippi, on October. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 1925. Also printed on the fan are sponsors from the fair 

Folder 11: Ray Bradbury. TDS. regarding Ray Bradbury’s memory of John Steinbeck. (5 March 1978) 

Folder 12: Misc. ANS. 1922, Poetry and Clippings (1920’s) 

Scope and Contents note

Various newspaper clippings, original poetry, and letters from the 1920’s. (1) pages 191-192 from
Captain Billy’s Whiz Bang Includes “Our History Lesson,” “A Woman’s Prayer,” and “Another Famous Saying: ‘When in Rum do as the Rummies do'” (2) A
letter size envelope with the return address: Spring Contests, Literary and Athletic, April 28 and 29, University, Mississippi.
(3) A.L.S from Liz to Miss Mary George Kinconnon, University, Miss. Also included is a newspaper clipping detailing a dance
given for young girls preparing to leave for school. (4) A poem written to accompany a potato-masher given at a kitchen shower.

Folder 13: Col. Roscoe Turner. Souvenir Pack 

Scope and Contents note

Information about the life and military career of Corinth, Mississippi, native Col. Roscoe Turner. Contains an article from

Time: The Weekly Newsmagazine, October 29, 1934 (two copies) and a lapel pin commemorating the commissioning of Corinth, Mississippi’s, first airport on
October 15, 1936.

Folder 14: Choctaw Heritage Press. Pamphlet produced by the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians 

Scope and Contents note

Document contains background information on the Choctaw Heritage Press, The Choctaw Department of Education and opportunities
to purchase educational videos, cassette tapes, and books published by the Choctaw Heritage Press. (2 copies)

Folder 15: Fall 1998 Book Catalog for Hill Street Press 

Scope and Contents note

Informational brochure that describes the purpose of the Hill Street Press and books offered for purchase. Offered in this
edition is
The Silent Stars Go By by Philip Lee Williams,
 Literary Savannah by Patrick Allen,
 Southern Christmas  Literary Classics of the Holidays by Thomas Payton,
 My Brother Bill, by John Faulkner and
 The Dog Star By Donald Windham.

Folder 16: “The Crossroads”: North Mississippi Regional Center Special anniversary issue of “The Crossroads.” 

Scope and Contents note

Issue contains Newsletter; Summer 1998 articles, maps and a timeline celebrating The North Mississippi Regional Center’s 25
years of service.

Folder 17: Yellow Barn Press. Broadside. Re: Sandy MacPherson 

Scope and Contents note

Broadside advertising the second printing of
Sandy MacPherson: Book Collector by Newman Levy. Included is information on the publication and a reservation order form.

Folder 18: Arion Press. Broadsides, Fall 1998 

Scope and Contents note

Various documents concerning the publications of The Arion Press of
Re: The Bible and
 Kora In Hell San Francisco, California. (1) T.L. from The Arion Press to Mr. Thomas Verich, September 8, 1998. (2) Broadside announcing
the The publication of a lectern addition of
 The Holy Bible (3) Broadside announcing the publication of
 Kora In Hell by William Carlos Williams, introduction by Lawrence Kart, with twenty-one prints in the book and three extra woodblock prints
by Mel Kendrick.

Folder 19: Price List September 1997 / Arion Press 

Scope and Contents note

List, price and other bibliographic information about currentlyavailable publications from Arion Press. (September 1997) T.L.
from Andrew Hoyem to “Librarian”, October 15, 1997, concerning Helen Vendler publications.

Folder 20: Broadside for With The Night Mail by Rudyard Kipling, Broadside of With The Night Mail: A Story of 2000 A.D. by
Rudyard Kipling, Introduction by Thomas Pinney, Illustrations by Vincent Perez, and Published by The Arion Press, 1998 

Folder 21: Broadside for limited edition of Shakespeare’s Sonnets 

Scope and Contents note

Broadside by The Arion Press announcing their publication of published by Arion Press
Shakespeare’s Sonnets Introduced and edited by Helen Vendler.

Folder 22: Broadside for Tim Dine’s Ape & Cat and Henry James’ Broadside announcing the publication of Ape & Cat and The The
Madonna of the Future / published by Arion Press Madonna of the Future Also included is a T.L from Andrew Hoyem to “Customer”,
August 11, 1997 and an order form for the two publications 

Folder 23: TLS. from Robert Penn Warren to Mr. Rappaport, December 17, 1954. Letter thanking Mr. H.A. Rappaport for a Christmas
gift 

Oversize 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Mid-South, February 4, 1968 Issue of Mid-South published by Commercial Appeal in Memphis, TN 

Folder 2: Photocopies of General W. S. Rosecrans’ papers from the UCLA Library 

Scope and Contents note

These papers deal mainly with his operations at Corinth, MS, in the fall of 1862.


Items are reproduced from originals held at UCLA. Items are organized by UCLA box and folder numbers.


TD[photocopy] by WSR
 The Battle of Corinth, 22 pages. Published in
 Century Magazine, 1886 and also in their “Battle and Leaders of the Civil War.” (Box 81, Folder 23).


TD[photocopy] by Clinton Parkhurst, 2 pages Typescript poem. (Box 82, Folder 17).


TD[photocopy] by Clinton Parkhurst, 2 pages Typescript poem. (Box 82, Folder 17).


HD[photocopy] by General WSR, 1 page. Recollection of General WSR. Re: the 64th Ohio After the Battle of Corinth. (Box 82,
Folder 22).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col Chetlain, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Order for intelligent officers and the construction
of stockades. (Box 44, Folder 104).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Thomas A Davies, 1 page, October 2, 1982, Corinth, Miss. Holograph signed and written
by Byron Kirby, 2nd Lt. Concerning the movement of troops. (Box 44, Folder 105).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brigadier-General Jefferson C. Davis, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding road conditions.
(Box 44, Folder 106).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Proposal for crossing Hatchie to attack
enemy. (Box 44, Folder 107).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Report of rebel force in
the vicinity of Bethel. (Box 44, Folder 108).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Report of prisoners taken.
(Box 44, Folder 109).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Charles Smith Hamilton, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Bethel, Tenn. Concerning the movement
and deployment of troops. (Box 44, folder 110).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Isham N. Haymie, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Instructions to construct a redoubt.
(Box 44, Folder 111).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. John M. Oliver, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding dispatches sent and received.
(Box 44, Folder 112).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Order to occupy Kossuth,
Miss. (Box 44, Folder 113).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanly, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the movement and
deployment of troops. (Box 44, Folder 114).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Gen’l. Thomas A. Davies and Gen’l. Hamilton, 1 page, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding
the disposition of troops pending a possible attack on Corinth. (Box 44, Folder 113).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to General Jefferson C. Davis, 1 page, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Orders to destroy bridges
at Danville. (Box 44, Folder 116).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. U.S. Grant, 1 page, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Dispatch reporting disposition
of troops. (Box 44, Folder 117).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. U.S. Grant, 2 pages, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding attack of rebel forces.
(Box 44, Folder 118).


TD from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Charles Smith Hamilton, 1 page, Army of the Miss. Orders for the disposition of Hamilton’s troops
for an attack on the enemy’s left flank. (Box 44, Folder 119).


ALS[photocopy] from C. Goddard, AG to Brig. Gen’l. Charles Smith Hamilton, 1 page, October 3, 1862. Concerning the deployment
of troops. (Box 44, Folder 120).


ALS[photocopy] from C. Goddard to Brig. Gen’l. Thomas J. McKean, 1 page, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding possible
activity on McKean’s front. (Box 44, Folder 121).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Instructions for Stanley
to move up in position. (Box 44, Folder 122).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, October 3, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Order for the deployment
of troops. (Box 44, Folder 123).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. U.S. Grant, 3 pages, October 4, 1862. Corinth, Miss. Report of the Battle of Corinth.
(Box 44, Folder 124).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’ls. Thomas S. McKean, Thomas A. Davies, Charles Smith, Hamilton, and David S. Stanley,
1 page, October 4, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning the supply and movement of troops. (Box 44, Folder 125).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. U.S. Grant, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the burial of Confederate
dead. (Box 44, Folder 126).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. U.S. Grant, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the burial of Confederate
dead; and question of aid to help push enemy. (Box 44, Folder 127).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. U.S. Grant, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding dispatches of Ord’s
engagement. (Box 44, Folder 127).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Ulysses Grant, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Reporting the arrival of leading divisions
at Chewalla, Miss.; and enemy’s rear-guard overtaken beyond Chewalla road. (Box 44, Folder 130).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by C. Goddard, AG) to Col. I.N. Haynie, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss.
Notice of safely received dispatch. (Box 44, Folder 131).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. H.W. Haynie, 1 page, October 5, 1862. HQ, Army of the Miss. Regarding Haynie’s movement from
Bethel. (Box 44, Folder 132).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Isham N. Haynie, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning a guard for a construction
train. (Box 44, Folder 133).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Isham N. Haynie, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the pursuit of the enemy.
(Box 44, Folder 134).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. John McArthur, 1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding movements of division.
(Box 44, Folder 135).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’ls. Thomas J. McKean, Thomas A. Davies, David S. Stanley, Hamilton, and James B. McPherson,
1 page, October 5, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the delay in progress of movements. (Box 44, Folder 136).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by C. Goddard, AG) to Thomas S. McKean, Brig. Gen’l., 1 page, October 5, 1862,
Corinth, Miss. Order to move to Corinth to take command. (Box 44, Folder 137).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 2 pages, October 7, 1862, Jonesboro, Miss. Regarding the defeat
of the enemy after Corinth, advance made, and positions captured. (Box 44, Folder 138).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, October 9, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding forage for animals.
(Box 44, Folder 140).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, October 9, 1862, Ripley, Miss. Report of rebel dispositions,
and measures taken. (Box 44, Folder 141).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to his wife, 4 pages, October 15, 1862. Description of the battle of Corinth (Oct. 3-4, 1862). Mention
of George W. Cullon and Ulysses G. Grant; comment on the illness of his wife Ann Eliza Rosecrans. (Box 55, Folder 58).


ALS[photocopy] from Ann Eliza Rosecrans to her husband, WSR, 4 pages, September 6, 1875, San Ranfael, California Comment
on various phases of the Civil War including the battle of Iuka and Corinth and a book by William T. Shermand on his war experiences.
(Box 56, Folder 35).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to his wife, 2 pages, June 11, 1875, Egan, Nevada. Comment on a letter from General Francis Darr
with news of the attitude of William T. Sherman about Rosecrans conduct in the battles of Iuka and Corinth. Mention of Whitelaw
Reid, and the activities of Adrian Louis Rosecrans. (Box 62, Folder 35).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to his wife, 2 pages, June 11, 1875, Egan, Nevada. Comment on a letter from General Francis Darr
with news of the attitude of William T. Sherman about Rosecrans conduct in the battles of Iuka and Corinth. Mention of Whitelaw
Reid, and the activities of Adrian Louis Rosecrans. (Box 62, Folder 35).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to his wife, 3 pages, October 22, 1862. Comment on the illness of his wife, Ann Eliza Rosecrans;
mention of the opinion held of him by Confederate and Union officers; description of a truce Mission sent to General Earl
Van Dorn and his replacement by General John C. Pemberton. (Box 68, Folder 59).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to his wife, Ann Eliza Rosecrans, 6 pages, June 14, 1862, Camp Big Spring, Tishamingo, Co., Miss.
Description of the activities during the Battle of Corinth and evacuation; comments on pursuit of the rebels and his camp
as of June 14, 1862. Mention of Generals: Henry W. Halleck, John Pope, don Carlos Buell, Andrew Jackson Smith, (William Tecumseh)
Sherman. (Box 69, Folder 39).


ALS[photocopy] from John C. Hatcher to William S. Rosecrans, 2 pages, Aug. 18, 1856, New York. Requesting information regarding
the financial condition of the Coal River Navigation Company. Numbered 334.


ALS[photocopy] from James Birdseye Mc Pherson, 1828-1864, 1 page, October 11, 1862. Reporting on his operations. (Box 7,
Folder 133).


ALS[photocopy] from William M. Willis to W.S. Rosecrans, 1 page, October 25, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Reporting number of prisoners
taken and number of enemy officers killed at the Battle of Corinth. (Box 7, Folder 136).


ALS[photocopy] from George Washington Cullum, 1809-1892, 2 pages, June 25, 1868, New York. Explanation of facts relating
to the command at the Battles of Iuka and Corinth as set down in the personal history of General U.S. Grant In the
 Register of Graduates of the U.S. Military Academy (Box 11, Folder 127).


ALS[photocopy] from Roberto R. Symon to William S. Rosecrans, 4 pages, July 7, 1878, Paris, France. Discusses efforts in
the East to interest businessmen in the Sonora railroad project; mentions Blair Concession in Mexico; progress of railroad
development in Mexico; efforts to obtain investment in railroad enterprise abroad. (Box 34, Folder 34).


ALS[photocopy] from Arthur C. Ducat to William S. Rosecrans, 3 pages, December 29, 1880, Chicago, Ill. Asking for information
on details of Civil War battle of Iuka and Corinth, needed for presentation of a paper before the Loyal Legion; discusses
role of Grant, Sherman, Ord, and other in the battles. (Box 40, Folder 113).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Robert Allen, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding forage for stock.
(Box ?, Folder 40).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (by H.G. Kennett, Chief of Staff) to Col. Crocker (in Iuka), 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth,
Miss. Order to search house of one De Wody for secreted flag of one of the Rebel regiments. (Box 44, Folder 41).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning the mustering
in of Miss. and Alabamians. (Box 44, Folder 42).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Request to retain name
of Army of the Miss. (Box 44, Folder 43).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the disposition
of forces around Ripley River and Rienza. (Box 44, Folder 44).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Charles S. Hamilton, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning the use
of Hamilton’s regiment. (Box 44, Folder 45). ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. John A. Rawlins, 1 page, September 29, 1862,
Corinth, Miss. Regarding the resignation of Lt. Col. Rinkhaus. (Box 44, Folder 46).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. John A. Rawlins, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning reports of defeats
at Pocahontas. (Box 44, Folder 47).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (by Calvin Goddard, Adjutant) to Eugene Shine, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Removed
from: Dispatches relating to Virginia, 1862. (Box 44, Folder 48).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning action at
Baldwin and Pocahontas. (Box 44, Folder 49).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Augustus L. Chetlain, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Orders for Col. Chetlain
to prepare to come in. (Box 44, Folder 50).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Augustus L. Chetlain, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Request for news. (Box 44,
Folder 51).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Augustus L. Chetlain, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Orders to hold at Burnsville.
(Box 44, Folder 52).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by Byron Kirby) to Col. Chetlain, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss.
Order to have 50 men guard a train going to Iuka. (Box 44, Folder 53).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Marcellus M. Crocker, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Orders to return to Corinth.
(Box 44, Folder 54).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by Bryon Kirby) to Col. M.M. Crocker, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss.
Asking for information about area between Ripley road and Hatchie River. (Box 44, Folder 55).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by Byron Kirby) to Col. M.M. Crocker, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss.
Notification of train leaving for Iuka. (Box 44, Folder 56).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. M.M. Crocker, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning amount of Quarter Masters
stores available. (Box 44, Folder 57).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (signed and sent by C. Goddard, AG) to Col. M.M. Crocker, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss.
Asking for information concerning the country and roads leading to Holly Springs and Memphis. (Box 44, Folder 58).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (signed and sent by C. Goddard, AG) to Capt. W. P. Darst, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Headquarters,
Army of the Miss. Order to find a citizen clerk to replace Mr. Law. (Box 44, Folder 59).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. John V. Dubois, 1 page, September 29, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Orders to move to Danville. (Box
94, Folder 60).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by C. Goddard, AG) to Col. Dubois, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Stating
that the Post of Danville, Miss., will be commanded by Brig. Gen’l. Davies. (Box 44, Folder 61).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (by Temple Clark, Adjutant) to Major Gilmore, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Desiring
to know the name of a clerk who he can detail Army Headquarters. (Box 44, Folder 62).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Report of rebel movements
and counter measures taken. (Box 44, Folder 63).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Request for information.
(Box 44, Folder 64).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Request for maps of N.
West area of operation. (Box 44, Folder 65).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Report regarding information
and news of the enemy. (Box 44, Folder 66).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR. To Maj. Gen’l. Ulysses S. Grant, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Report of officers and
vacant commissions. (Box 44, Folder 67).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to George Greenwood, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the disposition of deceased
aide’s effects. (Box 44, Folder 68).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Charles Smith Hamilton, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Request for news
from Hamilton’s front. (Box 44, Folder 69).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Hamilton, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Orders to move division to camp
of Clear Creek. (Box 44, Folder 70).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. Hamilton, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Describing location to current
headquarters. (Box 44, Folder 71).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (written and signed by Byron Kirby) to Brig. Gen’l. Charles Smith Hamilton, 1 page, September 30,
1862, Corinth, Miss. Order to obtain two additional days rations. (Box 44, Folder 72).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Isham N. Haynie, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Concerning troop movements down
to Bethel. (Box 44, Folder 73).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to I.N. Haynie, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth Miss. Requesting a map of the southern tier of
counties of Tenn. (Box 44, Folder 74).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (by T. Scott Belden, Adjutant) to Albert L. Lee, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Instructions
concerning recruits who have arrived for 7th Illinois Calvary. (Box 44, Folder 75).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR (by Temple Clark, Adjutant) to Joseph Anthony Mower, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Detailing
John Parkins to Army Headquarters as Clerk. (Box 44, Folder 76).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth Miss. Dispatch regarding operations
around Kossuth, Miss. (Box 44, Folder77).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth Miss. Orders to move forces
to Kossuth. (Box 44, Folder 78).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Directions to seek out
Price’s force. (Box 44, Folder 79).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Brig. Gen’l. David S. Stanley, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth Miss. Request for news from
Stanley’s area. (Box 44, Folder 80).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Pitcairn Morrison, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding activity around Bethel.
(Box 44, Folder 101).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Augustus L. Chetlain, 1 page, September 30, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Instructions for moving
troops. (Box 44, Folder 102).


ALS[photocopy] from WSR to Col. Chetlain, 1 page, October 2, 1862, Corinth, Miss. Regarding the deployment of troops. (Box
44, Folder 103).

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 1999 

Box 1 

Folder 1: 1808 summons MS Territory 

Folder 2: Jill Conner Browne. Reviews, letters, broadsheets, and newspaper articles discussing Jill Conner Browne’s The Sweet
Potato Queens’ Book of Love Conner Browne’s book provides a humorous look into the lives of southern women. Published by Three
Rivers Press, New York, New York, 1999 

Folder 3: Yellow Barn Press. Publication Announcement: The Return of a Private 

Scope and Contents note

Document announcing the publication of Hamil Garland’s
The Return of a Private, with wood engravings by Gaylord Schanilec. The book, first published in 1891, describes the life of a Civil War veteran
returning home to rural Wisconsin.

Folder 4: Burke’s Book Store. Announcement of Peter Guralnick’s signing The Unmaking of Elvis Presley: Careless Love 

Scope and Contents note

Announcement celebrating the publication of the second volume of Peter Guralnick’s biography of Elvis Presley. The signing
is set for Wednesday, January 20, 1999, at Burke’s Book Store in Memphis, TN.

Folder 5: Pennyroyal Caxton Press. Announcement of the publication of The Holy Bible 

Scope and Contents note

Booklet printed to announce the publication of
The Holy Bible: An Illustrated Folio Edition of The King James Bible The document contains descriptions of the text, illustrations, engraving medium, design and type, composition and printing,
edition and paper, bindings, allocation and price, and the Pennyroyal Caxton Press.

Folder 6: Patrick Smith. Assorted clippings. Re: 1999 induction to Florida Artists Hall of Fame 

Scope and Contents note

Various documents, clippings and letters describing the induction of Patrick Smith into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame in
1999. (1) T.D. reviewing Patrick D. Smith’s life and artistic accomplishments. (2) Photocopy of newspaper article. “Saluting
Patrick Smith”,
Florida Today, Wednesday, December 23, 1998. (3) Photocopy of newspaper article. “Smith Selected for Artists Hall of Fame”,
 Press, Thursday, December 17, 1998. (4) Newspaper article. “Author, 71, named to Artists Hall of Fame”,
 Florida Today, Monday, December 21, 1998. (5) Photocopy of journal article. “Confederation Creates Literary Award in Honor of Patrick Smith”,

 Florida Historical Society, August 1997.

Folder 7: Two engravings: Shakespeare’s Birthplace & Anne Hathaway’s Cottage 

Scope and Contents note

Copies of lithographs. “Shakespeare’s Birthplace” was created from a drawing by John Mortlock. “Anne Hathaway’s Cottage” is
unsigned.

Folder 8: AM. “The Chinaberry Tree” “The Chinaberry Tree” and Other Stories About Life in Mississippi in the Twenties and
Thirties and Early Forties by Jean Burnham Morgenthaler 

Scope and Contents note

A collection of short stories about life in Mississippi from the 1920’s to the early 1940’s.

Folder 9: ACS. 10 February 1932 from Langston Hughes. to Ethel Weimer. Postcard from Langston Hughes on his tour of Tougaloo,
Mississippi, 

Scope and Contents note

Re: Mississippi Miss Ethel Weimer of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Hughes explains that “Miss. has been kind.”

Folder 10: Mattie Pegues Wood. Biographical Sketch. Handwritten document tracing the genealogy of Sallie Watkins Wood Millsap,
Eugene Temple Millsap Jr., Eugene Temple Millsap III, George Mark Wood Jr., Barnett Meriwether Wood Moody, Mattie Maxwell
Pegues Wood, Alexander Hamilton Pegues Jr., Elizabeth Hamlin Lumpkin, Rebecca Ann Pegues McCullough and Alexander Hamilton
Pegues III. (dated May 25, 1996) 

Folder 11: Invitation; Re: film “Cookie’s Fortune,” 3 April 1999 Invitation to the Southern Premier of Robert Altman’s “Cookie’s
Fortune,” Saturday, April 3, 1999. (2 copies) Invitation to a reception Celebrating “Cookie’s Fortune,” Saturday, April 3,
1999. (2 copies) 

Folder 12: Invitation to Randall Kenan discussion and book-signing at Burke’s Bookstore 

Scope and Contents note

Postcard announcing a discussion and signing of Randall Kenan’s
Walking on Water: Black American Lives at the Turn of the 21  st   Century, Tuesday, March 16, at Burke’s Book Store in Memphis, TN.

Folder 13: Promotional letter for Darcey Steinke’s Suicide Blonde, T.L. from Judy Hottensen, Publicity Director for Atlantic
Monthly Press. , May 8, 1992 . Suicide Blonde is a tale of self identification, sexual awakening and the past’s effect on
the present. (May 8, 1992) 

Folder 14: Publication Announcement for the work “For the Good of the Bleeding Land” / Timothy Hawley Books 

Scope and Contents note

Broadside announcing the publication of a new book from The Contre Coup Press;
“For the Good of the Bleeding Land” Being the Text of a Letter from James Phelan to Confederate President Jefferson Davis
dated January 21, 1865
The letter describes the plea of James Phelan to replace General Hood with General Johnston as commander of the Army of Tennessee.

Folder 15: ALS. 12 October 1838, from William S. Burney to Col. A.B. Sanuners, Oxford, Mississippi 

Scope and Contents note

Letter from William S. Burney, of Oxford, Mississippi, requesting money from “Public Revenue” c/o Col. A.B. Saunders of Jackson,
Mississippi.

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2000 

Box 1 

Folder 1: B.F. Gentry. Civil War Correspondence 

General note

Some letters have typed transcriptions. B.F. Gentry Land Deeds available in Folder 2000.2f1

Handwritten letter. Dated 12th, 1865, “Dear Pa” from “Son B.F. Gentry” (typed transcription available) 

Handwritten letter. (Camp) April 1864, “Dear Pa,” and Camp Walthall’s Brig [25?] April, Near Dalton GA, “Dear Ma,” from “Your
affectionate son.” (typed transcription available) 

Handwritten letter. (Camp Near Dalton GA) 16 March 1864, “Dear Ma” from “Affectionate Son, B.F. Gentry.” (typed transcription
available) 

Handwritten letter. (Camped at Atlanta GA) 22 August 1863, “Dear Ma” from “Your son B.F. Gentry.” (typed transcription available) 

Handwritten letter. (Camp near Knoxville) 9 October 1962, “Dear pa” from “Son B.F. Gentry.” (typed transcript available) 

Envelope addressed to Ms. W.R. Gentry. 

Folder 2: B.F. Gentry. Ephemera, Geneological Material and pages from Gentry Bible 

Folder 3: B.F. Gentry. Gentry’s Military Records & Secondary Source Material (Photocopies) 

Folder 4: The Southern Quest for A Suitable Past: Historiography and Social Control, 1890-2000 by Fred Arthur Bailey 

Scope and Contents note

Document written by Fred Arthur Bailey of Abilene Christian University describing Southerners’ search for a “true history
of the Old South.”

Folder 5: Scan of 20 January 1903, Charter of the Oxford, MS, Branch of the United Confederate Veterans 

Scope and Contents note

Certificate recognizes that Oxford, MS, known as Lafayette County Camp, met all of the requirements for admittance into the
Mississippi division of the United Confederate Veterans. Document was signed in New Orleans, LA, on January 20, 1903, by the
Commanding General and by the Adjutant General and Chief of Staff (names are unreadable).

Folder 6: “Standing Tall” 

Scope and Contents note

Postcard announcing the documentary by Donald Blank, “StandingTall: Black Mississippi Delta Women take on White Catfish Farmers…Trying
To Create a Union…and win.” The front of the card is a photo of Rose Turner, daughter of a sharecropper and the UFCW’s head
Mississippi organizer.

Folder 7: Ellisville Lumber Company. Postcards and T.L.S. from Floyd Herrington to Mr. R.L. Mitchell, March 14, 1946 

Scope and Contents note

The letter relates that the postcards were taken at Reedbrake. Also included are three black and white postcards. None of
the cards was addressed and each are inscribed T.E. Davis Photos. One card depicts the Ellisville Lumber Co. In front of the
building are workers, oxen and wagons. The second card appears to be a photo of the Ellisville Lumber Co. The third card is
a photo of the Ellisville Lumber Co. yard from a different angle.

Folder 8: Printed Subscription Information for Alecto Historical Editions facsimile printing of Catesby’s The National History
of Carolina, Florida & the Bahama Islands 

Scope and Contents note

Color copies of Mark Catesby (1682-1749). Copies of “The Balsam Tree,” “Bison Americanus,” “The Yellow and Black Pye,” and
“The Red Curlew.”

Folder 9: Mill Press.-Jamaica Series Booklet printed by the Mill Press announcing A Three Volume Historical Tribute to the
Island of Jamaica Volume 1: “A Picturesque Tour of the Island of Jamaica” by James Hakewill, 1825. Volume II: “Sketches of
Character” by Isaac Mendes Belisario, 1837. Volume III: “Daguerian Excursions in Jamaica” by Adolphe Duperly, 1844. Document
also includes descriptions of each volume along with a copy of artwork from each volume 

Folder 10: March / April 2000 Edition of Humanities National Endowment For the Humanities. Re: Article on C. Vann Woodward 

Scope and Contents note

McPherson on the cover. The issue contains articles and photographs about “The War That Never Goes Away,” “Touring the Battlefields,”
“Excerpts,” “Celebrating American Poetry,” “Songs of the Sephardim,” “Racism and Redemption,” “Fifth National Black Writer
Conference,” “Troubling Questions About Universality,” “A Dakar Journal,” “State by State,” and “The Glory of Russia.”

Folder 11: Arion Press. Call It Sleep Announcement-1995 Publication announcement from Arion Press of the release of Call It
Sleep by Henry Roth. The book was praised by Alfred Kazin as “the most profound novel of Jewish life by an American.” The
publication also includes the publishing history of the book, a biographical sketch of Henry Roth, a synopsis of the work,
and a description of the photographs included in the book 

Folder 12: Fork in the Road Press- Will Grow Under Beeches Broadside announcing the publication of Gardener James Sherwood’s
Will Grow Under Beeches by Fork in the Road Press. Announcement includes letterforms, dimensions, and price of the book 

Folder 13: Wing & Wheel Press. Piecework Booklet announcing the publication of Wing & The Wheel Press Piecework a collection
of twelve poems by Corey Mesler 

Folder 14: James Burrell. Sketch by Martha Ann Brooks Copy of Martha Ann Brooks’ drawing of Mr. James Burrell, folk. Also
included is a copy of the letter sent by Martha Ann Brooks to Mr. Tom Verich, University Archivist, describing the work. Brooks
suggests that the drawing is an interpretation of Mr. Bill Ferris’ photograph of Mr. James Burrell 

Folder 15: The Wing & The Wheel. Announce: “Ten Poets” Announcement of Ten Poets The publication is a brief anthology consisting
of 10 poems composed of 10 lines (or less) by 10 different authors 

Oversize 

Box 2 

Folder 1: B.F. Gentry. Land Deeds 

Scope and Contents note

Various land deeds from the Gentry Collection. (1) Yalobusha County deed from Wiley R. Gentry to Mariah Gentry, October 26,
1868. (2) Panola County deed from John O. Massey to Mrs. Mariah Gentry, November 2, 1890. (3) Panola County deed from (?)
Chapman Esq. To Y.H. Chapman, April 14, 1881. (4) Yalobusha County deed from Wiley Gentry to John and Wiley Gentry, October
26, 1862. (5) Tallahatchie County deed from R. F. Bogans to E. H. Bomis, October 12, 1872.


NOTE: REST OF COLLECTION IS LOCATED IN SMMSS 2000-1

Folder 2: John M. Lyles Civil War Letter (original 1861) Handwritten letter from John M. Lyles (Confederate Officer) at Manassas
Junction, Prince William Co., Virginia, to Judge Parris, July 13, 1861. Original letter and typed transcript available 

Folder 3: Presidential pardon for Al Sharkey of Tallahatchie County, Mississippi, September 1, 1865, signed by Andrew Johnson 

Folder 4: Exhibitor’s campaign book from MGM’s Gone With the Wind starring Clark Gable, Viven Leigh, Leslie Howard, and Olivia
de Havilland 

Folder 5: Henderson Indenture (1856) ALS Lafayette county land deed from A (?) Henderson to William Henderson. November 13,
1856 

Folder 6: John Black land deed in Mississippi (1837) Hinds County (?) land deed signed by John Black, February 1, 1839 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2001 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Typescript of James S. Terry’s Journal. Typescript of the journal of James S. Terry of Tippah County, Ms. for the
years 1852-1856. Gift of Hugh Corrigan IV 

Folder 2: Typescript of Charles M. Terry’s Journal. Typescript of the journal of Charles M. Terry of Tippah County, Ms. for
the years 1856-1860. Gift of Hugh Corrigan IV 

Folder 3: Photocopied screenplay. Photocopied screenplay of The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones and movie flyer 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Documents related to executions and lynchings in the state of Mississippi, 1882-1959. Photocopy 

Folder 2: Mimeograph of Typed Manuscript. “The 17th Mississippi” brief description and maps of the Civil War battles the 17th
Mississippi regiment fought (n.d.) 

Folder 3: Speech before American Legion & American Legion Auxiliary. Typed Manuscript. “I assure you it is a distinct pleasure
to appear before you at this joint gathering of Legion and Auxiliary Members and discuss some of our problems in the field
of rehabilitation…” (c.1950). 4 pages. Found within The Gadget: United States’ Naval Training Camp, Gulfport, Mississippi
(1918) [cataloged in Special Collections as V434 G8 G2 1918] 

Folder 4: The Lafayette Alarm (August 2001, Vol. 3) alternative newsletter for Lafayette County, MS “promoting community activism
and awareness.” 

Folder 5: National Federation of American Party Women. Pamphlet. anti-Equal Rights Amendment literature (c.1970s) 

Folder 6: Howard Finster. Letter. ALS. February 11, 1983. Howard Finster to [Bill] Ferris. Found within Howard Finster’s Vision
of 1982: Vision of 2.00 Light Years Away, Space Born of Three Generations from Earth to the Heaven of Heavens (Summerville,
GA: Howard Finster, 1982) [cataloged in Special Collections] 

Folder 7: Postcards of Shiloh & Pickwick Dam, TN. 18 photo postcards of Shiloh National Military Park, TN; 8 photo postcards
of Pickwick Dam, TN; and 1 color photo postcard of Bellingrath Gardens in Mobile, AL 

Folder 8: Colonel Erasmus Ford Potts Papers. Xerox of approximately 90 handwritten pages concerning Potts’ land holdings,
Holly Springs, and the Hickory Flat Turnpike (1850s) 

Folder 9: Ode to Billy Joe film promotional pack. Pack with production notes, biographies, publicity photographs from the
film based on Bobbie Gentry’s song. Revised May 6, 1976 

Folder 10: Gone With the Wind notepaper (#2001-90) Writing paper incorporating Gone With the Wind script and photographs (2
images, 6 sheets for each) 

Folder 11: “Crow’s Neck Environmental Education Center” pamphlet for 530-acre environmental center in northeastern Mississippi
(n.d.) 

Folder 12: 8 photo postcards of Pickwick Dam, TN; and 1 color photo postcard of Bellingrath Gardens in Mobile, AL 

Folder 13: Stereoscopes. 6 stereoscopes, circa 1925. Features various comic scenes and scenes of New York City and Washington,
D.C 

Folder 14: Button. 2001 Political button in favor of the new Mississippi state flag design 

Folder 15: Receipt. 1854. Receipt for W.L. Coleman from J.G. Jones, Druggist and Bookseller. Canton, Mississippi 

Folder 16: TD. 4 January 1963. Statement of Governor Ross Barnett, Governor of the State of Mississippi, Before the Governor’s
Conference on the National Guard, January 4, 1963 in Washington, D.C 

Folder 17: TMs. circa 1950. “The Forgotten Negro Woman” by Mary Mc Guire. Re: Manuscript of an African American Mississippi
native regarding the state of race and feminism in America 

Folder 18: Telegram. August 28, 1917. G.T. Roach to “All Passenger conductors.” The Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company.
Re: Requesting that B.L. Cliner ride with the conductors to learn the duties of a railroad flagman 

Folder 19: Robert Rylee’s Deep Dark River Promotional piece reprinted from the Book-of-the-Month Club News 

Folder 20: Postcards of 1912 Mississippi River Flood Three black-and-white photo postcards of 1912 Mississippi River Flood
by photographer Rossele of Rosedale, MS: “Fill the Basin Riverton, 4/12/12”; “Convicts Jacking Levee, Riverton, Miss. 4/13/12”;
“Looking North. Benoit, Miss.” 

Folder 21: “Masque” Typed Manuscript in handmade binding. Undated, no author. Cast of the play includes: “Six Singing Blondes,
Angelic Choir Boys, Group of Dullards, Nuns, Black Jazzmen, Fifteen White Virgins…” 

Folder 22: Adam Shemper. Postcard. Postcard promoting Adam Shemper’s exhibition “New Photographs from the Sardis Lake Series
at the Driskel Gallery in Provincetown, MA 

Folder 23: Delta Time brochure Promotional brochure promoting the special publication by the Smithsonian Institution for Ken
Light’s Delta Time 

Folder 24: Arthur Palmer Hudson. “Arthur Palmer Hudson: The Founder of Mississippi Folklore Collecting”/ Bonnie Krause. Mid
America Folklore Vol. 28: 1 and2 

Folder 25: Zenos Preston. Typescript. Diary of Zenos Preston, a Natchez, Mississippi planter. 18 May 1844-16 July 1847 

Folder 26: TMs. of history of Holly Springs, Mississippi “Holly Springs: A Portrait 1837-1878″/ Charles A. Mills 

Folder 27: Jefferson Davis. Letter. Typescript of a letter from Jefferson Davis to William Delay Dec. 6, 1869 

Folder 28: Typed list of Lafayette County Petitioners for pardons Typed list of names of petitioners for Presidential pardons
after the Civil War by Lafayette County, Mississippi residents 

Folder 29: Photocopied letter and oath of LQC Lamar. Photocopied letter from LQC Lamar to President Andrew Johnson requesting
pardon. Also includes photocopy of his loyalty oath 

Folder 30: Photocopied letter and oath of AB Longstreet. Photocopied letter from AB Longstreet to President Andrew Johnson
requesting pardon. Also includes photocopy of his loyalty oath 

Folder 31: Pamphlets from Planter’s Bank, Tunica, MS, Undated 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2002 

Box 1 

Jacob Thompson Material collected by Dr. John Crews 

Folder 1: February 2, 1846 speech by J. Thompson “Speech of Mr. Thompson, of Mississippi, on The Resolution Gifing the Twelve
Months Notice for the Termination of the Joint Occupancy Of the Oregon Territory.” Photocopy. 

Folder 2: July 21, 1848 speech by J. Thompson “Speech of Jacob Thompson, of Mississippi, on the Civil and Diplomatic Bill,
and the Presidential Election.” Photocopy. 

Folder 3: Two ALS. John Thompson to “My dear uncle” March 8, 1854 and May 17, 1854. Photocopies. 

Folder 4: ALS. J. Thompson, Department of Interior, to August 19, 1857. Photocopy. “My Dear Sir” 

Folder 5: Miscellaneous material Re: Jacob Thompson’s Canadian expedition, 1864-65 

Folder 6: ALS. J. Thompson in Toronto to Jefferson Davis September 12, 1864. Photocopy from Harvard University holding. 

Folder 7: Six ALS. Jacob Thompson to Jeremiah S. Black July 24, 1868; August 9, 1868; January 10, 1870; January 12, 1870;
June 7, 1870; & undated. Photocopies from Library of Congress holdings. 

Folder 8: AL. Jacob Thompson in Memphis, TN to October 10, 1870. Photocopy and transcripts. J[eremiah] S. Black. 

Folder 9: ALS. J. Thompson in Memphis, TN to June 3, 1878. Photocopy. “My dear Claiborne” 

Folder 10: ALS. J. Thompson in Memphis, TN to J.F.H. February 23, 1881. Photocopy. Claiborne 

Folder 11: ALS. Daniel F. Wright of Clarksville, TN to April 21, 1885. Photocopy from the Museum of the Jefferson Davis Confederacy. 

Folder 12: AM. “The Hon. Jacob Thompson, of Memphis.” Author unknown, undated. Photocopy from the Museum of the Confederacy. 

Folder 13: Biographical Sketches of Jacob Thompson 

Folder 14: ALS. C.C. Clay in Huntsville, AL to Jeremiah January 9, 1867. Photocopy from Library of S. Black Congress. 

Folder 15: AM. “Judge Black in Defence of Mr. Photocopy from Library of Congress. Buchanans Administration” 

Folder 16: Dealer description of three Jacob Thompson letters dated October 9, 1865; September 21, 1877; letters to Jeremiah
S. Black & November 27, 1879. 

Folder 17: Miscellaneous material related to Jacob Thompson 

Folder 18: Commission of Home Missions to Colored pp. 1-4 of August, 1871 issue with article “A Committee People of the Convention
of the Diocese on the Colored School At Memphis having presented their report the Hon. Jacob Thompson spoke as follows…” 

Folder 19: Natchez Jewish Homecoming Program. “The Natchez Jewish Homecoming! 1994” (2 copies); Program. “Service in Commemoration
of the Natchez Jewish Homecoming Temple B’nai Israel and The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience” (4 copies) 

Folder 20: Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience Two information packets on the museum (c.1990s) 

Folder 21: Great Migration Articles [1916-1918] 

Scope and Contents note

Newspaper articles: (a)
New York Evening Post, June 22, 1918, “Why Negroes Are Leaving the South.” (b)
 New York Evening Post, May 26, 1917, “The Negro Exodus From the South.” Journal:
 The Immigration Journal, October, 1916

Folder 22: Mississippi Industrial College. Football Programs. 1954 and 1956 homecoming football programs from the Mississippi
Industrial College 

Folder 23: Interview with Rev. James Bevel, “Wild Man” of the Civil Rights Movement, 29 January 2002. Conducted by Jacquie
Lewis. Transcript only 

Folder 24: General Order No. 11. War Department, Union. 10 January 1863 

Scope and Contents note

Surprise attack at Holly Springs, MS

Folder 25: John Farmer Gotthelf Journal, 1915 

Scope and Contents note

Concerns the Biblical story of David, school questions, and daily events

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2003 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Photocopy and transcription of William D. Howell Diary. Howell was a private in Company I of 3rd Mississippi Regiment.
1863?-1865. Original owned by the University Museum. (Control No. 2003-2) 

Folder 2: Photocopy. “Message of Gov. Adelbert Ames to the Legislature of Mississippi, in Extra Session Assembled, Thursday,
December 17, 1874.” (Jackson, MS: Pilot Publishing Company, 1874). 8 pages. (Control No. 2003-30) 

Folder 3: Handwritten Manuscript. Minutes of the Union Republican State Executive Committee in Vicksburg, Mississippi. September
18, 1867 — October 3, 1867. 5 pages. (Control No. 2003-34) 

Folder 4: Inventory. Photocopy and transcription of Lecie Gant Autograph Album 1862-1866 Oxford, Mississippi. Original owned
by the University Museum. (Control No. 2003-3) 

Folder 5: Envelope with Charles Lindbergh imprint and Spirit of St. Louis stamp mailed in June of 1927 to Walter Charlton.
Copies of letters by donor (Walter Charlton) and appraiser. 

Folder 6: Broadside. “Excursion to Ship Island Every Sunday Via The Cavalier…” Mid-20th century. 2 copies (one pink and
one yellow). (Control No. 2003-29) 

Folder 7: Advertising Card for Sentry Coal in Port Gibson, MS. Circa early 20th century.(Control No. 2003-35) 

Folder 8: Broadsheet. “J.B. Glenn, Real Estate Agent for the Sale of Improved and Unimproved Lands, in Clay and Adjoining
Counties. West Point, Miss., October 18, 1886.” Extensive discussion boosting Clay County real estate. 12 x 6. (Control No.
2003-36) 

Folder 9: Letterhead. “Superintendent’s Office, Mississippi Penitentiary, Jackson, Miss.” April 27, 1871 letter from Z.A.
Philips, Superintendent, to R.S. McAllister in Liberty, [MS?]. (Control No. 2003-37) 

Folder 10: Invitation. Graduation of Class 44-F from Columbus Army Flying School on June 27, 1944 in Columbus, MS. (Control
No.2003-38) 

Folder 11: Handwritten poems by Joe Hayes on Camp Van Dorn letterhead on life as a soldier dated 1943-1944. 4 sheets. (Control
No.2003-53) 

Folder 12: Cotton Record Books kept for The Bend Plantation at Swan Lake, MS. 6 separate ledgers with crop records dated 1959,
1961, 1962, 1963, and 1965 (2). Books “compliments of Union Compress & Warehouse Co., Greenwood, Miss.” 

Folder 13: Transcription of Henry Craft Diary. April 1848-July 1849. Transcription from original diary written by Craft while
he was a student at Princeton and upon his return to Holly Springs, Ms.(Control No. 2003-8) 

Folder 14: TLS. 24 February 1934. Daniel Whitehead Hicky to Mrs. Deupree. Letter of the Atlanta, GA Poet located inside Main
Library’s copy of his book Bright Harbor (1932) with several newspaper and magazine clippings. 

Folder 15: Photocopy. “‘Mississippi and Its Future’: A Sermon for the Times, Delivered on the Day of General Thanksgiving
in the Hall of Representatives, April 21, 1870 by Rev. A.C. McDonald, A.M.” (Jackson, MS: Kimball, Raymond & Co., 1870). 23
pages. (Control No. 2003-31) 

Folder 16: “Soldiers Individual Pay Record Book” with entries by Joseph W. Seymour (soldier’s no. 3872776) based in Gulfport,
MS and dated October 31, 1918 through June 31, 1919. (Control No. 2003-54) 

Folder 17: Detective Agencies Broadsides (Control No.2003-32) 

Broadside. “McGilvray’s Detective Agency, D.G. McGilvray, Pincipal. Hattiesburg, Miss., $25 Reward, For the arrest and detention
of Joe Reynolds on charge of, Escaping after conviction in Green County, Mississippi.” (Hattiesburg, MS: Martin Printing Co.,
1912). 

Broadside. “McMahon’s Detective Agency, Licensed and Bonded to City of New Orleans for $10,000…” Contents include “We handled
the Night Riders case with success for the Governor of Mississippi; also captured the negro who cut Capt. Gray, of Bay St.
Louis, and delivered him to the authorities at the Bay, 24 hours after the crime; and he pleaded guilty and was sentenced
to 25 years in the Pen.” Circa early-20th century. 

Broadside. “McMahon’s Detective Agency, Oldest Detective Agency in New Orleans, La.” Re: Night Riders in Mississippi. Ink
Blotter. Fernwood, Columbia & Gulf Railroad Company. Advertisement includes map of railroad line. (Control No. 2003-33). 

Folder 18: Fernwood, Columbia & Gulf Railroad (Blotter) 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2004 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Oxford Graded School Commencement Program, 20 May 1904. 

General note

Gift of Provost Carolyn Staton

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2005 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Telegram. 17 December 1942. W.B. Herring, President Pascagoula National Bank, to Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Treasurer
of United States. Re: Selling of war bonds by the students of Moss Point High School for a war bomber. Photocopy. Gift of
Chancellor Robert Khayat. TL. May 30, 1943. E.A. Khayat, Principal of Moss Point High School, to Leigh Watkins, Deputy Administrator
Treasury Department. Re: Selling of war bonds by the students of the Moss Point High School for “The Spirit of Miss Point,
Miss High School.” Photocopy. Gift of Chancellor Robert Khayat 

Folder 2: Pamphlet. Undated. “L.Q.C. Lamar” by Clayton Rand. Printed for MS Power & Light. 4pp 

Folder 3: Proclamation. November 16, 1896. State of Mississippi, Executive Department. “A Proclamation by the Governor, Anselm
J. McLaurin.” Re: Day of Thanksgiving and prayer. Note: Embossed seal 

Folder 4: John Crews’ research on Jefferson Davis.Control # 2005-39 

Folder 5: Material found in books by Lewis E. Theiss held in Special Collections. Control # 2005-40 

Folder 6: Reformed Theological materials.Control # 2005-41 

Folder 7: Harper’s Weekly, 6 June 1863. Reprint. Features map of Colonel Grierson’s raid through Mississippi.Control # 2005-44 

Folder 8: Probate documents for the estate of John Calvin Jones, Harrison Co., Mississippi, August – October 1857.Control
# 2005-45 

Folder 9: Genealogical documents tracing the family of Hans Ulrick Dantzler, 1704-1990s. Control # 2005-46 

Folder 10: Seven letters regarding bank notes to Holly Springs, MS, residents from H.W. Conner & Co., September – November
1860.Control # 2005-47 

Folder 11: Seven timesheets for the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, December 1921.Control # 2005-48 

Folder 12: War Ration Book Four, United States Office of Price Administration, 1943. Control # 2005-49 

Folder 13: Commemorative envelope for the Declaration of Independence Road Trip, December 3, 2002.Control # 2005-62 

Folder 14: ALS: Irene B. Clur of Taylor, MS, to her sister Carrie, May 1914.Control # 2005-50 

Folder 15: ALS: Oxford, MS, July 1, 1915, to Dear dear Carrie. Control # 2005-51 

Folder 16: ALS: Mary E. Cain of Holly Springs, MS, to her mother, Mrs. Eliza J. Lynch, of Waterford, Marshall Co., Mississippi,
March 1, [1841].Control # 2005-52 

Folder 17: ALS: [J].W. Saunders to M.A. Saunders, Oxford, MS, 20 August 1870, regarding possible move by M.A. Saunders to
the Oxford area. Control # 2005-53 

Folder 18: S. Martinus de Porres – patron saint of the diocese of Biloxi, MS. One card. Control # 2005-54 

Folder 19: Mid-South magazine from The Commercial Appeal, January 5, 1969, with article on Waverly Mansion, West Point, MS.Control
# 2005-55 

Folder 20: TLS: Letter regarding cattle classes at the Mississippi State Fair on Mississippi State Fair letterhead, August
26, 1914.Control # 2005-56 

Folder 21: ALS: Letter to Mrs. Ona McQueen of Mexia, TX, from her husband J.E., on The New Hotel Meridian stationary, describing
his trip by train from Texas to Meridian. May 26, 1911.Control # 2005-57 

Folder 22: Bookmark promoting “Mississippi: An Illustrated History”.Control # 2005-58 

Folder 23: Autographed photo postcard of Cheryl Prewitt, Miss America 1980. (Control # 2005-59) 

Folder 24: Confederate pension application of Mrs. Matilda Long of Jasper County, MS, August 17, 1915.Control # 2005-60 

Folder 25: Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company Situation Report, Laurel, MS, June 17, 1943.Control # 2005-61 

Folder 26: American Folklore Films & Videotapes – An Index, promotional information, two copies, along with several fliers
of various films, etc.Control # 2005-63 

Folder 27: “Cookie’s Fortune” crime scene tape.Control # 2005-65 

Folder 28: Men’s Digest, February 1966, with an article on “Murder in Mississippi”, a sexy Civil Rights film, pp. 7-10.Control
# 2005-66 

Folder 29: Zora Neale Hurston promotional cards featuring book jacket designs.Control # 2005-67 

Folder 30: 15 letters from Neville Buck of Greenville, MS, to his father C.C. Buck of Rayville, LA, regarding Neville Buck’s
work for The Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, dated January 1915-August 1916. Control # 2005-69 

Folder 31: Photo card of “Uncle Tom and Little Eva”, from Stetson’s “Uncle Tom’s cabin” company 

Folder 32: ALS. June 14, 1888. Letter signed “Jefferson Davis” but written by Varina Davis to Maj N[orman] Walker. 3pp. Re:
Life at Beauvoir House, “in a very isolated home on the coast of Mexico.”Control # 2005-83 

Folder 33: ALS. November 1, 1863. Pvt. John J. Egger (Co. F, 43rd Mississippi Infantry) to family. 4pp. Re: Building hospitals
for the Confederacy. ALS. December 19, 1863. Pvt. John J. Egger (Co. F, 43rd Mississippi Infantry) to family. 4pp. Re: Building
hospitals for the Confederacy 

Folder 34: ALS. September 8, 1862. William and Sally Egger to Charles P. Egger (Co. D, 24th MS Infantry). Lowndes County,
MS. 2pp. Envelope. Re: Conscription and sickness of family 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Pillow Cover depicting historical sites of Mississippi. Circa 1945. 1 box. Note: James J. Uffner bought the pillow
case while serving at Kessler Air Force Base in 1945. “Given in Memory of our Mother and Father, Mary C. Uffner and Joseph
J. Uffner.” 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2006 

Box 1 

Folder 1: TMS “October Two-Thousand-Five” by Eva Ellzey (poem) (Control #2006-8) 

Folder 2: (copy) Handwritten manuscript “A Sunday in the South” by Lt. William White (90th Illinois Volunteers, Co. F) Description
of walk to Holly Springs, Mississippi, meeting General Grant as well as other officers, and dining with a regimental doctor
in an occupied home. (copy) photograph of Lt. William White, ca. 1863 (Control #2006-9) 

Folder 3: Civil War Confederate Currency and Bonds $1-State of North Carolina issue 20 December 1862 $1-Seventh Issue, 17
February 1864 $2-Seventh Issue, 17 February 1864 $2-Seventh Issue, 17 February 1864 $5-Third issue, 2 September 1861; printed
by two firms: Hoyer and Ludwig, J.T. Peterson; note was cut cancelled; x marks in currency mean that it was cut cancelled
$5-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 

Folder 4: Civil War Confederate Currency and Bonds $10-Third issue, 2 September 1861; B. Duncan, printer; Francis Marion offering
2 sweet potatoes to Sir Banastre Tarlton $10-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 $10-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 $10-Issued
6 April, 1963 $10-Fifth issue, 2 December 1862 $10-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 $20-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 $20-Seventh
issue, 17 February 1864 $50-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 $100-Seventh issue, 17 February 1864 

Folder 5: Mississippi Morning Promotional Postcard 

Folder 6: TLA (copy) Lt. Col. Bruce to PFC Barrett re: commendation of service during Meredith integration. October 1962 

Folder 7: “The Last Public Hanging in Oxford” (copy) Account of 1901 crime and 1902 trial in Lafayette County, Mississippi
resulting in the last public hanging in Oxford, Mississippi 

Folder 8: “Life of Will Mathis” (copy) Memoir of Will Mathis, the last man publicly hung in Oxford, Mississippi in 1902 

Folder 9: Mississippi Women’s History Symposium Collection (1989-1990) (Control No: 2006-37) 

Folder 10: Scrapbook “Miscellaneous Political Greenback Statistics made in 1874 and 1876 in Salt Lake, Utah by Edward G. Fuller”
(Control #2006-1) 

Oversize 

Box 2 

Folder 1: Engraving: Major General Samuel Gibbs French (Control No. 2006-18) 

Folder 2: Engraving. General John Clifford Pendleton (Control No. 2006-18) 

Folder 3: Engraving. General William Thomas Martin. (Control No. 2006-18) 

Return to Table of Contents »


Small Manuscripts 2008 

Box 1 

Jennie Johnson Collection 

Scope and Contents note

12 pages total, dated 1885-1888, to and from Jennie Johnson and J.G. Lowman & her family, writing from Huntington Station,
Bolivar County, MS. Lowman tells of his business, crops & a town barbeque that draws 2500 people.

Folder 1: ALS to my Dear Willie from Jennie dated July 12, 1884 

Folder 2: ALS to Jennie & Susie & Will in Beaumont, Kansas, from J.W. Lowman, dated October 18, 1885. Includes envelope postmarked
October 18, 1885, from Huntington, Bolivar County, Mississippi 

Folder 3: AD Receipt for goods ordered by W. H. Johnson from Louisville, New Orleans & Texas R’y Co., delivered to Huntington
Station, September 21, 1885 

Folder 4: ALS to Jennie and Susie from J.W. Lowman, dated August 30, 1885 

Folder 5: ALS to My dear dear Papa from your daughter S Mo J, dated April 29, 1888, from Huntington, Mississippi 

Folder 6: ALS to My Dear Willie from Jennie, dated April 30, 1888, from Huntington, Mississippi 

Folder 7: ALS to My Darling Husband from Jennie, dated May 3, 1888, from Huntington, Mississippi 

Folder 8: ALS to My Darling from your loving wife, dated May 10, 1888, from Huntington, Mississippi, and on reverse ALS to
My dear dear darling Papa from your daughter Susie J 

Folder 9: Petition of Mrs. J. Sanderson to Messers. Metcalf, Snodgrass, Hinds, Cage, and Gordon on the subject of female education.
Photocopy and transcription 

Folder 10: Binder. Some Methodist Female Academies in Southwestern Mississippi, including Elizabeth Female Academy; Centre
Seminary of Learning and Meeting House; Beechland – Red Lick Academy near Lorman, Jefferson County, Mississippi, Fayette Female
Academy – Fayette, Jefferson County, Mississippi; Port Gibson Female Academy – Port Gibson, Claiborne County, Mississippi;
Vicksburg Female Academy – Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi; Gibson’s School House, Lum’s Camp Ground & Asbury Methodist
Episcopal Church; Beech Land or Feathersone Chapel Academy, Warren County, Mississippi; Raymond Female Academy – Raymond,
Hinds County, Mississippi; Southern Female Academy – Rocky Springs, Claiborne County, Mississippi; Brownsville Female Academy
– Brownsville, Hinds County, Mississippi; Utica Female Academy – Utica, Hinds County Mississippi 

General note

Information accumulated and organized by James Earl (Sam) Price, June 15, 2008.

Materials from Ken Burns’ Civil War 

Folder 11: News from Alfred A. Knopf Publisher, “The Civil War: An Illustrated History” by Geoffrey C. Ward with Ric Burns
and Ken Burns. Coming from Knopf September 12, 1990. 

Folder 12: Clipping from Nashville Banner, review “Civil War vividly recreated” by William Boozer of “The Civil War: An Illustrated
History,” by Geoffrey Ward with Ken and Ric Burns. 

Folder 13: Scans of illustrations from “The Civil War: An Illustrated History,” by Geoffrey C. Ward with Ric Burns and Ken
Burns. Includes: The 5th Vermont at Camp Griffin, Virginia at the beginning of the war, General Winfield Scott Hancock and
David Bell Birney pose with their staffs, “Send me your picture” photograph collage of carte de visites, Abraham Lincoln,
Ulysses S. Grant, and Robert E. Lee. 

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Small Manuscripts 2010 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Scrapbook: Dr. Willis Walley, M.D., 20 October 1910 

Folder 2: Scrapbook: Dr. Willis Walley, M.D., newspaper clippings 

Folder 3: Recommendation letters and petitions for Dr. Willis Walley, 1911-1914 

Folder 4: Walley Hospital – Jackson, Miss. Magazine insurance advertisement 

Folder 5: Academic correspondence to Dr. Willis Walley from Barnes Medical College, 10 July 1901, and Atlanta College, 26
July 1901 

Folder 6: Emory University yearbook and alumni publication clippings 

Scope and Contents note

Two pictures of Dr. Willis Walley

Folder 7: Note from Sheriff Thomas Palmer, Mobile, Ala., appointing Dr. Willis Walley as a special deputy sheriff during the
execution of J. Lawrence Odom, 17 February 1912 

Scope and Contents note

Includes newspaper clippings

Folder 8: Letter from Henry MacDonald to Dr. Willis Walley, 10 May 1914 

Scope and Contents note

Re: Henry MacDonald thanking Dr. Walley for helping the family of John MacDonald

Folder 9: Letter, carbon copy fragment from Dr. Willis Walley to Dr. E.M. Galloway, Mississippi State Board of Health, 19
February 1915 

Scope and Contents note

Re: Dr. Willis asking for an investigation and hearing regarding allegations of issuing a temporary medical license

Folder 10: Note from Rose [Dr. William Walley’s Sister ?] to Dr. William Walley regarding obtaining recruits for military
service in World War I 

Scope and Contents note

Includes newspaper clipping dated 28 August 1918

Folder 11: Letter from Earle J. Christenberry to Mr. and Mrs. Walley, 23 September 1935 

Scope and Contents note

Re: Appreciation for show of condolence for Sen. Huey P. Long

Folder 12: Dr. Willis Walley’s Receipts and Souvenirs from trip to Mexico, September 1940 

Folder 13: Christmas Card: “For My Husband on Christmas.” Signed “Mother” 

Folder 14: Miscellaneous Items: 

2 Envelopes from Maracaibo Oxygen Plant-Venezuela 

1939 Pocket Calendar 

Receipt for Gasoline and Motor Oil – Barton Service Station, Augusta, Georgia 

Official Pinochle Poker Rules 

Postcard. Enchanted Trail-Rock City, Lookout Mountain, Tennessee 

Business card. Albert Langeluttig-Attorney, Chicago, Illinois 

Funeral notice/invitation. Charles Fleetwood House (1872-1937) Walter, Texas 

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Small Manuscripts 2011 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Newspaper Clipping. Map of World War II Pacific Theatre. “Shreveport Journal,” Monday, 7 May 1945 

Folder 2: Proclamation. The City of Oxford, Mississippi. Jacob Thompson Day. Proclaimed on Jacob Thompson’s 200th Birthday,10
May 2010. Signed by Mayor George G. Patterson. 

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Small Manuscripts 2012 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Daughters of the American Revolution David Reese Chapter material. 189u 

Folder 2: Yellow Fever: The Last Epidemic in North Mississippi by Robert A. Herring, MD 

Folder 3: Miscellaneous WWI material 

Folder 4: WWI Related Correspondence, 1921 

Folder 5: Jamel Burrell Karriem Papers 

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Small Manuscripts 2013 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Mrs. Henry Minor Faser scrapbook 1909 

Folder 2: Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese menu 

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Small Manuscripts 2014 

Box 1 

Folder 1: National Historic Landmark Nomination Materials for the Lyceum-The Circle Historic District. 2007 

Folder 2: Clipping and cartoon on Dwight Ball 

Folder 3: Debra Young Oral History Interview DVD 

Folder 4: Lynn Sykes Oral History Interview DVD 

Folder 5: Wanda Buckles Rice Oral History Interview DVD 

Folder 6: Willie Tankersley audio Interview DVD January 2007 

Folder 7: 4 page broadsheet, “The Negro Situation” 

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Small Manuscript 2015 

Box 2 

Rad H. Reed Clippings 

Valerie Boyd Howell 

Copy of Advertisement for Prof. JB Patorno, Photographer…Yazoo City. 

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Small Manuscript 2016 

Box 1 

Collective Leadership as institutional work: interpreting evidence from Mound Bayou. 2016 

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Small Manuscripts 2017 

Box 1 

Confederate Roll of Honor Medals 

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Small Manuscripts. Lobby Cards, Movie Stills and Pressbooks 

General note

Pressbooks formerly housed in this box have been removed for cataloging

Box 1 

Folder 1: “Heart of Dixie” t-shirt, 1989 

Folder 2: “Pinky” 1949 Color lobby card from “Pinky” starring Jeanne Crain, Ethel Barrymore, Ethel Waters and William Lundigan 

Folder 3: “The Gambler from Natchez” lobby card Color lobby card from “The Gambler from Natchez” starring Dale Robertson,
Debra Paget and Thomas Gomez 

Folder 4: “Tap Roots” lobby card 

Folder 5: “Home From the Hill” ad from magazine Advertisement for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s “Home From the Hill.” 

Folder 6: “Home from the Hill” (1) 11″ X 14″ color lobby card Color lobby card from “Home from the Hill.” 

Folder 7: “Mississippi Rhythm” (2) 11″ X 14″ color lobby cards 2 different color lobby cards from “Mississippi Rhythm” starring
Jimmie Davis 

Folder 8: “Band of Angles” (8) 11″ X 14″ color lobby cards 8 different color lobby cards from “Band of Angels” starring Clark
Gable 

Folder 9: “The Mississippi Gambler” lobby card Color lobby card from “The Mississippi Gambler” starring Tyrone Power, Piper
Laurie and Julia Adams 

Folder 10: “So Red the Rose” (1) 11″ X 14″ color lobby card Color lobby card from Stark Young’s “So Red the Rose” starring
Margaret Sullavan, Walter Connolly, Randolph Scott Elizabeth Patterson and Janet Beecher 

Folder 11: “All The King’s Men” (6) 11″ X 14″ color lobby cards 6 different color lobby cards from the movie based on Robert
Penn Warren’s Pulitzer Prize Novel,
All The King’s Men The film stars Broderick Crawford, Joanne Dru, John Ireland, John Derek and Mercedes McCambridge 

Folder 12: “Mississippi Rhythm” lobby card Color lobby card from “Mississippi Rhythm” starring Jimmie Davis 

Folder 13: (8) Color lobby cards from “The Client” 8 different lobby cards from the 1993 film “The Client” 

Folder 14: Play Bill featuring: “Biloxi Blues”, 1985 Play Bill from the opening night of “Biloxi Blues” in the Neil Simon
Theatre, March 28, 1985, starring Matthew Broderick, Bill Sadler, Barry Miller, Randall Edwards, Matt Mullhern, Geoffrey Sharp,
Penelope Ann Miller, Alan Ruck and Brian Tarantina 

Movie Stills 

Conditions Governing Access note

Movie stills removed to cold storage for preservation

Folder 1: Black and white 8 X 10 movie still from “So Red the Rose” Black and white photograph of Joan Bennette. Also included
is a handwritten letter from Pat McCarva (?) to “Doc” describing the photo 

Folder 12: 8″ X 10″ Black and white photograph of Kim Hunter Black and white photograph inscribed “To Charles-With all good
wishes, Kim Hunter.” 

Folder 14: (1) 8″ X 10″ black and white still from “Mississippi Mermaid” Black and white still from United Artists’ 1970 production
of “Mississippi Mermaid” starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Catherine Deneuve 

Folder 16: (1) 8″ X 10″ black and white still from “Tap Roots” Black and white still from Universal Pictures, Inc. “Tap Roots.” 

Folder 17: (1) 8″ X 10″ black and white still from “Ode to Billy Joe” Black and white still from Warner Bros. “Ode to Billy
Joe.” 

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Small Manuscripts Collection: Broadsheets and Broadsides 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Virginia Minstrels Broadside, Undated program from the March 16 production of and ‘Ethiopian Concert, Vocal and
Instrumental.’ 

Folder 2: Kelly Miller. Broadside. Broadside with photograph of Kelly Miller, A.M., LL. D., Dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences, Howard University, Washington, D.C 

Folder 3: ‘Horse Stolen’ Broadside, March 12, 1888. Broadside announcing the theft of a horse from William Fulton of Hancock’s
Mill, Winston County, Miss. March 12, 1888 

Folder 4: Broadsheet, “Child of the River” Broadsheet announcing the production of a “reader’s theatre adaptation” Carroll
Case of Carroll Case’s “Child of the River” by the Pike County Arts Council 

Folder 5: Broadside. “Parkway Sign” by Blair Hobbs 

Folder 6: Broadside. “Friends of Frank E. Smith want to ask Jamie Whitten some Questions” 

Folder 7: Broadside and “play” money from Two documents from the Dixie Showboat Players. (1) Broadside from the Dixie Showboat
Players the production of The Vicksburg Little Theatre’s “Gold in the Hills.” March and April 1956. (2) Piece of “play” money
given as a souvenir of the Dixie Showboat Players 

Folder 8: Broadside, “To the Conservative Republicans of Iowa”, 19th-century 

Folder 9: Broadside announcing the Resolution, The Union League and our late Victory at the Polls made concerning the election
of Abraham Lincoln for President of the United States 

Folder 10: Johnson & the Constitution. Lists candidates for various positions 

Folder 11: National Union Ticket for the Jackson Ward. Lists candidates for various positions 

Folder 12: Broadside, Lynch & Debar Minstrels, Program from the May 27 production of ‘Music & Mirth.’ c. 1851-1852 Broadside
printed in Holly Springs, Mississippi 

Folder 13: Shapiro for Oxford, Mississippi. Broadside for Ron Shapiro for Alderman of Oxford, Mississippi, May 1993 

Folder 14: “From Yalobusha County” 1997 Autographed broadside “From Yalobusha County” by Athena Kildegaard. Published by the
Jefferson City Broadside Society 

Folder 15: “Falling” Salita Bryant Autographed broadside “Falling” by Salita Bryant. Published by the Jefferson City Broadside
Society 

Folder 16: “Two are Four” by Turner Cassity Postcard; inscribed with Turner Cassity’s poem, “Two are Four.” 

Folder 17: Gulfport Land Sale Broadside announcing the sale of land where railroads will soon be built. (2 Copies) 

Folder 18: Broadside announcing the production of “Oxtales: Stories from Oxford”– Highlights from “The Oxford Lesson” by
Nayo Watkins 

Folder 19: Notice. Geo. W. Martin concerning “Treaty made with the Choctaw Indians at Dancing Rabbit Creek”, 14 November 1835 

Folder 20: “Mississippian Extra” concerning Mexican War Enlistment, 1846 

Folder 21: Broadside, Wanted poster for Myers H. Levy, escaped convict of “Jewish nativity”. Jackson, MS, July 22, 1886 

Folder 22: Crimean War Broadside. Original and photocopy of broadside: “Battle with Russians at Russians at Kamshatcha-1854.” 

Folder 23: Broadside, 2004 Square Books 25th Anniversary Poster 

Folder 24: Broadside. Ellen Douglas. “Can’t Quit You, Baby” 

Folder 25: Slave impressments certificate, Document issuing monetary compensation to Capt. W.S. Williams under the provisions
of “An act to authorize the impressments of slaves and other personal property for military purposes.” January 3, 1863 

Folder 26: Grenada, MS, Fiddlers’ Contest Broadside announcing “A Grand Old-Time Fiddler’ Contest, Grenada, Thursday, August
2, 1900, for the Fifteenth Regiment Monumental Fund.” 

Folder 27: “Destroy All Cotton”. C.G. Dahlgren, 17 May 1862 

Folder 28: “Lumbermen’s Excursion to Jackson, Miss. via the Illinois Central Railroad”, 20 December 1883 

Folder 29: Broadside encouraging white citizens printed by the committee to elect Frank Smith for U.S. to vote for Frank Smith
for U.S. Congressman. The document questions rival candidate, “Mr. Whitten’s” Congressman decisions concerning his children
and integrated schools 

Folder 30: Broadside, Southern Baptist Broadside announcing the 1894 Southern Baptist Convention in Dallas, Convention, May
9th, 1894 TX 

 

Folder 32: Confederate Role of Honor Certificates. 

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Small Manuscripts Collection: Ephemera 

Box 1 

Folder 1: Mississippi highways bumpersticker Bumpersticker that reads “Keep Mississippi’s Highways Clean” (2 stickers) 

Folder 2: Ross Barnett bumpersticker Bumpersticker that reads “Barnett for Governor” 

Folder 3: Governor Eaves Cardboard license plate reproduction that reads “Governor Eaves; Ten Dollars, Jan. 88” 

Folder 4: Bull Dozer Bumpersticker Bumpersticker that reads “Look Out for The Bull Dozer!!” 

Folder 5: Beloved Standing cardboard cutout that reads “Beloved: Toni Morrison’s Magnificent New Novel.” Also on the cutout
is a photo of Toni Morrison 

Folder 6: “Fighting for Finch” Bumpersticker that reads “I’m Fighting for Finch: Finch is in the fight PRESIDENT Committee,
Inc.” 

Folder 7: “Gandy for Governor” Bumpersticker that reads “I’m Going Gandy for Governor: Let’s Make ‘Honest’ Honorable Again.” 

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