Browse Items (916 total)
Letter from David L. Swain to Charles Manly, October 7, 1856
Chapel Hill, 7 Oct. 1856
My dear Sir,
Your note of the 4th by some oversight at the post-office did not reach me until late yesterday evening & this morning brought me that of the 6th with Judge Saunders's letter enclosed.
Hedrick has the…
Amnesty Petition of George Davis, November 22, 1865
In Prison, Fort LaFayette, Nov. 22, 1865
His Excellency,
Andrew Johnson,
President of the United States
Sir,
Desiring and intending on good faith to accept and abide by all the results of the late unhappy contest. I now respectfully…
Tags: Amnesty, National Government
Jonathan T. Dorris, Pardon and Amnesty Under Lincoln and Johnson: the Restoration of the Confederates to their Rights and Privaleges, 1883-1898 (1953)
The special consideration that President Johnson gave North Carolina in his program of reconstruction deserves notice. He was doubtless influenced by the manifestations there of loyalty to the Union during the war, and by the fact that he had many…
Amnesty Petition of Peterson Dunn, June 30, 1865
To his Excellency Andrew Johnson, President of the United States
For I respectfully ask for amnesty and pardon according to the provision of your proclamation of the 29th of May under the following statement of facts. I am a citizen of the County…
1856 Democratic Presidential Campaign Poster
William Woods Holden, 1818 -1892
Tags: North Carolina, prewar, Secession, W.W. Holden
Edgar Folk and Bynum Shaw, W. W. Holden, (1982)
When Holdne took office as provisional governor of North Carolina in June, 1865, the task he faced would have dismayed a less energetic man. Government in the state was utterly disorganized; all offices were vacant. The state was without money and…
Tags: postwar
"Editorial Notes on the South," May 31, 1867
If an election of any kind were to be held in the South within the next month, there is no reasonable doubt that three-fourths of the negro vote would be cast with the Southern white vote. There is perfect accord between the large portion of the…
Tags: Class Relations, Free Blacks, Race relations, Suffrage
Letter from Edward Jones Hale Jr. to James Lane, July 31, 1865
Fayetteville, N.C., July 31st, 1865.
My Dear General:
It would be impossible to give you an adequate idea of the destruction of property in this good old town. It may not be an average instance; but it is one the force of whose truth we feel…
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Hinton Rowan Helper, 1829-1909
Hinton Rowan Helper (1829-1909), a bitter and staunch racist, was the author of one of the greatest and most influential books on antislavery of his…