Browse Items (916 total)
Letter from William Sherman to Ellen Sherman, March 23, 1865
Headquarters, Military Division of the Mississippi, In the Field, Goldsboro, N.C., March 23, 1865 Dearest Ellen, I wrote you from Fayetteville. On our way there the enemy struck on left flank and I turned on him and after three days maneuvering…
Letter from William Sherman to Ellen Sherman, April 9, 1865
In the Field, Goldsboro, N. C,
April 9, 1865.
. . .. Tomorrow we move straight against Joe Johnston wherever he may be. Grant's magnificent victories about Petersburg, and his rapid pursuit of Lee's army makes it unnecessary for me to move…
William Sherman, Special Field Orders No. 55, April 14, 1865
[Special Field Orders, No. 55]
HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE MISSISSIPPI IN THE FIELD,
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA, April 14, 1865.
The next movement will be on Ashboro', to turn the position of the enemy…
Tags: military strategy, North Carolina
Letter from William Sherman to D.L. Swain, April 22, 1865
HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE MISSISSIPPI, IN THE FIELD, RALEIGH, N. C., April 22, 1865.
Hon. D. L. Swain, Chapel Hill, N. C.:
MY DEAR SIR: Yours of April nineteenth was laid before me yesterday, and I am pleased that you recognize in…
Tags: Home Front, North Carolina
Letter From William H. Thomas to Zebulon B. Vance, November 22, 1862
In the progress of the war men and circumstances change. At the commencement you were in Military I in Civil positions. Now my position is what your position was then. I find myself at the head of a Regment or Legion of Indians and Mountaineers,…
Certificate of appointment: James H. Harris to City Commissioner for Raleigh, N.C., July 13, 1868
William Woods Holden Memoir
After nine years of rebellion, and strife, and civil discord, and social disruption and bitterness, a very large majority of the people of North Carolina long for peace, and harmony, and good will, and security of life and property. But this matter…
Tags: W.W. Holden
Letter from W. W. Holden to S. A. Ashe, November 29, 1881
Raleigh, November 29, 1881.
Capt. S. A. Ashe: - On page 232 of his history Maj. Moore says:
"The persistency of President Davis, at Richmond, in refusing to make overtures to Mr. Lincoln, in order to break the force of the coming overthrow, led…
Tags: Class Relations, Freedpeople
Excerpt from the Memoirs of W.W. Holden, June 12, 1865
And in my first proclamation to the people of the State I used the following language in regard to the colored people: -
To the colored people of the State I would say, you are now free. Providence has willed that the very means adopted to render…
Tags: Freedpeople, North Carolina, W.W. Holden
"Slaves and Free Persons of Color," December 7, 1859
Slaves and Free Persons of Color.
At a time like this every thing which concerns domestic slavery is interesting and important.
We have observed for years in this community and in this State, the prevalence and the increasing prevalence of the…
Tags: W.W. Holden
Featured Item
Benjamin Sherwood Hedrick, 1827-1886

Benjamin Hedrick (1827-1886), a chemistry professor at UNC, was dismissed from his job in 1856 after openly claiming that he supported the Republican…