Browse Items (19 total)
- Tags: postwar
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
Testimony of Albert Murray in Holden's Impeachment, 1871
Tags: postwar
Testimony of William J. Murray in Holden's Impeachment Trial, 1871
Tags: postwar
Testimony of Jesse Gant in Holden's impeachment trial, 1871
Tags: postwar
Richard L. Zuber, North Carolina During Reconstruction (1969)
Just before Christmas, 1870, the House of Representatives drew up eight charges against the governor. The first two charges were that he had acted unlawfully by raising troops and sending them into Caswell and Alamance counties when there was no…
Tags: postwar
North Carolina Through Four Centuries, 1989
The trial got under way on 2 February 1871 and lasted until 22 March, a period of seven weeks. A separate vote was taken on each of the eight charges, and Holden was found guilty on six. Although Holden was the second American governor to be…
Tags: postwar
Ku Klux Klan Mask, c. 1870
Tags: postwar, Race relations, Racial Violence, Racism
Memorial to the Confederate Dead, Windsor, NC
We responded to our country's call.
We fought an honest fight.
We kept the Southron's faith.
We fell at the post of duty.
We died for the land we loved.
Erected by the Confederate Veterans Association of Bertie 1896
Our Confederate Dead…
Tags: Confederacy, memorial, postwar, statue
Petition of Joseph Etheridge
Calvin Hoggard's letter to the Southern Claims Commission
Tags: Calvin, claims, commission, Hoggard, patriotism, postwar, soldier, southern, union
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D. H. Hill, 1859-1924
Daniel Harvey (D. H.) Hill (1859-1924), the son of Confederate general D. H. Hill, was an important figure in the commemoration of the Civil War and…