Alaska – African American Documentary Resources https://blogs.lib.unc.edu/afam Enhancing African American Documentary Resources in the Southern Historical Collection at UNC-Chapel Hill Tue, 19 Jun 2018 15:12:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.8 Gustavus A. Henry papers, 1804-1895. https://blogs.lib.unc.edu/afam/index.php/gustavus-a-henry-papers-1804-1895/ Mon, 12 Oct 2009 12:00:00 +0000 https://fullcupdesign.com/wordpress/?p=850 Continue reading "Gustavus A. Henry papers, 1804-1895."

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Creator: Henry, Gustavus A. (Gustavus Adolphus), 1804-1880.
Collection number: 1431
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Abstract: Gustavus A. Henry (1804-1880) of Clarksville, Tenn., was a Whig politician, lawyer, and owner of plantations in Hinds County, Miss., and Desha County, Ark. Henry’s family included his wife Marion McClure Henry (fl. 1828-1871); their children Susan (fl. 1846-1862), John (d. 1862), and Gustavus, Jr. (fl. 1849-1865); and Gustavus’s brother Patrick Henry (fl. 1833-1850), plantation owner in Mississippi and Arkansas. Chiefly family correspondence of the Henrys, particularly of Gustavus and Marion and their children. Included is correspondence between Gustavus and Marion while he was away on court business and campaigning in Tennessee for the Whigs and Henry Clay. Also included is their correspondence while he was on trips to visit his plantations in Mississippi and Arkansas. Gustavus wrote about the crops and slaves on his plantations. Marion wrote about friends and family in Clarksville and her work with the Mount Vernon Association. Letters from the children were written chiefly while they were away at school, particularly from Susan at the Columbia Female Institute in Tennessee, from John at the University of Virginia, and from Gustavus, Jr., at the Military Academy at West Point. They also corresponded while on trips with their father to Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas; and Susan wrote while travelling in Virginia, New York, and the District of Columbia in 1853. Several of the Henry sons joined the Confederate Army during the Civil War, and Gustavus, Jr., served on the staff of General G. J. Pillow. In addition to family correspondence there are a few letters from political associates of Gustavus, including letters on the activities of John Bell. The earliest papers relate to Marion McClure Henry and her family before her marriage.

Repository: Southern Historical Collection

Collection Highlights: Included are letters which describe Henry’s sentiments on lynching in1835 (Folder 4) and comments on his slaves in Mississippi and Arkansas in 1837, 1839, and  1846 (Folders 5 and 8)

In Series 3, there are also correspondence from Henry about his dissatisfaction with an overseer due to ill treatment of enslaved people in December 1848 (Folder 10). In 1854, he writes about his slaves joining the Baptist church (Folder 15). On 7 January 1857 and 14 December 1856, Henry discusses building new cabins for enslaved people (Folder 15 and 16).

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Luther Hartwell Hodges papers, 1947-1969. https://blogs.lib.unc.edu/afam/index.php/luther-hartwell-hodges-papers-1947-1969/ Mon, 12 Oct 2009 12:00:00 +0000 https://fullcupdesign.com/wordpress/?p=857 Continue reading "Luther Hartwell Hodges papers, 1947-1969."

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Creator: Hodges, Luther Hartwell, 1898-1974.
Collection number: 3698
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Abstract: Luther Hartwell Hodges began his career as an executive for Marshall Field & Comapny, 1919-1950. He was later consultant to the Economic Cooperation Administration, 1950-1951; lieutenant governor, 1953- 1954, and governor, 1956-1960, of North Carolina; United Sates Secretary of Commerce, 1961-1965; head of the Research Triangle Foundation, 1966-1972; and president of Rotary International, 1967-1968. Correspondence, subject files, political files, speeches and other writings, scrapbooks, and other private papers and audiovisual materials of Luther H. Hodges. Much of the material concerns Hodges’s years with Marshall Field & Comapny, 1919-1950; his work with Rotary International, 1930-1972; and his chairmanship of Research Triangle Foundation, 1966-1972. Also included are some letters about the Economic Cooperation Administration in post-World War II Germany; a small amount of family correspondence; political speeches Hodges made as governor and Secretary of Commerce; books by and about Hodges; scrapbooks of clippings about Hodges’s political career and about school desegregation in Little Rock, Ark., as well as in North Carolina; materials relating to a study of the University of North Carolina Board of Trustees; and trip reports to friends and family from many trips overseas, including trips to Asia and Africa.

Repository: Southern Historical Collection

Collection Highlights: Series 2.7 (General Subject Files) contains various folders related to school desegregation and historically black colleges and universities in the area (See Folders 1774, 1815, 1816-1817).

Some copies of speeches in Series 4.2 also deal with Civil Rights and school desegregation as well.

Subseries 4.3 contains various reports about Hodges’s travel, including Africa, where he noted observations about various African nations after independence.

Scrapbooks in Subseries 5.1 contain several clippings, papers, and letters regarding desegregation in North Carolina and Arkansas from 1954-1961 and  1957-1958 (See Volumes S-72 to S-81).

Subseries 5.3 also contains letters, telegrams, clippings, and political pamphlets sent to Governor Hodges in the wake of Governor Orval Faubus’s summoning of the National Guard troops to prevent the integration of Central High School in Little Rock.

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