Box 5
Contains 48 Results:
Moise, Edwin Warren—b. 1832, Confederate Service Captain, Co. A, 7th Confederate Cavalry
Troop and Campaign research, service records, correspondence, request forms, and receipts (oversize and photocopy). Mention in TJC, see index pgs. 505.
Moise, Penina—b. 1797 Charleston, first American Jewish women to achieve prominence in the field of American Literature
Copy of poem writen by P. Moise, newspaper, excerpts from Jews of the South, by Samuel Proctor, eds. Mention in TJC, 35, 224-25, 225.
Mordecai Family Papers
Personal notes and letters, genealogical information.
Mordecai Family Papers Folder II
Correspondence between members of the Mordecai family (photocopy).
Mordecai, Alfred—b. 1804 North Carolina, Major U.S. Army, resignation at beginning of Civil War, choose not to fight on either side
Biographical information, articles “Divided Loyalties in 1861: The Decision of Major Alfred Mordecai,” by Stanley L. Falk; “The Life of Alfred Mordecai: As Related by Himself,” and “Life of Alfred Mordecai in Mexico, 1865-1866: As Told in His Letters to His Family,” by James A. Padgett ed. Mention in TJC, pgs, 43.
Mordecai, George Washington—Confederate service Private 2nd Co., Howitzer Battalion, Virginia Volunteers
Refuge, diary of G.W. Mordecai (typed and photocopy).
Mordecai, Moses Cohen—b. 1804 Chalreston, SC, ship-owner and merchant
Personal notes and letters, biographoical information, property notes, excerpts from Eventful Years and Experiences, by B. W. Korn. Mention in TJC, see index pg 505.
Moses Family
Genealogical papers, A Mother’s Poems: A Collection of Verses, by Octavia H. Moses; The Moses Family, by Herbert A. Yates.
Moses, Franklin J., Jr.—b. 1838, Sumter, SC, Confederate service Lt. Co. F, 1st Regiment of S.C. Regulars
Personal notes and biographical information, newspaper (photocopy), historical paper “Franklin J. Moses: Proto-New Dealer and Reconstruction Governor,” by Christopher Dell, article “Franklin J. Moses, Jr., Scalawag Governor of South Carolina, 1872-74,” by R. H. Woody, excerpts from South Carolina During Reconstruction, by Frances B. Simkins and Robert H. Woody, service records (oversize and photocopy) Mention in TJC, see index pgs. 506.
Moses, Franklin J., Sr.—b. 1804, Charleston, SC, first Jew to serve as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in any American State or foreign country
Personal notes, newspaper (photocopy), excerpts from Saga of American Jewry, by Harry Simonhoff, excerpts from South Carolina During Reconstruction, by F. B. Simkins and R. H. Woody. Mention in TJC, see index pgs 506.