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Box Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1

 Container

Contains 25 Results:

Charleston Chamber of Commerce records, 1823-1923

 File — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection: Records (1823-1923) include rules, awards, proposed constitution and by-laws, an annual report, and membership lists. A typescript copy of “Rules Charleston Chamber of Commerce Adopted to March 1858,” transcribed from the original by Agnes P. Lyons as part of a 1935-1936 W.P.A. project, contains a list of names of individual members whose signatures are on the document. A typescript copy of “Awards” transcribed by Mabel Whiting and Julia W. Reynolds during a 1935-1936 W.P.A. project contains...
Dates: 1823-1923

"Pans to Tote" typescript, 1933 August

 Item — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1, Item: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

The collection consists of a typescript copy of an article written by Miriam Pope Cimino entitled "Pans to Tote." The article appeared in the August 1933 edition of Scribner's. It describes the life of African-Americans in Georgia during the Great Depression. Cimino argues that African-Americans who remained in the south faired better than those who migrated north.

Dates: 1933 August

Request for passage north, 1865

 Item — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1, Item: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

The document is a request from Major General W.B. Hazen that "four ladies be permitted to pass through the lines of his army to proceed north."

Dates: 1865

Civil War era letters, 1861, 1862, 1864

 File — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

The collection consists of three Civil War era letters. The first letter was written by James E. Wilkins of Virginia to Colonel John Preston on January 23, 1861. In the letter Wilkins pledges his services to South Carolina. The second letter, written September 11, 1862 to John H. Easton, was from a Mr. Helton. In the letter Helton discusses his recovery from injuries suffered during the war. In the third letter, "C.A. Strange" discusses war time conditions to her brother.

Dates: 1861; 1862; 1864

Explanatory texts, undated

 File — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection: These manuscripts are from the Missale Romanum and contain pages 74 and 81. Page 74 gives the latter part of the Communion Prayer from the service for Tuesday in Holy Week, with the scriptures from Psalm 68: 13-14: "But as for me, my prayer is to Thee, O Lord; for the time of Thy good pleasure, O God, in the multitude of Thy mercy." On the following page, the service for Wednesday in Holy Week begins with the Introit from Philippians II: 10, 8 and 11: "In the name of Jesus let every knee...
Dates: undated

Henry Laurens Pinckney warrant , 1849

 File — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

This collection contains a single warrant issued by Henry L. Pinckney, Collector of the general tax for the parishes of St. Philip's and St. Michael's, to James S. Shingler, Sheriff of Charleston District, authorizing the arrest of the free black, Maria Louisa Silvanneau, of Charleston, for failure to pay the capitation tax of $2.77. Includes handwritten note of disposition.

Dates: 1849

Warrants signed by Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1667-1668

 File — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

Warrants signed by Anthony Ashley Cooper, Chancellor of the Exchequer of the Treasury of Great Britain relate to continuance of a pension (or annuity) granted to James Duke of Cambridge and his children and to the Lord Bishop of Winchester. Also available is a miniature copy of the minutes of the first meeting of the Carolina Proprietors in London, England on May 23, 1663, thought to be the oldest known business document in the history of South Carolina (typescript also available).

Dates: 1667-1668

John Cordes estate book, 1764-1798 (typescript copy), 1937

 Item — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1, Item: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection: Typescript copy of the John Cordes estate book (1764-1798) transcribed during a 1935-1937 W.P.A. project. Inventory and appraisal (1764) of the John Cordes estate contains lists of slaves (names and appraised values), dishes, furniture, linens, animals, rice, indigo, and other items. The volume also includes slaves (with names and valuations) taken by Catharine Cordes of Charleston (S.C.), and by Theodore Gaillard. Memorandums signed by the estate's executor Samuel Cordes are with other...
Dates: 1937

George Ingles Crafts letters, 1846-1847

 File — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

The collection contains five letters between George Ingles Crafts and his cousin Maria Campbell. In the letters Crafts describes his travels in Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa. One letter is from Campbell. In the letters, Crafts described his trips in great detail. He mentions stopovers in Constantinople, Thebes, Jerusalem, Paris, and other locations.

Dates: 1846-1847

"Sherman's Raid Through Camden, South Carolina" typescript, 1906 June

 Item — Box: Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 1, Folder: 1, Item: 1
Collection Overview From the Collection:

The collection consists of an essay read by Davis before the Richard Kirkland Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy in Camden, South Carolina in June of 1906. The work is titled Sherman's Raid Through Camden, South Carolina. In the essay, Davis discussed her memories and experiences during the war.

Dates: 1906 June