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Correspondence, 1832-1844

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 10

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Holloway Family Scrapbook contains legal documents, personal and business correspondence, receipts, ephemera, clippings and photographs pertaining to the Holloway family, a prominent free family of color in Charleston, SC. Series 1: "The Scrapbook," holds a variety of documents: Highlights include legal documents with deeds (1806, 1821, 1871), a conveyance (1811), slave bills of sale including one for the slave "Betty" (1829), an agreement (1829) to apprentice the slave boy Carlos in the carpenters and house joiner's trade, exhorter licenses to preach and a photograph of a 1797 document declaring patriarch Richard “Holliday” [Holloway] a free mulatto. Personal and business correspondence include letters concerning the hiring out of slaves, an offer (1837) to buy the "Holloway Negroes,” a letter (1831) from Samuel Benedict about emigrating to Liberia, agreements for carpentry work, and information about the Brown Fellowship Society, the Century Fellowship Society, the Minors Moralist Society and the Bonneau Literary Society. Also included are invitations, Confederate and corporate tax receipts, receipts for general merchandise, and Confederate scrip. Other letters and newspaper clippings, including letters to the editor written by James H. Holloway, concern Negro taxes, Negro slaveholders, the Liberia movement, the Methodist Episcopal Church, civil rights and related topics. James H. Holloway's niece, Mae Holloway Purcell, preserved the scrapbook after his death and added to its contents. The bound scrapbook was microfilmed by the South Caroliniana Library in 1977 but was later disbound and reorganized. Using the microfilm as a guide, this archive attempts to recreate the original order and this digital presentation of the scrapbook reflects those efforts.

Dates

  • Creation: 1832-1844

Creator

Extent

From the Collection: 4.0 linear feet (3 oversize boxes)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Materials Specific Details

Note (1837) from Mr. Gadsden offering $900 cash for Holloway's "negroes." Note (1839) to Charles Kershaw giving Richard Holloway permission to preach on Newman Kershaw's property "both at the grove and the island" with an addendum from N. Talley corroborating the character of Holloway; Request for payment (1839) from John Cook to Richard Holloway for chimney work done by Cook's servant, Moses; Receipt (1838) for $700 for a slave, Betty, purchased by Richard Holloway from Mrs. Dickinson. Letter (1844) to "Holloway - the carpenter" from Thomas N. Gadsden contracting Holloway to raise a flat roof on his house on Wall St. with details of the project. Letter (1844) from John Phillips, writing on behalf of client Mr. Fink, to Richard Holloway concerning a land dispute. Phillips claims that Holloway broke a covenant between him and Mr. Fink when he sold a lot to his son that Fink was leasing without giving Fink the right of first refusal; Letter (1839) from Edward Holloway to mother, Elizabeth, expressing his affection and describing his "exile" in Hamburg, SC, for unclear reasons.

Repository Details

Part of the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture Repository

Contact:
125 Bull Street
Charleston South Carolina 29424 United States
843-953-7608