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Tag Archives: weather
13 January 1865: “nothing at all to bother us except the mud”
Item Description: Letter dated 13 January 1865 written by James A. Graham to his mother. Graham, a native of Hillsborough, N.C., served as an officer in Company G (Orange Guards), 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Confederate States of America. Item … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Danville, Danville Railroad, furlough, James A. Graham, James Augustus Graham, music, Navy, snow, weather, Weldon (N.C.), Weldon Railroad, winter
Comments Off on 13 January 1865: “nothing at all to bother us except the mud”
4 December 1864: “he is really suffering for want of clothing”
Item Description: Letter dated 4 December 1864 from Catherine Roulhac to her father. Item Citation: Folder 91, Ruffin, Roulhac, and Hamilton Family Papers, #643, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Item Transcription: Hillsboro Dec … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Catherine Roulhac, clothing, Roulhac family, Ruffin family, Thomas Ruffin, weather
Comments Off on 4 December 1864: “he is really suffering for want of clothing”
2 May 1864: “I earnestly hope we may have a chance to fight…for the other thousands of anguished hearts…& also the cherishing of those passions of hatred & revenge which it would promote & encourage.
Item Description: Letter, 2 May 1864 and continued 11 May 1864, from Jonathan Lewis Whitaker to his wife, Julia A. Wells Whitaker, updating her on the conditions in his camp his well-being. Whitaker was an Orange County, N.Y., physician serving as a … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 26th United States Colored Troops, crops, doctors, dreams, food, Jonathan Lewis Whitaker, prayer meeting, preaching, United States Navy, water, weather
Comments Off on 2 May 1864: “I earnestly hope we may have a chance to fight…for the other thousands of anguished hearts…& also the cherishing of those passions of hatred & revenge which it would promote & encourage.
30 March 1864: “The weather continues cold, uncomfortable and equinoctial.”
Item: “News” (editorial), The Daily Journal (Wilmington, N. C.), 30 March 1864, page 2, column 1. This editorial column discusses the lack of news, the “temporary lull in the storm of war,” the editors’ opinion on the political relationship between … Continue reading
Posted in North Carolina Collection
Tagged bonds, Christopher G. Memminger, currency, General Ulysses S. Grant, snow, weather, Wilmington (N.C.) Daily Journal
Comments Off on 30 March 1864: “The weather continues cold, uncomfortable and equinoctial.”
21 March 1864: “So by Father’s request I now write to inform you of the result of last Saturday’s election which terminated in you being elected.”
Item Description: Letter dated 21 March 1864 from Maggie Espey to her brother, Joseph Espey. In it, Maggie discusses Joseph’s victory in a local election, potentially getting him excused from his military duty as a result, the weather, her parents’ activities, … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged elections, local militia, Rome (G.A.), slaves, weather
Comments Off on 21 March 1864: “So by Father’s request I now write to inform you of the result of last Saturday’s election which terminated in you being elected.”
19 March 1864: “I have never yet met any of the negro soldiers and hope I never may.”
Item Description: Letter, dated 19 March 1864, written by James Augustus Graham. James Graham served in the 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Confederate States of America and lived until 1908. [Transcription available below images.] Item Citation: From the James Augustus Graham Papers, #00283, … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, African American soldiers, Hillsborough (N.C.), James A. Graham, ladies' relief societies, prisoner exchanges, weather
Comments Off on 19 March 1864: “I have never yet met any of the negro soldiers and hope I never may.”
15 January 1864: “Our best protections will be our poverty and bad roads…”
Item description: In this letter dated 15 January 1864, Walter Waightstill Lenoir (1823-1890) wrote from Crab Orchard in Watauga County, N.C., to his mother, Selina Louisa Avery Lenoir (1783-1864) in Fort Defiance, Caldwell County, N.C., about the weather and its … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged corn crop, Crab Orchard (N.C.), health, poverty, Selina Louisa Avery Lenoir, slave labor, slaves, Union raids, Walter Waightstill Lenoir, Watauga County (N.C.), weather
Comments Off on 15 January 1864: “Our best protections will be our poverty and bad roads…”
7 January 1864: “I wish our Ladies Solidiers Aid Society in Hillsboro would make about fifty prs of gloves for our Company as very few of the men have gloves and they would be very acceptable such weather as this especially on picket.”
Item description: Letter, dated 7 January 1864, from James A. Graham to his mother. Item citation: From the James A. Graham Papers #00283, Southern Historical Collection,The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Item transcription: Camp 27th No. Ca. Inf’y near … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, clothes, Hillsborough (N.C.), James A. Graham, ladies' relief societies, substitutes, weather, winter, winter quarters
Comments Off on 7 January 1864: “I wish our Ladies Solidiers Aid Society in Hillsboro would make about fifty prs of gloves for our Company as very few of the men have gloves and they would be very acceptable such weather as this especially on picket.”
4 January 1864: “There was a most horrid murder perpetrated in Monroe the other day; Mr. Baker’s little son, only seven years old was riding through town attended by a negro boy when he was shot through the head and instantly killed…”
Item description: Entry, dated 4 January 1864, from the diary of Sarah Lois Wadley, which includes details about the murder of a young boy in Monroe, La., by a Mexican member of a Texas regiment. More about Sarah Lois Wadley: Sarah Lois … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged diaries, Louisiana, murder, Sarah Lois Wadley, weather, winter
Comments Off on 4 January 1864: “There was a most horrid murder perpetrated in Monroe the other day; Mr. Baker’s little son, only seven years old was riding through town attended by a negro boy when he was shot through the head and instantly killed…”
3 January 1864: “Tha have cut our rashions down to a quarter of a pound of bacon and one pound of flower…”
Item description: Letter, dated 3 January 1863, from Jesse Miller to William and Mary Proffit of Wilkes County, NC. He describes sickness, cold weather, and food rations in his camp. [transcription available below images] Item citation: From folder 4 in … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged furlough, hospital, illness, Orange Court House (V.A.), Proffit family, rations, weather
Comments Off on 3 January 1864: “Tha have cut our rashions down to a quarter of a pound of bacon and one pound of flower…”