Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Rare Books

Recollections of Thomas D. Duncan ; a Confederate soldier

Image not available



You might also be interested in

  • Image not available

    The recollections of an old Confederate soldier

    Rare Books

    318362

  • Image not available

    J.D. Duncan letters to A.H. Campbell

    Manuscripts

    In these two letters to his brother, J.D. Duncan writes that he has arrived in the town of Stockton, California from Wisconsin and plans to head north to the gold mines. A year later, he writes that he has found work with "a large Ditch Company." He writes of the current state of crops, of the scarcity of gold, and the danger posed by Indians. Nevertheless, J.D. believes there is still "plenty of gold to be had." HM 25788 is dated 1857, February 4, and HM 25789 is dated 1858, September 13, and both were written in Stockton, California.

    mssHM 25788-25789

  • Image not available

    The Confederate soldier in the ranks : an address

    Rare Books

    96833

  • Image not available

    Duncan Richmond accounts

    Manuscripts

    Accounts kept by Duncan Richmond between 1757-1758; there are six clearance notes in the hand of Earl of Loudoun. Also included are 32 receipts and accounts, mostly for feed and repairs, and the the account with Richmond (1758, Nov. 20), and Samuel Sackett (1758, July 22).

    mssHM 444

  • Image not available

    Duncan McKercher papers

    Manuscripts

    The collection includes three pocket diaries kept by McKercher from January 1, 1862 to March 3, 1865, detailing his military service and his imprisonment. Also included are memoirs, based on the diaries that McKercher composed later, and some additional regimental records. There is also a group of 41 notes from South Carolina enslavers requesting various forms of punishment for enslaved persons. The requests are addressed to the Master of the Charleston "workhouse," the city's notorious jail for enslaved persons. McKercher apparently took these papers while incarcerated in Charleston jail on his way to Libby Prison. Also included is a military commission issued by Governor of Alabama, May 29, 1861, a special instruction for officers guarding Libby Prison, April 30, 1864, and a letter from Theodore Schock, a prospector of Needleton, Colorado describing his wife's suicide, written on January 9, 1889.

    mssHM 48562-48568