Manuscripts
Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Note re: Lavender Hale
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Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Note re: Lavender Hale
Manuscripts
The voluminous correspondence, notebooks, affidavits, eyewitness testimonies, and published pamphlets of the family of Jonathan D. Hale contain a wealth of previously unknown information about the Civil War in Tennessee and Kentucky, including the organization of Unionist communities; womens contributions to the war effort; guerrilla warfare; the fate of Unionists' slaves; Reconstruction in East Tennessee and the rise of the Ku Klux Klan; and complicated and bitter politics of veterans' affairs in the wake of the Civil War. The letters, orders, reports, and communications written during Hale's services with General George H. Thomas (1816-1870) is a unique resource for historians of Civil War civilian scouts and guides, a topic that remains largely unexplored.
JDH 140
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Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Note re: James Yarboro and Lieutenant Phillips killed by guerrillas
Manuscripts
On verso: a later note by J. D. (Jonathan D.) Hale.
JDH 101
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Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Notes for an autobiography
Manuscripts
The voluminous correspondence, notebooks, affidavits, eyewitness testimonies, and published pamphlets of the family of Jonathan D. Hale contain a wealth of previously unknown information about the Civil War in Tennessee and Kentucky, including the organization of Unionist communities; womens contributions to the war effort; guerrilla warfare; the fate of Unionists' slaves; Reconstruction in East Tennessee and the rise of the Ku Klux Klan; and complicated and bitter politics of veterans' affairs in the wake of the Civil War. The letters, orders, reports, and communications written during Hale's services with General George H. Thomas (1816-1870) is a unique resource for historians of Civil War civilian scouts and guides, a topic that remains largely unexplored.
JDH 145
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Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Notes for an autobiography
Manuscripts
The voluminous correspondence, notebooks, affidavits, eyewitness testimonies, and published pamphlets of the family of Jonathan D. Hale contain a wealth of previously unknown information about the Civil War in Tennessee and Kentucky, including the organization of Unionist communities; womens contributions to the war effort; guerrilla warfare; the fate of Unionists' slaves; Reconstruction in East Tennessee and the rise of the Ku Klux Klan; and complicated and bitter politics of veterans' affairs in the wake of the Civil War. The letters, orders, reports, and communications written during Hale's services with General George H. Thomas (1816-1870) is a unique resource for historians of Civil War civilian scouts and guides, a topic that remains largely unexplored.
JDH 143
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Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Statement re: Champ Ferguson
Manuscripts
Written on the last page of a petition by Joseph Ramsey, Will Gilbreath and W. A. Black.
JDH 112
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Hale, J. D. (Jonathan D.). Note re: Ulysses S. Grant
Manuscripts
Probably by J. D. (Jonathan D.) Hale.
JDH 135