Daybook and docket, 1827-32, of this Tuscaloosa law firm.
Commencement address titled "Footprints of the Creator," delivered July 15, 1858 at the University of Alabama.
Letters from Private A. T. Baumgarten of Company F, 312th Infantry, American Expeditionary Forces in France during World War I, to his sister, Mabel Baumgarten of Hornell, Steuben County, New York and to Frank Taylor, also of Hornell, New York.
Christine Baxter of Panama sends a family newsletter and personal note to Len and Laverna Nyberg of Stillman Valley, Illinois.
A letter between cousins, Emily writes about her scholars.
Letters to Miss Marion Beale of Gordonville, Virginia between 1870 and 1878.
Two letters from B. L. Beall of Lenoir, North Carolina, to her children Meta and Bobbie. She discusses daily life and updates her children on friends and family.
Western American author, Amelia Bean, responds to Roberta Hickman's letter about the 1958 publication of "The Fancher Train," a book about the Mountain Meadows massacre. Bean suggests other books that might be of interest to Hickman.
A letter from V. Ormond Beatty to his father, asking permission to join the Presbyterian Church, July 19, 1835.
A letter from Louis Beck of Los Angeles, California, to William Pontius in Wyoming, congratulating him on his promotion to Corporal.
Letter and photographs relating to Harvey Beeson's ancestors in Michigan, August 1939.
A miscellany of materials including the text of Beeson's address to the 57th anniversary meeting of the Philomatic society, photographs of him, newspaper clippings, a copy of a physics exam for seniors, and other items.
A miscellany of materials including the text of Beeson's address to the 57th anniversary meeting of the Philomatic society, photographs of him, newspaper clippings, a copy of a physics exam for seniors, and other items.
Corporate letterbook, 1882-1906, and cloth samples of "Bell checks" and "Bell stripes" manufactured by the Bell Factory, Huntsville, Alabama, after the Civil War.
This collection includes "The Warrior Guards from the Reconstruction to the Great War," an unpublished manuscript on the 167th U.S. Infantry, Fourth Alabama Infantry Regiment ("The Fighting Fourth"), and newspaper clippings, newspaper transcripts, etc. on the "Warrior Guards."
A letter dated 29 May 1864 from a Confederate soldier to his mother and sister while stationed in Bayou La Batre, Alabama.
A letter containing genealogical information about the Benagh family. George William Benagh was a professor at the University of Alabama, 1850-1863. See also manuscript 1603.
This collection consists of one letter from Benedict, stationed at Camp McClellan, Iowa, to a Miss Susan Benedict, perhaps his sister, written 31 August 1861. Benedict mentions that there are fourteen prisoners there, one a "rebble [sic] Colonel With one arm off".
A miscellaneous collection of Civil War material of this Union soldier from Indiana, including enlistment lists, muster roles, war songs, writings, drawings, a diary, genealogical information, and clippings.
A letter dated 7 May 1848, written from Chickasaw, Alabama to cousin Caroline D. Bennett of Tuscumbia. Discusses the weather of the "Sunny South," temperance, sailing on the "Elipse" to New Orleans, and various family matters.