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Collection Overview
| Size | 23.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 14000 items) |
| Abstract | John Ellis Coulter was a general merchant and operator of fertilizer, lumber, livestock breeding, milling and threshing, farm machinery sales, and other businesses in Burke and Catawba counties, N.C. He was also a justice of the peace, Democrat, prohibitionist, and Lutheran. Papers, chiefly 1890s-1930s, of Coulter, including general and family correspondence and extensive business papers and account books relating to his business activities in Burke and Catawba counties, N.C., and to his activities as justice of the peace, Democrat, prohibitionist, and Lutheran. Also included are papers concerning farmers' mutual insurance, local farmers' cooperatives and unions, the Catawba Creamery, labor, the World War I draft, lands in Florida, tanbark and tobacco, railroads, local schools, and Rutherford College in Burke County, N.C. |
| Creator | Coulter, John Ellis, 1861-1947. |
| Language | English |
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Information For Users
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Subject Headings
The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
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Biographical Information
John Ellis Coulter (1861-1947) was the son of Philip Augustus Coulter and Mary Elvira Plonk. He had one sister, Clara, and two brothers, Frank and Philip. Coulter married Lucy Ann Propst and was the father of eight children: Alvin Augustus, who died in Tampa, Florida, in 1959; Beulah Belle, who became Mrs. L.V. Goodman of Asheville, North Carolina; Clyde David Franklin who settled in Connelly Springs, N.C.; Ellis Merton who became a professor of history at the University of Georgia; Laura Elvira, who married Carl Block and, after his death, Jesse M. Teas of Tex.; Ray Daniels of Ojus, Fla.; William Bryan of Washington, D.C.; and Herbert Lee who settled in Connelly Springs.
John Coulter was raised in Bandy's Township, Catawba County, and lived his adult life in Connelly Springs, Lovelady Township, Burke County, North Carolina. His papers were collected by his son, Ellis Merton, who used them for his biography of his father John Ellis Coulter: Small Town Businessman of Tarheelia (1962).
John Ellis Coulter was active in the Lutheran Church and in the Democratic party, serving for many years on the Democratic executive committee for Burke County and as chairman of the Democratic precinct committee of Lovelady Township. He was an ardent prohibitionist and served on the executive committee of the Burke County Anti-Saloon League. He also served at various times as a member of the school committee of Lovelady Township, as justice of the peace, and mayor of Connelly Springs.
Coulter's general store in Connelly Springs became the headquarters for his diversified business enterprises which included lumber, lathes, shingles, livestock breeding, fertilizers, farm machinery, typewriters, poultry, grain, and threshing operations. In his store, he acted as agent for such varied concerns as the newspaper GRIT and the Piedmont Wagon Company.
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Scope and Content
All of these papers pertain to John Ellis Coulter and his family and to his political and business interests in Connelly Springs, North Carolina. About ninety percent of the papers relate to Coulter's various business concerns. The remainder of the papers are mostly family correspondence and local government records created by Coulter while a justice of the peace. Much of the correspondence, especially after 1945, deals with Coulter family genealogy; prior to 1945, the correspondence deals chiefly with Coulter's activities in politics, town government, and schools, but includes many letters from his sons who were at work or in school in such scattered locales as Wisconsin, Florida, Georgia, and Latin America.
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Series Quick Links
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Accession of 1962
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Subseries 1. General Correspondence, 1849-1942.
Letters of general interest about Coulter's activities in politics, town government, and schools. In this series there are letters from office holders and Democratic party workers. It is arranged chronologically as follows:
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Subseries 2. Business Correspondence, 1884-1941.
Bills, receipts, orders, and letters relating to store merchandise and to business ventures not of significant scope to merit independent grouping are found in the following:
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Subseries 3. Family Letters, 1872-1960.
Letters from members of the Coulter family arranged chronologically under the name of the writer as follows: Alvin A. Coulter, 1911-1923; Ellis Merton Coulter, 1909-1960; J. Frank and Ruth Coulter, 1895-1916; Lucy Ann Coulter, 1881; Philip Augustus Coulter, 1881-1909; Mrs. Philip Augustus Coulter (nee Mary Elvira Plonk), 1872-1919; and Phillipton, Nannie, Harry, and Lois Coulter, 1895-1935. There is one folder of letters to J. E. Coulter from miscellaneous family members and distant relations dating from 1893 to 1934. Included in this folder are letters from J. B. Rhyne, P. M. Rhyne, J. H. Plonk, M. E. Rudisill, C. A. Weiss, P. E. Fry, Rose Smyre, and Jonas W. Plonk.
| Box 13 |
Family Letters #03579, Subseries: "3. Family Letters, 1872-1960." Box 13 |
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Subseries 4. Letters from Individuals, 1880-1938.
Letters from individuals listed below are arranged in chronological order under the writer's name: John W. Bailey, 1899-1934; Stanford Cline, 1915-1937; Beatrice, T. G., and Lucille Cobb, 1892-1938; J. H. Giles, 1898-1936; Richard Gunter, 1898-1918; William P. and Minnie Halliburton, 1897-1911; Emma Hildebrand, 1880-1892; Memory and N. L. Chapman Perry, 1895-1910; and L. M. and George E. Williams, 1891-1931.
| Box 14 |
Letters from Individuals #03579, Subseries: "4. Letters from Individuals, 1880-1938." Box 14 |
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Subseries 5. Fertilizers, 1893-1941.
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Subseries 6. Lumber, Lathes, and Shingles, 1890-1940.
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Subseries 7. Farm Machinery, 1893-1940.
| Box 21 |
1893-1909 #03579, Subseries: "7. Farm Machinery, 1893-1940." Box 21 |
| Box 22 |
1910-1940 #03579, Subseries: "7. Farm Machinery, 1893-1940." Box 22 |
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Subseries 8. Livestock, 1891-1934.
Correspondence concerning livestock is mostly about pigs but includes his Angora goat interests. Poultry correspondence is in box 33.
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Subseries 9. Grain, 1905-1932.
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Subseries 10. Poultry, 1900-1937.
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Subseries 11. Advertisements and pamphlets
| Box 34-36 |
Advertisement and pamphlets #03579, Subseries: "11. Advertisements and pamphlets" Box 34-36Box 34Box 35Box 36 |
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Subseries 12. Volumes, 1853-1937.
Volumes 33 and 34 are account books of Marcus Wike of Newton, Catawba County, N.C. He married a sister of Julia (Smyre) Propst, who was John E. Coulter's mother-in-law. There is one Civil War letter addressed to Marcus Wike in the general chronological papers from a nephew in Atlanta.
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Accession of 1981
(Note: when requesting material, stipulate "Accession of 1981, folder -".)
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Subseries 1. General Correspondence, circa 1876-1968.
Arrangement: chronologically.
Mostly correspondence from Alvin A. Coulter to his brothers Merton, Bryan, and C.D., and to his father J.E. Coulter. There are also a few letters from friends and relatives to J.E. Coulter and from relatives and other persons to E. Merton Coulter, one of J.E. Coulter's sons.
About ninety percent of the letters are from Alvin A. Coulter to his brothers and father and date from 1903 to 1924. Alvin, a bachelor, was a railroad engineer in Florida, Cuba, Peru, and the Panama Canal Zone. In his letters, he commented on land speculation , agriculture, and swamp drainage in Florida, and on working and living conditions, wages, cost of living, climate, disease, food, strikes and labor violence, mining operations, and the character of fellow alien workers and the local citizens, in Peru, Cuba, and Panama. Other topics discussed by Alvin include working conditions on United States railroads, World War I and the Germans, and local matters in Connelly Springs, North Carolina.
There are a few letters to J.E. Coulter from various persons concerning local Burke County politics. Only three letters date from the period 1924-1962. There are about twenty-five letters to E. Merton Coulter dated 1962-1968; they concern Coulter's biography of his father.
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Subseries 2. Genealogical Material, circa 1917-1975.
Arrangement: Chronologically.
Letters from John C., Will, and Victor Coulter, and others, to Merton Coulter, concerning Coulter famly genealogy. In addition, there are photocopies of old deeds, articles from genealogical journals, genealogical charts, and essays relating to Coulter family history.
Items of note are two hand-drawn maps (one is labelled "1890-1940") of Connelly Springs, North Carolina showing the names and locations of businesses, churches, the post office, and private residences.
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Subseries 3. Business Papers, circa 1889-1963.
Arrangement: by type, largely as received.
Business correspondence, bills and receipts, debts and claims, and other material relating primarily to J.E. Coulter's various business enterprises in Connelly Springs, North Carolina.
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Subseries 4. Legal Papers, circa 1894-1975.
Arrangement: by estate, largely as received.
Chiefly legal documents pertaining to the administration of the J.E. Coulter estate and several other estates. There are also patents, licenses, contracts, deeds, mortgages, crop liens, sharecropping contracts, summonses, warrants, and other legal papers that reflect the various business and legal activities of J.E. Coulter.
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Subseries 4.1 Administration and Estate Documents.
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Subseries 4.2 Other Legal Documents.
| Folder 28 |
Bicycle Patent Document #03579, Subseries: "4.2 Other Legal Documents." Folder 28 |
| Folder 29 |
Certificates, Licenses, etc. #03579, Subseries: "4.2 Other Legal Documents." Folder 29 |
| Folder 30-34 |
Deeds, Mortgages, Promissary Notes, etc. #03579, Subseries: "4.2 Other Legal Documents." Folder 30-34Folder 30Folder 31Folder 32Folder 33Folder 34 |
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Subseries 5. Miscellaneous Papers, circa 1883-1938.
Arrangement: largely as received.
Printed advertisements, licenses, business letterheads, newspaper clippings, insurance policies, stock certificates, and other items pertaining mainly to J.E. Coulter and his various business enterprises in Connelly Springs, North Carolina.
The "Signatures" in folders 37-51 contain various business and legal documents with signatures valued for some unknown reason by J.E. Coulter or one of his sons who labeled these folders and fixed them in their present arrangement.
| Folder 35 |
Miscellaneous Connelly Springs Material #03579, Subseries: "5. Miscellaneous Papers, circa 1883-1938." Folder 35 |
| Folder 36 |
Printed Material #03579, Subseries: "5. Miscellaneous Papers, circa 1883-1938." Folder 36 |
| Folder 37-51 |
Signatures #03579, Subseries: "5. Miscellaneous Papers, circa 1883-1938." Folder 37-51Folder 37Folder 38Folder 39Folder 40Folder 41Folder 42Folder 43Folder 44Folder 45Folder 46Folder 47Folder 48Folder 49Folder 50Folder 51 |
| Folder 52-53 |
Miscellaneous Items #03579, Subseries: "5. Miscellaneous Papers, circa 1883-1938." Folder 52-53Folder 52Folder 53 |
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Subseries 6: Photographs.
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Subseries 7: Volumes, 1890-1945.
Account books used by J.E. Coulter in his various business enterprises in Connelly Springs from 1890 to 1945; and a volume consisting of Coulter's diary, 20 August 1926 to 9 August 1942, and the Record of Proceedings of the Mayor's Office, Connelly Springs, 27 December 1920 to 14 November 1921.
The diary contains short comments about the weather, politics, national, state, and local events, family matters, law and order, births, deaths, and other topics. There are numerous newspaper clippings pasted in the diary that contain information primarily of local and family interest.
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Items Separated
Processed by: Diana Horne, 1963, William T. Auman, 1984
Encoded by: ByteManagers Inc., 2008
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