Inventory of the C. B. Mallett Papers, 1829-1954

Collection Number 3165

unc seal
Manuscripts Department, Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Collection Information


Contact Information:
Manuscripts Department
CB#3926, Wilson Library
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890
Phone: 919/962-1345
Fax: 919/962-3594
Email: mss@email.unc.edu
URL: http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/

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Descriptive Summary

Repository
Southern Historical Collection
Creator
Mallett, C. B. (Charles Beatty), 1816-1872.
Title
C. B. Mallett Papers, 1829-1954
Call Number
3165
Language of Materials
Materials in English
Extent
Items: About 750
Linear Feet: 1.5
Abstract
C. B. (Charles Beatty) Mallett (1816-1872), of Fayetteville, N.C., was a manufacturer, merchant, and the president of the Western North Carolina Railroad. With James Browne of Charleston, S.C., he formed the partnership Mallett and Browne. The Mallett family is descended from Peter Mallett (1744-1805).
The collection consists primarily of business papers and family correspondence of C. B. Mallett. Included are antebellum correspondence, bills, and accounts related to a textile mill; letters, contracts, bills, accounts, and other records pertaining to the operation of coal mines in Chatham County, N.C., during the Civil War by Mallett and Browne and and of the partnership's supplying the Confederate War Department with coal, iron, nails, and other materials; accounts, 1845-1854, for cotton bales, cotton cloth, cotton sheeting, meal, and miscellaneous merchandise; a daybook of a kerosene oil works, 1864-1865; a daybook of a river freight firm, 1867-1868; and miscellaneous records of Mallett and Browne, the Union Manufacturing Company, the Western North Carolina Railroad, and Saint John's Episcopal Church, Fayetteville, N.C. Also included are correspondence and other family papers, chiefly letters from the family of C. B. Mallett's father, Charles Peter Mallett, in North Carolina and in Balstrop, La., in the 1870s. Of particular interest are letters by Charles Peter Mallett in Chapel Hill, N.C., during the town's occupation by Union forces in the spring of 1865.

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Administrative Information

Restrictions to Access
No restrictions.
Alternate Form of Material
Typed copies of Charles Peter Mallett's letters concerning the Union occupation of Chapel Hill, N.C., in 1865 are available.

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Additional Descriptive Resources

An old description (folder 44) gives genealogical information about the Mallett family and a detailed inventory of the collection's correspondence.
Acquisitions Information
Received from Mrs. C. Beatty Overman of Falls Church, Va., in September 1955, August 1969, and September 1976.
Processing Information
Processed by: Library Staff, January 1992
Encoded by: Peter Hymas, March 2005
Funding from the State Library of North Carolina supported the encoding of this finding aid.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], in the C. B. Mallett Papers #3165, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Copyright Notice
Copyright is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
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Online Catalog Headings

These and related materials may be found under the following headings in online catalogs.

Bastrop (La.)--Social life and customs.
Chapel Hill (N.C.)--History--19th century.
Chapel Hill (N.C.)--History--Civil War, 1861-1865.
Coal mines and mining--Confederate States of America.
Coal mines and mining--North Carolina--History--19th century.
Cotton manufacture--North Carolina--History--19th century.
Family--Louisiana--Social life and customs.
Family--North Carolina--Social life and customs.
Fayetteville (N.C.)--Economic conditions.
Fayetteville (N.C.)--Social life and customs.
Industries--Confederate States of America.
Industries--North Carolina--History--19th century.
Inland water transportation--Freight--North Carolina--History--19th century.
Kerosene industry--North Carolina--History-19th century.
Mallett and Browne.
Mallett family.
Mallett, C. B. (Charles Beatty), 1816-1872.
Mallett, Charles Peter, 1792-1873.
Mallett, Peter, 1744-1805.
North Carolina--Economic conditions.
Railroads--North Carolina--History--19th century.
Saint John's Church (Fayetteville, N.C.).
Union Manufacturing Company (Fayetteville, N.C.).
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Equipment and supplies.
Western North Carolina Railroad Company.
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Related Collections

Peter Mallett Papers (#480), Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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Biographical Note

C. B. Mallett was born in Fayetteville, N.C., on 8 June 1816, the second child and eldest son of Charles Peter Mallett (1792-1873) and Sophia Sarah Beatty (1796-1829). Sometime in the 1830s, Mallett attended Kenyon College at Gambier, Ohio, where he majored in engineering and scientific subjects.

On 17 November 1841, Mallett married Margaret Winslow Wright, only child of John Winslow Wright (1791-1854) and Margaret Ann Anderson (1800-1823). The couple's children were John Wright (1842-1917), Charles Peter (1844-1900), William Anderson (1846-1847), Caroline Green (1848-1924), Margaret Anderson (1850-1907), Charles Beatty (1851-1902), Mercer Wright (1854-1875), and Alice Hazelton (1857-1955). Margaret died in August 1859, and Mallett married Marion Winslow, Margaret's relative, in February 1862.

C. B. Mallett very early associated himself with his father in cotton manufacturing, both at the Rockfish Manufacturing Company in Cumberland County, N.C., and at the Phoenix Company in Fayetteville. In 1848, Mallett organized the Union Manufacturing Company, another cotton factory. In 1852, a group of Fayetteville citizens obtained a charter from the State Legislature or organize and construct a railroad from Fayetteville to the coal fields in Chatham County, N.C. Mallett was one of the first subscribers to the capital stock of the Western North Carolina Railroad and was elected its second president in 1855, a position he held until 1868. Problems attending the contracts for construction delayed the project. It was not until 1858 that the first rails were laid, and it was not until the Civil War had begun that the railroad was completed. In the meantime, Mallett had acquired the major interest in the Union Manufacturing Company, controlling 75% of the capitol stock.

When North Carolina joined the Confederacy and the Civil War began, the Egypt coal mines, which were owned by a Philadelphia-based company, were placed in receivership by the Confederate government. In 1862, Mallett, in partnership with James Browne of Charleston, S.C., successfully bid for the management and operation of the mines and was under contract with the Confederate government throughout the war to deliver coal at Wilmington, N.C. The facilities of the Western Railroad were used to transport coal to Fayetteville from which the coal was moved by river steamer and flat boat down the Cape Fear River to Wilmington. One of the steamers, the Chatham, and several flat boats were built and owned by Mallett and Browne.

Mallett had general superintendence of the mining operation at Egypt, getting the coal to Fayetteville, and reloading the flat boats. Browne was the agent at Wilmington, seeing generally to unloading and return of vessels upstream and to weighing and delivery of coal to the agents of the Confederate government. The firm was allowed, on special orders of the Confederate government, to sell coal privately, negotiating its own prices with several Confederate states, various railroad companies, and blockade runners. In addition to the coal mining operation and using an iron-stone band which overlay the coal seam, the firm also engaged in the extraction of crude oil and the distillation of kerosene. In 1863, to supply a need for railroad car wheels, Mallett bought a half interest and became a partner with his first wife's cousin, David Anderson, in the Eagle Foundry located in Fayetteville. In 1864, Mallett again negotiated a partnership for the construction of another iron works at Buckhorn Falls on the Cape Fear River, which was called the Ocknock Iron Works.

In March 1865, General Sherman's army reached Fayetteville and razed Mallett's businesses. Not only were the cotton factory and stores of cotton, the two iron works, and the steamboat and flat boats all burned, Woodside, Mallett's home in the country several miles north of Fayetteville, was destroyed with all its furnishings and provisions. The Western North Carolina Railroad, with rolling stock badly depreciated and some of its bridges burned, was out of operation. In the years following the Civil War, the partnership of Mallett and Browne continued and an attempt was made to reestablish river trade on the Cape Fear River, but, in 1868, Mallett was forced into bankruptcy. Until his death on 7 July 1872, Mallett attempted to raise grapes and manufacture wine on his plantation property.

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Collection Overview

The collection consists primarily of business papers and family correspondence of manufacturer, merchant, and railroad president C. B. Mallett of Fayetteville, N.C. The collection includes antebellum correspondence, bills, and accounts related to a textile mill; letters, contracts, bills, accounts, and other records pertaining to the operation of coal mines in Chatham County, N.C., during the Civil War by Mallett and partner, James Browne of Charleston, S.C., and their supplying the Confederate War Department with coal, iron, nails, and other materials; accounts, 1845-1854, for cotton bales, cotton cloth, cotton sheeting, meal, and miscellaneous merchandise; a daybook of a kerosene oil works, 1864-1865; a daybook of a river freight firm, 1867-1868; and miscellaneous records of Mallett and Browne, the Union Manufacturing Company, the Western North Carolina Railroad, and Saint John's Episcopal Church, Fayetteville, N.C. Also included are correspondence and other family papers, chiefly letters from the family of C. B. Mallett's father, Charles Peter Mallett, in North Carolina and in Balstrop, La., in the 1870s. Of particular interest are letters by Charles Peter Mallett in Chapel Hill, N.C., during the town's occupation by Union forces in the spring of 1865. Other persons represented include Alexander Fridge Mallett, a physician in the Confederate Army and younger brother of C. B. Mallett; Carrie Mallett, older sister of C. B. Mallett; Charles Peter Mallett, Jr., son of C. B. Mallett; Edward Mallett, younger brother of C. B. Mallett; John Wright Mallett, son of C. B. Mallett; Margaret Winslow Wright Mallett, first wife of C. B. Mallett; Marion Winslow Mallett, second wife of C. B. Mallett; Peter Mallett, younger brother of C. B. Mallett; William Peter Mallett, Chapel Hill, N.C., physician and younger brother of C. B. Mallett; Maria L. Spear (1804-1881), Englishwoman who was a private teacher for C. B. Mallett's children; John Winslow Wright, father of C. B. Mallett's first wife; and William Henry Beatty, maternal grandfather of C. B. Mallett.

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Arrangement of Collection

1. Correspondence
2. Financial and Legal Materials
3. Other Papers

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Detailed Description of the Collection

1. Correspondence, 1829-1954.

About 350 items.
Arrangement: alphabetical.
Folder 1-5
Mallett, C. B., 1845-1868

Digital version: Excerpts from the letter of Charles P. Mallett to Charles B. Mallett, 18 April 1865

Folder 6
Mallett, Alexander Fridge, 1847-1874
Folder 7
Mallett, Carrie, 1847-1874
Folder 8
Mallett, Charles Peter, Jr., 1861-1899
Folder 9-11
Mallett, Charles Peter, 1848-1884
Folder 12-13
Mallett, Edward, 1856-1872
Folder 14
Mallett, John Wright, 1861-1908
Folder 15
Mallett, Margaret Winslow Wright, 1840-1861
Folder 16
Mallett, Marion Winslow, 1863-1872
Folder 17
Mallett, Peter, 1858-1885
Folder 18
Mallett, Dr. William Peter, 1851-1874
Folder 19-20
Spear, Maria L., 1866-1879, 1954
Folder 21
Wright, John Winslow, 1829-1856

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2. Financial and Legal Materials, 1848-1871.

About 350 items.
Arrangement: by subject.
Letters, wills, contracts, bills, receipts, and accounts concerning estate management, business interests, and personal business of C. B. Mallett. Mallett was the co-executor of the estates of his father-in-law, Edward L. Winslow, and his grandfather, William Henry Beatty. Mallett's business interests included the Mallett and Brown coal manufacturing operation, the Union Manufacturing Company's cotton business, and the operation of the Western North Carolina Railroad.
Folder 22
Winslow estate, 1857-1866
Folder 23-25
Beatty estate, 1848-1864
Folder 26
Mallett and Brown, 1861-1868
Folder 27-29
Union Manufacturing Company, 1856-1871
Folder 30-32
Bills and receipts, 1853-1871
Folder 33-35
Accounts, 1854-1870
Folder 36-37
Western Railroad, 1848-1871
Folder 38-39
Tax, medical, and school bills, 1856-1870

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3. Other Papers, 1860-1866, 1954.

About 50 items.
Arrangement: by subject.
Handwritten history, program, and newspaper clippings relating to Saint John's Episcopal Church located in Fayetteville, N.C.; miscellaneous papers, including a railroad ledger and documents concerning reimbursement of Confederate soldiers for travel expenses; clippings from Richmond, Va., Wilmington, N.C. and Fayetteville, N.C., newspapers; old collection description.
Folder 40
Saint John's Episcopal Church, 1860, 1917, 1954
Folder 41
Miscellaneous papers, 1864-1865
Folder 42-43
Newspaper clippings, 1865-1866
Folder 44
Old description

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