Back to TopDescriptive Summary
- Repository
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.
- Creator
- Randolph, V. M., fl. 1819-1820.
- Title
- V. M. Randolph Diary, 1819-1820.
- Call Number
- 3246
- Language of Materials
- Materials in English
- Extent
- 1 volume
Abstract MICROFILM ONLY. Detailed travel narrative of two Virginians, V. M. Randolph and A. T. Burnley, on a trip through Virginia
and North Carolina to Knoxville, down the Tennessee River through Alabama, then by way of the Tennessee and Mississippi rivers
to New Orleans, mentioning taverns, homes, persons met, conversations, hunting trips, flora and fauna, and towns visited.
Back to TopAdministrative Information
- Location of Originals
- Original in private hands in 1956.
- Processing Information
- Processed by: SHC Staff
- Encoded by: Noah Huffman, December 2007
- Additional Descriptive Resources
- A more complete finding aid for this collection is available at the Southern Historical Collection.
- Preferred Citation
- [Identification of item], in the V. M. Randolph Diary, #3246, Southern Historical Collection, The 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.
Back to TopOnline Catalog Headings
These and related materials may be found under the following headings in online catalogs.
- Burnley, A. T., fl. 1819-1820.
- Diaries.
- Knoxville (Tenn.)--Description and travel.
- Mississippi--Description and travel.
- New Orleans (La.)--Description and travel.
- Randolph, V. M., fl. 1819-1820.
- Southern States--Description and travel.
- Tennessee--Description and travel.
- Travelers--Southern States--Diaries.
Back to TopCollection Overview
MICROFILM ONLY. Detailed travel narrative of two Virginians, V. M. Randolph and A. T. Burnley, on a trip through Virginia
and North Carolina to Knoxville, down the Tennessee River through Alabama, then by way of the Tennessee and Mississippi rivers
to New Orleans, mentioning taverns, homes, persons met, conversations, hunting trips, flora and fauna, and towns visited.
|