Manuscripts Department
Library of the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
SOUTHERN HISTORICAL COLLECTION
#716
LEWIS THOMPSON PAPERS
Inventory
Abstract: Lewis Thompson, owner of plantations near
Woodville (also called Hotel), Bertie County, N.C.,
and at Bayou Boeuf, near Alexandria, Rapides Parish,
La. Thompson was also a political leader in North
Carolina, serving in the House of Commons and State
Senate, 1831-1852, and as a member of the General
Convention of 1865. He was a UNC trustee from 1848
until his death.
Business papers, ca. 1840-1871, of Lewis Thompson,
consisting chiefly of correspondence, accounts,
bills, receipts, slave lists, sharecropping contracts,
and other documents relating to the production of
cotton and wheat in Bertie County, N.C.; to sugar in
Rapides Parish, La.; and to the sale of crops through
factors in New York, Norfolk, New Orleans, and
Baltimore. There is also a considerable amount of
correspondence relating to Lewis Thompson's role as
executor of many estates, particularly that of his
father-in-law, William M. Clark, and to Thompson's
investments with brokers in New York. Papers before
1840 consist chiefly of land grants, deeds, and estate
papers of Thompson's Pugh, Williams, Clark, Thompson,
and Urquhart relations. There is also a group of
papers relating to land controlled by the Tuscarora
Indians. Few papers relate to Thompson's political
career or to his involvement with UNC. Papers after
Thompson's death in 1867 relate chiefly to the
activities his son, Thomas W. Thompson, who took
over his father's North Carolina business affairs.
The plantations in Louisiana had been run by Thomas's
brother William for many years before their father's
death.
Online Catalog Terms:
Bayou Boeuf (La.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
Bertie County (N.C.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
Clark, William M., d. 1837.
Clark family.
Commission merchants--Louisiana.
Commission merchants--North Carolina.
Cotton growing--North Carolina.
Estates (Law)--Louisiana--History--19th century.
Family--Louisiana--Social life and customs--19th century.
Family--North Carolina--Social life and customs--19th century.
Hotel (N.C.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
Plantations--Louisiana--Rapides Parish.
Plantations--North Carolina--Bertie County.
Pugh family.
Rapides Parish (La.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
Sharecropping--North Carolina.
Slavery--Louisiana.
Slavery--North Carolina.
Sugar growing--Louisiana.
Thompson, Lewis, 1808-1867.
Thompson, Thomas W.
Thompson, William C.
Thompson family.
Tuscarora Indians--Land transfers.
Urquhart family.
Williams family.
Woodville (N.C.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
Size: About 4,650 items (3.5 linear feet).
Provenance: Received from Richard A. Urquhart of Lewiston,
N.C., before 1940, Molly Urquhart of Raleigh, N.C.
in October 1994 (Acc. 94149), and Margaret U.
Griffin in February 1995 (Acc. 95036).
Access: No restrictions.
Copyright: Retained by the authors of items in these papers, or
their descendants, as stipulated by United States
copyright law.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Biographical Note
Collection Overview
Series Descriptions
Series 1. Chronologically arranged papers
Series 2. Bonds
Series 3. Lewis Thompson Volumes
Shelf List
INTRODUCTION
Biographical Note
The Thompson family of Bertie County, North Carolina, appears
to be descended from Hezikiah Thompson, who died in Bertie County
in 1771. Because his will lists much land in South Carolina, it
is possible that Hezikiah came to Bertie County from that state.
Hezikiah Thompson had six sons: Noah, Arthur, Rubin, and
William apparently by his first wife, and Hezekiah, Jr. (d.
1820), and Thomas (d. ca. 1827) by his second wife. Thomas
Thompson was Lewis Thompson's father. Lewis Thompson was born in
1808 and graduated with honors from the University of North
Carolina (A.B., 1827; A.M., 1832). He went on to become a
successful businessman, owning plantations near Woodville (also
called Hotel), Bertie County, and in Rapides Parish, Louisiana.
It appears that most of Thompson's Louisiana land was acquired
through his father-in-law, William M. Clark, who had purchased
these lands shortly before his death in 1837. From around 1849
to 1858, these sugar plantations seem to have been managed in
Thompson's behalf by this brother-in-law Kenneth M. Clark.
Around 1858, when Moore Rawls took over the day-to-day
management, William Thompson, Lewis's younger son, appears to
have taken up permanent residence on the family's Louisiana
lands. His brother, Thomas W. Thompson, gradually took over the
management of the Bertie County plantations. The brothers appear
to have remained on their respective plantations after their
father's death.
In addition to his plantations, Thompson made many
investments, chiefly through bankers in New York. During the
Civil War, he was a heavy investor in Confederate bonds.
Thompson was also a political leader in North Carolina, serving
in the House of Commons and the State Senate, 1831-1852, as as a
member of the General Convention of 1865. He was a trustee of
the University of North Carolina from 1848 until his death.
Lewis Thompson's wife, Margaret Ann Cathcart Clark (fl.
1840s-1880s) was a daughter of William M. Clark and Martha Bodie
Williams (d. ca. 1843). Lewis and Margaret had four children:
sons Thomas W. and William and daughters Pattie and Mary. Pattie
appears to have died shortly before 1867; Mary eventually married
married Burges Urquhart and was the mother of the donor of these
papers.
Collection Overview
These papers relate almost exclusively to business affairs, a
very high proportion of them being deeds, copies of deeds, and
bills and receipts. They relate primarily to the activities of
Lewis Thompson and to his sons William in Louisiana and Thomas
W., who remained in Bertie County. There are also many items
relating to members of the Clark, Pugh, Williams, and Urquhart
families. The Clark family is especially prominent, with much
material relating to the activities of Thompson's father-in-law
William M. Clark, and, after 1837, to his estate for which Lewis
Thompson was executor.
The papers tell a story of Lewis Thompson's growing wealth.
Much of the material is about the cultivation and marketing of
cotton and wheat in Bertie County, North Carolina, and of sugar
in Rapides Parish, Louisiana. These items are chiefly from the
period 1840 to 1871; they include many documents dealing with
slave sales and purchases, and, after the Civil War, with black
laborers and sharecroppers. Some of the earlier material relates
to land in Bertie County belonging to the Tuscarora Indian
Nation.
As Thompson appears to have specialized in being named
executor of the estates of his relatives and friends, there is a
large amount of material relating to estate settlements.
Although Thompson was active in North Carolina politics for most
of his life, there is very little of a political nature in this
collection, and, although he was a trustee of the University of
North Carolina for twenty years, there is even less about the
University. Starting around 1856, there are some personal
letters, but the bulk of the papers discuss business affairs.
Volumes are chiefly account books and records of estate
settlements.
The collection consists of a series of correspondence, legal
and financial materials, and other papers, arranged in a roughly
chronological run, followed by a series of Confederate bonds
[transferred to Miscellaneous Currency, #4672], and a series of
eight volumes that are chiefly Lewis Thompson's account books.
Volumes been ordered chronologically by the last date appearing
in the volume. The run of loose papers has been divided into
subseries according to dates that mark significant changes in
subject or type of materials; the volumes have been split into
two subseries: one consisting of antebellum volumes and the other
of volumes dated 1861 or later.
The arrangement is as follows:
Series 1. Chronologically arranged papers
Subseries 1.1. 1723-1833
Subseries 1.2. 1834-1848
Subseries 1.3. 1849-1855
Subseries 1.4. 1856-1860
Subseries 1.5. 1861-1867
Subseries 1.6. 1868-1894
Series 2. Confederate bonds [tranferred to #4672]
Series 3. Lewis Thompson volumes
Subseries 3.1. 1827-1857
Subseries 3.2. 1861-1879
SERIES DESCRIPTIONS
Series 1. Chronologically arranged papers
1723-1894 and undated. About 4100 items.
Arrangement: roughly chronological.
Correspondence, legal and financial materials, and other
papers relating to Lewis Thompson, his son Thomas W. Thompson,
and to their Clark, Pugh, Williams, and Urquhart relatives.
Subseries 1.1. 1723-1833
About 150 items.
Chiefly originals and copies of deeds, indentures, and wills.
The earliest items are largely hand-drawn plats of land in Bertie
County, North Carolina. In this subseries, there is material
relating to most of the families important in this collection,
but especially to the Pugh, Clark, and Williams families. The
relationship between the Lewis Thompson mentioned in items dated
before the Lewis Thompson after whom the collection is named came
of age is unclear.
Of particular interest are the following:
1730: Grant to Thomas Pollock by Lord Proprietors of North
Carolina (dated 2 August 1727, but with endorsements dated
1730) for 600 acres on Moratuck River (Roanoke River).
1749: 23 June, indenture of John Pugh to Thomas Barker for land
in Bertie County.
1760: 27 November, land grant of Lord Granville to George House
(d. ca. 1763) for land in Bertie County. Lewis Thompson
eventually gained control of this land through his father,
who had gotten it from Littleberry Abington.
1766: 23 July, indenture leasing 8000 acres in the Indian Wood,
Bertie County, to Robert Jones, William Williams, and
Thomas Pugh for 150 years. The indenture was signed by
many of the leading men of the Tuscarora Nation.
1771: 25 January, copy of will of Lewis Thompson's grandfather,
Hezikiah Thompson.
1775: 2 December, copy of indenture leasing 2000 acres of land
in the Indian Wood for 99 years to Thomas Pugh, Wilie
Jones, and William Williams for an annual rent of 80
duffle blankets, 80 shirts, 80 pair of boots, 50 pounds of
powder, and 150 pounds of shot. This indenture was also
signed by Tuscarora Nation leaders, but this particular
document is a copy and, thus, does not bear original
signatures.
1786: Will of Thomas Barker (1713-1787), who came to Bertie
County around 1735. Barker, who first married Pheribee
Pugh ne‚ Savage and then Penelope Hodgson ne‚ Pagett, is
buried at Hayes Plantation in Edenton, North Carolina.
1792: January, list of slaves belonging to the estate of John
Pugh. The list shows the dispensation of eleven slaves,
valued at œ315; two slaves were given to Thomas Thompson.
1798: Indenture of Littleberry Abington to Lewis Thompson.
Littleberry was married Sarah Moor, daughter of Titus
Moore, whose name appears several times in these papers.
1807: 23 April, receipt of Jeremiah Slade, as "Commissioner,"
for rents and purchase money from Thomas Pugh and William
Williams for lands in Bertie County belonging to the
Tuscarora Indians.
1808: 13 October, copy of the 1717 treaty with the Tuscarora
Indians by which the Tuscarora Nation yielded lands on the
Pamlico and Neuse rivers in exchange for lands in Bertie
County.
1808: ca. 1808, petition to Governor Caswell of North Carolina
from the Tuscarora Indian Nation against William King, who
was alleged to have negotiated a lease with members of the
tribe after he had "got all the Indians drunk."
1809: 6 March, copy of letter, dated 28 July 1803, from the
United States Secretary of War to J. Slade, agent and
attorney for Tuscarora Nation.
1810: 16 March, indenture of Nathaniel and Penelope B. Bond to
Thomas Thompson for land in Bertie County. Penelope is
probably the same woman who had been married to Thomas
Barker (see 1786 above).
1810: May, document, signed by Judge William Gaston, detailing
the legal proceedings of William Williams and others
against George Pollock in the North Carolina District
Court.
1812: Beginning around 1812, there are records of many purchases
and sales of slaves by various relatives of Lewis
Thompson, and, later, by Thompson himself. The volume is
especially high around 1818-1819, when it appears that
William M. Clark was assembling a large group of slaves.
1820: 5 March, list of 99 slaves purchased from Ann B. Pollock
by Davis and William M. Clark and subsequently divided
between the buyers.
1824: 9 December, letter from Elisha Mitchell of UNC to Thomas
Thompson about his son Lewis's performance at the
University. The letter was actually written by George S.
Beltner, a tutor at the University, who later became a
well-respected physician in New Bern and New York.
1827: August, copy of the will of Thomas Thompson, father of
Lewis Thompson.
1828: 10 October, copy of will of David Clark (b. 1772) of
Scotland Neck, North Carolina. David Clark was the
brother of William M. Clark, Lewis Thompson's
father-in-law, and husband of Louisa Norfleet. Clark was
one of the largest and most substantial planters on the
Roanoke River.
1828: 23 May, receipt from John Cox of Plymouth, North Carolina,
for $2,500 received from William M. Clark in payment of
money owed by Cox's wife, who was Clark's sister. An
explanation of the debt is also included. Cox was a
partner in the Plymouth firm of Clark, Devereux & Cox,
merchants.
1828: 3 December, evaluation of two islands at the mouth of the
Roanoke River made by Hardeson and Maitland of Plymouth,
North Carolina, for Francis Pugh and the heirs of Thomas
Thompson. Benjamin Maitland was a merchant of
Philadelphia with a branch office in Plymouth. The
islands were valued at $250 for both.
1813-1828: Ledger of the estate of William T. Thompson, Thomas
Thompson, executor.
1830: 10 October, list of 72 slaves belonging to the estate of
Thomas Thompson and to be divided between his sons Lewis
and Hezikiah.
1830: 25 February, receipt from W. M. Roberts, treasurer of
North Carolina, to William M. Clark for a payment towards
the purchase of land in the Indian Wood.
1831: 28 July, receipt from William Hill, North Carolina
secretary of state, to the heirs of William Williams for
payment on 1,000 acres of land in the Indian Wood.
Folder 1 1723-1798
2 1801-1810
3 1812-1820
4 1821-1827
5 1828-1833
Subseries 1.2. 1834-1848
About 300 items.
While materials relating to North Carolina predominate,
Thompson's Louisiana connections are first seen in a letter dated
30 January 1834 (described below). During this period, there is
much activity in settling estates, particularly that of
Thompson's father-in-law, William M. Clark, who died in 1837
after buying land in Louisiana. It is not clear whether or not
Thompson had connections with Louisiana sugar production before
he became executor of Clark's will, but settlement of Clark's
seemingly complicated dealings in Louisiana certainly increased
Thompson activity in that state. Beginning in 1840, there are
many letters to Thompson from cotton factors in Norfolk. Most of
these letters give routine information on numbers of cotton bales
sold during specific periods. There is also a great deal of
estate settlement going on during this time, especially the
estate of John Ruffin in the mid-1840s.
Of particular interest are the following:
1834: 30 January, unsigned letter from New Orleans to [William
M. Clark?] about land deals and mortgage collections. The
writer may have been Benjamin Ballard, from whom William
M. Clark bought property in 1837.
1836: 6 October, letter from Asa Biggs in Tarboro, North
Carolina, to William M. Clark about Biggs's payment of a
note. Biggs (1811-1876) was a Bertie County resident,
congressman and senator, and important member of the state
and Confederate judiciary.
1836: October, copy of will of William M. Clark.
1836: 30 December, copy of deed of purchase of land in Bayou
Boeuf, Rapides Parish, Louisiana, from Benjamin Ballard by
William M. Clark, who was represented at the sale by
Reuben Carnal, an attorney who appears to have handled
much of the family business in Louisiana.
1837: June, letter from Reuben Carnal to Lewis Thompson
explaining how Louisiana inheritance laws affect the
property that William M. Clark, now deceased, held in that
state.
1840: 6 June, beginning of reports from James B. Gordon &
Company, factors in Norfolk, Virginia, to Lewis Thompson
giving information on cotton sold on Thompson's behalf.
1841: 30 August, letter from William J. Ellison in Winsor, North
Carolina, to Lewis Thompson summarizing the North Carolina
land holdings of William M. Clark.
1843: 22 January, letter from Benjamin Ballard in New Orleans to
Lewis Thompson about money owed to Ballard by the estate
of William M. Clark.
1843: 12 December, valuation of the slaves owned by the estate
of Martha Bodie Williams Clark, Lewis Thompson's
mother-in-law.
1844: 14 May, letter from Benjamin Ballard in New Orleans to
Lewis Thompson about money apparently owed by Ballard to
Thompson. Letter from Ballard to Thompson, chiefly about
money matters, continue sporadically for many years.
1845: 21 February, inventory of the estate of John Ruffin, Lewis
Thompson, and William Bishop, executors. There are many
papers after this date that relate to the settlement of
Ruffin's estate and to payments for educating Ruffin's
children.
Folder 6 1834-1836
7 1837-1840
8 1841-1843
9 1844
1845
10 January-March
11 April-December
12 1846
13 1847-1848
Subseries 1.3. 1849-1855
About 700 items.
The purchase of William M. Clark's two sugar plantations in
1849 signaled increased activity for Lewis Thompson in that
state. The volume of materials relating to his Louisiana
interests increases dramatically during this period, as Thompson
strived first to resolve legal and financial entanglements
involving Clark's estate and then to get on with the business of
producing sugar. By the mid-1850s, documents relating to
Louisiana far outnumber those pertaining to North Carolina.
During this period, there is also much material that illustrate
the increasing scope of Thompson's operations. These consist
chiefly of large number of bills and statements from factors and
brokers, among them Bogart & Foley (later Bogart, Foley & Avery
and, still later, Foley, Avery & Company) in New Orleans; Kada
Biggs & Company in Norfolk; and John Cunningham in New York.
Of particular interest are the following:
1849: 3 May, deed conveying William M. Clark's Louisiana
property, consisting of two plantations on Bayou Boeuf,
Rapides Parish, from Thompson's brother- and
sister-in-law, William M. and Martha Clark, to Lewis
Thompson.
1849: Beginning in 1849 and continuing until around 1858, there
are many letters from Kenneth M. Clark to Lewis Thompson,
all of which were written from Bayou Boeuf, Rapides
County, Louisiana, and relate to the running of Thompson's
sugar plantations. Clark (b. 1827) was Thompson's
brother-in-law. He was apparently retained by Thompson to
manage the Louisiana plantations.
1850: 6 January, unsigned letter notifying Lewis Thompson that a
land deal has been concluded on his behalf. This is
probably the successful settlement of the Clark property,
with the addition of the purchase of slaves, machinery,
and other necessities of sugar production.
1850: Lists of slaves formerly belonging to William M. Clark.
1851: 9 April, beginning of numerous account statements from
Bogart & Foley, factors of New Orleans, who marketed Lewis
Thompson's sugar and molasses.
1852: 19 May, letter from Benjamin Bullard in New Orleans to
Lewis Thompson about Bullard's recent bouts with the
courts.
1853: 29 March, letter from Asa Biggs in Williamston, North
Carolina, to Lewis Thompson about collecting the proceeds
from the sale of lands from the William M. Clark estate.
1853: 10 August, letter from Lewis and Margaret Thompson at the
springs to their son Thomas at home. This is one of the
very few personal letters in the collection.
1854: 2 April, letter from Thomas W. Thompson in Bayou Boeuf,
Louisiana, to his father, Lewis Thompson reporting on
conditions on the family's Louisiana plantations.
1854: 20 November, letter from Henry King Burgwyn at Thornburg
Plantation near Jackson, North Carolina, to Lewis Thompson
about the sale of a bull. Burgwyn (1813-1877) was a major
North Carolina planter and the father of several
illustrious sons.
1854: November, bills relating to the building of Grace
Episcopal Church at Woodville, North Carolina. Lewis
Thompson seems to have been in charge of the financial end
of this project. Bills continue into 1855.
1854: Bills and letters indicating that marketing of Lewis
Thompson's cotton in Norfolk was being handled by Kada
Biggs & Company. Kada Biggs was the brother of Asa Biggs.
1854: 9 March, letter from Thomas Ruffin in Raleigh, North
Carolina, to Lewis Thompson about the activities of the
Board of Trustees of the University of North Carolina.
This is the first of several such letters appearing
sporadically from various board members until Thompson's
death in 1867.
1854: 17 March, letter from Henry King Burgwyn to Lewis Thompson
about buying Thompson's cotton crop.
1854: 11 June, letter from Henry King Burgwyn to Lewis Thompson
about the wheat crop and about Thompson's coming visit to
Burgwyn.
Folder 14 1849
15 1850
16 1851
1852
17 January-March
18 April-December
1853
19 January-March
20 April-September
21 October-December
1854
22 January-March
23 April-June
24 July-December
1855
25 January-February
26 March-April
27 May-September
28 October-December
Subseries 1.4. 1856-1860
About 1200 items.
Beginning in 1856, while materials are still chiefly financial
and legal, there are also a number of letters about political
issues. There are also, in 1857, several items relating to
Thompson's activities in the Seaboard Agricultural Society of
Virginia and North Carolina. Also, around 1857, letters from
Lewis Thompson's sons begin to appear, with William in Louisiana
and Thomas in Bertie County. There are also a few letters
relating to family affairs, particularly from Thompson's
daughters at St. Mary's School in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Of particular interest are the following:
1856: 12 February, letter from Caleb S. Hollawell in Alexandria,
Virginia, to Lewis Thompson about William Thompson's
entering Hollawell's school, which became Alexandria High
School, an institution of some note. See also receipts
from the school starting 26 February 1856. By 1857,
however, William had left school for Louisiana.
1856: Letters relating to American Party politics, among them a
letter of 29 May notifying Lewis Thompson of his selection
as elector from the American Party in the coming
presidential election; on of 17 June from P. H. Winston in
which he declined to be an American Party legislative
candidate; and two letters dated 16 July in which American
Party meetings were discussed. Few other items of a
political nature appear until 1860.
1857: April-May, letters from Thomas W. Thompson reporting back
to his father on conditions on the family plantations in
Louisiana.
1857: October-November, several items showing Lewis Thompson
involvement with the Seaboard Agricultural Society of
Virginia and North Carolina, including a letter on 10
November, informing him that he had been chosen
vice-president of the Bertie County chapter.
1857: Beginning in 1857, there are many letters from Lewis
Thompson's son William, who appears to have taken up
permanent residence on the family's Louisiana plantations.
1857: Around 1857, Moore Rawls appears to have succeeded Kenneth
M. Clark in the day-to-day running of Thompson's Louisiana
sugar plantations. Although there is an occasional letter
from Clark, there are many letters about plantation
operations from Rawls to Thompson.
1858: 31 December, letter from Lewis Thompson in Louisiana to
his son Thomas, in which he reported the results of his
search for land in Thomas's behalf.
1859: 11 April, letter from Lewis Thompson in Philadelphia to
son Thomas in Bertie County about depression suffered by
Margaret Thompson and Lewis's feeling that he may have to
commit his wife to professional caretakers.
1859: 16 May, letter from Henry King Burgwyn to Lewis Thompson
about state bonds.
1859: 31 December, bill for the sale of a slave to Lewis
Thompson.
1860: 1-10 February, receipts for the purchase of nine slaves by
Lewis Thompson. Another document shows that, shortly
after this purchase, Lewis sold six slaves to his son
Thomas.
1860: 14 March, letter written on behalf of a slave in Orange
County, North Carolina, to a slave who had apparently been
bought by Lewis Thompson.
1860: 16 March, letter from Sam E. Johnston in Edenton, North
Carolina, to Lewis Thompson asking for his help in getting
his son a tutorship at the University of North Carolina.
1860: 18 May, letter notifying Lewis Thompson of his selection
as a senator from Bertie County to the General Assembly in
Raleigh. A small number of items that mention politics
appearing throughout 1860.
1860: 23 July, letter from Henry King Burgwyn to Lewis Thompson
about the purchase of bonds.
1860: Beginning in September, letters from Thompson's daughters
Pattie and Mary at St. Mary's School, Raleigh.
1856
Folder 29 January-April
30 May-July
31 August-December
1857
32 January-May
33 June-August
34 September-October
35 November-December
1858
36 January
37 February
38 March
39 April-June
40 July-October
41 November-December
1859
42 January-February
43 March-May
44 June-September
45 October-December
1860
46 January
47 February
48 March-April
49 May-June
50 July-September
51 October-December
52 Undated letters and fragments, probably prior to
1861
Subseries 1.5. 1861-1867
About 900 items.
A certain amount of nervousness and anticipation of hard times
to come cloud materials from 1861, although direct mention of the
Civil War is rarely found. There is a letter, dated 2 June 1861,
from Thomas Thompson, who was apparently in the army at the time.
Soon, however, he seems to have returned to Bertie County, where
he remained with his father throughout the conflict. William
Thompson spent the war years in Bayou Boeuf, Louisiana, and
Pattie and Mary remained at St. Mary's School in Raleigh. The
biggest change wrought by the war in this collection is in terms
of volume of material, which falls off dramatically in 1862 and
becomes little more than a trickle in 1863 and 1864. Immediately
following the war's end, there are many items documenting Lewis
Thompson's efforts to reestablish his financial network. Soon
enough, the collection resumes its pre-war character, with only
some changes in the names of bankers (Duncan, Sherman & Company
in New York) and merchants (James Corner & Sons in Baltimore) and
the introduction of shipping cotton through Baltimore instead of
exclusively through Norfolk. The new order of things is best
demonstrated by contracts for sharecropping and farm labor and in
letters from William, who was having a hard time getting the
Louisiana plantation back on track with hired labor. During this
period, there is a scattering of letters bearing on political
issues, particularly around 1866. Lewis Thompson appears to have
died in early December 1867; many materials dated after December
16 are addressed to his executors (Margaret, Thomas, and
William).
Of particular interest are the following:
1861: 23 January, letter from Kenneth M. Clark in Baton Rouge to
Lewis Thompson about Louisiana's leaving the Union.
1861: 1 April, letter from John Devereux of the Assistant
Quarter Master's Office in Raleigh, North Carolina, to
Lewis Thompson about the purchase of hogs for the
Confederate army and the pasturage of soldiers' horses on
Thompson's lands. Devereux (b. 1820) was married to
Margaret Mordicai, and owned considerable acreage in
Bertie County. Devereux's wealth may be measured by the
fact that he owned over 1,000 slaves at the outbreak of
the Civil War.
1861: 2 June, letter from Thomas W. Thompson in the Confederate
army at [Garysburg?] to Lewis Thompson about army life.
1863: 29 August, bill of sale for land in Bertie County
purchased by Lewis Thompson.
1864: 7 March, letter from Thomas W. Thompson in Hotel to Pattie
[in Raleigh?] expressing his fear that he may be called up
to fight [again?] and discussing the activities of
soldiers in the vicinity.
1865: 1 April, note about commandeering a "third-class horse"
from Lewis Thompson for use by the military.
1865: In May and June, there are letters about re-establishing
Lewis Thompson's financial network. For example, a letter
dated 6 June, from the National Bank of Commerce in New
York, reveals that Thompson's money was not confiscated
during the war and that the bank is willing to resume
trade with him.
1865: 28 June, letter from William Thompson in Louisiana about
the burning of his crop by Confederate soldiers and about
how hard it will be to work the land.
1865: June, several sharecropping agreements between freedmen
and Thomas W. Thompson.
1865: 27 August, letter from Kenneth W. Clark to Lewis Thompson
about post-war conditions in Louisiana.
1866: 31 October and 7 November, letters from W. W. Holden to
Lewis Thompson about meetings of the Union Vote Committee
on which they both served.
1867: 2 June, letter from William Thompson about difficulties
with his crops and workers. He also wrote about taking
some of his black workers to register to vote.
1867: 1 August, invitation to Lewis Thompson to address the
Republican Club in Edenton, North Carolina.
1867: August, accounts of several of Thompson's North Carolina
plantations, including wages due to hands.
1867: 31 September, letter of John Pool to Lewis Thompson about
reconstruction politics.
1867: 1 November, "memorandum" by Lewis Thompson listing sums of
money invested and with whom these investments were made.
1867: 1 November, copy of Lewis Thompson's will.
1861
Folder 53 January-February
54 March
55 April-June
56 July-December
57 1862
58 1863-1864
1865
59 January-July
60 August-December
1866
61 January-February
62 March-April
63 May-June
64 July-September
65 October-December
1867
66 January-February
67 March-April
68 May-June
69 July-August
70 September-December
Subseries 1.6. 1868-1894
About 850 items.
Lewis Thompson's death appears to have had little effect on
family affairs; materials after 1868 show that the business
relationships established under Lewis were, by and large,
continued by his son Thomas. Beginning in 1868, there are papers
relating to the estate of Lewis Thompson, number of which
diminishes significantly after 1869. During this period, there
are few references to Louisiana, where, it appears, William C.
Thompson was operating independently from his brother. Beginning
in the late 1860s and continuing to April 1883, however, there
are items relating to the settlement of a court case involving
some of Lewis Thompson's Louisiana property and his children's
attempt to insure the equitable division of the proceeds from the
sale of that land. In general, the Thompson family appears to
have prospered under Thomas W. Thompson's guidance; throughout
this period, there are many letters to Thomas from neighbors and
relatives requesting loans and outright gifts of money and land.
Correspondence is very slight after mid-1871, but, even into
1874, there is evidence that Thomas W. Thompson was still active
in acquiring land to add to the wealth amassed by his father.
Of particular interest are the following:
1868: Throughout this period, there are many letters from P.H.
Winston in Windsor, North Carolina, who was managing the
business affairs of Thomas W. Thompson. Winston may have
been Thompson's lawyer, since he appears to have had much
to say about the Louisiana property case.
1868: 5 May, copy of will of Mary R. Urquhart of Isle of Wight
County, Virginia, wife of R. H. Urquhart and grandmother
of the donor.
1868: 1 June, letter of William C. Thompson in Louisiana to his
brother about planting and related affairs.
1869: 4 May, letter of William M. Clark, Thomas's uncle, to
Thomas W. Thompson, requesting a loan to help him out of
destitution.
1870: 1 January, printed notice from a neighbor about
untrustworthy sharecroppers.
1870: 18 September and 11 December, letters of William C.
Thompson in Louisiana to Thomas W. Thompson, about crops
and the pending property settlement.
1871: January through May, several letters from J. Adalaide
Oertel, wife of J. A. Oertel, minister and painter of
Lenoir, North Carolina, to Margaret Thompson about her
husband's art and ministry.
1872: Chiefly materials relating to the affairs of Burges
Urquhart of Bertie County, North Carolina, who was the
husband of Lewis Thompson's daughter Mary.
1868
Folder 71 January-February
72 March-April
73 May-July
74 August-October
75 November-December
1869
76 January-February
77 March-April
78 May-July
79 August-December
1870
80 January-February
81 March-June
82 July-September
83 October-December
1871
84 January-February
85 March-December
86 1872-1879
87 1880-1894
88 Undated and fragments, probably after 1860
Series 2. Confederate bonds
1862-1863. 31 items.
Confederate bearer bonds, issued through the state of North
Carolina, in $500 and $1000 denominations, with many coupons
intact. Although no names appear on the bonds, they were surely
the property of Lewis Thompson. [transferred to Miscellaneous
Currency, #4672]
Series 3. Lewis Thompson volumes
1827-1879. 8 items.
Arrangement: chronological by last date in volume.
Volumes relating to Lewis and Thomas W. Thompson, containing
business, personal, and estate accounts. Subseries 3.1 contains
antebellum volumes and Subseries 3.2 contains volumes with
entries dated 1861 or later.
Subseries 3.1. 1827-1857
3 items.
Folder 92 1827-1836, account book of Lewis Thompson,
containing records of payments for goods and
services and entries relating to the settlement of
various estates. 73 pp.
93 1837-1840, account book of Lewis Thompson as
executor of the estate of William M. Clark,
including an inventory of the property of the
estate. 35 pp.
94-95 1850-1857, account book of Lewis Thompson as
executor of the estate of William M. Clark,
continued. Included are accounts relating to
Thompson's guardianship of David and Gavin H.
Clark. Folder 94 contains enclosures from the
volume that show the status of estate property as
of 1 January 1851.
Subseries 3.2. 1861-1879
5 items.
Folder 96 1861-1862, Lewis Thompson's 1861 timber accounts
and a few general accounts dated 1862. 18 pp.
97 1865-1866, Lewis Thompson's memorandum book,
chiefly listing cash paid to various individuals
for goods and services. 19 pp.
98 1861-1867, account book containing records of
Lewis Thompson's accounts with the Exchange Bank
of Virginia, 1861-1864, and miscellaneous accounts
with black sharecroppers, 1866-1867. 36 pp.
99 1867, account book containing Thomas W. Thompson's
household and personal accounts. 18 pp.
100 1870-1879, account book containing Thomas W.
Thompson's accounts with Kada Biggs & Company and
James Corner & Sons for cotton shipped and other
business transactions. About 100 pages.
SHELF LIST
Box 1 Subseries 1.1. 1723-1833 (folders 1-5)
Subseries 1.2. 1834-1848 (folders 6-13)
Subseries 1.3. 1849-1850 (folders 14-15)
Box 2 Subseries 1.3. 1851-1855 (folders 16-28)
Subseries 1.4. 1856 (folders 29-31)
Box 3 Subseries 1.4. 1857-February 1860 (folders 32-47)
Box 4 Subseries 1.4. March 1860-Undated
prior to 1861 (folders 48-52)
Subseries 1.5. 1861-April 1866 (folders 53-62)
Box 5 Subseries 1.5. May 1866-1867 (folders 63-70)
Subseries 1.6. 1868-April 1869 (folders 71-77)
Box 6 Subseries 1.6. May 1869-1879 (folders 78-89)
Box 7 Subseries 1.6. 1880-Undated after
1860 (folders 90-91)
Series 3. Lewis Thompson volumes (folders 92-100)
Items separated:
OP-716/1-4