Alvord, Clarence W. (1868-1928) and Idress Head (1873-1962), Collection, 1759-1962 (C970)
21.2 linear feet and 1 oversize volume
INTRODUCTION
Correspondence, writings, and collected materials of Clarence Walworth Alvord, founder of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, editor of the Mississippi Valley Historical Review, and professor of history at the universities of Illinois and Minnesota; and his wife, Idress Head Alvord, writer and former curator of the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis. Mrs. Alvord's private manuscript collection includes territorial documents and Ste. Genevieve records; Liberty Tribune papers; Missouri state and county records; and Civil War and military papers.
DONOR INFORMATION
The Idress Head Alvord Estate, Columbia, Missouri, donated the Alvord Collection to the University of Missouri on 15 March and 26 November 1962 (Accession Nos. 3505 and 3528).
The donation included papers of Clarence Walworth Alvord which had previously been housed at the Minnesota Historical Society. The University of Missouri Library transferred additional items on 14 March 1969 (Accession No. 3802).
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES
Clarence Walworth Alvord was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts, May 21, 1868, the son of Daniel Wells and Caroline Betts (Dewey) Alvord. On July 25, 1893 he married Jennie Kettell Blanchard (née Parrott). She died September 12, 1911. They had one daughter, Genevieve. On April 10, 1913 he married Idress Head in Palmyra, Missouri. Professor Alvord was a Unitarian.
Alvord received his A.B. from Williams College in 1890 and studied at the University of Berlin, 1893-1895, and the University of Chicago for two quarters in 1895. He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1908.
Alvord began his academic career in Massachusetts as an instructor at the Milton Academy, 1891-1893, and at the Prep School, University of Illinois, 1897-1901. He became an instructor of history, 1901-1906; associate, 1904-1907; assistant professor, 1907-1909; associate professor, 1909-1913; and professor, 1913-1920, at the University of Illinois. In 1920 he accepted a professorship at the University of Minnesota.
He was a founder of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association. From 1906 through 1920 he was General Editor, Illinois Historical Collections, and from 1913 to 1923, managing editor of the Mississippi Valley Historical Review. He was editor-in-chief of the Illinois Centennial History and director of the Illinois Historical Survey, University of Illinois.
Alvord and his wife spent the years from 1923 until his death in 1928 abroad, primarily in England and France. He was recognized on both sides of the Atlantic for his contributions to historical scholarship and was awarded the Loubat prize in 1917 for the best historical work published in the United States during the preceding five years: The Mississippi Valley in British Politics. He was a member of the Anglo-American Historical Committee. He gave the Raleigh lecture on history before the British Academy in 1925 and the Creighton lecture before the University of London in 1926. He was the first non-British subject to deliver the Creighton lecture.
Alvord contributed to various English magazines and was published in the Nation and the American Mercury in the U.S. He was also a member of the American Historical Association and the National Academy of Sciences. When he died in Diano Marina on the Italian Riviera, January 27, 1928, he had been working on his contribution to the Cambridge History of the British Empire. He was to contribute chapters on causes of the American Revolution and on British politics.
Idress Head Alvord was born in Roanoke, Randolph County, Missouri, on March 2, 1873. She was the daughter of John Calhoun Head and Susan Wallace Head. She graduated from Howard Payne College, Fayette, Missouri, in 1897; Central College, Fayette, 1899; and did graduate work at the University of Illinois.
Miss Head taught in the Fayette public schools from 1901 through 1902. She was a research assistant from 1903 to 1907 for historian Louis Houck, author of the three volume History of Missouri. She was librarian and curator for the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis from 1907 until her marriage to Clarence Walworth Alvord on April 10, 1913. Miss Head founded the Missouri United Daughters of the Confederacy Library and Museum and became its first librarian in 1906. She published Historical and Interesting Places of St. Louis in 1909, and a series of her historical sketches were published in the St. Louis Republic.
She was state treasurer of the Missouri Folklore Society and director of the St. Louis branch from 1909 to 1913. From 1912 to 1913 she served on the executive committee of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association.
In 1918 Mrs. Alvord was an assistant in the woolens section of the War Industries Board. Active in Democratic politics, she ran for Minnesota State Senator from the 29th district in 1922. In partnership with M. Gertrude Neal, she tried her hand at business, opening the Neal-Alvord Shop in Minneapolis in 1922. The shop specialized in furnishings and accessories for the dining room. In 1923 she accompanied her husband to England and Europe.
From 1933 to 1936 she was executive secretary in the Missouri office of the Farm Debt Adjustment Unit of the Resettlement Administration, and in 1937 was assistant state director of the WPA Historical Records Survey in New Mexico. She co-authored Inventory County Archives, Colfax County, N.M.
Mrs. Alvord contributed numerous articles on historical topics to newspapers and magazines. During her husband's extended illness in Italy, she wrote reviews under his name. In 1948 she published a family genealogy, Descent of Henry Head (1695-1770) in America.
Her memberships included the Methodist Church, various historical associations and societies, Pi Beta Phi Social Sorority, Missouri Folklore Society, Women's Club (Minneapolis), American Association of University Women, National Society of Magna Carta Dames, Descendants of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, Daughters of 1812, United Daughters of the Confederacy, and the League of Women Voters.
Mrs. Alvord held honorary memberships in the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Institute Historique et Heraldique de France. She was patroness of Phi Beta Fraternity. She is listed in Who's Who in America, World Nobility and Peerage, The National Directory of Biography, American Women, and the Institute of American Genealogy Handbook.
She moved to Columbia in 1945 and rented rooms in her home to University of Missouri students. Her home, filled with antiques obtained in Italy after World War I, and her gardens, were frequently the subject of local newspaper stories. She died in February 1962.
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE
Correspondence, writings, and research materials of Clarence W. Alvord relate to his career at the universities of Illinois and Minnesota, abroad, as the founder of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, and editor of the Mississippi Valley Historical Review.
Idress Head Alvord's papers consist of her private manuscript collection; writing files; materials documenting her genealogical work, activities in patriotic and social organizations, and employment with the Missouri Agricultural Advisory Council and New Mexico WPA projects; and personal correspondence with family and friends. Her position as curator of the Missouri Historical Society and her work with Missouri historian Louis Houck receive limited coverage.
The Alvord Collection is divided into the following series:
The Missouri History series consists of Idress Head Alvord's private manuscript collection of original historical documents and manuscripts pertaining to periods in Missouri history from territorial days through 1901. The series is divided into eight subseries: Ste. Genevieve, Territorial Documents, Missouri Register of Lands, Liberty Tribune Papers, Missouri Education Papers, Missouri County Court Papers, Military Papers, and Governor's Proclamations.
These original manuscripts include Missouri state papers originating from the offices of Missouri's Governor, Adjutant General, Secretary of State, and Register of Lands; and include reports to the Superintendent of Common Schools.
The Clarence W. Alvord series contains correspondence, research notes, manuscripts, articles and reprints, reviews, biographical materials, and printed items. The Alvord Family series contains family correspondence, 1859-1920, and papers of James Church Alvord and his wife Lucy Fairbanks Alvord.
The Idress Head Alvord series contains her personal and professional correspondence, genealogical materials, notes and writing files, newspaper clippings, papers of organizations, and personal papers including diaries, letters, and miscellaneous printed and collected materials.
The Miscellaneous series includes photographs and pictorial items; architectural drawings of the Alpha Phi Sorority House in Columbia, Missouri; original drawings; and printed materials. The Volumes series consists of nine items, four of which are scrapbooks.
More detailed descriptions of these series and subseries can be found in the folder list. This collection is invaluable for scholars focusing on scholarly research of the westward movement, American settlement in the Mississippi Valley, and Great Britain and her colonies before the American Revolution. Military historians will find original documentation for periods including the Mexican War, Civil War, and Kansas border conflicts.
Genealogists will benefit from the Ste. Genevieve documents and records, and Head and related families genealogical material. Students of education will find the Missouri education papers of interest for the 1840s and 1850s. Black history sources may be found in the Ste. Genevieve and Territorial records, and racial prejudice and segregation are addressed in Mrs. Alvord's correspondence. Local and social historians will enjoy the images provided of Columbia in the 1950s and 1960s from the correspondence and clippings sections, and may trace the southern influence in the collected papers of Mrs. Alvord.
Mrs. Alvord's correspondence spans eight decades and offers excellent social history and insights into the world of academia and the life of a talented, involved woman. Letters from abroad offer European views of politics and events leading up to and through both World Wars. Scrapbooks offer insights into student life in the 1910s.
SERIES LIST
FOLDER LIST
Ste. Genevieve, 1759-1868. This subseries contains original Catholic and Protestant marriage certificates, and typed and handwritten copies of baptismal, marriage, and death registers and miscellaneous documents, compiled by Idress Alvord from Catholic church records in Ste. Genevieve, Missouri, and from a marriage register of the Saint Joachim Church of Illinois.
The marriage certificates are arranged by name of groom within each year. Names of parents are given on some certificates. The German Settlement in Ste. Genevieve County, the Methodist Episcopal Church, Baptist Church, and Church of Christ are mentioned. An index to the marriage certificates follows the folder list.
An 1854 letter from R.A. Hatcher, New Madrid, to the Secretary of State, and an 1855 certificate appointing Joseph Shaw as constable are filed with the marriage certificates. A copy of a translated Spanish letter, signed by Manuel de Salcedo, to the Spanish commandants of Upper Louisiana notifying them of the retrocession from Spain to France and instructing them to deliver the territory to the proper authorities appears in folder 37.
The marriage and death registers are written mostly in French and cover the entire community, including slaves. The marriage register from St. Joachim Church, 1759-1781, includes Indian and German brides. Some of Mrs. Alvord's notes are in shorthand.
The registers predate registers in the Ste. Genevieve Parish Records, 1764-1837, Collection #3040, on microfilm at the Western Historical Manuscript Collection-Columbia. Original certificates for some, but not all, of the marriages recorded in the handwritten copies may be found in the Ste. Genevieve Archives, 1756-1930, Collection #3636, also available on microfilm at the Western Historical Manuscript Collection-Columbia.
| f. 1-2 | Register of Baptisms, 1760-1782 (typed copy) |
| f. 3 | Marriage Register, 1759-1781--Saint Joachim Church, Illinois (typed copy) |
| f. 4 | Marriages, n.d. |
| f. 5 | Marriages, 1817 |
| f. 6-8 | Marriages, 1827-1829 |
| f. 9-18 | Marriages, 1830-1839 |
| f. 19-22 | Marriages, 1840-1843 |
| f. 23-24 | Marriages, 1848-1849 |
| f. 25-26 | Marriages, 1850-1851 |
| f. 27-29 | Marriages, 1854-1856 |
| f. 30-33 | Marriages, 1861-1865 |
| f. 34 | Marriages, 1868 |
| f. 35-38 | Ste. Genevieve [Catholic] Church records (handwritten copies) |
| f. 36 | Baptismal and marriage records, 1760-1804 |
| f. 37 | Baptismal, marriage, and death records |
| f. 38 | Register of Deaths |
Territorial Documents, c. 1770-1851. Original territorial documents and letters, the bulk written in French and Spanish, and items from the early period of Missouri statehood comprise this subseries which includes documents signed by U.S. territorial governors, lieutenant governors, and officials of the five Missouri districts in Upper Louisiana: Ste. Genevieve, St. Louis, St. Charles, Cape Girardeau and New Madrid.
Book and page numbers given on the docketed documents refer to registers in the recorder's office in St. Louis and/or district recorder's offices. Items are arranged chronologically within each folder in this section.
The documents primarily concern land and land transactions and include deeds, land claims and grants, plats and surveys. Other items of note include legal depositions; appointments of watchmen and constables; power of attorney documents; an Indian Council petition and grant (folder 39); documents certifying the number of inhabitants in the District of New Bourbon (folder 39); a land transfer signed by the Chief of the Peoria Indians and his wife (folder 40); a court record transcription from the Court of General Quarter Sessions, District of St. Louis (folder 41); petitions signed by the inhabitants of St. Ferdinand, 1802, 1808 (folders 41,44); an 1804 Arkansas District document (folder 43); letters from Le Baron de Carondelet, New Orleans; Francois Cruzat and Zenon Trudeau; a statement of titles, etc. in the New Madrid District; and a letter of Henri Peyroux describing the founding of New Madrid and George Morgan's activities (folder 46).
Missouri. Register of Lands, 1825-1863. Quarterly returns on records of land sales in western Missouri, 1825-1828, from the Jackson, Missouri, Land Office; lists of delinquent lands in Jasper County, Missouri, 1855, and in St. Francois County, 1863; and the Sample Orr Papers, 1860-1863, comprise this subseries.
Sample Orr was Register of Lands during the Civil War period. His papers concern attempts by citizens of Missouri and other states to prove title to and/or redeem Missouri lands through the payment of property taxes on the lands. The Civil War disrupted collection and payment of taxes which subsequently became delinquent resulting in sales of delinquent lands by county sheriffs.
The bulk of the correspondence is dated 1863 and arranged chronologically. Some correspondents describe their activities during the war. William Green describes conditions in Arkansas and the town of Fort Smith (folder 68). Bushwhacker activities in Greene County, lands of rebel soldiers in Saline County, and attitudes toward slave emancipation are also described.
Applications and recommendations for jobs, tax exemptions, and other miscellaneous topics are also addressed in the correspondence. John Hiram Lathrop recommends P.A. Rice as a student to attend the University of Missouri in 1863 (folder 63)
| f. 47 | Land Office, Jackson, Missouri--Quarterly returns, 1825-1828 |
| f. 48 | Delinquent lists--Jasper county, 1855; St. Francois county, 1863 |
| f. 49-69 | Sample Orr papers, 1861-1863, n.d. |
| f. 49 | Correspondence, n.d. |
| f. 50 | Correspondence, 1860-1862 |
| f. 51 | Correspondence, 1863 January |
| f. 52 | Correspondence, 1863 February |
| f. 53-54 | Correspondence, 1863 March |
| f. 55-56 | Correspondence, 1863 April |
| f. 57 | Correspondence, 1863 May |
| f. 58 | Correspondence, 1863 May-June |
| f. 59 | Correspondence, 1863 June |
| f. 60 | Correspondence, 1863 June-July |
| f. 61 | Correspondence, 1863 July |
| f. 62-63 | Correspondence, 1863 August |
| f. 64 | Correspondence, 1863 September |
| f. 65 | Correspondence, 1863 September-October |
| f. 66 | Correspondence, 1863 October-November |
| f. 67 | Correspondence, 1863 November. |
| f. 68 | Correspondence, 1863 November-December |
| f. 69 | Correspondence, 1863 December |
Liberty Tribune Papers, 1794-1885. This subseries contains manuscripts of stories, ads and notices submitted for publication, letters to the editor, personal correspondence, and miscellaneous items from a Whig newspaper founded in 1846 by Colonel Robert Miller in Clay County, Missouri. Which items submitted for publication were actually published is not noted.
The Kansas conflict, the Mexican War, Civil War, and state and Whig politics receive considerable attention in the correspondence. Notable correspondents include Alexander W. Doniphan, James S. Rollins, William Switzler, and John T. Hughes. There are a few Miller family letters.
The papers are divided into four sections: miscellaneous and undated items, c. 1794-1884; manuscripts of stories, letters to the editor, and miscellaneous (mostly pre-Civil War, 1840s-1850s); correspondence; and ads and notices.
The majority of the items in the miscellaneous material section date from the 1860s, which appear to have no connection to the newspaper, but, according to a note of Mrs. Alvord's, were located by her in the building housing the paper. The earliest item is an 1794 itemized whiskey account of Jerome Danis. Civil War items include broadsides, a soldier's roster, a record book of rations received; an account of a robbery in Missouri City; a Ripley County battalion item; 1864 receipts; a Hannibal citizens petition; a Clay County citizens petition protesting slaves from Missouri joining the federal army in Kansas; letters of conscientious objectors; a rebel prisoner's letter; an 1866 Enrolled Missouri Militia broadside; and letters to Missouri governors and state officials.
Other items include 1849 and undated marriage records, possibly from Ste. Genevieve; Governor Austin A. King's letter concerning 1864 congressional candidates; newspaper clippings; and an 1874 St. Louis Bar Association petition supporting W.B. Napton for re-election to the Supreme Court.
| f. 70-73 | Miscellaneous and undated materials |
| f. 70 | 1794-1861, n.d. |
| f. 71 | 1861, n.d.--Civil War |
| f. 72 | 1862-1864--Civil War--Letters and miscellaneous |
| f. 73 | 1865-1884 |
The second section contains undated (primarily pre-Civil War, c. 1840s-1850s) manuscripts of stories and poems, political speeches, and letters to the editor. Topics include politics and candidates, Whig meetings, the Missouri Compromise, Sons of Temperance activities, Thomas Hart Benton, slavery and abolitionists, location and building of William Jewell College, Birch v. Hendricks land dispute; and the 1860 presidential election.
Also included are a Civil War song; a history of the Plattsburg Sabbath School; Whig resolutions, [1848]; incorporation papers of the Clay County Agricultural and Mechanical Association; and items describing activities in Liberty, and Clay and Clinton counties.
| f. 74-80 | Manuscripts of stories, letters to the editor, [c. 1840s-1850s] |
Chronologically arranged correspondence, 1845-1885, comprises the third section. There are no letters for 1855, 1868, 1873-1876, and 1879-1883. The correspondence consists of personal and private letters to Miller as well as letters to him as editor of the Liberty Tribune.
Concern over railroads, schools, and political meetings dominate the correspondence in the undated letters. An [1838] memorandum and order for Spanish land grant papers of the Morrison family, and a descriptive account of the landing and reception of the Japanese Embassy at Old Point Comfort, Virginia, by a woman from Clay County, Missouri, are also included.
In the 1840s correspondence, John T. Hughes offers graphic, first hand coverage of the Mexican War, and descriptions of stagecoach travel across Missouri to Cincinnati. Other letters, notices and speeches [1847-1850] made in connection with the Mexican War and Missouri troops are in folder 86. V.E. Bragg contributes political anecdotes and views in dialect under the pen name of Kernel Calvin Quinn.
Other descriptions and topics include celebrations upon the return of Missouri's volunteers, troops in Fort Leavenworth, the Oregon territory (folder 85), political views, organization of an artillery company in Columbia, a contested election in Randolph County and proceedings of the Missouri House of Representatives, and the presidential inauguration.
Local issues recede in importance in 1850s letters as increasing hostilities and violence in legislative sessions in Jefferson City and Lecompte, Kansas, are described. New newspapers in Columbia and Richmond, a smallpox epidemic in Jefferson City, and supplies available for California bound overland travel are mentioned as are numerous steamboats.
Letters from Bridger's Fort in Utah Territory contain details of the Mormon War and activities of Brigham Young. James H. Birch describes the 1858 session of the U.S. Congress and positions on Kansas statehood and the slavery issue. Robert H. Miller's mother writes of her spiritual experience in encountering her dead relatives through the aid of a resident preacher.
Letters of the 1860s include descriptions of the Baltimore Union convention; a session of the U.S. Congress, House of Representatives; arrival of the Japanese embassy in Washington; New York City; college students at William Jewell College; and opinions on national and local politics, the 1860 presidential election, squatters sovereignty, secession, the fugitive slave law, and the slavery issue.
Letters and articles submitted to the editor during 1861 and the Civil War years include a description of the Battle of Lexington by Colonel John T. Hughes (folder 103), and contain vehement views on secession, emancipation, and politics. Descriptive reports on legislative sessions of the 21st through 23nd General Assemblies are submitted by L.W. Burris. Personal letters to Editor Miller include letters from his mother and female cousins expressing their fears and concerns over the war and offering news of family members.
Accounts of bushwhackers and killing a "reb" in Platte County, railroad construction, Clay County tax collection, a report on the Clay Seminary, and minutes of the Congressional Convention held in Liberty are in the 1864 materials.
A letter written from the Idaho Territory contains descriptions of wagon trains led by Jim Bridger, gold mining, vigilante justice, general conditions, and opinions on divorce in a male dominated population and western migration. A personal letter from William Davenport, written also from the Idaho Territory, describes Missouri wagon trains, overland travel, and an Indian attack, and informs Miller of the accidental death of his sister-in-law's husband. Letters dated 1866-1869 concern local events and include personal correspondence. The murder of the Marshall family in Barry, Missouri, is described in detail. A black woman writes of her travels, cooking skills, and her situation with a new white family. Hugh T. Wilson of Lexington writes of prices of silk, building, and railroads. Itemized accounts for paper and supplies, and letters from printers and other newspaper men are included.
The 1870s letters are mainly letters to the editor on topics including temperance and the sale of Clay Seminary. Travelers to St. Louis and Taney County, Missouri, Texas, and California offer vivid descriptions. A history of Liberty, Missouri, and Civil War poetry are also included. The 1880s letters address the controversy over establishing an asylum for alcoholics, actions of the 33rd General Assembly, temperance issues, and politics.
| f. 80-113 | Correspondence, 1845-1885, n.d. |
| f. 81-82 | n.d. |
| f. 83 | 1845-1846 |
| f. 84-85 | 1847 |
| f. 86 | 1847-1850 (Mexican War ) |
| f. 87-89 | 1848 |
| f. 90 | 1849 |
| f. 91-95 | 1850-1854 |
| f. 96-99 | 1856-1859 |
| f. 100-101 | 1860 |
| f. 102 | c. 1861-1865 |
| f. 103 | 1861 |
| f. 104 | 1862 |
| f. 105 | 1863 |
| f. 106 | 1864 |
| f. 107 | 1865-1866 |
| f. 108 | 1866 |
| f. 109 | 1867-1869 |
| f. 110 | 1870-1872 |
| f. 111 | 1877-1878 |
| f. 112 | 1884-1885 |
| f. 113 | 1880s |
The last section of the Liberty Tribune Papers comprises ads, notices, and items submitted for publication, 1846-1880s, n. d. It is not noted which items were actually published. Proceedings and descriptions of political meetings and minutes of the Fishing River Association of Regular Baptists are included. Printing and advertising accounts mention steamboats on which orders were shipped. Broadsides, advertising literature and assorted printed materials, and related letters, are interspersed throughout.
Undated materials are mostly pre-Civil War. Items of note include a Liberty City ordinance on slavery, notices concerning slaves serving as soldiers, merchants's descriptive ads for dry goods, textiles, etc; views on women's suffrage, c. 1860s; proceedings of Whig meetings in Clay and Platte counties; and by-laws of the Liberty [Masonic] Lodge.
Highlights from the 1840s include Whig meetings in Clay and Platte counties, location of the Baptist College, supplies and insurance offered for sale to California-bound immigrants and gold seekers, and the sale of slaves. Attitudes toward the Mexican War are expressed.
The 1850s include minutes of political meetings, a description of the Mormon hostilities in Utah, incorporation papers of the Liberty Insurance Company, slave bills of sale, and broadsides of female academies. Attitudes toward immigrants and immigration are expressed in one letter.
The 1860s include lists of ordnance and ordnance stores offered for sale by the U.S. government; proceedings and descriptions of mass meetings including women supporting the union; letters offering views on secession, emancipation, the 1862 and 1863 Missouri conventions; Quantrill's attack on Lawrence, Kansas; descriptions of troop movements including a Clay County militia's encounter with Jayhawkers; and the constitutional convention .
Other notable Civil War items include circulars and general orders, proceedings of the Platte County Union Convention, and lists of Clay County citizens who took the loyalty oath. Austin A. King describes a Quantrill and Parker raid and expresses his views on emancipation. E.M. Samuel discusses the slavery issue. Views on the progression of the war from a Union supporter mentions Camp Jackson and the seizure of the arsenal at Liberty. Southern social customs of blacks and whites are described and condemned.
Local items include letters from W.L. Watkins describing his woolen mills; broadsides advertising mule and horse breeding; ads for runaway slaves; notices for sale of slaves; stray notices; notices of circuit court sessions, estate administrations, personal property sales, school openings and commencements; proceedings of various church and fraternal organizations; and a Liberty City ordinance concerning blacks.
Social and charitable activities increase after the war with notices of cotillions, revivals, and appeals for aids to the South. Political meetings resume and Johnson Clubs are formed. Marriage notices and obituaries are numerous.
The 1870s include proceedings of the Clay County Grange, turnpike road meetings, marriages performed, descriptions of Liberty Band concerts and other amusements. The 1880s include election tickets, temperance related items, voter lists, and excerpts from an 1836 Liberty newspaper, The Far West.
Folders 213 and 214 in the Military Papers series contain additional Liberty Tribune materials. Original issues of the Liberty Tribune may be found in the newspaper library of the State Historical Society of Missouri.
| f. 114-183 | Ads and Notices |
| f. 114-124 | n.d. (pre-Civil War) |
| f. 125-129 | 1846-1849 |
| f. 130-139 | 1850-1859 |
| f. 140-141 | 1860 |
| f. 142-143 | 1861 |
| f. 144-149 | 1862 |
| f. 150-152 | 1863 |
| f. 153-154 | 1864 |
| f. 155-160 | 1865 |
| f. 161-165 | 1866 |
| f. 166 | 1867 |
| f. 167 | c. 1860s |
| f. 168 | 1870-1872, 1874, 1877 |
| f. 169-171 | 1878 |
| f. 172-180 | c. 1870s |
| f. 181 | 1880, 1884-1885 |
| f. 182-183 | c. 1880s |
Missouri Education Papers, 1843-1875. Reports to the Superintendent of Common Schools from county court clerks; questions from citizens concerning the Missouri education system; and reports from county superintendents of public schools to the state superintendent comprise this subseries. Three letters to J.L. Jones, 1859, are unrelated. They concern the appointment of census takers for Cooper and Macon counties, and a J.W. Payne letter relates to court sessions.
| f. 184 | 1843-1859 |
| f. 185 | 1867-1869 |
| f. 186 | 1870-1872 |
| f. 187 | 1873-1875 |
Missouri County Court Papers, 1849-1856, include recommendations for appointments; records of election of county court justices, including notifications, writs of election, and certificates of election. These latter documents were forwarded from the county clerks to state officials. Petitions for the 14th judicial circuit judgeship are in this subseries.
| f. 188 | Petitions for 14th Judicial Circuit Judgeship, 1849 |
| f. 189 | Certificates of election, 1851 |
| f. 190-193 | Certificates of election, 1852 |
| f. 194-197 | Certificates of election, 1853 |
| f. 198-202 | Certificates of election, 1854 |
| f. 203-206 | Certificates of election, 1855 |
| f. 207-211 | Certificates of election, 1856 |
Military Papers, 1860-1901. This subseries contains collected materials concerning the Missouri State Guard, Confederate States Army, Missouri State Militia, Enrolled Missouri Militia, Provisional Enrolled Militia, Missouri Militia and Missouri National Guard. The bulk of these papers are Missouri state papers which deal largely with the Civil War in Missouri. Also included are loyalty oaths of militia officers and Missouri citizens, 1860-1884; documents of appointments of county officials, 1865, and U.S. government documents, 1861-1891.
Missouri State Guard (Confederate) materials, 1860-1862, consist of items pertaining to the Southwest Battalion, the 5th Division, and formation of the Washington Guards; letters submitted to the editor of the Liberty Tribune containing descriptions of Civil War battles in Missouri and Tennessee; and muster rolls and a few payrolls of the 1st through 6th divisions and miscellaneous companies. Names of counties and/or towns, handwritten on some of the muster rolls, indicate place of recruitment. It is not known who added this information. A list of the companies represented follows this inventory.
| f. 212 | Southwest Battalion, 1860-1861 |
| f. 213 | Battle descriptions, 1861 |
| f. 214 | Miscellaneous documents, 1861 |
| f. 215 | Muster Rolls/Pay Rolls, Miscellaneous companies |
| f. 216 | Muster Rolls, 1st Division |
| f. 217 | Muster Roll, 2nd Division |
| f. 218 | Muster Rolls, 3rd Division |
| f. 219 | Muster Rolls, 4th Division |
| f. 220 | Muster Rolls, 5th Division |
| f. 221 | Muster Rolls, 6th Division |
Confederate States Army materials, 1862, include special and general orders and a circular of the Army of the West and Army of the Mississippi, Beauregard's Army.
| f. 222 | Army of the West--Special Orders, Circular, 1862 |
| f. 223 | Beauregard's Army--Orders, 1862 |
Missouri State Militia/Enrolled Missouri Militia/Provisional Enrolled Militia/Missouri Militia papers include correspondence, orders, special requisitions, reports of exemptions, commissions of officers, muster rolls, quartermaster reports, and miscellaneous material.
The correspondence is arranged chronologically. Folder 241 contains histories of Provisional Enrolled Militia companies and Enrolled Militia Regiments. There are histories of Missouri Militia companies in folder 245.
Orders include Enrolled Militia special orders, 1863-1865; general orders arranged by military district number (#1-9); 1862 orders for Camp Gamble, St. Louis; 1864 orders for Ford's Brigade at Liberty; and orders for the 7th Sub-District, North Missouri at Liberty, 1862-1865; District of Central Missouri, 1865; District of Northwest Missouri, 1862-1864; and District of Northeast, Missouri, 1862.
Reports of exemption, 1861-1865, are for physical disability and are signed by the examining surgeon of various counties. Commissions of officers, 1861-1865 are signed by the Governor.
Muster rolls, a clothing roll, mechanics and laborers's roll, and a monthly report and return are in folder 292. Missouri Militia, Saline County quartermaster reports are in folder 293.
| f. 224 | Miscellaneous, 1864-1866, n.d. |
| f. 225 | Correspondence, n.d. |
| f. 226 | Correspondence, 1861 |
| f. 227-228 | Correspondence, 1862 |
| f. 229-232 | Correspondence, 1863 |
| f. 233-240 | Correspondence, 1864 |
| f. 241 | Histories--Provisional Enrolled Militia Companies/Enrolled Missouri Militia Regiments (1865 January) |
| f. 242-247 | Correspondence, 1865 |
| f. 248 | Correspondence, 1866 |
| f. 249 | Correspondence, 1867 |
| f. 250 | Correspondence, 1868-1869 |
| f. 251 | Orders, 1863 |
| f. 252 | Orders, 1864 |
| f. 253 | Orders, 1865 |
| f. 254 | General Orders, 1862--1st Military District |
| f. 255-256 | General Orders, 1863--1st Military District |
| f. 257 | General Orders, 1864--1st Military District |
| f. 258 | General Orders, 1864--lst Military District, 1st Division |
| f. 259 | Special Orders, 1864--1st Military District |
| f. 260 | Special Field Orders; General Order, 1864--1st Military District, 1st Division |
| f. 261 | General and Special Orders, 1865--1st Military District |
| f. 262 | General Orders, 1865--1st Military District (Missouri Militia) |
| f. 263 | Special Orders, 1863--2nd Military District |
| f. 264 | General Orders, 1864--3rd Military District |
| f. 265 | Special Orders, 1863-1865--3rd Military District |
| f. 266 | General Orders, 1862--5th Military District |
| f. 267 | Orders, 1863--5th Military District |
| f. 268 | Orders, 1862-1863--6th Military District |
| f. 269-277 | Special Orders, 1863--7th Military District |
| f. 278 | General Orders, 1863--7th Military District |
| f. 279 | Special Order #67, 1864--7th Military District |
| f. 280 | Orders, 1862-1863--8th Military District |
| f. 281 | General Order #1, 1862--9th Military District |
| f. 282 | Orders, 1862--Camp Gamble |
| f. 283 | Orders, 1864--Ford's Brigade |
| f. 284 | Orders, 1863-1865--7th Sub-District North |
| f. 285 | Orders, 1863-1865--District of North Missouri |
| f. 286 | Orders, 1865--District of Central Missouri |
| f. 287 | Orders, 1862-1864--District of Northwest Missouri |
| f. 288 | Orders, 1862--District of Northeast Missouri |
| f. 289 | Special Requisitions, 1863 |
| f. 290 | Reports of Exemptions, 1861-1865 |
| f. 291 | Commissions of Officers, 1861-1865 |
| f. 292 | Muster Rolls, Reports and Returns, 1861-1865 |
| f. 293 | Quartermaster Reports, 1864-1866 |
Oaths of Loyalty, 1860-1884, include oaths of commissioned militia officers, 1st lieutenants and enrolling officers, state and county officials, and other Missouri citizens. Arrangement is chronological with oaths of militia officers arranged by county within each year.
| f. 294 | University of Missouri. Curators, 1860 |
| f. 295-300 | State and county officials, 1861 |
| f. 301-302 | State and county officials, 1862 |
| f. 303 | Enrolled Militia/Enrolled Missouri Militia, 1862 |
| f. 304 | Enrolled Missouri Militia, 1863 |
| f. 305-309 | Enrolled Missouri Militia, 1864 |
| f. 305 | Andrew-Gentry counties |
| f. 306 | Holt-Moniteau counties |
| f. 307 | Morgan-Platte counties |
| f. 308 | Platte-St. Louis counties |
| f. 309 | St. Louis-Worth counties | |
| f. 310-331 | Missouri Militia, 1865 |
| f. 310 | Andrew-Cedar counties |
| f. 311 | Chariton-Clinton counties |
| f. 312-315 | Cooper County |
| f. 316 | Cooper-Crawford counties |
| f. 317 | Dade, Jasper & Barton Battalion-Grundy counties |
| f. 318 | Harrison-Holt counties |
| f. 319 | Holt-Howard counties |
| f. 320 | Johnson County |
| f. 321 | Knox-Livingston counties |
| f. 322 | Marion-Monroe counties |
| f. 323 | Montgomery County |
| f. 324 | Morgan-Platte counties |
| f. 325 | Polk-Putnam counties |
| f. 326 | Putnam County |
| f. 327 | Randolph-Reynolds counties |
| f. 328 | St. Charles-St. Francois counties |
| f. 329 | St. Louis |
| f. 330 | St. Louis City and County |
| f. 331 | Ste. Genevieve-Wright counties |
| f. 332-334 | Officers of the Missouri Militia, 1866 |
| f. 332 | Callaway-Crawford counties |
| f. 333 | Hickory-Miller counties |
| f. 334 | Monroe-Taney counties |
| f. 335-338 | Officers of the Missouri Militia, 1867 |
| f. 335 | Cedar-Howard counties |
| f. 336 | Howell-Maries counties |
| f. 337 | Monroe-Reynolds counties |
| f. 338 | St. Francois County |
| f. 339 | State Officials, 1869 |
| f. 340 | Jackson County, 1870 |
| f. 341-345 | Organized Missouri Militia, 1871-1877 |
| f. 341 | St. Louis Grays and Joe Brown's Guards, 1871 |
| f. 342 | St. Louis Emmett Guard and Simpson Battery, 1872 |
| f. 343 | St. Louis Engineer Corps, 1873 |
| f. 344 | Jasper County--Carthage Light Guards, 1876 |
| f. 345 | St. Louis--Cass Place Guards, 1877 |
| f. 346-352 | National Guard, 1878-1884 |
| f. 346 | St. Louis, 1878 |
| f. 347 | Buchanan County-St. Louis, 1879 |
| f. 348 | Buchanan County-St. Louis, 1880 |
| f. 349 | Cooper and Macon counties, 1881 |
| f. 350 | Adair County, 1882 |
| f. 351 | Brigadier General Lawrence; 1st Infantry Regiment, 1883 |
| f. 352 | 2nd Regiment, 1884 |
Appointments of County Officials, 1865. Material on the appointment of county officials after all civil officers in the state were removed by act of the state legislature in 1865. Arrangement is by county.
| f. 353-355 | Miscellaneous |
| f. 356 | Adair, Barton, Benton and Butler counties |
| f. 357 | Cape Girardeau and Dunklin counties |
| f. 358 | Franklin - Macon counties |
| f. 359 | Madison County |
| f. 360 | Maries County |
| f. 361 | Mississippi County |
| f. 362 | Moniteau County |
| f. 363 | Monroe County |
| f. 364 | Montgomery and Morgan counties |
| f. 365 | New Madrid County |
| f. 366 | Newton and Nodaway counties |
| f. 367 | Oregon and Ozark counties |
| f. 368 | Osage County |
| f. 369 | Pemiscot and Pettis counties |
| f. 370 | Phelps County |
| f. 371 | Pike, Pulaski and Putnam counties |
| f. 372 | Ray, Reynolds and Ripley counties |
| f. 373 | Saline, Scott and Shannon counties |
| f. 374 | Ste. Genevieve - Stoddard counties |
| f. 375 | Webster, Weston and Wright counties |
Missouri Militia and National Guard, 1866-1901, n.d. This section includes incoming correspondence, orders and miscellaneous reports received by the Adjutant General and the Governor concerning enrollments and election of officers, appointments and resignations, Copperheads and bushwhackers, Missouri's war debt and Civil War and pension claims, including claims for a black regiment, petitions to the St. Louis Board of Police Commissioners, 1877-1878, concerning riot control, and an undated history of the U.S. Reserve Corp, 4th Regiment (folder 386). There are no papers for 1870.
For additional papers concerning the Civil War and reconstruction, see also the Sample Orr Papers in the Register of Lands subseries; the Liberty Tribune Papers subseries; a collection of Civil War related items in the Idress Head Alvord Personal Papers series; printed copies of Civil War photographs in the Photographs subseries; and, in the Volumes series, a prisoner record of Gratiot Prison in St. Louis during the Civil War; Missouri Militia records, 1862-1864; and military orders from the District of St. Louis, 1862-1863.
| f. 376 | 1866 |
| f. 377 | 1867-1869 |
| f. 378 | 1871-1873 |
| f. 379 | 1874 |
| f. 380 | 1875-1876 |
| f. 381 | 1877-1878 |
| f. 382 | 1878 |
| f. 383 | 1879-1880 |
| f. 384 | 1881-1882 |
| f. 385 | 1883-1901 |
| f. 386 | n.d. |
U.S. Government Documents, 1861-1891, relate to Missouri soldiers in the Civil War. Military claims; orders from the War Department and Department of the Missouri, General Courts Martial orders; a document concerning transfer of sick and wounded in various states; volunteer enlistment forms of the 15th Regiment, Missouri Volunteers; correspondence and reports received by the Adjutant General and the Governor of Missouri; and miscellaneous items are included.
Correspondence primarily concerns Missouri volunteers. A letter from C.P.B. Jeffers describes his farm in Jackson County and the military post established there during the occupation. Reports are from Van Horn's Battalion, U.S. Reserve Corp and the small pox general hospital in St. Louis. A petition is signed by members of the 21st Regiment, Missouri Volunteer Infantry.
| f. 387 | U.S. Army, Missouri Volunteer Roll of Honor, 1865 |
| f. 388 | U.S. Army, Volunteer Enlistments, 1861-1865 |
| f. 389 | U.S. Army, Volunteers--Correspondence, 1861-1863, n.d. |
| f. 390 | U.S. Army, Volunteers--Correspondence, 1864-1865, 1868, n.d. |
| f. 391 | U.S. Adjutant General--Correspondence, 1862-1863 |
| f. 392 | U.S. War Department--Orders, 1863, 1865, 1873, 1875 |
| f. 393 | U.S. Army, Department of the Missouri, Orders, 1863-1865 |
| f. 394 | U.S. Army, General Courts-Martial Orders, 1877-1891 |
| f. 395 | Military Claims, 1861-1869, 1871-1872 |
| f. 396 | Military Claims, 1874 |
Miscellaneous. Papers include letters of C.A. Peddicord, confederate soldier, to his mother and sisters, 1861-1866; roll of Sumner Greys, Tennessee Volunteers; reminiscences of confederate veterans; and Mrs. Alvord's notes (some in shorthand) on and from military sources.
| f. 397 | 1861-1866, 1901-1915, n.d. |
| f. 398 | Mrs. Alvord's notes, n.d. |
Missouri Governor's Proclamations, 1868-1873. Proclamations of Missouri Governors Fletcher, McClurg, Brown, and Woodson including reward offered for Frank and Jesse James; Thanksgiving proclamations; and restoring order in Callaway, Stoddard and Dunklin counties.
Most of Alvord's Correspondence is professional with the bulk dating from 1910 through 1928. Correspondents include American and British historians, scholars, publishers, archivists and librarians, as well as personal friends. There is extensive correspondence with Albert Beveridge, Solon J. Buck, Evarts Boutell Greene, and friend and physician Otto J. Schmidt. Alvord's correspondence in connection with the Mississippi Valley Historical Association and its publication, the Mississippi Valley Historical Review, well represented. Correspondence of the Review, 1912-1917, is in bound form in volumes 1 and 2 in the Volumes series.
Family correspondence is limited. Colorful letters from his brother, James Church Alvord, offer biting, humorous descriptions of family, James's experiences as an English and language professor in various college communities, refugees from the floods of 1927, and life in Emory, Virginia, and Lafayette, Louisiana. Clarence's daughter Genevieve describes her travels and teaching experiences. There is one letter from his mother. See the Alvord Family series and Idress Head Alvord series for additional family correspondence.
During the 1910s the war and the League of Nations is of concern to correspondents on both sides of the Atlantic but they do not overshadow discussion of internal and historical topics. Letters dated 1920 to 1922 concern the Alvords's move to the University of Minnesota, and include comments on Mrs. Alvord's senatorial candidacy and a description of cross country travel in the U.S. by two female friends.
Correspondence from 1923 to 1928 covers the Alvords's years in England, France, and Italy. The prestigious Raleigh and Creighton lectures and social functions connected with them are major topics as are editorship of the Review and activities of the American Historical Association back home. Application for a position at the Howard Library in Louisiana, Alvord's failing health, and his contributions to the Cambridge History of the British Empire are major concerns in the later months of 1926.
Candidacies for professorships and chairs and internal politics in history departments throughout America and England are highlighted in these letters. Reflections on current issues and politics and history of both England and America are shared in the letters of Lord Edmond George Fitzmaurice. Scholarly comments on Lord Shelbourne and the western aspect of the American Revolution, and efforts to trace maps of North America to show lines of frontier settlement are also present.
| f. 400-400a | n.d. |
| f. 401 | 1892-1893, 1899 |
| f. 402-403 | 1904-1909 |
| f. 404-404b | 1910 |
| f. 405 | 1911 |
| f. 406-413 | 1912 |
| f. 414-418 | 1913 |
| f. 419-424 | 1914 |
| f. 425-427 | 1915 |
| f. 428-431 | 1916 |
| f. 432-433 | 1917 |
| f. 434-438 | 1918 |
| f. 439-446 | 1919 |
| f. 447-454 | 1920 |
| f. 455-459 | 1921 |
| f. 460-469 | 1922 |
| f. 470-479 | 1923 |
| f. 480-486 | 1924 |
| f. 487-494 | 1925 |
| f. 495-506 | 1926 |
| f. 507-514 | 1927 |
| f. 515 | 1928 |
The Research Notes subseries is arranged by topic and covers the colonial and revolutionary periods of American history. Historical evidence presented by Alvord in Desplaines River litigation, transcriptions of letters from the Canadian Archives, 1771-1783, and transcriptions from Cahokia and Kaskaskia Records are also included.
| f. 516-528 | Canadian Archives, 1771-1783 |
| f. 529 | Treaty of 1783 |
| f. 530 | La Salle |
| f. 531 | Early Louisiana Territory |
| f. 532 | Exploration of Louisiana after 1783 |
| f. 533 | Mormons |
| f. 534 | Fur Trade on Missouri & Pacific |
| f. 535 | Political Situation in 1800 |
| f. 536 | Turner's Thesis (Old West & Sectionalism) |
| f. 537 | Mexican War |
| f. 538 | Oregon Question |
| f. 539 | American History Lectures |
| f. 540 | Settlement of Louisiana after 1803 |
| f. 541 | Land Laws, 1785-1820 |
| f. 542 | Western Indian Wars, 1769-1772 |
| f. 543 | Early Illinois |
| f. 544 | West Prior to Revolution |
| f. 545 | Early Mississippi Valley |
| f. 546 | Louisiana Purchase |
| f. 547 | Aaron Burr's Conspiracy |
| f. 548 | Florida War |
| f. 549 | Texas & U.S. after 1837 |
| f. 550 | Population of Northwest thru War of 1812 |
| f. 551-553 | Historical Evidence in the Desplaines River Case |
| f. 554-557 | Transcripts from Draper Manuscripts |
| f. 558-561 | Continental Congress Papers |
| f. 562-563 | Rocheblave Genealogy |
| f. 564-566 | Lists of Material in Other Collections |
| f. 566-569 | Transcripts from Cahokia Records |
| f. 570-572 | Transcripts from Kaskaskia Records |
| f. 573-576 | Miscellaneous |
The Manuscripts subseries contains Alvord's writings, speeches, transcriptions of records, and a book review.
| f. 577-579 | Speeches, 1918, n.d. |
| f. 579a | "The 'Hyphenates' and American Foreign Policy," n.d. (London address) |
| f. 759b | "The World Safe for Democracy," n.d. (Paris address) |
| f. 579c | "Kaskaskia-The Lost Monument," n.d. (Paris) |
| f. 580-583 | "The Imperial Muddlers" |
| f. 584-585 | "The Significance of the new Interpretation of Georgian Politics" |
| f. 586 | "Party Politics and the American Revolution" |
| f. 587 | "The American Colonists Grow Violent" |
| f. 588 | "Lord Shelburne and the American Colonies" |
| f. 589 | "The Peace of Paris, 1763" |
| f. 590 | "American Colonies" |
| f. 591 | "The Advocates Dioboli on Liberty" |
| f. 592 | Articles on Dante |
| f. 593 | Articles on Niebelugenlied |
| f. 594 | "Lake District & its Poets" |
| f. 595 | "Cartography of North America;" "American Art in the Future;" "Western American History" |
| f. 596 | Articles on the Papacy |
| f. 597 | "The Desplaines River as a Trade Route" |
| f. 598 | "Continuity, Vincennes Report" |
| f. 599 | "Prologomena to Illinois History" |
| f. 600 | "The Story of the Old Cahokia Court House" |
| f. 601 | "Debunking George Rogers Clark" |
| f. 602 | Notes on Illinois-Wabash Land Company |
| f. 603 | "Daniel Boone, Western Kentucky" |
| f. 604 | "Puncturing the Daniel Boone Myth" |
| f. 605 | "The Inertia of the Accomplished Fact" |
| f. 606 | "England's Responsibility in the War" |
| f. 607 | "Is the Two Party System of Government Doomed?" |
| f. 608 | "The Profits of a Subsidized Writer" |
| f. 609 | Review of The Education of Henry Adams, an Autobiography |
| f. 610 | "An Account of the Library of Col. Reuben T. Durrett" |
| f. 611 | "Historical Science and War Guilt" |
| f. 612 | "Why Coke is the Best Fuel" |
| f. 613 | "Importance of Trade" |
| f. 614 | "International Bimetallism" |
| f. 615 | "The Origin of the Democratic Party" |
| f. 616-625 | History of Illinois |
| f. 626-640 | American History notes, 1800-1840 |
| f. 641-643 | Miscellaneous notes |
| f. 644 | "History of West" |
| f. 645-646 | Transcriptions from the Canadian Archives |
| f. 647 | Transcription of the Census of Illinois, 1732 |
| f. 648 | "The New Andrew Jackson" |
| f. 649 | "The Shelburne Manuscripts in America" |
| f. 650 | Summary of volumes on House of Burgesses |
| f. 651-654 | "Cambridge History of the British Empire XXII" |
| f. 655 | "Memoir on State History of the Great War" |
| f. 656 | "New Histories of America" |
The Articles, Reprints, and Bibliographies subseries consists of printed materials either edited or written by Alvord; and two bibliographies, one a handwritten list of Alvord's historical works which was used with an exhibit.
| f. 657 | "The Future of Research in Illinois History," 1907 |
| f. 658 | "Illinois, the Origins," 1909 |
| f. 659 | "Father Pierre Gibault and the Submission of Post Vincennes, 1778;" "A Critical Analysis of the Work of Reuben Gold Thwaites," 1914 |
| f. 660 | "The Science of History," 1914 |
| f. 661 | "Letter of Father Marquette," 1920 |
| f. 662 | "Alas! George III was a Tyrant," 1925 |
| f. 663 | "Lord Shelburne & the Founding of British-American Goodwill"--Raleigh Lecture on History, 1925 |
| f. 664 | "The Enigmatic Aaron Burr," n.d. |
| f. 665 | "The Background of American Politics,"n.d.; "Documents Illustrating French History in the Seventeenth Century" |
| f. 666 | Bibliographies |
The Reviews subseries includes reviews of Alvord's major works, reviews written by Alvord, and newspaper clippings. The clippings chronicle Alvord's work on the Illinois State Centennial History and winning the Loubat prize for Mississippi Valley in British Politics.
| f. 667 | Reviews of Alvord's The Critical Period, 1763-1765 |
| f. 668-671 | Reviews of and by Alvord, 1908-1927, n.d. [See Also: f. 609] |
| f. 672 | The Nation, "American Historical Association" |
The Biographical Materials subseries contains biographies of Alvord and a bibliography of his published works; newspaper clippings; and writings of Solon J. Buck. Included are joint reports of Alvord and Buck to the Illinois Centennial Commission.
| f. 673 | List of Alvord's publications; Alvord Memorial Fund |
| f. 674-675 | Newspaper clippings & miscellaneous, 1905-1928, n.d. |
| f. 676-677 | Reports to the Illinois Centennial Commission |
| f. 678 | "Some Thoughts on the Publications of the Mississippi Valley Historical Association" by Solon J. Buck |
| f. 679 | "A Laboratory of State History," Solon Buck, 1916 |
| f. 680 | "Sketch of the Career of Clarence W. Alvord," Solon J. Buck |
| f. 681 | "Clarence Walworth Alvord, Historian," Solon J. Buck, 1928 |
| f. 682 | "Clarence W. Alvord and His History Plant" |
| f. 683 | Biography of Alvord |
| f. 684 | List of C.W. Alvord's Papers |
| f. 685 | Miscellaneous biographical items |
The Printed Materials subseries includes articles and pamphlets on topics of interest to Alvord, and miscellaneous printed materials arranged chronologically, 1891-1926, n.d. There are German items from the l890s and 1907 including pamphlets, a University course schedule, and a children's song and storybook. Published materials contain references to Alvord, articles by him, and/or notations by him or Mrs. Alvord.
Articles and pamphlets
| f. 686 | Articles from Journal of Bacteriology |
| f. 687 | "Peace," Harry Gosling |
| f. 688 | "History of the Bureau of Markets," Caroline Sherman |
| f. 689 | "The Panama Canal Zone," Charles Francis Adams |
| f. 690 | "A Yankee in Switzerland," Albert Paine |
| f. 691 | "New England in the Colonial Period," James Truslow Adams |
| f. 692 | "Methodism & the American Pulpit," James Wideman |
| f. 693 | "The Jersey Society in London" |
| f. 694 | "An Ancient Village on the Marne" |
| f. 695 | "Pioneer Mining in California" |
| f. 696 | "A Bay of Biscay Watering-place," Harrison Rhodes |
| f. 697 | "The Idyl of Concord," Lilian Whiting |
| f. 698 | "Detachment & the Writing of History," Carl Becker |
| f. 699 | "The Poetry of William Watson," Harold Williams |
| f. 700 | "The Quest of Ancestors," D.O.S. Lowell |
| f. 701 | "The Significance of Yorktown," Charles H. MacDowell |
Miscellaneous
| f. 702 | Williams College, Williamstown, Mass., 1891 |
| f. 703 | Kaiser Friedrich-Wilhelms University, 1893-1894 |
| f. 704 | German pamphlets, 1894-1895 |
| f. 705 | "Kinderscherz furs Kinderherz," n.d. |
| f. 706 | "The Psychological Review," 1898 |
| f. 707 | German publications, 1907, 1910 |
| f. 708 | "The Art Book," 1908 |
| f. 709 | "Hudson-Fulton Celebration," 1909 |
| f. 710 | "St. Louis Centennial Program," 1909 |
| f. 711 | Supreme Court of Illinois, 1909--People vs. Economy Light and Power Company |
| f. 712 | Supreme Court of Illinois, 1911--Land Commissioners of the Commons of Kaskaskia vs. President and Trustees of the Commons of Kaskaskia |
| f. 713 | Textbook List of Ginn and Company, 1914 |
| f. 714 | "The Union of International Associations," 1914 |
| f. 715 | American Association of University Professors, May 1915 |
| f. 716 | "Modern Fallacies," Herbert Bancroft, 1915 |
| f. 717 | "Papers and Addresses," Volume 3, Kent Historical Society, 1917 |
| f. 718 | "The Catholic Historical Review," October 1917 |
| f. 719 | "World History," by Viscount Brice, 1919 (Raleigh Lecture) |
| f. 720 | "The British Academy Bulletin," 1919 |
| f. 721 | University of London, University College--Catalog, 1919-1920 |
| f. 722 | "The Journal of English and Germanic Philology," January 1920 |
| f. 723 | Mississippi Valley Historical Association--Programs, 1908-1921 |
| f. 724-725 | Canadian Historical Review, March, September, 1921 |
| f. 726 | Council of the Royal Historical Society--Report, 1922-1923 |
| f. 727-729 | Institute of Historical Research, London--Bulletins, 1923-1926 |
| f. 730 | Anglo-American Historical Conference--Minutes, 1924 |
| f. 731 | "Les Theories Economiques et Sociales de Thorstein Veblen," 1924 |
| f. 732 | Handbook for American Students in France, 1926 |
| f. 733 | "Le Mouvement Ouvrier a Paris pendant la Revolution Francaise" |
| f. 734-735 | The Landmark, July 1926, February 1928 |
| f. 736 | American Historical Association |
| f. 737 | Illinois Centennial pamphlet |
| f. 738 | University of Illinois, Faculty Directories, 1918-1919 |
| f. 739 | University of Illinois, Syllabus of Modern European History |
| f. 740-742 | Minnesota Historical Society, 1921-1923 |
| f. 743-746 | State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1916, 1922 |
| f. 747 | "The Boundary Dispute between Illinois & Wisconsin," William Radebaugh |
| f. 748 | Garden Catalogs and garden related items |
| f. 749 | Notebook, n.d. |
| f. 750 | Book of Hymns, c. 1895; Autograph book, c. 1880s |
| f. 751 | Miscellaneous |
This series contains family correspondence, 1859-1920, and papers of James Church Alvord and his wife Lucy Fairbanks Alvord. The earliest family letters are written from Greenfield, Massachusetts, and Spring Hill, Virginia, and include children's letters and letters written by the parents of James and Clarence Alvord. Letters dated from 1897 to 1899 include letters to Lucy before her marriage, and letters of sympathy to Lucy and James over the death of their first born son.
Papers include old cards and love notes gathered by James Church Alvord and presented to his wife Lucy on her 51st birthday, undated articles and a poem written by James, pamphlets and an article written by Lucy, and insurance policies. See also the Idress Head Alvord series for the estate papers of James Church Alvord (f. 809), notes on Alvord family genealogy (f. 1321), and Alvord family photographs (f. 1356-1358).
| f. 752 | Correspondence, 1859-1870, n.d. |
| f. 753 | Correspondence, 1881--James Church Alvord |
| f. 754 | Correspondence, 1884-1887--Lucy Fairbanks |
| f. 755 | Correspondence, 1897--Lucy [Fairbanks] Alvord |
| f. 756 | Correspondence, 1898--James and Lucy Alvord |
| f. 757 | Correspondence, 1894-1920--James Church Alvord |
| f. 758-761 | James Church Alvord and Lucy Alvord Papers |
Chronological correspondence, 1884-1887, 1900-1961, is followed by a subseries of Genevieve [Alvord] Yates's letters to Mr. and Mrs. Alvord, n.d., c. 1919-1938; a subseries of business correspondence and records of the Neal-Alvord Shops in Minneapolis, 1923-1926; undated correspondence; and miscellaneous cards and invitations including dated and undated greeting cards and post cards. Drafts and copies of Idress's letters to family members are interspersed throughout the correspondence and may also be found in the writing files section of her papers.
World War I years are described in letters from both sides of the Atlantic and include descriptions of Washington D.C., reception of French diplomats, and federal workers. Love letters from Clarence Alvord, and discussion of marriage preparations dominate the 1913 correspondence.
Letters from the 1920s cover the years the Alvords spent in England and France and include drafts of Mrs. Alvord's letters from Italy describing the lingering illness and care of her husband. Lord Fitzsimmons continues to be a notable correspondent until his death. Prominent Missourians--Perry S. Rader, uncle of Mrs. Alvord; and her brother, James Wallace Head, express their strong Democratic Party views. There are only two letters dated 1925. After Professor Alvord's death, there are scattered letters to Idress from his former colleagues. A friend writes descriptive letters from China.
Emphasis in the 1930s correspondence is on the failing health and care of James Church Alvord. His estate papers, including the will of his wife, are in this section. Also included is correspondence with a New Mexico scholar who was planning to publish a study on Clarence Alvord and his work, introspective notes of Mrs. Alvord concerning her husband and their marriage with excerpts of letters from Dr. Alvord to her, and portions of original letters from others describing him (folder 979).
Letters from the 1940s through the 1960s are primarily from relatives and contain family news. Topics from the 1940s include the death of Clarence's brother, Clinton; World War II, the presidential election, and Negro equality. Genevieve was living in Honolulu when Pearl Harbor was bombed and her letters describe conditions in the islands, postwar politics and statehood. Copies of Idress's letters focus on her health, the Head Genealogy, and politics. A paper on V.J. Day (folder 816) and letters to Mrs. C.M. Gray are included in the 1940s correspondence. Notable correspondents include Tama N. Nishikawa, a Central Missouri College graduate and scholar, who describes the air raid on Kobe and post war Japan (folder 819).
Topics in the 1950s correspondence include the Cold War, the atomic scare, politics and presidential elections, Senator Joseph McCarthy, racial segregation, the Korean War and foreign policy. The death of her sister and two cousins, her own health and comments on old age, politics, Nixon's election and communism are reflected in letters written by Idress in 1955. Genevieve continues to write of her activities describing social and political events in Hawaii. There are letters from former University of Missouri students and tenants who rented rooms in Mrs. Alvord's home on Virginia Avenue. Friend Jeanne Gruener of Illinois writes of her teaching, travels, activities, and expresses views on current events; Mrs. Solon J. Buck offers her views on investigating Communism in the universities (folder 831); and Ursula Lewis, a teacher at the University of Kansas, continues a life long correspondence.
In the 1960s young nieces and nephews describe their new homes and growing families while old friends and relatives share health concerns and lament the loss of friends. The death of Ursula Lewis and Genevieve in 1959 and Nat Blanchard, Genevieve's brother in 1960 are of special concern.
| f. 762 | 1884-1887 |
| f. 763 | 1900-1905 |
| f. 764 | 1906-1909 |
| f. 765-771 | 1910-1919 |
| f. 772-788 | 1920-1929 |
| f. 789-794 | 1930-1934 |
| f. 795-808 | 1935-1939 |
| f. 809 | 1939. James C. Alvord Estate Papers |
| f. 810-820 | 1940-1949 |
| f. 821-837 | 1950-1954 |
| f. 838-865 | 1955-1959 |
| f. 866-869 | 1960 |
| f. 870-871 | 1961 |
| f. 872 | c. 1960s |
Letters in the Genevieve Alvord subseries were written by Genevieve to her parents and, after her father's death, to Idress, from Shanghai; Puerto Rico; Hawaii and Champaign, Illinois. Genevieve, a graduate of the University of Illinois, taught and lived in Puerto Rico and later Hawaii with her husband Bob. Her descriptive letters offer insights into the daily lives of young American teachers in a foreign country, local customs and entertainments, and politics and government. Rich descriptions of Puerto Rico are from the viewpoint of a young single girl and of Hawaii from the upper crust society of which she and her husband Bob became a part. President Roosevelt's visit to the islands is described in detail. Miscellaneous items in this section include banking records from Illinois and history papers and teaching aids. For additional letters from Genevieve see the correspondence sections of her parents papers, and volume 9 (Genevieve's scrapbook).
| f. 873-878 | Genevieve [Alvord] Yates, n.d., c. 1919-1938 |
The Neal-Alvord Shop subseries includes a ledger and business correspondence.
| f. 879-881 | Neal-Alvord Shops, 1923-1926 |
The Undated Correspondence subseries contains letters from family and friends and drafts of Idress's letters. The 1950s are heavily represented.
| f. 882-902 | Undated correspondence [c. 1890s-1960s] |
The majority of the Greeting cards, invitations and miscellaneous cards are from the 1950s and the early 1960s.
| f. 903-942 | Greeting cards, invitations and miscellaneous, c. 1900-1960s |
Postcards offer a pictorial chronology of the travels of family members and friends.
| f. 943-946 | 1900s |
| f. 947 | 1910s |
| f. 948 | 1920s |
| f. 949 | 1930s |
| f. 950 | 1940s |
| f. 951-955 | 1950s |
| f. 956 | 1960s |
| f. 957-966 | Postcards, n.d. [no messages] |
| f. 957 | Miscellaneous |
| f. 958 | Arizona-California |
| f. 959 | Colorado-Massachusetts |
| f. 960 | Missouri |
| f. 961 | St. Charles, Missouri |
| f. 962 | St. Louis, Missouri |
| f. 963 | New Mexico |
| f. 964 | Nebraska-Tennessee |
| f. 965 | Utah-Washington, D.C. |
| f. 966 | Foreign |
The Genealogy subseries includes charts, notes, correspondence, clippings, printed materials and miscellaneous items on the Head, Wallace, Craig, Campbell, Tate, Burton, Henderson, and related families, used by Idress in compiling Descent of Henry Head (1695-1770) in America, published in 1949. Dated correspondence, 1949-1958, is concerned mostly with this book. The collection does not include a copy of the book.
Other items of note include 1830s letters containing descriptions of Saline, Randolph, and Chariton county amusements and women (folder 987); 1849 Gold Rush letters (folder 968); Civil War reminiscences (folder 985); two Civil War documents: an oath of loyalty signed by Alexander F. Denny and approval of leave of absence for [P.F.] Burris signed by Major General Sterling Price (folder 1024); and reminiscences about Brunswick and Chariton counties.
| f. 967 | James C. Wallace letters, 1879-1901 |
| f. 968-972 | Wallace Genealogy |
| f. 973-974 | Head Genealogy |
| f. 975 | "Genealogical Letters No. 1" (Head family) |
| f. 976 | "Genealogical Letters No. 2" (Head family) |
| f. 977 | "About Some of the Heads" |
| f. 978 | Craig Genealogy |
| f. 979 | Campbell Genealogy |
| f. 980 | The Highlander |
| f. 981 | Campbell family genealogy chart |
| f. 982 | Tate Genealogy |
| f. 983 | Burton Genealogy |
| f. 984-990 | Miscellaneous genealogical data |
| f. 991-1024 | Correspondence, notes and miscellaneous (Head family) |
| f. 999 | Henderson family genealogical chart |
| f. 1025-1038 | Genealogical Correspondence, 1909-1962 |
| f. 1025 | 1909-1924 |
| f. 1026 | 1925-1926 |
| f. 1027 | 1945-1949, n.d. |
| f. 1028-1037 | 1950-1959 |
| f. 1038 | 1960-1962 |
The Writing Files consist of manuscripts and research notes for articles and speeches, personal notes, course notes, newspaper clippings, magazine articles and miscellaneous printed materials concerning topics of interest to Idress. Politics, government, and travel are emphasized. The files are arranged in four sections.
The first section, Articles and speeches, includes materials arranged by title followed by personal notes, manuscripts, and chronologically arranged clippings. Personal notes include Idress's reminiscences of her family's slaves (folder 1103), attitudes toward women's suffrage, and blacks (folder 1064). Many notes are written on the backs of unrelated letters, some addressed to Clarence, her husband.
| f. 1039 | "The Road to Christmas" |
| f. 1040 | "English Politics in a Lighter Vein," "The Melee of Modern Elections" |
| f. 1041 | "Liberals and Democrats," "The Death-Watch Beetle & Democratic Party" |
| f. 1042 | "How a Postage Stamp Sold America the Panama Canal," "A Bear Killer in American Politics," [1924], "Why I saw the Berkshires" (written on the back of letters from Dr. O.L. Schmidt, Chicago, and J.M. Barker, Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives), "Labor Becomes Articulate" |
| f. 1043 | Idress Head, Saint Louis, Historical and Interesting Places, 1909, "Early Methods of Travel," "Early Events in St. Louis History" |
| f. 1044 | "When Governments Fall," 1924, Speech on Italy given to the Pierian Club, Palmyra, Missouri, "Women of the South, and Their Influence on Our Country," "How to Make Democracy Live," 1948 |
| f. 1045 | "In Defense of a Labor Government," "Lady Astor's Portrait and Parliament," "French Thrift Faces Financial Crisis" |
| f. 1046 | Speeches [c.1936] on experiences abroad in 1923, war and peace, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt, "A Summer Outing in England" by Clarence Walworth Alvord, University of Illinois |
| f. 1047-1048 | "Architecture of Rome," Notes, pictures, and miscellaneous materials on Italy |
| f. 1049 | Notes for speech to D.A.R., 1934, on experiences abroad |
| f. 1050 | Notes on Theodore Roosevelt, "Lord Charnwood's Comparison of Lincoln and Roosevelt," Lord Charnwood letter, December 24, 1923 |
| f. 1051 | "The Lost Ring." "A Quirk of Fate." "Bishops to Open Johanna Couthcut's Box." Notes: Experiences abroad; government aid. |
| f. 1052 | "The Land and Agriculture in Missouri," Notes on history of Illinois, advertising articles |
| f. 1053 | Peace writings |
| f. 1054 | Review of Anna Karenina |
| f. 1055 | "Bibliography of Missouri" |
| f. 1056 | Idress Head, "The Missouri Historical Society" |
| f. 1057 | "Preface." "The Roosevelt Myth." |
| f. 1058 | "Archibald Rutledge" [a plantation melody] |
| f. 1059 | "Good Manners" |
| f. 1060 | "Do You Want to be a Bird Man" |
| f. 1061 | "Pottery" |
| f. 1062-1076 | Miscellaneous notes, manuscripts and clippings, c. 1900s-1930s. |
| f. 1077-1090 | Miscellaneous notes, manuscripts and clippings, c. 1910-1930s |
| f. 1091-1092 | Miscellaneous notes, manuscripts and clippings, c. 1920-1930s |
| f. 1093-1100 | Miscellaneous notes, manuscripts and clippings, c. 1940s-1950s. |
| f. 1101-1104 | Miscellaneous notes, manuscripts and clippings, c. 1950s-1960s |
The Topical file includes book reviews by Idress including reviews she wrote for her husband in 1927 when he was too ill to complete them, copied letters of the Pollard and Sheldon families dated from 1851 to 1871, and course notes.
| f. 1105-1107 | Armistice, 1918 |
| f. 1108-1109 | Aviation |
| f. 1110 | Book reviews by Idress Head Alvord (includes reviews she wrote for her husband in 1927 when he was too ill to complete them) |
| f. 1111-1112 | Christmas |
| f. 1113-1124 | Course notes |
| f. 1125 | Daniel Dewey-- Article based on copied letters, 1812-1814 |
| f. 1126-1134 | Great Britain; British politics |
| f. 1135 | Griggs Museum ["Million Dollar Adobe Hut," by Marion Clark] |
| f. 1136 | Hyde Park |
| f. 1137 | League of Nations |
| f. 1138-1139 | Lend Lease Bill, 1941 |
| f. 1140 | Letters, 1851-1871--Pollard and Sheldon families |
| f. 1141 | Missouri |
| f. 1142-1148 | The Nation (Articles, 1925-1927). See Also: f. 1103 |
| f. 1149 | [Roosevelt, Theodore] "A National Monument," "A Monument to Roosevelt" |
| f. 1150-1151 | Segregation; blacks |
| f. 1152-1155 | Trips Abroad |
| f. 1156 | Wagon trains |
| f. 1157 | Wives of Missouri governors |
| f. 1158-1160 | Women and the home |
| f. 1161 | Youth |
The Printed materials subseries includes fiction stories; magazine articles and pamphlets concerning the Civil War, the South, and World War I.
| f. 1162 | Laurence M. Larson, "John Scolvus" |
| f. 1163 | "The Sons of Old Scotland in America" |
| f. 1164 | Henry Kitchell Webster, "The Real Adventure" |
| f. 1165 | "The Real Tom Sawyer" |
| f. 1166-1172 | "Mark Twain's Autobiography,"Sunday Magazine of the St. Louis Republic, October 1907 |
| f. 1173-1177 | Pamphlets--Speeches |
| f. 1173 | General J.C. Smuts, May 15 and October 4, 1917 |
| f. 1174 | David Hunter Miller, "The New Administration," May 1921 |
| f. 1175-1176 | Thomas J. Walsh and Samuel M. Shortridge, U.S. Senate, 1924 |
| f. 1177 | Walter F. Lineberger, "...On Narcotic Education," 1925 |
| f. 1178-1180 | Articles from The Forum, 1927 |
| f. 1178 | Roark Bradford, "The River Witch," " Notes on the Negro" |
| f. 1179 | "...Birth Control"; "...Race Prejudice"; "Mexico" |
| f. 1180 | Amos Pinchot, "The Flag and the Dollar" |
| f. 1181 | Some Effects of Woman Suffrage, 1929 | |
| f. 1182 | Bart Kennedy, "The Mississippi," n.d. |
| f. 1183 | "General Robert E. Lee," " Ninety-Seven Years in the White House," Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly, March 1897 |
| f. 1184-1189 | Articles from Century Magazine |
| f. 1184 | Articles on Henry Clay, 1886 |
| f. 1185 | Civil War articles, 1888 |
| f. 1186 | Joel Chandler Harris, "A Conscript's Christmas," December 1890 |
| f. 1187 | "The Confederate Diplomatists & Their Shirt of Nessus," May 1891 |
| f. 1188 | "Treatment of Prisoners at Camp Morton," September 1891 |
| f. 1189 | Civil War articles, January 1893 |
| f. 1190-1195 | Articles |
| f. 1190 | Guy Stanton Ford, "Wollner and the Prussian Religious Edict of 1788, II," 1910 |
| f. 1191 | Winthrop More Daniels, "The Slave Plantation in Retrospect," The Atlantic Monthly, 1911 |
| f. 1192 | Katharine M. True, "The Romantic Voyage of Polly Jefferson," Harper's Magazine, September 1914 |
| f. 1193 | "Marquis de Chambrun, "Personal Recollections of Mr. Lincoln," Scribner's, 1893 |
| f. 1194 | Charles Gayarre, "A Louisiana Sugar Plantation of the Old Regime," Harper's Magazine, March 1887 |
| f. 1195 | Charles Dudley Warner, "The South Revisited," Harper's Magazine, March, 1887 |
| f. 1196 | Eugenie Berthold, Glimpses of Creole Life in Old St. Louis, Missouri Historical Society, 1933 |
| f. 1197 | Pamphlets: Is America A Shylock, 1924; America Awake! Awake!!, 1926 f. 1198J.B. Scott, Judicial Settlement of International Disputes, No. 22, 1915; No. 29 1917 |
| f. 1199 | Rerum Germanicarum, 1878 |
| f. 1200 | "Drittes Buch.," "Annales Altahenses Maiores" | | f. 1201 | E. de Cyon, La Guerre ou La Paix, 1891 |
| f. 1202 | Paris Chamber of Commerce, Facts About the War, 1915 |
| f. 1203 | Selection of Papers found in the Possession of Captain von Papen, London, 1916 |
| f. 1204 | La Nouvelle France, 1916 |
| f. 1205 | Collegiate Anti-Militarism League, War?, 1916 |
| f. 1206 | Our Navy, 1917 |
| f. 1207 | Committee on Public Information, German War Practices, 1917 |
| f. 1208 | Grier's Almanac, 1917 |
| f. 1209 | The German-Bolshevik Conspiracy, October 1918 |
| f. 1210 | Illinois and War, 1918; Wallace Rice, Illinois Centennial Plays: Children of the Civil War and Children in the Great War, 1918 |
| f. 1211 | Joel Henry Greene, Democracy & the College, March 1919 |
| f. 1212 | The Plain Truth, 1920 |
| f. 1213 | Congressional Record, 68th Congress, First Session (European Diplomacy) |
| f. 1214-1215 | Campaign literature, 1920s-1930s, n.d. |
| f. 1216-1220 | Miscellaneous magazine articles and stories, c. 1900s-1920s |
| f. 1221 | Trophies and Decorations of Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, 1933 |
| f. 1222 | "Child Labor Under the Recovery Program," September 1933 |
| f. 1223 | The Living Age, November 1936 (includes published letter of Idress) |
| f. 1224 | National Women's Party; Equal Rights, April 15, 1937 |
| f. 1225 | "Public Opinion," October 1937 |
| f. 1226 | "Can We Look Forward to a Better World?" 1943 |
| f. 1227 | John K. Jessup, America and the Future, 1943 |
| f. 1228 | Manuscript by [Dr. Butler] |
| f. 1229 | Notes for the Guidance of Authors, 1905 |
| f. 1230 | Notes, c. 1920s |
The Newspaper Clippings include clippings about Mrs. Alvord. The remaining clippings are arranged chronologically and cover national and international news, and family and local news.
| f. 1231 | 1909-1957-- clippings about Mrs. Alvord |
| f. 1232 | 1914-1929 |
| f. 1233 | 1930s |
| f. 1234 | 1940-1943 |
| f. 1235 | 1944--International news |
| f. 1236 | 1944-1945--National news |
| f. 1237 | 1944-1946--Family and local news |
| f. 1238 | 1946-1949 |
| f. 1239-1241 | 1950s |
The Organizations subseries contains items related to the social, civic, and historical organizations in which Idress took an active part, and her employment with the Farm Debt Adjustment Unit and the New Mexico WPA.
| f. 1242-1244 | American Association of University Women |
| f. 1245 | The Friday Club |
| f. 1246-1251 | Missouri Agricultural Advisory Council |
| f. 1252 | Missouri Federation of Women's Democratic Clubs, 1957 |
| f. 1253 | Missouri Folklore Society |
| f. 1254-1260 | National Society Magna Charta Dames, 1948-1949, 1952-1956 |
| f. 1261-1265 | Phi Beta Phi sorority |
| f. 1266-1270 | United Daughters of the Confederacy, Missouri Division |
| f. 1271 | The Women's Club of Minneapolis |
| f. 1272 | The Minnesota League of Women Voters |
| f. 1273-1274 | Resettlement Administration, Federal Debt Adjustment Unit |
| f. 1275-1280 | U.S. Work Projects Administration |
| f. 1275 | Division of Women's and Professional Projects |
| f. 1276-1280 | New Mexico Projects |
Personal Papers include diaries; notebooks; notes; political items; a collection of canceled checks, promissory notes and receipts from New Mexico, 1875-1930; a war ration book; memorabilia from England, France, and Italy; campaign literature, notes and posters; college commencement programs; family and genealogical materials; pencil drawings; printed items and personal memorabilia; and a collection of clippings, articles, pamphlets and miscellaneous items relating to the Civil War including the memoirs of A.M. Payne.
| f. 1281 | Central Collegian, October 1891, 1892 |
| f. 1282 | Bulletin of Central College, November, 1927 |
| f. 1283 | Diaries, 1886, 1890s |
| f. 1284 | Letters and miscellaneous, 1890s |
| f. 1285-1292 | Diaries |
| f. 1285 | 1898-1900 |
| f. 1286 | 1901-1914 |
| f. 1287 | 1905 (Summer travel to southern Illinois) |
| f. 1288 | 1913 |
| f. 1289 | 1933 |
| f. 1290 | 1950 |
| f. 1291 | 1954 |
| f. 1292 | 1955
| | f. 1293-1296 | Notebooks |
| f. 1293 | "People I Have Known" |
| f. 1294 | Literature and poetry notes |
| f. 1295 | University of Illinois, Faculty Golf Members; notes on Italian history |
| f. 1296 | Description and cost of decorator items, possibly for the Neal/Alvord Shop |
| f. 1297-1301 | Notes |
| f. 1297 | Introspective notes |
| f. 1298 | c. 1912-1916 |
| f. 1299 | 1913, 19[17]-1925 |
| f. 1300 | 1926, n.d. |
| f. 1301 | Miscellaneous notes, menus and recipes |
| f. 1302-1309 | Miscellaneous material |
| f. 1302 | Collection of canceled checks, promissory notes, receipts from New Mexico, 1875-1930 |
| f. 1303 | Canceled checks and war ration book, 1923-1928, n.d. |
| f. 1304-1308 | Memorabilia from England, France and Italy, 1920s |
| f. 1309 | Certificates and personal memorabilia, 1930s-1940s. Lord Edmond Fitzmaurice funeral program. |
| f. 1310-1314 | Political items |
| f. 1310-1311 | Idress Head Alvord's state senatorial candidacy, 1922 |
| f. 1312 | Campaign notes, 1922 |
| f. 1313 | Presidential election, 1928 |
| f. 1314 | 1921-1956, n.d. |
| f. 1315-1321 | Family and genealogical materials |
| f. 1315 | John Wallace Head biographical material and restoration of the Head graveyard. |
| f. 1316 | Correspondence, labor accounts--Head graveyard. Notes on Head genealogy. Medical notes. Clippings on Riverscene and descriptive sale inventory of items purchased by Mrs. Alvord. |
| f. 1317 | "Recollections"by Alma Elizabeth Beasley. Original pencil drawings. |
| f. 1318-1320 | Head, Lewis, Wallace, Price, and Beasley families. Alvord family. Personal property inventories |
| f. 1321 | Alvord family |
| f. 1322-1324 | Miscellaneous |
| f. 1322 | Baptist Female College Commencement Program, 1860; commencement picture, Univ. of Illinois, 1910; W.P. Trent, "Dr. Eggleston on American Origins," The Forum, January 1897; recipe; original pencil drawing; notes on quotes from books; menus, 1954. |
| f. 1323-1324 | Manuscripts, notes, printed items |
| f. 1325-1347 | Printed materials |
| f. 1325-1328 | Commencement programs |
| f. 1329 | John Carter Brown Library Annual Report, 1914-1915 |
| f. 1330 | "Estelbrook Farm, Palmyra, Missouri," 1920 |
| f. 1331 | English garden catalogs, c. 1920s; garden book list |
| f. 1332 | University of Minnesota, Bulletin, 1935 |
| f. 1333 | Denny Reunion, 1936 |
| f. 1334 | Missouri Historical Society, "Diary of William Campbell, 1830," 1936 |
| f. 1335 | Roll of Cincinnati Society |
| f. 1336 | Missouri Gazette, 1808 [reprint] |
| f. 1337 | "Address of William R. Manning,"1914--Monroe Doctrine |
| f. 1338-1342 | 1920s |
| f. 1343 | London |
| f. 1344 | Washington, D.C. |
| f. 1345 | 1940s |
| f. 1346-1347 | Miscellaneous, 1900s-1960s, n.d. |
| f. 1348 | Brief for training in function design; notes on municipal government, c. 1940s |
| f. 1349-1355 | Collection of materials relating to the Civil War |
| f. 1349 | Newspaper clippings, 1862, 1874, n.d. |
| f. 1350 | Richmond Times Dispatch, 1922; article on Sterling Price, 1950 |
| f. 1351 | Letter of Miss Eleanora Price McClelland and memoirs of A.M. Payne on the Battle of Pea Ridge. Clippings and notes. |
| f. 1352 | "Second Annual Report of the Director of the Department or Archives and History of the State of Mississippi," 1903 |
| f. 1353 | "The Palmyra Massacre." |
| f. 1354 | Articles from The Outlook, 1898; clippings and miscellaneous |
| f. 1355 | Hamp B. Watts, "The Babe of the Company" [Captain Bill Anderson's Company of Guerrillas] |
Photographs are of family and friends including the Alvord, Wallace, and Head families; the Jefferson Club of St. Louis at Monticello, 1901; aviators and planes, 1917; historical documents and letters; travel scenes in Europe and possibly North Africa, c. 1920s; miscellaneous scenes and buildings. There are printed copies of Civil War photographs, and scenes of Rome and Europe. A photograph album of Genevieve Alvord, c. 1908, contains images of Genevieve and her young friends in Illinois. See also the scrapbooks in the Volumes series for additional photographs of Genevieve and her college days at the University of Illinois.
| f. 1356 | Alvord family |
| f. 1357-1358 | Clarence W. Alvord, English scenes, Idress Alvord |
| f. 1359 | Wallace family |
| f. 1360 | Head family |
| f. 1361 | Family and friends |
| f. 1362 | Miscellaneous: Figurehead of ship Missouri. Jefferson Club of St. Louis, 1901. Aviation photographs, 1917. Muldavia Hospital. Florida scenes. Sol Smith Russell home. |
| f. 1363 | Photographs of lithographs on canceled checks, receipts; Chick, Brown and Company letters and itemized receipts, 1867-1881. |
| f. 1364 | Portraits of famous men. Photographs of historical documents, Kaskaskia, 1779, and 1791 letter. |
| f. 1365 | Autographed picture of Semple McPherson; men's portraits |
| f. 1366 | Engraving of Battle of Wilson's Creek. Printed copies of Civil War photographs. |
| f. 1367 | Scenes of Rome |
| f. 1368 | European and North African scenes, c. 1920s. Italian scenes and interiors. |
| f. 1369 | Photogravures, Philadelphia. Unidentified pictures of campus buildings |
| f. 1370 | Photograph Album of Genevieve Alvord, c. 1908-1910 |
| f. 1371 | Architectural drawings--Alpha Phi Sorority House, Columbia, MO |
| f. 1372 | Drawings by M. Leman, c. 1925 |
Printed materials are dated from the 1890s through the 1920s and include books lists and catalogs, maps, programs, sheet music, travel brochures and pamphlets; and bulletins, pamphlets and miscellaneous items related to the League of Nations, Missouri, railroads, St. Louis, ships, and World War I. An incomplete London Times "History of the War" is included.
| f. 1373 | Archives--Alabama, 1904-1907 |
| f. 1374 | Articles, 1898, 1926, n.d. |
| f. 1375 | Books lists and catalogs |
| f. 1376 | List and Index of the Publications of the Royal Historical Society, 1871-1924 and of the Camden Society, 1840-1897 |
| f. 1377 | Les Fetes du Monument Laval, 1908 |
| f. 1378-1379 | Catalogs |
| f. 1380 | Maps |
| f. 1381-1383 | Ballet, concert, and theatre programs |
| f. 1384 | Sheet music |
| f. 1385-1386 | Travel brochures and pamphlets |
| f. 1387-1409 | Bulletins, pamphlets and miscellaneous |
| f. 1387 | Colorado Chautauqua Bulletin, 1917 |
| f. 1388 | Rice Institute Pamphlets, 1916-1918 |
| f. 1389 | The Co-ordinate College at Charlottesville |
| f. 1390-1391 | League of Nations |
| f. 1392 | Missouri |
| f. 1393-1394 | Railroads |
| f. 1395 | St. Louis, 1903-1921 |
| f. 1396 | Ships--Passenger lists and miscellaneous |
| f. 1397-1409 | World War I |
| f. 1410-1411 | Miscellaneous |
| v. 1-2 | Mississippi Valley Historical Review--Correspondence, 1912-1917. Typed copies of Mississippi Valley Historical Review correspondence, 1912-1917. Correspondence from volume 2 has been placed in folders. Plans for publication of the Review are documented in the 1912-1914 letters. The conflict between Dunbar Roland, the American Historical Association, and the Mississippi Valley Historical Association are in the 1915-1917 letters. |
| v. 3 | Record of Prisoners and Enrolled Missouri Militia regiments, Gratiot Street Prison, St. Louis, 1862-1864. A record of prisoners sent to McDowell College (Gratiot Street) Prison, September 9, 1862 - September 15,1863, and to camp in October 1864; absentee lists for various regiments of the Enrolled Missouri Militia; lists of men "sent forward" in October 1864; and other data. The book belonged to Brigadier General E.C. Pike, 1st Division, Enrolled Missouri Militia. |
| v. 4 | Missouri Militia Records, 1862-1864. Records include stations of Missouri State Militia and Missouri Volunteer troops; commissions, resignations, deceases, muster out, and sundries. |
| v. 5 | Missouri Militia, District of St. Louis, Office of Muster and Inspection--General and Special Orders, December 1861- May 1862. |
| v. 6 | Scrapbook of Idress Head Alvord, c. 1860-1890s. A gift from Betti Head Beasley, contains clippings of poems and articles about the Civil War, obituaries and notes on the family; |
| v. 7 | Scrapbook of Idress Head Alvord, c. 1896-1903. Clippings on topics of interest to Mrs. Alvord. |
| v. 8 | Scrapbook of Idress Head Alvord, c. 1914. Clippings on "Historical Sketches of St. Louis" by Idress Head published in the St. Louis Republic. |
| v. 9 | Scrapbook of Genevieve Alvord, c. 1912-1916. Kept while a student at the University of Illinois, contains photographs, sorority and fraternity items, letters and miscellany. |
| Albert, William Francis | Boyer, Isabelle | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Aubuchon, Antoine | Thomure, Aselie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Aubuchon, Antoine | Calliot, Euphrasie | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Aubuchon, Antoine | Maurice, Odile | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Aubuchon, Antoine | Pepin, Marie Louise | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Bauman, Joseph | Harris, Louisa Belle | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Bahr, Martin | Guethle, Sophia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Bayer, Vincent | Roddler, Elisabeth | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Beard, William | Labruyere, Mary Eulalie | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Beauchamp, Michel | Grenier, Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Beltrami, Antoine | DuRocher, Emily | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Bequette, Jean Baptiste | Gornon, Louise | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Bisch, Theodore | St. Vrain, Mary | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Bogy, Charles | McKnight, Cornelia Julian | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Bogy, Joseph | Valle, Eleonore | 1827 | f. 6 |
| Boyer, | Majot, Rosa | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Boyer, Felix | Pullan, Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Boyer, Jean | Thomur, Marie | 1841 | f. 20 |
| Boyer, John Baptiste | [Alentier], Rebecca | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Boyer, Pierre | Govro, Zelina | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Brugieres, Alexandre | Calliot, Rosalie | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Buate, Louis | Larose, Marie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Buate, Louis Bequette | Lalumandiere, Julie | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Buehler, Herman | Roth, Amalia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Buhler, Charles | Schaaf, Mathilde | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Cadran, Lurent | Grenier, Mary | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Caillot, Antoine | Beauvais, Marie Therese | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Caillot, Jean Noel | Placette, Marie | 1834 | f. 14 |
| Caillot, John Noel | Caillot, Melanie | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Caillot, Paul | Caillot, Mary Anne | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Caillotte, Jean Noel | Placette, Marie | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Caron, Francois | Charlesville, Mathilda | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Caron, Joseph | Calliot, Melanie | 1830 | f. 9, |
| Carron, Joseph | Drury, Clementine | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Carron, Louis | Roussin, Hyacinthe | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Cerre, Antoine | St. Gemme, Elisabeth | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Chardin, Pierre | Govro, Elisabeth | 1836 | f. 15 |
| Chrisewell, John | Gornon, Marie | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Clark, Henry L. | Bogy, Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Conrad, Peter | Itt, Mary Ann | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Cromer, Francis | Pfeifer, Catharine | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Cromer, Xavier | Fitzkam, Pauline | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Daguet, Piere | Janis, Marie Jeannette | n.d. | f. 4 |
| David, Edward | Janis, Emely | 1842 | f. 21 |
| David, Julien | Janis, Philippine | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Degagne, Alexis | Ding, Mary Regina Lucinda | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Delassus, Ceran Evariste | Beauvais, Eleonore | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Delassus, Leon | Elliott, Mary Louisa | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Delcomane, Louis Joseph | Govro, Marie | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Delunay, Michel Benjamin | Thomure, Odile | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Detchemendy, Clement | Durocher, Marie Louise | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Dorlac, Peter | LaRosa, Odile | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Drury, Clement | Cason, Marle | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Dufour, Theophile | Tessero, Julie | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Eckenfels, Severin | Kiefer, Catharine | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Eichenlaub, Gervais | Jogerst, Catherine | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Ekenfels, Andrew | Heusler, Sophia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Falk, George | Huber, Catherine | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Fallert, Francis C. | Schnur, Gertrude | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Friedman, William | Gegg, Mary Ann | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Geck, Francis Xavier | Grither, Marie Anne | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Giesler, Valantin | Doll, Mary Ann | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Girard, Henri | Griffard, Christian Pelagie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Girard, Rubin | Eubank, Charlotte | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Gisi, August | Echle, Mary Ann | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Gornon, Joseph | Maurice, Celeste | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Goron, Louis | Govro, Elisabeth | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Govro, Adolf | Labruyere, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Govro, Antoine | Larose, Marie | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Govro, Etienne | Calliot, Odille | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Govro, Jean Baptiste | Simonau, Julie | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Govro, Xavier | Maurice, Angelique | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Greninger, Henry | N , Margaritha | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Grieshaber, Isidorus | Panter, Maria Anna | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Griffard, Charles | Govro, Eulalie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Griffard, Louis | Heber, Marianna | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Janis, Edmond | St. Gemme, Pelagie | 1827 | f. 6 |
| Jogerst, Bernard | Hermann, Marie | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Hampton, Andrew E. | Gornon, Constance | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Hanlon, William | Thomas, Elisabeth C. | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Hays, Felipe | Gegg, Catherine | n.d. | f.. 4 |
| Heberly, Nicholas | Griffard, Marcellete | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Heberly, Thomas | Glvan, Catherine | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Heck, David | Wingard, Mary Catherine | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Herman, Nicholas | Phoff, Theresia | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Herzog, Franz | Polack, Carolina | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Hoog, Thomas | Grieshaber, Anastasie | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Horine, Thomas M. | James, Elizabeth | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Huck, Florian | Fisher, Mary | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Hurst, Isidor | Gegg, Theresia | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Janis, Henry | Leclere, Odile | 1829 | f. 8 |
| Janis, Henry | Cerre, Emelie | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Janis, Louis | Thomure, Euphemie | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Janis, Pierre Antoine | Thomure, Mathilde | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Jockerest, Laurenz | Grieshaber, Josephine | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Jockerest, Michael | Bahr, Caecila | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Jockerst, Bernard | Scheerer, Emerentia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Jockerst, Joseph | Siebert, Theresia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Jokerst, John | Siebert, Ehersia | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Jones, George D. | Gregoire, Josephine | 1829 | f. 8 |
| Kauffman, Joseph | Palmer, Louisa | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Kempf, Antony | Moser, Mary Louise | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Kempf, Simon | Neff, Marguerite [widow Beyer] | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Kirchner, Laurentius | Bassler, Regina | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Koenig, Ambrose | Winkler, sophie | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Kohler, Simon | Guethle, Jeann | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Kraas, George | Siebert, Maria Anna | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Kraft, Emile | Detchemende, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Kroeber, Joseph | Halbeisen, Carolina | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Labourin, Pierre | Pepin, Marie Louise | 1827 | f. 6 |
| Labruyere, Antoine | Thomure, Pelagie | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Labruyere, Bernard | Boyer, Marie | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Labruyere, Gongaga | Govro, Judit | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Labruyere, Jules | Moris, | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Labruyere, Julien | Buatte, Rosalie Bequette | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Labruyere, Louis | Govereau, Felicite | 1827 | f. 6 |
| Labruyere, Moses | Mauroze, Mary | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Labruyere, Paul | Majot, Mary | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Labruyere, Pierre | Roussin, Marie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Labuche, Michel | Cavalier, Odile | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Lachance, Louis | Govro, Elizabet | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Lagrave, Antoine | Valle, Marie | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Lahaye, Hilaire | Gerard, Mry | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Lahaye, Jean Baptiste | Winston, Rosalie | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Lahaye, Vincent | Aubuchon, Josephine | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Lalumendiere, Antoine | Thomure, Julie | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Lalumendiere, Antoine | Charleville, Marie | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Lalumendiere, Basile | Thomure, Marcellite | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Lalumendiere, Basile | Cork, Elisa Jane | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Lalumendiere, Francois | Thomure, Marie | 1836 | f. 15 |
| Lalumendiere, Louis | Boyer, Pelagie | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Langelier, [T.] B. | Lalumandiere, Judit | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Laplante, Francois | Range, Elisa | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Laplante, Louis | Cantrell, Sarah | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Larose, Alexis | Buate, Odile | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Larose, Alexis | Thomur, Elisabeth | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Larose, Baptiste | Simoneau, Melonia | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Larose, Henry | Thomur, Martha Clemence | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Larose, Jean Baptiste | Boyer, Marie | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Larose, Louis | Buate, Emerante | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Larose, Louis | Pepin, Marie Elisabeth | 1839 | f. 21 |
| Larose, Louis | Thomure, Emmelienne | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Laster, Ruben | Govro, Eliza | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Lecompte, Eloy | Bogy, Melanie | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Leon, Joseph | Labruyere, Leocadia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Leseieur, Francis Valle | Lognion, Eliza | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Levard, John Baptist | Gornon, Eulaly | 1841 | f. 20 |
| Levrard, Joseph | Govnon, Emelie Juliette | 1843 | f. 22 |
| McLain, Edward | Simoneau, Hurore | 1835 | f. 14 |
| MacLane, Francis | Simoneau, Elisabeth | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Maurice, Jean Baptist | Buate, Emelie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Maxwell, Ferdinand | Allen, Caroline M. | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Menard, Michel B. | Leclere, Marie Anne | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Meyers, William | Shannon, Suzan | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Michael | Therese [free mulatoes] | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Miller, Andrew | Litterst, Victoria | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Misse, Phillippe | Proquet, Adele | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Missig, John | Fisher, Catherine | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Montgomery, Stephan | Friedmann, Sophia | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Moore, James | Mariah Cousins | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Moreau, Jean | Courtois, Marie | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Moreau, Pierre | Simonau, Marie | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Mueller, Anthony | [Schilli], Mary Ann | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Naeger, Germanus | Seitz, Josepha | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Niebur, Francis | Brucher, Afra | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Obuchon, Auguste | Thomure, Julie | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Obuchon, Basile | Govro, Marie | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Odonnell, Daniel | Hughes, Sarah | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Oliver, William | Deutchemandy, Emily | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Palmer, Henry | Hurst, Theresia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Palmer, Joseph | Schweiger, Agatha | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Pepin, Louis Lachance | Bequette, Catherine | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Peser, Peter | Weber, Rosine | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Pettit, Willima Mc. D. | Prentice, Elisabetha | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Pfaff, Antony | Palmer, Louise | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Pratte, Augusta | Taniz, Eliza | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Pratte, Bernard Sebastien | Coffman, Sarah Jane | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Range, Francois | Thomure, Eulalie | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Range, Francois | Winston, Melanie Euphrasie | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Range, Joseph | Janis, Julie Reine | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Rehm, Simon | Huber, Mary Ann | 1843 | f. 18 |
| Rihm, Joseph | Kempf, Christina | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Robert, Francois | Govro, Cecile | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Roddler, Valentin | Isemann, Mary | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Roth, Basilius | Sipp, Ann Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Roth, Francis Ignatius | Schweigert, Magdalena | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Roth, Ignatius | Hurst, Magdelena | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Roth, John | Friedmann, Catherine | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Roth, John G. | Fallert, Theresia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Roth, Joseph | Schweigert, Mary Ann | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Roussin, Francois | Charlesville, Marie Louise | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Roussin, Louis | Thomure, Marie | 1847 | f. 16 |
| Royer, John | Langelier, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Rozier, Fermin A. | Valle, Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Rozier, Francois | Valle, Marie Louise Zoe | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Ruth, Christian | Huck, Genovefa | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Sacher, Laurence | Kirchner, Regina | 1843 | f. 22 |
| St. Gemme, Victor P. | Cerre, Odile | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Schmidt, George | Huber, Theresa | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Schwarz, Mathias | Geisler, Elisabeth | 1828 | f. 23 |
| Sebastien, Moses | Maze, Nancy | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Seckinger, Erhart | Mussig, Ernstina | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Seitz, Michael | Naeger, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Seitz, Thomas | Grieshaber, Mary | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Sieber, Charles Hloysuis | Hurst, Mary Ann | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Siebert, Carolus Aloysius | Kempf, Theresia | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Simonau, Joseph | Morris, Sintha | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Simpson, Ignatius | Simoneau, Marie Anne | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Simonau, Paul | Campbell, Mary | 1827 | f. 6 |
| Simoneau, Pierre | Govro, Judith | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Schmidt, George | Huber, Theresa | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Smith, Francis [Idalgo] | Watson, Mary Jane | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Spalding, Bennett | Placet, Pelagie | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Stelting, August | Friedmann, Eleonara | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Storkle, John | Rehm, Magdalen | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Stuppy, Jacob | Willwohl, Elisabeth | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Tanez, Elie | Diel, Adele | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Thomur, Francis | Janis, Therese | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Thomur, Gabriel | Labruyere, Mary | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Thomur, Joseph | Menard, Mary Elizabeth | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Thomur, Joseph | Govro, Desile | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Thomure, Charles | Pepin, Marie Louise | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Thomure, Jean Baptiste | Labruyere, Melanie | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Thomure, Jean Baptiste | Larose, Susanne | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Thomure, Jean Baptiste | Collmann, Emerente | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Thomure, Joseph | Danny, Odille | 1836 | f. 15 |
| Thomure, Joseph | Bross, Priscilla | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Thomur, Louis | Labroyere, Merante | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Urich, John | Ritch, Therese | 1854 | f. 28 |
| Valle, Charles | Laplante, Pauline | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Valle, Charles | Mergler, Eleonora | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Valle, Franes | De Carlegan, Mary Anne Antoinette | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Valle, Jean Baptise, Jr. | Janis, Pelagie | 1829 | f. 8 |
| Vila, Barthelemy | Vilmere, Antoinette | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Villars, Antoine | Aubuchon, Marie | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Vilmer, Joseph | Brugiers, Antoinette | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Vogt, Pantaleon | Moser, Catharine | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Waters, William | Sargeant, Adelina | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Wilder, Henry | Jogerst, Rosine | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Wilson, Samuel | Scott, Emily Josephine | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Winston, Antoine | Range, Marie Louise | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Wolk, Philipp | Siebert, Catharine | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Yemen, Ludwig | King, Victoria | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Zeigler, Sebastian | Hoffman, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Adams, Hamilton | Sweazy, Jane | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Adams, Lee | McPike, Louisa | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Aikman, William C. | Hollerman, Elizabeth | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Andre, Damien | Frichet, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Bagley, [T.] W. | Jackson, Mary V. | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Baird, Edmund B. | Fravey, Lavinia | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Baird, John | Kenner, Lucinda | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Bassler, Peter | Zelinger, Elena | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Beal, Charles | Faulkner, Carolina | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Becquette, Antoine | Dufour, Louisa | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Bell, Austin | Beard, Manerva | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Bell, Austin | Strasbourg, Mrs. Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Beohtre, Friedrich | Bauer, Catherine | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Becquett, Joseph | Wooldridge, Letha | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Bequett, Francis Baptist | Boyer, Odile | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Blackwell, Jesse | Crane, Elizabeth | 1855 | f, 28 |
| Blair, Jesse | Hopings, Sarah Carr | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Boid, Jackson | Coker, Caroline | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Boid, Mattison | [L ] , Metill | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Boland, George W. | Harrison, Mary E. | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Boland, Peter | Hunt, Artemezia | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Bowlin, Rowan | Campbell, Rebeccah | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Boyd, George | McDaniel, Rebecca | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Boyer, Barie | Smith, Winifrid | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Boyer, Israel | Beauchamp, Mary Jane | 1865 | f. 33 |
| Boyer, Zavier | Maurice, Julia | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Brown, Walter L. | Chandler, Mary Elizabeth | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Brown, William | Beard, Susan | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Bryan, Thomas | Griffeth, Louisa | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Burks, John | Murphey, Minerva | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Burnley, Joel | McFaddin, Dolly | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Burnett, Francis | Bell, Barbara Helen | 1865 | f. 33 |
| Byington, John | Brady, Pollyan | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Camden, Benjamin | Tubbs, Sarah Ann | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Campbell, Samuel | Godair, Clotilde ( Mrs.) | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Caron, Adolph | Lawrence, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Caron, Jean Baptiste | Charleville, Melonie | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Carro, Ferdenand | Bono, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Champion, Bennat | Ivey, Terjah | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Church, Samuel M. | Perry, Sally | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Cimino, Francis | Crisall, Mary Jane | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Clardy, Erasmus S. | Ott, Mary Ott | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Clardy, Johnson B. | McFarland, James | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Clark, William | Dun, Izabel | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Clarwell, Shadrick | Turley, Louisa | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Clement, former slave | Constance, former slave | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Clemmens, Robert | Pinkly, Maria | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Closkey, William | Nole, Elisebeth | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Cofer, Larkin | Burns, Eliza | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Cofer, Mordecai | Patterson, Sinthey | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Coffman, Joseph | Madison, Emely | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Conor, Nicholas | Watson, Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Coots, Edward | Hipes, Elizabeth | 1848 | f.23 |
| Cox, Daniel B. | Meggitt, Emily | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Cosons, William H. | Robinson, Rachel B. | 1854 | f. 27 |
| Counts, Samuel Garrett | McFarland, Missouri Ann | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Courtois, Henry | Frery, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Cozens, james C. | Levenworth, Mary Ann | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Danieley, James | Warmach, Mary Ann | 1854 | f. 27 |
| Darrow, John R. | Keeton, Hannah M. | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Daugherty, Thomas | Bryan, Julia | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Davis, William | Danley, Nancy | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Degonia, Batiste | Dickeson, [ ] | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Delvy, Andrew | Garrison, Reziah | 1833 | f. 12 |
| [Deroin], Nicholas Hebert | Boutillet, Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| [Dethshear], John | Crisp, Jane | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Dilman, John | Evians, Judah | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Dorlac, Louis | Boyer, Clotilde | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Drane, Stanford, Thomas | [Tarnlin], Eliza | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Dutton, Asael M. | Akins, Harriet | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Edeline, Jacques | [Louys], Elizabeth | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Edwards, Samuel | Lunsford, Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Elders, Lafaett | Whitt, Margaret | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Elders, Thomas | Lows, Lucy A. | 1854 | f. 27 |
| Evans, Tiba | Kenner, Elizabeth | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Fergason, Albert | Thacker, Nancy Elizabeth | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Flamm, Cristian Fredrec | Rozier, Felicity | 1841 | f. 20 |
| Fleig, Thomas | Voght, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Fletcher, Elijah | Reynolds, Betsy Matilda | 1836 | f. 15 |
| Gardner, Alenison | Moore, Mary Ann | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Geisler, George | Kenner, Saless | 1865 | f. 33 |
| Gesler, John | Heish, Sabina | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Gilbert, Martin | Martin, Amanda | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Glandon, Victor | Mise, Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Glover, Jefferson | Brown, Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Godair, John B. | Tucker, Mary Elizabeth | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Greenwalt, William | Vaughan, Rebecca Jane | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Goss, Benjamen | Swartz, Lutrilia | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Govero, Henry | Rhine, Mary Ida | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Guittar, Samuel | Byington, Rachel | 149 | f. 24 |
| Gurno, Louis | Paraduar, Judah | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Haddoc, John | Cumings, Louisa J. | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Hale, George B. | Strickland, Mary Jane | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Hallmark, George | Hart, Agnes | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Hammer, Enos | Barton, Sally | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Harp, Joseph H. | Silvey, Manurva J. | 1861 | f. 30 |
| Hart, Jacob | Klein, Ida | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Hart, William A. | Ragsdale, Martha | 1865 | f. 33 |
| Harris, Robert G. | Byington, Harriet | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Hartley, Wiliam | Johnson, Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Hase, John | Chandler, Roddy | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Head, William | Lunglebay, Susan | 1837 | f. 15 |
| Henderson, Stokley | Blloom, Carthrine | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Henn, Anthony | McKnelly, Mary | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Hertes, Charles | Kreither, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Hews, James | Resinger, Julian | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Higins, Josiah | Baugh, Francis R. | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Hinkle, William John | Rickar, Margaret | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Hipes, William | Bequette, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Hogan, Greenville | Mounce, Tilitha | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Hogan, James C.C. | Boak, Margaret c. | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Holms, Robert B. | McFarland, Sarah C. | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Holnes, Thomas H. | Maddin, Rachel | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Horn, Dudley | Hughs, Amanda | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Horn, Thomas | Level, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| House, John | Turly, Telith | 1834 | f. 13 |
| House, William | Wilson, Emely | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Hughes, John | Jarrell, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Hughs, Jefferson C. | Hoback, Nancy J. | 1856 | f. 29 |
| Hughs, Samuel | Hamor, Martha | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Hunt, Johnthan B. | Alexander, Elizabeth | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Humphreys, Joseph S. | Oklass, Elizabeth Ann | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Hurdus, James | Tillard, Louisa Jane | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Jackson, George E. | McClannahan, Catherine | 1817 | f. 5 |
| Jackson, Uel | Hunt, Rebecca | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Klein, Augustus | [Day], Catherine | 1855 | f. 25 |
| Kohm, Frank | Klein, Bertha | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Frederick, Charles | Meggett, Mary Jane | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Jennings, Elisha M. | Elders, Mary E. | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Jennings, Woodson | Herrod, Nancy | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Jinnings, Samuel C. | Jackson, Lydiann | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Johnson, Henry L. | Searcy, Milly | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Johnson, John C. | Daguet, Theotiste | 1834 | f. 13 |
| K[ ], Hansaud | Duvall, Ophelia | 1851 | f. 26 |
| Kempf, George | Manly, Merhthilde | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Ketson, William | Miller, Nancy | 1834 | f. 13 |
| King, Baker | Dale, Julian c. | 1836 | f. 15 |
| Kinner, John Hughes | | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Labba, Ambrose | Bets, Ann | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Labruyere, Felix | Labruyere, Marie Filomenne | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Labruyere, Ignace Lubien | Aubuchon, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Lachance, John | Bequette, Pelagie | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Lalumendiere, Fabien | Thomur, Marguerite Euphemie | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Lalumandiere, John Baptisste | Lalumandiere, Mrs. Mary | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Lasource, [Narsis] | Vansickles, Marthey M. | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Lambert, John a. | Macley, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Lambert, William R. | Silvey, Anna E. | 1865 | f. 33 |
| [Laws], Silas S. | Counts, Margret | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Lemons, Loyd | Winters, Demyra | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Levenworth, Ralph B. | Owsley, Sarah Ann | 1849 | f. 24 |
| McClanahan, Spicer | Carlisle, Sarah | s1849 | f. 24 |
| McClennahan, Madison | Frechoux, Mary Virginia | 1833 | f. 12 |
| McCleniham, Michael | Sebastian, Amanda | 1842 | f. 21 |
| McDowel, William W. | Mayberry, Mahala J. | 1850 | f. 25 |
| McFarland, Jesse | Boyd, Tomsey Elizabeth | 1864 | f. 32 |
| McHenry, Silas | Randolph, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| McMullin, Samuel | Tanner, Mary Ann | 1863 | f. 31 |
| McNutt, George | Swink, Sarah | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Marten, James D. | Randolph, Harriet | 1865 | f. 33 |
| Martin, William L. | Lalumendiere, Emely | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Matlack, William Henry | Servant, Lucretia | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Maurice, Louis | Langelier, Mary | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Miller, James F. | Reedy, Eliza Jane | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Morgan, Silas | Bogy, Sarey E. | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Morris, Alexander | Larant, Elizabeth | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Morris, James | Berry, Mary Ann | 1836 | f. 15 |
| Morrow, John | Eaglebarger, Eunity | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Mudd, Edward | Talbot, Elizabeth | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Munch, Nicholass | Missig, Theressee | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Murry, James | Thomure, Mary | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Myers, John | Palmer, Jane | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Noland, Samuel | Evans, Lydia | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Owsley, Franklin C. | Thompson, Eliza | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Perido, John | Moro, Elizabeth | n.d. | f. 4 |
| Petes, Joshua | Stone, Mary | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Pinkly, Charles | Morrison Delila | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Pinkston, William | Ricard, Elizabeth | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Porter, Robert | Totten, Nancy Jane | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Porter, William | McMullen, Rebecca | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Porton, Felix | [Berry], Martha Ann | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Pullon, George W. | Byington, Annis | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Ragley, Richard | Anderson, Mary C. | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Reed, Peter | Patric, Christina | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Reeder, James | Cragget, Elisabeth | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Reyatt, Frederick | Akins, Nancy | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Resinger, Alfred | Covington, Mary | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Reynolds, Micager | Cofer, Matilda | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Reynolds, Richard | Bateman, Polly Ann | 1834 | f. 13 |
| Rickart, Samuel | Slate, Elisabeth | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Rigdon, James A. | Kirchner, Josephine | 1835 | f. 14 |
| Robillard | Mueteer, Anna | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Robinson, Francis | Web, Elizabeth | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Rowe, George | Patterson, Martha | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Rozier, Felix | Valle, Louisa | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Rutledge, Charles C. | Johnson, Tempa Ann | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Sargent, Edmund | Brown, nancy Jane | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Schiller, Joseph | Jokerst, Marianne | 1863 | f. 31 |
| Schnarr, Gregoire | Williams, Julia | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Schuler, Jacob | Eissenberg, Marianna | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Scott, George | Slinkert, Elizabeth | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Scott, William C. | Mead, Louisa | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Seals, James | Gossett, Guley Ann | 1865 | f. 33 |
| Sebaston, Eddin | Cousins, Nancy | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Segesaw, George | Perre, Fanny | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Shaw, Adoniram | Whetstine, Catharine | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Shaw, Thomas | Cross, Mary J. | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Shepherd, William H. | Laws, Martha | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Sievre, L. Bte. | Lachance, Mary Elizabeth Catiot | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Skaggs, James | Holcomb, Hanah | 1830 | f. 9 |
| Slagle, Samuel | Evans, Elisabeth | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Smith, Hiram | Boyer, Maront | 1848 | f. 23 |
| Smith, William | Laws, Matilda | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Sparrow, Warren | Geer, Ann W. | 1842 | f. 21 |
| Staab, Philipp | Karcher, Carolina | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Statenbocker, Peter | Hermann, Louisa R. | 1868 | f. 34 |
| Stephens, John P. | Donaldson, Margarett | 1833 | f. 12 |
| Strasburg, Herman J. | Sims, Polly | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Strasburg, William H. | Lalumendiere, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Stressburgh, Herman J. | Baird, Maryann | 1839 | f. 18 |
| Sullikar, William | Lamare, Martha | 1838 | f. 17 |
| Tanner, William H. H. | Boyd, Elizabeth N. | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Thomur, Louis | Vansickles, Sarah | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Thomure, Alexis | Hughes, Mellie Ann | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Thomure, Levy | Ranger, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Thurman, George | Vandiver, Mary | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Tinnin, John | Hays, Julia M. | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Tomison, Carel | Wallace, Nancy | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Totterson, El[ius] | Anderson, Elizabeth | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Trenholz, Ernst | Klemmer, Margaret | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Tucker, John | Ashley, Nancy | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Turley, Lot | Brady, Nancy | 1836 | f. 15 |
| [Tyler], John | Gatch, Adaline | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Underwood, John Jamison | Pinkley, Louisiana | 1831 | f. 10 |
| Valle, Augustus E. | Roussin, Mary E. | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Valle, Charles | LaPlante, Mary | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Valle, Charles C. | Bruce, Eliza | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Varner, William | Kenner, Adaline | 1837 | f. 16 |
| Vaughan, Randolph | Townsley, Katharine | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Vault, William Greeney | [illegible] | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Voght, Joseph | Valle, Susan | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Waddle, Samuel M. | Morris, Jane Caroline | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Waddle, Stephen William | Lay, Mary Jane | 1838 | f. 23 |
| Watts, John B. | Perringer, Martha | 1850 | f. 25 |
| Webb, Jerome | Drew, Marian | 1840 | f. 19 |
| Webb, John L. | Townsley, Albertine | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Weber, John Conrad | Schmidt, Johanne Wilhelmine | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Wells, John | Jackson, Mereny | 1828 | f. 7 |
| Whit, George | Elders, Mandy | 1854 | f. 27 |
| Whiteside, Samuel | Dalton, Rachael Ann | 1864 | f. 32 |
| Wilson, Benjamin | Thomure, Rosalie | 1855 | f. 28 |
| Wilson, Robert | Moro, Melinda | 1843 | f. 22 |
| Womack, Francis | McDaniel, Rachel | 1849 | f. 24 |
| Womack, William | Mercer, Susan | 1854 | f. 27 |
| Woolford, John | Bloom, Jane | 1832 | f. 11 |
| Woolsey, Jacob C. | , Elisa | 1838 | f. 17 |
| York, John W. | Barrett, Nancy | 1843 | f. 22 |
| 1st Division, 1st Brigade, 1st Battalion, Daniel S. Jenning's Company A | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Brigade, 1st Battalion, Daniel S. Jenning's Company B | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Brigade, 3rd Regiment, Thomas Cannon's 9th Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Brigade, Mounted Rangers, 2nd Regiment, E.H. Wray's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Regiment, Charles P. Price's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Regiment, M. Jeff Thompson's Brigade, L.M. Byrnes's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 3rd Reginent, Clark's Company A | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, Artillery Regiment, Robert McDonald's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, Artillery, Volunteers, E.G. Richardson's Company B | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Cavalry Battalion, 1st Brigade, A.E. Valle's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Cavalry Battalion, Independent Rangers, Daniel McGee's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Cavalry Battalion, James D. White's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Cavalry Brigade, 1st Battalion, W.A. Martin's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, Jeff Branham's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, Volunteers, James M. O'Donal's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, Oliver C. Turley's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, E.H. Wilson's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, E.H. Wray's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, Cavalry Battalion, John G. Kelly's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, White's Cavalry Battalion, W.A. Martin's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Infantry Battalion, W.A. Martin's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Infantry Battalion, John R. Taylor's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade, Volunteers, Warren P. Jones' Company G | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 1st Infantry Regiment, Jesse A. Dooly's Company E | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 3rd Infantry, 1st Brigade, Peter Ake's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 3rd Infantry, 1st Brigade, James Carson's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 3rd Infantry Regiment, Clark's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 3rd Infantry Regiment, M. Jeff Thompson's Brigade, John Kemper's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 3rd Infantry Regiment, M. Jeff Thompson's Brigade, N.G. Thaxton's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 4th Infantry Regiment, John A. Hinton's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 4th Infantry Regiment, John M. Pair's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Division, 4th Infantry Regiment, George B. Zimmerman's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Infantry Regiment, George W. Waller's Company | f. 216 |
| 1st Rifle Regiment, L.H. Willis's Company | f. 215 |
| 2nd Division, 3rd Infantry Battalion, James Crane's Company E | f. 217 |
| 2nd Infantry Regiment, Captain B[enet]'s Company D | f. 215 |
| 3rd Division, 3rd Infantry Regiment, John Hanna's Company | f. 218 |
| 3rd Division, 3rd Infantry Regiment, George William Sandusky's Company | f. 218 |
| 3rd Division, 3rd Regiment, Thomas H. Flood's Company | f. 218 |
| 3rd Division, 3rd Regiment, R. Hooper's Company | f. 218 |
| 4th Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, Charles Cooper's Company D | f. 219 |
| 4th Division, 1st Extra Battalion, John W. Coleman's Company B | f. 219 |
| 4th Division, 1st Infantry Regiment, N.G. Dye's Company A | f. 219 |
| 4th Division, 1st Infantry Regiment, James A. Small's Company G | f. 219 |
| 4th Infantry Regiment, Captain H.F. Smith's Company C | f. 215 |
| 5th Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, Elijah Gates's Company A | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, Hiram Brown's Company | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 2nd Infantry Regiment, E.W. Markwell's Company | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 3rd Regiment, Robert Minter's Company | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 5th Regiment, Hiram Brown's Company | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 5th Regiment, Thomas J. McQuiddy's Company | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 5th Regiment, Lewis Burris's Company | f. 220 |
| 5th Division, 5th Regiment, Felix Blakely's Company | f. 220 |
| 6th Division, J.C. Gorham's Artillery Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 3rd Cavalry Regiment, James Hutchison's Company G | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 3rd Cavalry Regiment, Reuben Sorrell's Company [E] | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 3rd Cavalry Regiment, J.H. Wallis's Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 1st Battalion, Iberia Rangers, Jesse W. Burk's Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, James Johnston's Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, F. McKenzie's Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 1st Cavalry Regiment, Peter Taylor's Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Division, 1st Regiment, J.W. Salmon's Company | f. 221 |
| 6th Infantry Regiment, W.L.H. Frazier's Company J | f. 215 |
| Artillery, William B. Foster's Company A | f. 215 |
| Hunted's Company | f. 215 |
| Price's Rifles, Bledsoe's Company | f. 215 |
| Washington Guards | f. 214 |
|