From the Hardy (William H. and Sallie J.) Papers. Letter to Sallie Hardy, possibly from her father, Thomas H. Johnson; written from Brandon, Mississippi. There is no transcript for this letter, and pages are missing.
From the Hardy (William H. and Sallie J.) Papers. Letter from Thomas H. Johnson, Sallie Hardy's father, to William Hardy. There is no transcript for this letter.
From the Hardy (William H. and Sallie J.) Papers. Letter from Temperance Toney to granddaughter, Mattie Hardy; written from Paulding, Mississippi. There is no transcript for this letter.
From the Hardy (William H. and Sallie J.) Papers. Letter from Mattie R. Ellington to Sallie Hardy; written from Iuka, Mississippi. There is no transcript for this letter.
From the Hardy (William H. and Sallie J.) Papers. Inscription on back says, “My mother's grave and the monument -Paulding, Miss." Probably the gravestone of Sally Ann Hardy.
From the Hardy (William H. and Sallie J.) Papers. Inscription says: “House where my mother died." Probably the home where Sallie Ann Hardy died. Back says: "The house where my mother died and I spent my childhood."
From the Hamlett (Ed) White Folks Project Collection. This document from Margie [?] recounts a meeting with Rev. Harris, an African American minister whose church was used as a Freedom School.
One-page document dated December 4, 1871 and drafted by the Mississippi State Legislature requesting return of Federal lands first granted in 1856 for the purpose of building the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad. The Gulf and Ship Island Railroad was...