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Ebenezer Wilson Patton Papers

0.01 Linear Feet Summary: 1/4 in. (1 folder)
Abstract Or Scope
Genealogical data, a letter, and other papers of the Ebenezer Wilson Patton family of Clarksburg, West Virginia, documenting Patton family history and Clarksburg in the 1870s. Genealogical material includes two family records that list births, deaths, and marriages from 1729 to 1879. The letter from Ebenezer Patton to M. L. Paullus of Greenfield, Indiana, describes conditions in Clarksburg in 1872. Topics include Patton's recent return to West Virginia, starting a general store and the state of his business, religious revivals, politics, radicalism, the weather, and news of family and friends. Patton also writes about the status of African Americans in the community after the Civil War. He describes churches, sermons about the status of African Americans, having his former slaves returned to his family to be cared for, and the Ku Klux Klan.
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Ebenezer Wilson Patton Papers 0.01 Linear Feet Summary: 1/4 in. (1 folder)

George W. Atkinson, Governor, Letter of Recommendation for W.G. Compher

0.01 Linear Feet Summary: 1 item
Abstract Or Scope
Letter from George W. Atkinson, Governor of West Virginia, to the Board of Trustees, Ohio State University, Columbus, recommending Professor W.G. Compher for any chair that he will accept.
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George W. Atkinson, Governor, Letter of Recommendation for W.G. Compher 0.01 Linear Feet Summary: 1 item

Samuel Price, Politician, Papers

0 Linear Feet Summary: 61 pages (photocopies and transcripts)
Abstract Or Scope
Includes both transcriptions and photocopies of original manuscripts of Samuel Price's 1828 law license and an 1879 life history from his birth through 1866. Also included are transcriptions of newspaper articles and letters concerning Price's life and death, and his funeral service. Samuel Price was born July 28, 1805. He served as Virginia's Lieutenant-Governor during the Civil War. He was president of the Constitutional Convention of West Virginia in 1872, which framed the present day constitution. He was a member of the Constitutional Convention which passed the ordinance of secession, but he did not vote for or sign the ordinance when it passed. He was also a member of the West Virginia State Legislature and a representative of West Virginia in the United States Senate. Price died February 25, 1884.
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Samuel Price, Politician, Papers 0 Linear Feet Summary: 61 pages (photocopies and transcripts)

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