- No4
Alexander H. Stephens family papers

Plantation account books and writings of Alexander Hamilton Stephens, born near Crawfordville, Georgia in 1812 to Margaret Grier and Andrew Baskins Stephens; he was vice president of the Confederacy during the Civil War, a United States congressman, and died in office as Georgia governor in 1883.
More About This Collection
Date of Original
1851/1944
Subject
Johnson Island Prison
Know-Nothing Party
Stephens family
Broadsides--Georgia
Cotton farmers--Georgia
Dueling--Georgia
Families--Georgia--Photographs
Farm management--Georgia
Freedmen--Georgia
Georgia--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Campaigns
Land grants--Georgia
Lawyers--Georgia--Correspondence
Legislators--Georgia
Plantations--Georgia
Prisoners of war--Confederate States of America--Correspondence
Slaveholders--United States
Slavery--Southern States
Slaves--Georgia
Enslaved persons--Georgia
Soldiers--Confederate States of America--Correspondence
Surveying--Georgia
Surveyors--United States--Correspondence
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Prisoners and prisons
Vice-Presidents--Confederate States of America--Correspondence
People
Simpson, William W.
Stephens, Aaron G.
Stephens, Alexander H. (Alexander Hamilton), 1812-1883
Stephens, Alexander W.
Stephens, John Alexander
Stephens, John Lindsay, 1815-1856
Stephens, Linton, 1823-1872
Stephens, William G.
Toombs, Robert Augustus, 1810-1885
Location
United States, Georgia, 32.75042, -83.50018
Medium
writings (documents)
account books
Type
Text
Description
Alexander Hamilton Stephens (1812-1883) was born near Crawfordville (Ga.) to Margaret Grier and Andrew Baskins Stephens. Liberty Hall in Crawfordville was his home. He was Vice President of the Confederacy during the Civil War, a United States Congressman, and died in office as Georgia Governor in 1883. John Alexander Stephens (1838-1887), nephew of Alexander H. Stephens, was a lawyer in Atlanta and son of John Lindsay Stephens. John Alexander Stephens was married to Mary Emma Simpson (1841?-1900), daughter of William Wingfield Simpson (1814-1887), owner of a plantation in Hancock County (Ga.). Linton Stephens was the half-brother of Alexander H. Stephens. The collection consists of correspondence, writings, printed material, photographs, financial papers, and scrapbooks. The correspondence is divided into family and business with family letters mainly among Alexander H. Stephens, John A. Stephens and Linton Stephens. They discuss family matters, politics and legal cases. Included is a letter from Alexander H. Stephens describing his trip to Athens to take his entrance examination, in which he describes the university and town as well as the countryside between Athens and Washington, Georgia. Business correspondence includes letters from Herschel Johnson, Howell Cobb, Joseph E. Brown, and Joseph H. Lumpkin. There are also items relating to John Stephens' imprisonment at Johnson Island (OH) during the Civil War. Letters during wartime included lists the members of the Stephens Rifles, flag design proposals, petitions for military positions, and discussions on the release of a Union officer from Andersonville. There is a folder of 1851 correspondence concerning a possible duel between Thomas W. Thomas and James M. Smythe, and materials regarding the surveying of Michigan and Texas Territories. Printed material includes several speeches of Alexander H. Stephens. The scrapbooks contain newspapers clippings about Alexander H. Stephens. Included is a plantation account book of the Simpson plantation, in which are lists of enslaved people, a journal of daily farm work, printed rules for managing farms and slaves, and signed contracts with freedmen.
Language
eng
Holding Institution
Hargrett Library