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Collection

Daniel Morgan collection, 1764-1951 (majority within 1764-1832)

63 items

The Daniel Morgan collection is made up of financial records, legal documents, correspondence, and other items related to General Daniel Morgan and to Willoughby Morgan, his son.

The Daniel Morgan collection is made up of 63 financial records, legal documents, correspondence, and other items related to General Daniel Morgan and to Willoughby Morgan, his son. The majority of the collection consists of accounts, bonds, promissory notes, and other documents pertaining to Daniel Morgan's financial affairs. Accounts and invoices record Morgan's purchases of clothing, wagon-related equipment and services, and other items. Some of the later items do not concern Morgan directly but have his legal endorsement. Also included are two outgoing letters by Morgan, a 9-page legal document about a lawsuit against Morgan, and a deposition that Morgan gave in a different dispute. Other items are a bond regarding Morgan's marriage to Abigail Curry (March 30, 1773) and Morgan's political address to the citizens of Allegheny County about politics and the militia (January 17, 1795). Three of the documents pertain to enslaved and free African Americans (November 6, 1773; June 13, 1789; and March 28, 1799). Later items mostly pertain to the estate of Willoughby Morgan, Daniel Morgan's son. James Graham wrote two letters to unknown recipients in 1847 and 1856 about his efforts to write Daniel Morgan's biography, which he subsequently published.

Printed items include a map of the surrender of Yorktown (undated), a newspaper article from a Winchester, Virginia, paper about the possible disinterment of Daniel Morgan's remains (August 18, 1951), and printed portraits of Daniel Morgan with manuscript and facsimile autographs.

Collection

Succession de Pierre de Camper Procés de Louis Felix Lescarmoutier manuscript, 1729-1744

167 pages (1 volume)

This vellum-bound volume contains copies of testimonies, depositions, legal opinions, accounts, and extracts, dating between 1729 and 1744, pertinent to the sale of a St. Domingue sugar plantation by Pierre de Camper to Louis Felix Lescarmoutier. These copies were made circa 1744 and are attested at the conclusion by notaries Moreau and Bugard, as well as Laurent de Sartre on February 16, 1744. The plantation, with as many as 67 enslaved laborers, was valued at between 25,000 and 30,000 livres per year. Its selling price was 182,000 livres, but Lescarmoutier apparently only ever paid around half that amount.

This vellum-bound volume contains copies of testimonies, depositions, legal opinions, accounts, and extracts, dating between 1729 and 1744, pertinent to the sale of a St. Domingue sugar plantation by Pierre de Camper to Louis Felix Lescarmoutier. These copies were made circa 1744 and are attested at the conclusion by notaries Moreau and Bugard, as well as Laurent de Sartre on February 16, 1744. The plantation, with as many as 67 enslaved laborers, was valued at between 25,000 and 30,000 livres per year. Its selling price was 182,000 livres, but Lescarmoutier apparently only ever paid around half that amount.

The volume contains 173 numbered pages; pages 1-6 are not present. The manuscript cover title is "S. Domingue Succession de M. De Cam[per] Procés De M. Lescarmotis."