Description: [Louisiana] 1837 ALS Concerning Sale of the Steamboat Pearl River Author: Hawes, Hugh W. Title: [Louisiana] 1837 ALS Concerning Sale of the Steamboat Pearl River Publication: New Orleans, Louisiana: 1837 Description: 1837 ALS Concerning Sale of the Steamboat Pearl River, Hugh W. Hawes, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1837, 7.5 x 11 inches, bifolio 4 pp.Bifolio leaf with manuscript on three pages; two 1841 newspaper clippings tipped onto third page; all corners folded; previous folds, content not affected; very good condition.Interesting manuscript correspondence about the sale of some land and the steamboat Pearl River from New Orleans lawyer Hugh Walker Hawes to a man named John Blair. The letters convey tension concerning payments. One of the newspaper clippings, dated June 1841, references a legal battle between Hawes and John Blair's heirs after John Blair died - possibly with money still owed to Hawes. This manuscript contains writing and autographs by three or four different people, including Hugh W. Hawes. Some of the entries, including one of the newspaper clippings, state that Hawes lost several important papers in New Orleans, including a "private mortgage of John Blair to H. W. Hawes, on two quarter sections of land in Illinois" and "receipts... for cotton lost on board the steam boat Pearl River". This seems to suggest that the Pearl River sank, though I could not find any record of that, nor any information on John Blair. Worthy of further research!Hugh Walker Hawes (1798-1883) was a lawyer practicing in New Orleans in the 1830s. He moved to Daviess County, Kentucky circa 1837, and then to the Saluria Bayou on the Texas coast in 1839. He was one of the pioneering settlers of Matagorda Island, seeing the area as a potential alternative to New Orleans. On the island, Hawes ran a ranching operation and built a wharf and warehouses, so that deep-draft ships that did not want to sail into the shallow bay waters could offload their cargo on the island and have it transferred to the mainland. Hawes and the town of Saluria were prospering by the 1850s, but the Civil War caused financial losses, and then a storm in 1875 destroyed much of the island's infrastructure. Hawes was left with only his ranch. Very Good. Seller ID: 1223 Subject: 19th Century Pamphlets & Ephemera, Americana, Autograph, Autograph Letters & Manuscripts, Economics, Ephemera, One-of-a-kind (OOAK), Stampless Letters Stellar Books & Ephemera is an on-line antiquarian dealer offering a wide variety of unique, unusual and rare artifacts of American History ranging from letters, manuscripts, archives and diaries to 19th century photography and 20th century letterpress. We specialize in the ephemeral and occasionally offer finer books which strike our fancy. If we stock it, you know it's unique. Terms All items are guaranteed to be as described or they may be returned within 30 days of receipt.This listing was created by Bibliopolis.
Price: 417 USD
Location: Moab, Utah
End Time: 2024-08-11T16:19:11.000Z
Shipping Cost: 8 USD
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Special Attributes: Signed
Place of Publication: New Orleans, Louisiana
Date of Publication: 1837
Author: Hawes, Hugh W
Language: English