Description:

Deep South

Lot comprised of two ALS, both inscribed on pale blue bifold stationery paper with integral address leaves. The first is inscribed overall and signed by Haller Nutt as "Haller Nutt", and the second is inscribed overall and signed by a man named "Hollingsworth". Both in near fine condition with expected paper folds and isolated areas of minor loss corresponding to red wax seals. The address leaves also note which steam boat was expected to deliver each letter; in the case of these letters, the "Princess No. 3" and the "Might" respectively.

 

Haller Nutt (1816-1864) wrote a 2pp ALS to his wife Julia Augusta Williams (1822-1897) from his plantation at Araby on August 10, 1849. He talks extensively about medical advice and recent bouts of sickness. "There has been a good deal of sickness -- mostly among children -- lost one since us left -- Jim Simons [sic] youngest child", Nutt wrote his wife. Each page measures 8" x 9.875".

 

Nutt's acquaintance Hollingsworth wrote him a 3pp ALS from Hard Times, Louisiana on September 29, 1853, addressing it to Nutt at Longwood outside of Natchez. Hollingsworth was a doctor, as his letter discusses patients including a vomiting child and an older man with a fistula. Hollingsworth reports: "The Epidemic at Gr. Gulf Port Gibson has alike abated -- but one or two new cases -- the convalescents off hand -- Dr. Hawood (?) has but 5 cases to day -- but 2 deaths yesterday." Each page measures 7.5" x 9.5".

 

Hollingsworth's letter also mentions the cotton crop harvest, of especial interest to Nutt, who owned five plantations in Mississippi and Louisiana. He wrote: "I observe Cotton is opening more fully -- generally high up on the stalk." Before the Civil War, Nutt's sugar cane and cotton plantations encompassed more than 43,000 acres of land and relied on the labor of roughly 800 slaves; his antebellum fortune was estimated at three million dollars.

Ex-Charles Sigety

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