A Guide to the John T. Harris papers, 1771-1937 Harris, John T., 37443

A Guide to the John T. Harris papers, 1771-1937

A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Accession number 37443


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Processed by: Jay Gaidmore

Repository
Library of Virginia
Accession number
37443
Title
John T. Harris papers, 1771-1937
Physical Characteristics
9 microfilm reels .
Creator
John T. Harris
Location
Library of Virginia
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

Collection is open to research.

Use Restrictions

For permission to cite collection for publication, contact the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society.

Preferred Citation

John T. Harris Papers, 1771-1937. Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society, Dayton, Va.

Acquisition Information

Lent for microfilming by Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society, Dayton, Virginia

Biographical Information

John T. Harris was born on 8 May 1823 in Albemarle County to Nathan and Ann Anderson Harris. In 1845, he was admitted to the bar and married Virginia Maupin Miller in 1855. From 1852 to 1859 he served as commonwealth's attorney for Rockingham County and in 1856 was a Presidential elector for James Buchanan. In 1859, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives and served until the outbreak of the Civil War. Despite his strong Unionist sentiments and his continual efforts to keep Virginia in the Union, Harris remained loyal to Virginia when she seceded in May of 1861. During the war he served two terms in the Virginia General Assembly. Following the war John T. Harris was judge of the 12th judicial circuit, which included Rockingham County. In 1870, he was again elected to Congress and was continuously re-elected until 1880, after which he resumed his law practice in Harrisonburg. John T. Harris returned to politics in 1889 as a rival of Philip W. McKinney for the Democratic nomination for governor. Later he was appointed by Governor McKinney as one of the representatives for Virginia to the World's Columbian Exposition in 1892. He died in Harrisonburg on 14 Octo

The Randolph family papers came into the Harris family when John T. Harris's son, John T. Harris, Jr. married Peyton Randolph's daughter, Mary Elizabeth Randolph. Born in Washington, D.C. in 1833, Peyton was the son of James Innes Randolph, a congressional clerk, and Susan Armistead Randolph. Prior to the Civil War he attended Columbian College (now George Washington University) and was an engineer on numerous railroad projects in Virginia, Indiana, and Alabama through the 1850's. He enlisted in the army in Mobile, Alabama at the outbreak of war and served as an engineer in Pickett's division, rising to the rank of major by 1865. He married Mary Fisher following the war, returned to the engineering profession, and died 28 November 1888.

Scope and Content

Papers, 1771-1937 (bulk 1850-1900), primarily consisting of letters of John T. Harris and family, and letters of Peyton Randolph and family. Also includes a large amount of personal and political documents relevant to the life and career of John T. Harris.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged

Series I: Letters, 1831-1937; Series II: John T. Harris Personal and Family Papers, 1843-1936; Series III: John T. Harris Political Papers, 1856-1896; Series IV: Miscellaneous, 1771-1936; Series V: Oversize

The box and folder number refer to the finding aid compiled by the staff of Special Collections, Carrier Library, James Madison University, for the original collection.

Contents List

Letters 1831-1937
Reels Misc. Reel 2147-2152
6 reels
  • Reel Misc. Reel 2147-2149
    John T. Harris Letters, 1845-1899
    3 reels

    JOHN T. HARRIS LETTERS, 1845-1899. A major portion of this subseries consists of letters from Harris's constituents requesting personal favors. The letters from 1860 to 1861 primarily address the issue of Virginia seceding from the Union. Echoing the sentiments of many residents of western Virginia, most of the letters express pro-Unionist feelings and encourage Harris to work for a compromise in the Congress to avert violent conflict. Moreover, the contents of these letters, despite the lack of any letters from him, suggest that Harris worked with and was a close friend of Stephen A. Douglas.

    • Reel 2147 Box 1 Folder 1
      Letters, 1845-1860
    • Reel 2147 Box 1 Folder 2
      Letters, January 1861
    • Reel 2147 Box 1 Folder 3
      Letters, February 1861
    • Reel 2147 Box 1 Folder 4
      Letters, March 1861-1864
    • Reel 2147 Box 1 Folder 5
      Letters, 1865-1866
    • Reel 2147 Box 1 Folder 6
      Letters, 1867-1868
    • Reel 2148 Box 1 Folder 7
      Letters, 1869
    • Reel 2148 Box 1 Folder 8
      Letters, 1870-1872
    • Reel 2148 Box 2 Folder 1
      Letters, 1873-1877
    • Reel 2148 Box 2 Folder 2
      Letters, 1878-1880
    • Reel 2148 Box 2 Folder 3
      Letters, 1881-1885
    • Reel 2149 Box 2 Folder 4
      Letters, 1886
    • Reel 2149 Box 2 Folder 5
      Letters, 1887-1888
    • Reel 2149 Box 2 Folder 6
      Letters, 1889
    • Reel 2149 Box 2 Folder 7
      Letters, 1890-1893
    • Reel 2149 Box 2 Folder 8
      Letters, 1894-1899
    • Reel 2149 Box 2 Folder 9
      Letters, undated
  • Reel Misc. Reel 2150-2151
    Miscellaneous Harris Family Letters, 1831-1937
    2 reels

    MISCELLANEOUS HARRIS FAMILY LETTERS, 1831-1937, consists consists chiefly of letters among various members of the Harris family. These letters provide little more than descriptions of family life. However, there are several letters to John T. Harris, Jr., himself a prominent lawyer in Rockingham County, from Woodrow Wilson and Teddy Roosevelt.

    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 1
      Letters, 1831-1879
    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 2
      Letters, 1880-1890
    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 3
      Letters, 1891-1901
    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 4
      Letters, 1902-1911
    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 5
      Letters, 1912-1915
    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 6
      Letters, 1916-1927
    • Reel 2150 Box 3 Folder 7
      Letters, 1928-1931
    • Reel 2151 Box 3 Folder 8
      Letters, 1932-1937
    • Reel 2151 Box 3 Folder 9
      Letters, undated
  • Reel Misc. Reel 2151-2152
    Peyton Randolph Letters, 1846-1884
    2 reels

    PEYTON RANDOLPH LETTERS, 1846-1884, primarily consisting of letters from several college friends and his immediate family. Of these, those from college friend Henry Force are particularly enlightening. Force was the son of historian Peter Force and acted as surveyor on the Border Commission dispatched to study the newly acquired lands in present-day New Mexico and Arizona. In a series of letters to Peyton from 1850 to 1853, Force describes his encounters with Mexican soldiers and Apache Indians, as well as his duties on the trek from New Orleans to San Diego. Also worth noting are the letters to Peyton from his mother, Susan Armistead Randolph, which form the bulk of the Randolph letters. In her weekly four-page letters Mrs. Randolph describes life in Washington, D.C. during the 1850's, including the inauguration of Franklin Pierce and Henry Clay's funeral. Significantly, Susan Randolph was acutely aware of the political climate of her era and took particular interest in the Know-Nothing Party in the 1850's. In several letters she outlines the platform of the Know-Nothings and even urges Peyton to join the party. However, despite her vivid political commentaries and her proximity to the arena of the conflict, she surprisingly never mentions the issue of slavery. In addition to her political and social sketches, she provides detailed accounts of family life, including rather grisly descriptions of the deaths of various family members. Her letters from Richmond during the war describe the changes in life in that city through the course of the war and include detailed examples of the rampant inflation of prices on common goods such as bacon and flour. Of particular interest are Mrs. Randolph's inquiries concerning General Lewis Armistead, who was said to be the first Confederate soldier to cross into Union lines during Pickett's Charge at the battle of Gettysburg. She was, in fact, General Armistead's first cousin.

    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 1
      Letters, 1846-1851
    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 2
      Letters, 1852
    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 3
      Letters, January-June 1853
    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 4
      Letters, July-December 1853
    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 5
      Letters, January-June 1854
    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 6
      Letters, July-December 1854
    • Reel 2151 Box 4 Folder 7
      Letters, 1855
    • Reel 2151 Box 5 Folder 1
      Letters, 1856
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 2
      Letters, 1857-1860
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 3
      Letters, 1861-1862
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 4
      Letters, 1863-1884
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 5
      Letters, undated
  • Reel Misc. Reel 2152
    Miscellaneous Randolph Family Letters, 1837-1928
    1 reel

    MISCELLANEOUS RANDOLPH FAMILY LETTERS, 1837-1928, consist mainly of miscellaneous letters from Susan Randolph to her other children and correspondence among Peyton's sisters, Mollie, Nannie, and Sue.

    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 6
      Letters, 1837-1857
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 7
      Letters, 1861-1866
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 8
      Letters, 1868-1928
    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 9
      Letters, undated
  • Reel Misc. Reel 2152
    Peyton Randolph Miscellaneous, 1844-1865
    1 reel

    PEYTON RANDOLPH MISCELLANEOUS, 1844-1865, consisting of several items including a book of psalms which he carried during the Civil War.

    • Reel 2152 Box 5 Folder 10
      Papers, books, miscellany, 1844-1865
John T. Harris Personal and Family Papers, 1843-1936
Reel 2153
1 reel

JOHN T. HARRIS PERSONAL AND FAMILY PAPERS, 1843-1936. This series encompassing John T. Harris's personal papers includes his law license, a will written in 1861, and his post-Civil War oath of allegiance to the U.S. The certificate in which President Benjamin Harrison appoints Harris as Virginia's representative at the World's Columbian Exposition of 1892 is located in the oversize miscellaneous file. His handwritten autobiography,(photocopy) dated 1898, gives many particulars of his life. For a transcription of the autobiography see, "Of Men and Measures: The Memoirs of John T. Harris of Virginia " by Dale F. Harter, 1999.

  • Reel 2153 Box 6 Folder 1
    Papers, 1843-1887
  • Reel 2153 Box 6 Folder 2
    Autobiography of J. T. Harris (photocopy), 1898
  • Reel 2153 Box 6 Folder 3
    Autobiography of J. T. Harris (photocopy), 1936
  • Reel 2153 Box 6 Folder 4-6
    Harris genealogy
  • Reel 2153 Box 6 Folder 7-9
    Newsclippings
John T. Harris Political Papers, 1856-1896
Reel 2153-2154
2 reels

JOHN T. HARRIS POLITICAL PAPERS, 1843-1936. This series comprised of John T. Harris's political papers consists primarily of copies of his Congressional speeches as well as several made by other members of Congress. The most notable of these is the resignation speech of Preston B. "Bully" Brookes, who was censured by the Congress for caning Charles Sumner in 1856. In addition, there are election returns from elections in which Harris was a candidate. These include reports from Rockingham County and localities throughout the Shenandoah Valley. A large number of political broadsides and handbills, from both local and national elections, are collected in an oversize file.

  • Reel 2153 Box 7 Folder 1
    Papers, 1856-1896
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 2
    Papers, undated
Miscellaneous, 1771-1936
Reel 2154
1 reel

MISCELLANEOUS, 1771-1936. Consists of three folders of genealogical notes and charts pertaining to the Harris family. These were compiled by members of the Harris family and researchers at the Virginia Historical Society. Among the Civil War documents are requests for exemption from military service, requisition receipts from Confederate military authorities, contracts between individuals and their military substitutes, and requests to John Harris for release from Union prisoner-of-war camps. There is also a typed autobiography (photocopy) by John T. Harris Jr. dated 1936,which includes characterizations of the lawyers he knew. The James Clarkson papers, (1771-1835), are comprised mostly of legal documents from Albemarle County. These documents were preserved by John T. Harris's wife, Virginia Harris, who was a descendant of James Clarkson. Other miscellaneous items include indentures, as well as numerous items pertaining to the Harris family. Among the photographs is a print of Peyton Randolph and his four brothers.

  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 3
    Miscellaneous, 1795-1863
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 4
    Miscellaneous, 1864-1933
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 5-6
    Civil War documents, 1861-1865
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 7
    Indentures, 1734 (copy), 1786
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 8
    James Clarkson papers, 1771-1835
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 9
    Photographs
  • Reel 2154 Box 7 Folder 10
    Miscellaneous, undated
Oversize
Reel 2155
1 reel
  • Reel 2155 Box Flat box 1 Folder 1
    John T. Harris Political Papers
  • Reel 2155 Box Flat box 1 Folder 2
    Miscellaneous