A Guide to the R.L. Brown Letters 1856-1861
A Collection in
The Special Collections Department
Accession Number 11021
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Administrative Information
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Preferred Citation
R.L. Brown Letters, 1856-1861, Accession #11021, Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.
Acquisition Information
These letters were purchased by the Library from Timothy Bakken of Halvor Americana, Claredon Hills, Illinois, on October 7, 1991.
Biographical/Historical Information
The Hempfield Rail Road connected Wheeling with Greensburg
by way of the Pennsylvania Rail Road and at one point was the
only railroad to hold a charter from Virginia for passage
through her territory to Pennsylvania and Ohio.
R. L. Brown was a one-term member of the Virginia General
Assembly in 1857-58 representing Upshur County (it and
Clarksburg, now West Virginia, are mentioned in his letter).
Scope and Content Information
This collection consists of two letters: M. B. Poitiaux, Wheeling, Virginia, to James C. Clarke, Greensburg, Pennsylvania, October 1856, concerning a upcoming meeting of the Board of Directors of the Hempfield Rail Road, and, R. L. Brown, Washington, D. C., to "Dear Judge," February 4, 1861, concerning the 1861 Peace Congress, the border states, General Winfield Scott, business prospects, and his family.
Poitiaux's letter mentions James Kennedy Moorhead (1806-1884), a politician and businessman associated with railroad, telegraph, and canal enterprises for most of his career, and a member of Congress representing Pennsylvania from 1859 to 1869. [For another of Poitiaux's letters, see accession number 9110-C.]
Brown, a pro-Southern advocate, predicts the creation of a Southern Confederacy but maintains that Virginia and four other border slave states will be held in the Union and forced to abolish slavery. He denounces General Scott as a dictator, says Washington is under martial rule, and anticipates the failure of the Washington Peace Conference (February 4-27, 1861). Brown also discusses his willingness to engage in any type of profitable business with the judge, mentions the pending graduation of his son from medical school and asks the judge's assistance in helping him to establish a practice.
Contents List
Wheeling Va Oct 4th 1856
James C. Clarke Esq.
Greensburgh Pa
Dear Sir
At request of J. C. Acheson Esq. I notify you that
a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Hempfield
Rail Road will be held in Philadelphia on Friday next
Oct: 10th, to meet and confer with Gen. J. K. Moorhead
President of ? Valley R. R. and Noah L. Wilson Esq.
President
of Cin[cinnati] & Marietta R. R. Co. in
relations to an agreement for a through line in
connection with the Penna. Central R. R.
Yours respectfully
M. B. Poitiaux
Clerk, H. R. R. Co.
Washington City Feby 4th 1861
Dear Judge
Your last kind favor has just been received--by
some strange [fortuity] the letter was sent to the dead
letter office and I accidently saw it among the list of
dead letters advertised! This accounts for my not having
answered it sooner. Since I last saw you, the political
revolution has advanced a pace. This poor city is now a
fortified camp--United States Soldiers are arriving by
every Northern train and the prospect now is that by the
4th of March we will be taken care of
in a horn .
President and
Commander in Chief, and is carrying things with a high
hand. It requires no Prophet to foresee the end. I
despair of my Country.
Now a word about myself. My Wife's health is very
delicate, and but for that I should have removed my
family to Upshur
I expect nothing from Virginia but truculent submission and any other action on her part, will but agreeably disappoint me.
Let me hear from you at your earliest convenience. If
you know of any business I can engage in that will
likely pay, call on me, and you will find me "yours to
serve." My family desire to be kindly remembered to you.
Your friend truly
R. L. Brown