Chatham County Warrants, Onslow County Land Grants, and Medical Remedy Recipes from Alamance County
1788-1897, undated, bulk 1804-1840
Manuscript Collection #1369- Creator(s)
- Tatum, Mary E.
- Physical description
- 0.35 Cubic Feet, 1 half document case and 1 oversize folder, consisting of warrants, grants, a receipt, advertisements, and handwritten cures
- Preferred Citation
- Mary E. Tatum Collection (#1369), East Carolina Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA
- Repository
- ECU Manuscript Collection
- Access
- No restrictions.
This collection includes 108 Chatham County, North Carolina, warrants (1804-1840); 2 Onslow County, North Carolina, grants (1788, no date); and 1897 financial receipt with 4 handwritten medicinal cures by Wyley M. Cates of Teer and Alamance County, NC, and print ads for his cures.
Biographical/historical information
The Colonial Assembly established Cantham County on December 5, 1770 and was formed from a portion of what was once Orange County. The county was governed by justices of the peaces which severed Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions. The justices were appointed by the state's General Assembly. With the new State Constitution in 1868 a 5 member board of county commissions were created and it changed the court system. This caused justices of the peace to become obsolete in 1894.
Scope and arrangement
The bulk of this collection are warrants issued in Chantham County, North Carolina from 1807-1821. The last folder includes remedies and notes made by Wiley M. Cates.
Administrative information
Custodial History
January 21, 2020, (unprocessed), 0.35 cubic feet; This collection contains unrelated material belonging to Mary E. Tatum. Included are 108 Chatham County, North Carolina, warrants (1804-1840); 2 Onslow County, North Carolina, grants (1788, no date); and 1897 financial receipt with 4 handwritten medicinal cures by Wyley M. Cates of Teer and Alamance County, NC, and print ads for his cures. Gift of Mary E. Tatum
Source of acquisition
Gift of Mary E. Tatum
Copyright notice
Literary rights to specific documents are retained by the authors or their descendants in accordance with U.S. copyright law.