This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held in the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in our reading room, and not digitally available through the World Wide Web. See the Duplication Policy section for more information.
This collection was rehoused under the sponsorship of a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Office of Preservation, Washington, D.C., 1990 1992.
Size | 1.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 900 items) |
Abstract | Elizabeth Seawell Hairston Hairston was a Virginia genealogist. The collection includes papers of Elizabeth Seawell Hairston Hairston and of other members of the Hairston, Penn, Wilson, and related families, chiefly of Patrick and Henry counties, Va. Included are personal correspondence and genealogical data. Early letters are to and from members of the Penn family, especially Elizabeth Seawell Hairston Hairston's mother, Elizabeth ("Eliza") Penn Hairston (b. 1826), and describe growing and selling tobacco, the settling of new lands in Louisiana and Alabama, and student life at Washington College in Lexington, Va., the University of Virginia, the Greensboro (N.C.) Female Institute, and other institutions for women. Beginning in 1848, most letters are about family life, but a few comment on local and state politics, 1851- 1852, and on the condition of slaves, 1852. Civil War letters describe activities on the home front, the routine of camp life at various locations, chiefly in Virginia, and life in the Union prison at Point Lookout, Md. During Reconstruction, letters discuss family financial hardships and problems with freedmen. Letters in the 1880s and 1890s deal chiefly with family matters, except for a few 1898 letters that relate to George Hairston's military service during the Spanish-American War. Hairston never left Virginia during his enlistment, and his discharge may have been connected with his company's involvement with an affray involving a black man, 14 August 1898. After 1900, the majority of the letters are about Hairston, Penn, and Wilson genealogy, and such organizations as the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Colonial Dames. Also included are clippings and scrapbooks, most relating to the Civil War. |
Creator | Hairston, Elizabeth Seawell Hairston, 1855-1945. |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Scott Philyaw, January 1992
Encoded by: Roslyn Holdzkom, October 2006
Updated by: Nancy Kaiser, March 2021
This collection was rehoused under the sponsorship of a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Office of Preservation, Washington, D.C., 1990 1992.
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
There were many Hairstons, and identifications of individuals in the family is frequently difficult because of the numerous intermarriages of Hairstons with other Hairstons and with their neighbors, the Penns and Wilsons, and because of the repetition of given names in succeeding generations and among contemporaries in different Hairston lines. Elizabeth Seawell Hairston's The Hairstons and Penns and Their Relations (available in the North Carolina Collection, UNC-Chapel Hill), while helpful, should be used with great caution.
Elizabeth Seawell Hairston (1855-1945), genealogist, honorary president of the Virginia United Daughters of the Confederacy and member of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Colonial Dames, married her first cousin, Judge Nathaniel H. Hairston (b. 1851) on 17 September 1874. Most of the 19th century letters in the collection are to and from Elizabeth's mother Eliza Penn Hairston (b. 1826), who married Samuel William Hairston (fl. 1826-1866) on 21 October 1848. There are, however, many other correspondents, including Eliza Penn Hairston's parents, Thomas Penn (fl. 1818-1866) and Mary Christian Kennerly Penn (fl. 1818-1866); her brother, George Penn (fl. 1840-1861); her sisters, Martha Ann Catherine Penn (fl. 1820 1866), who married John N. Zentmeyer (fl. 1840-1863), and Sarah Ruth Penn (fl. 1829-1847); and her son, John Tyler Hairston (fl. 1850-1861), who was named after her brother. Eliza Penn Hairston's uncle, George Penn (fl. 1818-1826), also appears in the earlier correspondence. A number of Eliza and Samuel's children and grandchildren were named Eliza or Elizabeth, Samuel, George, William, Nicholas, or Ruth.
Amongst the Hairston correspondence, there are letters from Samuel Hairston's mother, Louisa Hardyman Hairston (fl. 1811-1847), and his brother, Nicholas Perkins Hairston (fl. 1791-1846). There are also letters to and from a George Hairston, who may be either Samuel's father (1750-1827), his brother (1784 1863), or Elizabeth Seawell Hairston's son. There were also several George Hairstons in other branches of the family.
Back to TopThe collection includes papers of genealogist Elizabeth Seawell Hairston Hairston and of other members of the Hairston, Penn, Wilson, and related families, chiefly of Patrick County, Va., and Henry County, Va. Included are personal correspondence and genealogical data. Early letters are to and from members of the Penn family, especially Elizabeth Seawell Hairston Hairston's mother, Elizabeth Penn Hairston ("Eliza") (b. 1826), and describe growing and selling tobacco, the settling of new lands in Louisiana and Alabama, and student life at Washington College in Lexington, Va., the University of Virginia, the Greensboro Female Institute in Greensboro, N.C., and other institutions for women. Beginning in 1848, most letters are about family life, but a few comment on local and state politics, 1851- 1852, and on the condition of slaves, 1852. Civil War letters describe activities on the home front, the routine of camp life at various locations, chiefly in Virginia, and life in the Union prison at Point Lookout, Md. During Reconstruction, letters discuss family financial hardships and problems with freedmen. Letters in the 1880s and 1890s deal chiefly with family matters, except for a few 1898 letters that relate to George Hairston's military service during the Spanish-American War. Hairston never left Virginia during his enlistment, and his discharge may have been connected with his company's involvement with an affray involving a black man, 14 August 1898. After 1900, the majority of the letters are about Hairston, Penn, and Wilson genealogy, and such organizations as the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Colonial Dames. Also included are clippings and scrapbooks, most relating to the Civil War.
Back to TopArrangement: chronological.
The earliest letters are to and from members of the Penn family. They include letters from Thomas Penn to his family written while he was selling tobacco throughout the South and letters from Thomas's brother George describing new lands in Louisiana and Alabama. Most of the 1840s letters are to Eliza Penn from her brother George and others and discuss family matters. During this period, George was attending Washington College. Other letters mention the Greensboro Female Institute where Sarah Penn attended, Memphis Conference Female Institute, Female Collegiate Institute, and the University of Virginia. There are a few letters from Louisa H. Hairston to her son Samuel W. Hairston, who also attended Washington College. These also disucss family matters. After Samuel and Eliza's marriage in 1848, the letters are mainly concerned with family news: births, health, visits, gardens, etc. There is some commentary on local and state politics, 1851-1852, and on the condition of slaves, 17 April 1852. Other items include a copy of a 1 June 1842 letter from W[illia]m Martin to Lyman C. Draper describing the service of General Joseph Martin during the American Revolution and George Hairston's 1805 Princeton diploma.
Folder 1 |
1805, 1818-1839 |
Folder 2 |
1840-1847 |
Folder 3 |
1848-1852 |
Folder 4 |
1853-1859 and undated antebellum |
The Hairston family embraced the southern cause with enthusiasm. Early letters describe visits to the Manassas battlefield, volunteer activities on the home front, and the routine of camp life--food, marches, etc. Later letters comment on problems with deserters and Yankee raiders in Patrick and Henry counties; black Union troops, 28 November and 12 December 1864; life on Confederate lines around Petersburg and Richmond; and life in the Union prisoner of war camp at Point Lookout, Md. (possibly from Hairston Watkins). Other items include an 1862 Confederate recruiting broadside and a store account of Samuel H. Hairston, dated 28 November 1863.
Folder 5 |
1861-1863 |
Folder 6 |
1864-15 April 1865 and undated Civil War era |
The Hairston and Penn families adjusted to reconstruction with difficulty. Even after Lee's surrender, Mary Penn, in a 16 April 1965 letter, wrote that "... there is still a hope left for ... independence." Several letters from this period mention anxieties over the newly freed slaves. Family members also encountered problems with the growing and marketing crops, and letters show that one of the George Hairstons was reduced to working as a wagoneer, while several young girls in the family took positions as governesses. Other letters include an agreement with Georgia freedmen, 16 August 1865; letters from Thomas Penn describing trade difficulties and a potential murder trial in South Carolina, 17 May and 8 July 1866; an inventory of S. W. Hairston's property sold in Georgia, December 1867; a visa for Dr. Russell McCord from the United States Consulate to Brazil, 22 November 1867; and a genealogy of the Penn family, 15 October 1873.
Folder 7 |
16 April 1865-1866 |
Folder 8 |
1867-1869 |
Folder 9 |
1870-1872 |
Folder 10 |
1873-1877 |
The letters from this subseries are almost entirely concerned with family news: births, grandchildren, gardens, deaths, etc. There are several letters from Judge Nicholas H. Hairston, but they include only minimal political commentary. There are also several 1898 letters relating to George Hairston's enlistment and subsequent discharge in the Spanish American War. Hairston never left Virginia during his enlistment, and his discharge from the 3rd Regiment may have been connected with his company's involvement in an affray involving a black man, 14 August 1898. After 1900, the majority of the letters are about genealogical matters. Others relate to the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Colonial Dames, and the unveiling of Confederate monuments. One letter, dated 10 November 1928, bemoans the existence of "Hoover Democrats."
Folder 11 |
1878-1885 |
Folder 12 |
1886-1889 |
Folder 13 |
1890-1893 |
Folder 14 |
1894-1899 |
Folder 15 |
1900-1919 |
Folder 16 |
1920-1929 |
Folder 17 |
1930-1933 |
Folder 18 |
1934-1939 |
Folder 19 |
1940-1949 |
Folder 20 |
Undated |
Letters, genealogical materials, and notes relating to the history of the Hairstons, Penns, Wilsons, and related families.
Folder 21-22
Folder 21Folder 22 |
Genealogical materials |
Chiefly newspaper clippings relating to the Civil War, historic sites in Virginia, and family histories. Some memorial poems are also included.
Folder 23 |
1870-1889 |
Folder 24 |
1890-1911 |
Folder 25 |
1912-1919 |
Folder 26 |
1920-1933 |
Folder 27 |
1934 |
Folder 28-32
Folder 28Folder 29Folder 30Folder 31Folder 32 |
Undated |
Oversize Volume SV-1518/1 |
Volume 1Samuel Hairston's book of clippings, 1886-1899, chiefly about Confederate matters. |
Oversize Volume SV-1518/2 |
Volume 2Poems, belles-lettres, and miscellany, 1880-1914. |
Image P-1518/1 |
Photograph marked "Maj. M. H. Stevens, CSA" |
Image P-1518/2-4
P-1518/2P-1518/3P-1518/4 |
Unidentified persons |