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 | 0.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 200 items) |
Abstract | The collection is chiefly papers of Benjamin Fitzpatrick, along with some papers of his son, Benjamin Jr. (1854-1892). Papers of the elder Fitzpatrick consist of documents relating to his legal practice; plantation records, including receipts and bills of sale for slaves; material from his political career as governor of Alabama, 1841-1844, as U.S. senator and representative from Alabama, 1848-1860, as nominee for the Democratic vice-presidential candidacy in 1860, and attendance at the convention held in Baltimore, Md., that same year; and personal correspondence, including letters from political allies, such as Dixon Hall Lewis, and from Fitzpatrick, Sr., to his wife and son. There are also letters from other members of the Fitzpatrick family, including one describing West Texas in the 1840s. The papers of Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr., 1854-1892, consist of school compositions and essays he wrote while a student at the Greene Springs School, run by Henry Tutwiler, in Hale County, Ala.; letters to and from his mother, Aurelia Blassingame Fitzpatrick, and other family members; and financial and legal documents relating to his law career. |
Creator | Fitzpatrick, Benjamin, 1802-1869. |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Elizabeth Pauk, June 1991
Encoded by: ByteManagers Inc., 2008
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.
Benjamin Fitzpatrick, son of William and Anne Phillips Fitzpatrick, was born 30 June 1802 in Greene County, Ga. In 1816, he moved to Alabama, where he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1823. He retired from the practice of law in 1827 due to ill health and became a successful planter on his estate "Oak Grove" in Autauga (now Elmore) County, a few miles from Montgomery. In 1827, he married Sarah Terry Elmore (1807-1837), member of a prominent Alabama family, and became a brother-in-law by marriage to Dixon Hall Lewis (1802-1848), a powerful states rights advocate in Congress from 1829 to 1848. In 1840, Fitzpatrick campaigned for Martin Van Buren, and was awarded with the Democratic Party's nomination for the governorship of Alabama. He was elected in 1841, and served two terms. In 1844, he retired once again to his Oak Grove plantation, but reentered politics when called upon to fill the U.S. Senate seat of Dixon Lewis, who died in 1848. In 1853, he was once again appointed to fill a U.S. Senate seat, this time that of William Rufus DuVane King, and he was elected for a full term in 1855. In 1860, he was nominated by the National Democratic Convention in Baltimore for vice-president on the Douglas ticket. He refused this nomination. He opposed secession, but supported the Confederate cause. After the outbreak of the Civil War, he retired once more to Oak Grove, where he died on 21 November 1869.
Benjamin Fitzpatrick had several children with Sarah Elmore: Elmore Joseph, Phillips (1830-1901), Morris, James Madison, and John Archer. In 1837, Sarah died, and, in 1846, Fitzpatrick married Aurelia Rachel Blassingame. Their only surviving child was Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr. (1854-1892).
Back to TopThis collection consists chiefly of the business, political, and personal papers of Benjamin Fitzpatrick from 1819 to 1869, including legal and financial documents, letters from his political allies, and other material relating to his political career; and the papers of his son Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr., consisting of school compositions and speeches, letters from his mother, Aurelia Blassingame Fitzgerald, and other relatives, 1868-1871, and legal and financial documents, 1873-1892. There are also newspaper clippings on Benjamin Fitzpatrick's role in the Baltimore Convention of 1860 and obituaries on his death in 1869, as well a copy of his 1841 inaugural address as governor of Alabama.
Back to TopBusiness, financial, political, and personal papers of Benjamin Fitzpatrick, 1819-1869, as well as newspaper clippings on his life and reminiscences by members of his family.
Arrangement: chronological.
Business, financial, personal, and political papers consisting of receipts for the purchase of slaves by his nephews, David and William Baldwin; Fitzpatrick's commission as a member of the Alabama state militia in 1823; receipts for the purchase of slaves and land, and for the sale of cotton; documents and correspondence relating to Fitzpatrick's legal practice; a letter dated 1831 from R. Safford regarding Andrew Jackson's election and Cabinet, and the upcoming gubernatorial race in Alabama; and letters to and from various family members, including a letter dated 1849 from A. Fitzpatrick in Arenoso near Texana, Texas, a brother of Benjamin Fitzpatrick, to his nephew Phillips Fitzpatrick, comparing the states of Louisiana and Texas in terms of quality of life and agricultural value, and describing methods of conducting business and setting up a plantation in West Texas.
Fitzpatrick's political papers include a letter from Dixon H. Lewis, 1841, on the state of the Democratic Party in Alabama, Lewis's opinions on abolitionists, various political figures in Washington, the disarray of the Whig Party, and his observations regarding Clement Comer Clay (1789-1866), fellow U.S. Senator from Alabama. There is also a printed copy of Fitzpatrick's inaugural address in 1841, and an original copy and a typed transcription of his second inaugural address in 1843.
For Benjamin Fitzpatrick's U.S. Senate career, there are documents relating to the purchase of a share of the steamboat "Watumpka" in Cincinnati; a letter, presumably by Benjamin Fitzpatrick to a constituent, describing the events leading up the the admission of Kansas to the Union; and a letter from Benjamin Fitzpatrick to Colonel Albert James Pickett (1810-1858) in Autaugaville, Ala., regarding a claim before Congress on behalf of the Creek Indian tribe, asking for his testimony. There is a great deal of material dealing with the Baltimore Convention of 1860 and Fitzpatrick's nomination for vice-president on the Douglas ticket by the National Democratic Convention, including an official letter from the Convention informing him of the nomination; telegrams urging him to accept or reject the offer; and letters to friends explaining his decision to decline and views on the upcoming election.
There are documents from the Civil War years about the embrasure of mules by the Confederate Army, a Confederate bond, records of tax payments for agricultural products, and receipts for the sale of corn to the Confederate Army. There is a typed transcription of a letter Fitzpatrick wrote his son Elmore in Mobile in which he informed his son of prominent northern statesmen who would aid him if captured by the Union Army, and a letter of acknowledgment from the U.S. State Department regarding Fitzpatrick's presidential pardon in 1865. There are also several letters dated 1868 and 1869 to his son Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr. and his wife Aurelia giving family news. Letters to his son include fatherly advice and news from home while Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr., was studying under the care of his uncle Albert in Mobile. There are other letters from this period in Series 2.1.
Folder 1 |
1819-1825 |
Folder 2 |
1826-1829 |
Folder 3 |
1830-1838 |
Folder 4 |
1840-1843 |
Folder 5 |
1844-1857 |
Separated Folder SEP-3291/1 |
Letter, 3 March 1857, Franklin Pierce to Benjamin FitzpatrickRestriction to Access: The original item is not available for immediate or same day access. Please contact staff at wilsonlibrary@unc.edu to discuss options. |
Folder 6 |
1858-1869 |
Newspaper clippings relating to Benjamin Fitzpatrick's nomination as vice-president during the National Democratic Convention in Baltimore in 1860, obituaries, and other clippings about him; a typed transcription of a reminiscence of Fitzpatrick's Oak Grove plantation by his niece Mary Glenn Brickell; and the lyrics to a song by Fitzpatrick's nephew William O. Baldwin called "Wait for the Wagon," on his decision to leave politics and not to run for a seat in the Confederate Congress.
Folder 7 |
Undated material about Benjamin Fitzpatrick |
Folder 8 |
Newspaper clippings about Benjamin Fitzpatrick |
Personal, financial, and legal papers of Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr., 1868-1892 including school compositions, letters to and from members of his family, and legal and financial documents.
Arrangement: roughly chronological.
Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr.'s school compositions while attending the Greene Springs School near Havana, Hale County, Alabama. This schools was directed by Henry Tutwiler and his daughters. Included are essays, course of readings, speeches, Bible lessons, and a translation from Virgil; a handwritten copy of a song or poem entitled "Little Breeches" by John Hay and copies of two debating society speeches from 1872; a number of letters written to Benjamin Jr., while at the Greene Springs School and in Mobile, mostly undated, from Fitzpatrick's mother Aurelia Blassingame Fitzpatrick, detailing family and neighborhood activities; and several letters from Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr. to and from his cousins at home and to his mother. Note that there are letters from this period in Series 1.1.
Folder 9 |
Compositions and speeches, 1872 and undated |
Folder 10 |
Correspondence, 1870-1872 |
Folder 11 |
Correspondence, undated (circa 1868-1872) |
Arrangement: chronological.
Will of Aurelia Blassingame Fitzpatrick, mother of Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr.; several promissory notes to various individuals from Benjamin Fitzpatrick Jr.; legal documents relating to his law career; and a list of his solicitor's fees for 1890; a bill for the court costs relating to his will, 1892.
Folder 12 |
1873-1892 |