Includes 5 items: Document signed Jno O’Fallon, executor of last will and testament of William Stokes, dated June 25, 1825. General William H. Ashley will pay John Graves on order $500 in consideration of having furnished me with information regarding bounty lands belonging to estate of late William Stokes; Letter signed Jno. O’Fallon, St. Louis, to John Graves, dated June 26, 1825. Enclosed is order on General Ashley. Mr. Tooley has been several days with us, having made sale of his tobacco to Scott & Rule. He did not pay us $500 you wished, but only $50, preferring a draft upon Mr. Hood for the residue. For some months I have been much occupied in attending to my mother, who was buried last Monday. I expect Mr. Keyte in ten days, have received about $7000 of goods, the greater part of which are yet unopened for want of invoices and the illness of Mr. Campbell who is visited with consumption. Mrs. Keyte’s little daughter is very ill and fears she will lose it; Letter signed John Graves, Chariton, to H. R. Gamble, dated January 4, 1831. Concerning the business between me and Colonel J. O’Fallon; Letter signed John Graves, to H. R. Gamble, dated March 1, 1831. I enclose you the written demand against Colonel John O’Fallon for General Ashley’s obligation; Letter signed John Graves, to Colonel John O’Fallon, dated March 1, 1831. You will deliver to Hamilton R. Gamble the bond or obligation from General William H. Ashley to William Stokes for $500 which you, as executor of said Stokes, transferred to me June 25, 1825., 1825-1831
Scope and Contents
The Hamilton Rowan Gamble Papers consist of deeds, early land grants, surveys, a St. Louis court docket book (1816-1833), bills of sale, legal papers regarding land ownership and business agreements, letters pertaining to causes of the Civil War, letters regarding the raising of a state militia, correspondence with political and military leaders, account books and receipts. Papers pertaining to land cases include deeds from French and Spanish ownership of this area, such as a deed between Pierre Chouteau and his wife who sold land for $248 to Meriwether Lewis (box 1/folder 2); a land grant to Andrew Bowen from President James Monroe with the presidential seal (box 1/folder 5); notes on Doit Delany’s land between Creve Coeur Lake and the Missouri River, part of a land grant to Antoine Reynal by the Spanish government (box 6/folder 1); a copy of the land paper from May 23, 1772, signed by Laclede Liguest, et al., designating land granted in the name of the king (box 5/folder 3). Papers regarding slave cases in the courts of Missouri include an 1805 freedom suit by Celeste, an Indian woman, versus Madame Chevalier (box 1/folder 2). An 1827 case of Margrite versus Pierre Chouteau, Sr., explains that the plaintiff’s grandmother, an Indian, was taken in war by the French and possibly sold as a slave in 1769 (box 2/folder 5). Subsequent papers in the collection show that the case was dismissed in 1838 for want of jurisdiction (box 6/folder 6). Letters to and from Gamble from the years before and during the Civil War illuminate the issue of slavery and emancipation in a border state. A copy of a letter from Gamble in 1861 states his view of abolitionists (box 9/folder 13). A copy of an address at an 1862 meeting of loyal states in support of President Lincoln and emancipation bears a notation that Governor Gamble refused to sign it as governor of Missouri (box 10/folder 3). The original draft and copy of Gamble’s 1863 message before a party convention concerns emancipation for the state of Missouri (box 10/folder 7). Critical papers and letters between Gamble and President Abraham Lincoln cover such issues as: raising and paying for a state militia (box 9/folder 3); the situation in Missouri at the beginning of the Civil War (box 9/folder 8); and disagreements between Gamble and Union generals over who should be in control of the state militia (box 10). Collection includes several letters signed by President Lincoln (box 9/folder 12, box 10/folder 9). The collection includes official papers with government seals from 1824 when Gamble was appointed secretary of state of Missouri (box 2/folder 2), and from 1849 on a certificate admitting Gamble as an attorney and counselor of the U.S. Supreme Court (box 8/folder 5). Miscellaneous letters consist of one against gambling and playing roulette from “The Friends of Morality” (box 4/folder 6); plans for a 2nd Presbyterian Church on 5th Street, including drawings of the church interior (box 7/folder 1); and a letter soliciting donations to establish Linden Wood Female College (box 8/folder 9). Other letters and journal entries discuss treatments of diseases, e.g., cholera and neuralgia (box 8/folder 5). Receipts and account books show costs of clothing, household items, food, building materials and bills of sale for slaves to and from Gamble (box 2/folder 6; box 3/folder 7; box 5/folder 1, 5; box 7/folder 5; box 8/folders 4, 6, 11; box 9/folder 2). Letters written near the end of the Civil War, shortly before Gamble’s death, discuss the status of the provisional government (box 10/folder 7).
Dates
- 1825-1831
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research use.
Extent
From the Collection: 5.7 Cubic Feet ( (11 boxes; 2 oversize folders))
Language of Materials
English
Creator
- From the Collection: Gamble, Hamilton Rowan, 1798-1864 (Creator, Person)
Repository Details
Part of the Missouri Historical Society Library and Research Center Repository