John Devereux Papers, PC.34
Abstract
This collection contains papers relating to the Pollock and Devereux families, among the largest landowners and slaveholders in North Carolina during the antebellum period. This small lot of documents includes some papers of the Pollock family prior to as well as after the connection formed with the Devereux family by the 1790 marriage of Frances Pollock (1771-1849) and John Devereux, Sr. (1761-1844). The family papers are made up principally of patents for land, deeds, in Halifax and Bertie counties and the Hawfield land in Orange (now Alamance) County. Papers relating to slaves owned by the family are located in folders concerning the estates of George Pollock, 1839-1840, and John Devereux, 1844. Of particular interest is the last will and testament of Frances (Pollock) Devereux (1771-1849) leaving several charitable bequests to the Presbyterian Church in the United States, its schools and foreign missions, to the Presbyterian Church, Raleigh, N.C., to The Seaman's Friend Society, Norfolk, Va., and a continuing annual fund to help pay a teacher giving religious instruction to slaves on Roanoke River plantations. While the record of Mrs. Devereux's estate indicates the value of her slaves, the file includes no list of them; and only a few of her slaves were named in the will. Also of interest are the group of papers relating to the Griffin Free School New Bern, N.C., 1834-1867. These are primarily fiscal records dating from the time when Thomas Pollock Devereux (1793-1869) and his son were trustees. Additionally, a large portion of the collection consists of military papers and accounts relating to John Devereux's (1819-1893) service during most of the Civil War as the state's chief quartermaster, with the rank of major.
Descriptive Summary
- Title
- John Devereux Papers
- Call Number
- PC.34
- Creator
- Devereux, John
- Date
- 1712 - 1892
- Extent
- 14.00 Archive Boxes, 5000.00 items
- Language
- English
- Repository
- State Archives of North Carolina
Restrictions on Access & Use
Access Restrictions
Available for research.
Use Restrictions
Copyright is retained by the authors of these materials, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law (Title 17 US Code). Individual researchers are responsible for using these materials in conformance with copyright law as well as any donor restrictions accompanying the materials.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], PC.34, John Devereux Papers, State Archives of North Carolina, Raleigh, NC, USA.
Collection Overview
This collection contains papers relating to the Pollock and Devereux families, among
the largest landowners and slaveholders in North Carolina during the antebellum period.
This small lot of documents includes some papers of the Pollock family prior to as
well as after the connection formed with the Devereux family by the 1790 marriage
of Frances Pollock (1771-1849) and John Devereux, Sr. (1761-1844). The family papers
are made up principally of patents for land, deeds, in Halifax and Bertie counties
and the Hawfield land in Orange (now Alamance) County. Papers relating to slaves owned
by the family are located in folders concerning the estates of George Pollock, 1839-1840,
and John Devereux, 1844. Of particular interest is the last will and testament of
Frances (Pollock) Devereux (1771-1849) leaving several charitable bequests to the
Presbyterian Church in the United States, its schools and foreign missions, to the
Presbyterian Church, Raleigh, N.C., to The Seaman's Friend Society, Norfolk, Va.,
and a continuing annual fund to help pay a teacher giving religious instruction to
slaves on Roanoke River plantations. While the record of Mrs. Devereux's estate indicates
the value of her slaves, the file includes no list of them; and only a few of her
slaves were named in the will. Also of interest are the group of papers relating to
the Griffin Free School New Bern, N.C., 1834-1867. These are primarily fiscal records
dating from the time when Thomas Pollock Devereux (1793-1869) and his son were trustees.
Additionally, a large portion of the collection consists of military papers and accounts
relating to John Devereux's (1819-1893) service during most of the Civil War as the
state's chief quartermaster, with the rank of major.
This Collection is part of a larger body of papers relating to the Pollock and Devereux
families of North Carolina that was divided sometime in the past into three independent
collections: Thomas Pollock Papers (PC.31); Pollock-Devereux Papers (PC.32); and John
Devereux Papers (PC.34). The division was not a particularly neat one. Consequently,
this collection includes materials that properly ought to have been put into one or
the other of the three collections - or all treated as a single group of papers. Not
only does this collection include Pollock family papers and Pollock-Devereux family
papers, but it includes a series of the papers of Thomas Pollock Devereux (1793-1869),
papers of John Devereux (1819-1893), and papers of James Nicolson Edmondston (1831-1896).
The collection is, therefore, arranged in three principal sub-groups: (1) Family Papers,
1712-1892; (2) John Devereux Civil War Papers, 1861-1863; and (3) James N. Edmondston
Civil War Papers, 1862-1963.
The address list, or more properly, the "Contract Check List," in Box 7 is under seal
until the year 2002 and may not be used without the permission of Professor Lane before
that date.
Arrangement Note
The collection is arranged in three principal sub-groups: (1) Family Papers, 1712-1892; (2) John Devereux Civil War Papers, 1861-1863; and (3) James N. Edmondston Civil War Papers, 1862-1863. A description of the contents of the primary sections of the Devereux collection follows:
Biographical Note
The Pollock and the Devereux families were among the largest landowners and slaveholders in North Carolina. This small lot of documents includes some papers of the Pollock family prior to as well as after the connection formed with the Devereux family by the 1790 marriage of Frances Pollock (1771-1849) and John Devereux, Sr. (1761-1844). (See family chart at end of the paper finding aid in the Search Room of the State Archives..)
Contents of the Collection
1. Family Papers
scopecontent:
The Pollock and the Devereux families were among the largest landowners and slaveholders in North Carolina. This small lot of documents includes some papers of the Pollock family prior to as well as after the connection formed with the Devereux family by the 1790 marriage of Frances Pollock (1771-1849) and John Devereux, Sr. (1761-1844). (See family chart at end of the paper finding aid.) The Pollock family papers range in date from the time of Governor Thomas Pollock (1654-1722), and commence with the signed by Pollock for the government of North Carolina on November 25, 1712, and by King Tom Blount (c.1675-c.1739) and five chief men for the upper towns of the Tuscarora Indian nation. The papers are, for the most part, arranged chronologically by the family member to whom they pertain, and they are made up principally of patents for land, deed, in Halifax and Bertie counties and the Hawfield land in Orange (now Alamance) County. Papers relating to slaves owned by the family are to be found in the folders concerning the estates of George Pollock, 1839-1840, and John Devereux, 1844. The last will and testament of Frances (Pollock) Devereux (1771-1849) leaves several charitable bequests to the Presbyterian Church in the United States and its schools and foreign missions, to the Presbyterian Church, Raleigh, N.C., and to The Seaman's Friend Society, Norfolk, Virginia.
It provides, as well, for a continuing annual fund to help pay a teacher to give religious instruction to slaves on Roanoke River plantations. Only a few of her slaves were named in specific bequests and provisions of the will, and while the record of her estate indicates the value of her slaves to have been approximately $20,000, the file includes no list of them. The last folder in the box contains a few letters and miscellaneous documents dating between 1863 and 1892, relating for the most part to the law practice of Thomas Pollock Devereux, Jr. (1845-1913).
Griffin Free School,1834-1867
scopecontent:
By provisions of his last will and testament Moses Griffin of New Bern, N.C., converted his estate into a trust upon his death in 1816, and directed his executors to use the profits from the trust to purchase land in the town, to erect a schoolhouse, and to engage a teacher. The school was to be nonsectarian and was to provide a free education to children and orphans, both boys and girls, of indigent parents. After a delay occasioned by lawsuits lasting until 1828, brought by heirs to invalidate the trust, the free school was opened in the spring of 1832 and was incorporated in 1834. As it turned out, only girls were admitted as students to the school, which was long under the superintendence of Miss Arete S. Ellis (1802-1865). One of the original trustees was John Devereux, his son Thomas Pollock Devereux and grandson John subsequently serving, too, as trustees. After the fall of New Bern to United States forces in 1862, the school was briefly moved to Raleigh, but returned to New Bern upon the close of the Civil War. In 1882 funds from the Griffin Free School trust were merged with other funds in order to finance the newly created New Bern Graded Schools.
This group of papers relating to the school is made up of fiscal records and date from the period when Thomas Pollock Devereux and his son were trustees. The files contain: a draft of the private act incorporating the school; correspondence from the New Bern attorney, George S. Attmore, who represented the trustees and his annual accounting to them; the trustees' annual accounts to the Craven County Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions; papers from lawsuits relating to the charitable trust fund and its disbursements; and miscellaneous papers.
2. John Devereux Civil War Papers,1861-1863
scopecontent:
Even before the North Carolina seceded from the Union, the state began to prepare itself militarily by purchasing arms and ammunition and enlarging the staff of the state adjutant general. In the commissary department, the commissary general was given four assistants, and in the quartermaster department, the quartermaster general was given a number of assistants as well. John Devereux was appointed an assistant commissary of subsistence on May 1, 1861, and given the rank of captain. On September 20, 1861, Devereux was reassigned to duties as the state's chief quartermaster and later in December of that year was promoted to the rank of major. He held both the rank and position throughout the remainder of the war. At the close of the war, he was one of the delegation sent from Raleigh to meet General Sherman in order to arrange terms for surrender of the city.
Devereux's office as assistant commissary for subsistence was located at Weldon where he spent the summer of 1861 gathering and issuing provisions to feed the state's regiments in training camps at Weldon and Garysburg. His papers are very incomplete, being stronger for the months of May and June than for the third quarter of the year. It may be that some of the papers have been removed and put into the
Upon his appointment as chief quartermaster, Devereux was given assistants with specialized
duties:
Devereux had two special agents for the purchase of cotton - Captain William H. Oliver in the eastern part of the state, and Captain James Sloan in the central part. The two special agents purchased ginned and baled cotton and sent it either to the Saxapahaw mills to be made into cloth, or to Wilmington to be run out through the U.S. blockade to England and sold in order to purchase medicine and medical supplies, spirits, coffee, grey cloth, flannels, army cloth, blankets, boots, leather, and so forth that could hardly be obtained in the Confederacy.
Devereux made quarterly reports using standardized forms called , each having a distinctive letter to designate the nature of the report. For every expenditure and every receipt or disbursement within the various categories, Devereux was expected to have supporting vouchers so that his accounts could be audited. Despite the fact that Devereux was scrupulous in his record keeping, some vouchers are not present with their abstracts. More than that, abstracts and vouchers are lacking either in some quarters, or for entire quarters, or for entire years. During the biennium of 1920-1922 a large part of Devereux's papers were removed and put into the . Some years later the papers of Thomas D. Hogg, chief commissary, and briefly, ordnance officer, were similarly treated. This resulted in an intermingling of some of the Devereux Papers with the Hogg Papers in which quartermaster, commissary, and ordnance are indiscriminately commingled. The following files are no longer to be found in the John Devereux Papers but are, presumably, to be found in the 1862 Third Quarter; 1863 Second Quarter; 1863 Fourth Quarter; 1864-1865 All Quarters.
3. James N. Edmondston Civil War Papers,1862-1863
scopecontent:
James Nicolson Edmondston (1831-1896) was brother to Patrick M. Edmondston, husband of John Devereux's sister Catherine. The family arranged in October, 1861, to get James Edmondston an appointment, with the rank of captain, in Devereux's quartermaster operation. In May, 1862, he received an appointment to the staff of the C.S.A quartermaster general with rank of major and was assigned duties as assistant quartermaster for Daniel's Brigade which was then stationed at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia. In January, 1863, the brigade was dispatched first to Goldsboro then to Kinston, N.C., to take part in Gen. D. H. Hill's effort to recapture the towns of New Bern and Washington from the Yankees. The brigade was ordered back to Virginia in May, 1863, preparatory to the Gettysburg Campaign, on which Edmondston accompanied the brigade as quartermaster. He remained assigned to Daniel's Brigade until May, 1864, though it is unclear to what extent he was able to perform duties as brigade quartermaster after September, 1863. He entered the hospital at Richmond at the beginning of December, 1863, and did not return to duty with the brigade until sometime in February, 1864. In May he was reassigned to duties in the department of the C.S.A. inspector general of transportation. Edmondston spent the remainder of the war headquartered at Greensboro, N.C., as C.S.A. inspector of field transportation, holding the chief power of impressment of horses and mules in the state for the Confederate Army.
Edmondston's records as quartermaster to Daniel's Brigade appear to be reasonably complete for the period he is known to have executed the duties of the office personally. It is presumed that another officer served as brigade quartermaster after September, 1864 and that Edmondston put his retained copies of reports and their supporting vouchers into the hands of Devereux for safekeeping. There is no connection between the reports of Edmondston and those of Devereux. Though Edmondston was concerned with the supplying of a brigade and not the troops of a state, his reports, too, are in the standard form of lettered abstracts with supporting vouchers.
These include records for some regiments that were constituent elements of Daniel's Brigade and some that were not. The muster and pay rolls are, rather, for regiments paid at Drewry's Bluff, Va., or Kinston and Goldsboro, N.C., by Edmondston as a C.S.A. assistant quartermaster acting for the C.S.A. pay department. When regiments paid were mustered for pay purposes, they were mustered by company and rolls were made out and certified by the mustering officer. When each soldier was paid, the amount of pay was entered on the roll, and the soldier signed the roll as he received his pay.
4. Family Papers, 1712-1892
Scope and Content:
Series is part of the John Devereux Papers collection.
The Pollock and the Devereux families were among the largest landowners and slaveholders
in North Carolina. This small lot of documents includes some papers of the Pollock
family prior to as well as after the connection formed with the Devereux family by
the 1790 marriage of Frances Pollock (1771-1849) and John Devereux, Sr. (1761-1844).
(See family chart at end of the paper finding aid.) The Pollock family papers range
in date from the time of Governor Thomas Pollock (1654-1722), and commence with the
Preliminary Articles in Order to a General Peace, signed by Pollock for the government
of North Carolina on November 25, 1712, and by King Tom Blount (c.1675-c.1739) and
five chief men for the upper towns of the Tuscarora Indian nation. The papers are,
for the most part, arranged chronologically by the family member to whom they pertain,
and they are made up principally of patents for land, deed, in Halifax and Bertie
counties and the Hawfield land in Orange (now Alamance) County. Papers relating to
slaves owned by the family are to be found in the folders concerning the estates of
George Pollock, 1839-1840, and John Devereux, 1844. The last will and testament of
Frances (Pollock) Devereux (1771-1849) leaves several charitable bequests to the Presbyterian
Church in the United States and its schools and foreign missions, to the Presbyterian
Church, Raleigh, N.C., and to The Seaman's Friend Society, Norfolk, Virginia.
It provides, as well, for a continuing annual fund to help pay a teacher to give religious
instruction to slaves on Roanoke River plantations. Only a few of her slaves were
named in specific bequests and provisions of the will, and while the record of her
estate indicates the value of her slaves to have been approximately $20,000, the file
includes no list of them. The last folder in the box contains a few letters and miscellaneous
documents dating between 1863 and 1892, relating for the most part to the law practice
of Thomas Pollock Devereux, Jr. (1845-1913).
5. John Devereux Civil War Papers, 1861-1863
Scope and Content:
Series is part of the John Devereux Papers collection.
Even before the North Carolina seceded from the Union, the state began to prepare
itself militarily by purchasing arms and ammunition and enlarging the staff of the
state adjutant general. In the commissary department, the commissary general was given
four assistants, and in the quartermaster department, the quartermaster general was
given a number of assistants as well. John Devereux was appointed an assistant commissary
of subsistence on May 1, 1861, and given the rank of captain. On September 20, 1861,
Devereux was reassigned to duties as the state's chief quartermaster and later in
December of that year was promoted to the rank of major. He held both the rank and
position throughout the remainder of the war. At the close of the war, he was one
of the delegation sent from Raleigh to meet General Sherman in order to arrange terms
for surrender of the city.
Devereux's office as assistant commissary for subsistence was located at Weldon where
he spent the summer of 1861 gathering and issuing provisions to feed the state's regiments
in training camps at Weldon and Garysburg. His papers are very incomplete, being stronger
for the months of May and June than for the third quarter of the year. It may be that
some of the papers have been removed and put into the Military Collection.
Upon his appointment as chief quartermaster, Devereux was given assistants with specialized
duties:
1. Captain Moses A. Bledsoe, transportation (cavalry horses, forage, mules, wagons,
harness);
2. Captain Abraham Myers, supplies (camp and garrison equipage such as tents of all
sorts, knapsacks, haversacks, canteens, cooking and eating utensils, small tools such
as axes, picks, shovels, spades);
3. Captain I. W. Garrett and Major Clement Dowd, clothing manufacture (hats, coats,
pants, shirts, socks, undergarments, woolen and cotton jeans cloth, thread, buttons,
needles).
Devereux had two special agents for the purchase of cotton - Captain William H. Oliver
in the eastern part of the state, and Captain James Sloan in the central part. The
two special agents purchased ginned and baled cotton and sent it either to the Saxapahaw
mills to be made into cloth, or to Wilmington to be run out through the U.S. blockade
to England and sold in order to purchase medicine and medical supplies, spirits, coffee,
grey cloth, flannels, army cloth, blankets, boots, leather, and so forth that could
hardly be obtained in the Confederacy.
Devereux made quarterly reports using standardized forms called abstracts, each having
a distinctive letter to designate the nature of the report. For every expenditure
and every receipt or disbursement within the various categories, Devereux was expected
to have supporting vouchers so that his accounts could be audited. Despite the fact
that Devereux was scrupulous in his record keeping, some vouchers are not present
with their abstracts. More than that, abstracts and vouchers are lacking either in
some quarters, or for entire quarters, or for entire years. During the biennium of
1920-1922 a large part of Devereux's papers were removed and put into the Military
Collection. Some years later the papers of Thomas D. Hogg, chief commissary, and briefly,
ordnance officer, were similarly treated. This resulted in an intermingling of some
of the Devereux Papers with the Hogg Papers in which quartermaster, commissary, and
ordnance are indiscriminately commingled. The following files are no longer to be
found in the John Devereux Papers but are, presumably, to be found in the Military
Collection: 1862 Third Quarter; 1863 Second Quarter; 1863 Fourth Quarter; 1864-1865
All Quarters.
6. James N. Edmondston Civil War Papers, 1862-1863
Scope and Content:
Series is part of the John Devereux Papers collection.
James Nicolson Edmondston (1831-1896) was brother to Patrick M. Edmondston, husband
of John Devereux's sister Catherine. The family arranged in October, 1861, to get
James Edmondston an appointment, with the rank of captain, in Devereux's quartermaster
operation. In May, 1862, he received an appointment to the staff of the C.S.A quartermaster
general with rank of major and was assigned duties as assistant quartermaster for
Daniel's Brigade which was then stationed at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia. In January,
1863, the brigade was dispatched first to Goldsboro then to Kinston, N.C., to take
part in Gen. D. H. Hill's effort to recapture the towns of New Bern and Washington
from the Yankees. The brigade was ordered back to Virginia in May, 1863, preparatory
to the Gettysburg Campaign, on which Edmondston accompanied the brigade as quartermaster.
He remained assigned to Daniel's Brigade until May, 1864, though it is unclear to
what extent he was able to perform duties as brigade quartermaster after September,
1863. He entered the hospital at Richmond at the beginning of December, 1863, and
did not return to duty with the brigade until sometime in February, 1864. In May he
was reassigned to duties in the department of the C.S.A. inspector general of transportation.
Edmondston spent the remainder of the war headquartered at Greensboro, N.C., as C.S.A.
inspector of field transportation, holding the chief power of impressment of horses
and mules in the state for the Confederate Army.
Edmondston's records as quartermaster to Daniel's Brigade appear to be reasonably
complete for the period he is known to have executed the duties of the office personally.
It is presumed that another officer served as brigade quartermaster after September,
1864 and that Edmondston put his retained copies of reports and their supporting vouchers
into the hands of Devereux for safekeeping. There is no connection between the reports
of Edmondston and those of Devereux. Though Edmondston was concerned with the supplying
of a brigade and not the troops of a state, his reports, too, are in the standard
form of lettered abstracts with supporting vouchers.
These include records for some regiments that were constituent elements of Daniel's
Brigade and some that were not. The muster and pay rolls are, rather, for regiments
paid at Drewry's Bluff, Va., or Kinston and Goldsboro, N.C., by Edmondston as a C.S.A.
assistant quartermaster acting for the C.S.A. pay department. When regiments paid
were mustered for pay purposes, they were mustered by company and rolls were made
out and certified by the mustering officer. When each soldier was paid, the amount
of pay was entered on the roll, and the soldier signed the roll as he received his
pay.
Subject Headings
Acquisitions Information
Received from Margaret (Mordecai) Devereux (Mrs. John Devereux), Raleigh, N.C., biennium of 1902-1904.