Our Collection

At the Institute’s core is the Gilder Lehrman Collection, one of the great archives in American history. More than 85,000 items cover five hundred years of American history, from Columbus’s 1493 letter describing the New World through the end of the twentieth century.

Adair & Smith (1861-1864) Southern Confederacy. (April 8, 1862)

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Gilder Lehrman Collection #: GLC05959.09.007 Author/Creator: Adair & Smith (1861-1864) Place Written: Atlanta, Georgia Type: Newspaper Date: 8 April 1862 Pagination: 2 p. ; 55.5 x 40.8 cm. Order a Copy

Article titles include: The New Jersey Peace Resolutions, Northern Dispatches, Yankee Letters, The Provision Question, Episcopal Election, Our Special Port Hudson Correspondence, Letter from the Rio Grand, Special Correspondence of the Southern Confederacy, We Won't Take Them, The Spring Campaign. Note: 2 Pages Only - Incomplete, Has Part of masthead with signed name J.C. Grant. Miscellaneous advertisements and land sale notices. Large burn mark on first page. Slave sale advertisement on verso.

This newspaper was commenced by Dr. J.P. Hambleton, on the 15th of February, 1859, and continued until May, 1861, when its title was transferred to Messrs. Hanleiter and Adair.
In March, 1861, Mr. G.W. Adair became associatd with Mr. Hanleiter in its proprietorship. In May, Dr. Hambleton having discontinued the publication of his paper and transferred its title, etc. to Messrs. Hanleiter and Adair, they adopted, as being more general and appropriate the title of The Southern Confederacy - and associated with themselveds as Co-editors, Mr. J.H. Smith, who in June, 1861, purchased Mr. Hanleiter's interest. By July 4th 1861, the paper began using a letter and telegraphic correspondant located at Mnassas Junction and other reporters at various points in Virginia.
As the Union troops stormed down towards the Chattahoochee, the paper sought quarters in Macon, georgia, however leaving a small staff in Atlanta to issue hand-bill "Extras" from proof presses.
It's last copy was issued on the day the Confederates evacuated the City. So fell the City and the newspaper.

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