A Guide to the Papers of James Lawson Kemper 1823-1895
A Collection in
The Special Collections Department
Accession Number 4098
![[logo]](http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/logos/uva-sc.jpg)
Special Collections Department, University of Virginia Library
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections LibraryUniversity of Virginia
Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110
USA
Phone: (434) 243-1776
Fax: (434) 924-4968
Reference Request Form: https://small.lib.virginia.edu/reference-request/
URL: http://small.library.virginia.edu/
© 2002 By the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia. All rights reserved.
Funding: Web version of the finding aid funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by: Special Collections Department
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Use Restrictions
See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.
Preferred Citation
James Lawson Kemper
Papers, 1823-1895, Accession #4098,
Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia Library,
Charlottesville, Va.
Acquisition Information
This collection, originally deposited in 1952, was given without restriction by Mr. Harry P. Bresee, Orange, Virginia, on September 5, 1978.
Biographical/Historical Information
James Lawson Kemper
(1823-1985), Confederate general and
governor of Virginia, was born June 11, 1823, in Madison
County, Virginia. He attended the Virginia Military Institute
and Washington College, received his B.A. from the latter in
1842, and commenced practicing law a year later. At the
outbreak of the Mexican War in 1846
Kemper
was comissioned a
captain in the Virginia volunteers, but did not see active
service. Returning to Virginia and his law practice, in 1853
he married Cremora Conway Cave, affectionately called "Belle"
by her husband. They were to have six children. The same year
Kemper
was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates for the
first of five terms, the last (1861-1863) as speaker of the
house. He headed the committee on military affairs and was
appointed president of the Board of Visitors at the Virginia
Military Institute. In 1861
Kemper
advocated calling the state
convention that eventually declared Virginia's secession from
the Union on April 17.
Kemper
joined the Confederate army receiving a comission as
colonel of the 7th Virginia Regiment on May 2, 1861. He led
his regiment with great skill and valor at First Bull Run and
Williamsburg, which resulted in his promotion to brigadier
general on June 3, 1862. Commanding a brigade in the Army of
Northern Virginia, he fought in the Seven Days Battles, Second
Bull Run (where he temporarily commanded a division),
Antietam, and Fredericksburg. After serving with Longstreet's
First Corps in North Carolina during the Battle of
Chancellorsville, he rejoined Lee's army as a brigade
commander for the Gettysburg campaign in Pickett's division.
At Gettysburg,
Kemper
led his brigade in the ill-fated
Pickett's charge of July 3, 1863, and was severely wounded and
captured. Returned on a prisoner exchange in 1864, he was
deemed unfit for futher field service, and was relegated to
the command of the Virginia Reserves.
Kemper
was promoted to
major general on September 19, 1864, and after Appomattox he
was paroled by United States military authorities on May 2,
1865.
Kemper
returned to his law practice and resumed his
involvement in politics in Reconstrudction-era Virginia. He
favored reconciliation with the north with an eye to
rebuilding Virginia's shattered economy by attaching
railroads, commercial business, and industry to the Old
Dominion. At first he opposed the reign of the Republican
Party under President Ulysses S. Grant, attending the 1860
Democratic National Convention, and speaking for presidental
candidate Horace Greeley in 1872. In 1873, with the support of
General William "Billy" Mahone, the powerful postwar
Conservative Party leader,
Kemper
captured the party
nomination for governor, and won the ensuing election. His
campaign made no attacks on the Grant administration, adopting
a "wait-and-see" attitude. As John Scott wrote to
Kemper
on
December 18, 1873 after taking to Grant, "when they have got
the whites of Virginia as allies they can then let the negro
go and will do it." Later,
Kemper's
support of Grant led to
rumors of a Grant-
Kemper
ticket in 1876.
As governor Kemper
urged full civil rights and protection
for the freedmen. Believing that the state should pay its
debts,
Kemper
broke with Mahone and joined the "Debt-payer"
faction in fighting the "Readjustors" or "Repudiators" in
state politics. He also fought for a new constitution and the
restoration of Virginia to normal relations with the United
States. After his term as governor, he returned to his law
practice, and died in April 7, 1985, in Orange County,
Virginia.
Scope and Content Information
The James Lawson Kemper
papers contain the correspondence
and the financial, legal, and political papers of James Lawson
Kemper
(1823-1895), lawyer, Confederate general, and governor
of Virginia (1874-1877).
The correspondence series covers the years 1826 to 1905,
with most material dating from the period between 1848 and
1895. Early letters (pre-1861) illustrate Kemper's
growing law
practice and his involvement in politics, culminating in five
terms in the Virginia House of Delegates. Many letters pertain
to national politics, including the presidental elections of
1852, 1856, and 1860, and mention such national figures as
Stephen A. Douglas, James Buchanan, Henry A. Wise, and R. M.
T. Hunter. State politics are discussed in detail, as are the
improvement of the Virginia militia system, railroad
construction,
Kemper's
dispute with Dr. George N. Thrift with
threatened his political career, and military preparations in
the south in the pre-Civil War period. The letters portray
Kemper's
importance in the political scene immediately prior
to the outbreak of hostilities, and his leadership in calling
for the state convention which led to Virginia's secession
from the United States on April 17, 1861.
The correspondence from the period of Kemper's
service in
the Confederate army from 1861 to 1865 concerns the various
commands he held throughout the conflict. Most of the material
pertains to military operations in Virginia in 1861, including
the first Battle of Bull Run (Manassas) on July 21, 1861.
Correspondents and endorsements include Brigadier (later
Lieutenant) General James B. Longstreet, Major General John B.
Gordon, Confederate President Jefferson Davis, and Major
Walter H. Taylor, General Robert E. Lee's aide-de-camp. There
is a letter from Major General Ethan A. Hitchock, U.S.V.,
explaining to
Kemper's
wife Belle that she could not see her
captured and badly wounded husband because Confederate
authorities had refused the same courtesies to a Union
family.
Correspondence from the years of Reconstruction, 1865 to
1877, concerns Kemper's
investment speculations, legal
business, recollections of the Battle of Gettysburg, and his
political career, including his campaign and election to the
governorship in 1873 on the Conservative Party ticket. Several
letters from John A. Wise explain to
Kemper
why his father, a
pre-war governor of Virginia Henry A. Wise, could not bring
himself to endorse
Kemper
for the governorship. Much of the
correspondence during his governorship concerns three topics:
Kemper's
veto of the Petersburg charter, which would have
removed political power from the blacks residing there; the
dispute over payment of the state debt; and
Kemper's
relations
with President Ulysses S. Grant. There is a series of letters
between
Kemper
and William Mahone, Confederate general and
politician, regarding
Kemper's
choice of words in a speech
attackign Mahone's stand on the state debt. Also included is a
letter from Major General Fitz-John Parker, U.S.V., asking for
evidence to be used in Porter's attempt to vindicate his
conduct at Second Bull Run on August 29, 1862, for which he
was later removed from command. Correspondents include
ex-Confederate Vice President Alexander H. Stephens,
Conservative Party chairman Nathaniel B. Meade, John Scott of
the pro-Grant faction in the Conservative Party, former
Confederate Lieutenant General Jubal Early of the Southern
Historical Society, and Democratic politicans and editor
Manton Marble.
Most of the correspondence following Kemper's
return to
private life in 1878 until his death in 1895 regards personal
affairs. Many letters concern the education of
Kemper's
children and their attempts to earn a living. Several letters
refer to the disappearance of
Kemper's
son James,
Kemper's
attempts to collect on James' life insurance policy, and the
efforts of the insurance company to recover the money when
James turned up alive several years later. Other
correspondence covers topics such as
Kemper's
farm, Virginia
politics, and Confederate history. At the end of this section
are several manuscripts written by
Kemper
relating to his
estate, his will, and religious matters. Also included here
are two drafts of
Kemper's
farewell address to his brigade in
1864, written after he had been wounded at Gettysburg and
temporarily taken prisoner.
The series of financial papers, dating from 1843 to 1895,
contains bills and receipts from Kemper's
business
transactions as a lawyer and a farmer. This series includes
Kemper's
account books, ledgers, and checkbooks.
The legal papers series, dating from 1854 to 1893, gives
some idea of Kemper's
law practice. Among the major topics are
the estate settlements of R.A. Banks, Thomas Shirley, and
Kemper's
brother John S.
Kemper
, and
Kemper's
guardianship of
Susan and William Matthews. Wills, bonds, deeds, court fees,
licences, land surveys, bankrupcy notices, and arguments from
several court cases are also included.
The series of political papers, dating from 1860 to 1876,
includes a political scrapbook from the 1860 presidental
campaign, Kemper's
drafts of his annual messages as governor
in 1874 and 1876, and an undated speech by John Massie on the
state debt controversy.
The printed material series spans the years 1853 to 1985.
It includes material on political campaigns, the Conservative
Party, masonry, state militia affairs, schools, the Civil War
and Reconstruction. Also included are several advertisements,
and a copy of a speech by Kemper
upon the presentation of the
first Jackson-Hope medals at Virginia Military Institute.
Several photographs of
Kemper
and his children are at the end
of this section followed by one box of
Kemper's
books and four
boxes of unsorted envelopes and fragments of letters.
Organization
The collection is organized into seven series:
correspondence, manuscripts, financial papers, legal papers,
political papers, printed material and photographs. The legal
series is arranged alphabetically according to topic and
chronologically within each folder. All other series are
arranged in chronological order, except where Kemper
arranged
some of his accounts in alphabetical order. Ledgers are
located at the end of the collection.
Contents List
- Box 1
Correspondence 1826-1854
14 folders
- Box 2
Correspondence 1855-1858
10 folders
- Box 3
Correspondence 1859-1866
10 folders
- Box 4
Correspondence 1867-1870 Jun
9 folders
- Box 5
Correspondence 1870 Jul - 1871 Aug
9 folders
- Box 6
Correspondence 1871 Sep - 1872
8 folders
- Box 7
Correspondence 1873
7 folders
- Box 8
Correspondence 1874 Jan - Mar
- Box 8
re request for information about Second Battle of Bull Run and Court of Inquiry about Porter's conduct at the battle on August 29, 1862, for which he was courtmartialled
- Box 8
Correspondence 1874 Apr - 1877
7 folders
- Box 9
Correspondence 1878 - 1879 Sep
6 folders
- Box 10
Correspondence 1879 Oct - 1882
9 folders
- Box 11
Correspondence 1883-1889
6 folders
- Box 12
Correspondence 1890-1895
7 folders
- Box 13
Correspondence 1896-1905, n.d.
2 folders
- Box 13
Bills and Receipts 1851-1857
- Box 13
Bills and Receipts 1861-1880
- Box 13
Bills and Receipts 1870-1886
- Box 13
Bills and Receipts 1880-1889
- Box 14
Bills and Receipts 1886-1895, n.d.
4 folders
- Box 14
Account with Cave and Gordon 1851-1859
- Box 14
Account Books 1851-1860
- Box 14
Woodchopping and Saw Mill 1866-1867
- Box 14
Land Purchases in Orange, Virginia 1868-1887
- Box 14
- Box 14
Checking Account 1870-1879
- Box 15
- Box 15
Taxes 1882-(1890-1894)
- Box 15
Insurance 1888-1895
- Box 15
Miscellaneous n.d.
- Box 15
Bankrupcy Notices 1868-1873
- Box 15
Banks' Estate 1878-1889
- Box 15
Banks' Estate, Final Settlement 1881-1886
- Box 15
- Box 15
Bonds and Deeds 1884-1888
- Box 15
Carpenter Family 1860-1878
- Box 15
Court Papers, Licences, and Fees 1868-1889
- Box 16
General 1860-1890
- Box 16
Grasty Estate 1864, 1871
- Box 16
Hutchinson v Simms 1868-1872
- Box 16
- Box 16
- Box 16
- Box 16
Land surveys 1798-1844
- Box 16
McIntire v McIntire 1806-1893
- Box 16
Matthews Family 1854-1887
3 folders
- Box 17
Shirley Estate 1872-1881
- Box 17
- Box 17
Advertisements ca. 1850-1890
- Box 17
Miscellaneous 1852-1881
- Box 17
Political Campaigns and Party Organization 1855-1874
- Box 17
Schools 1855-1881
- Box 17
Banking 1855-1884
- Box 17
State Militia 1856-1858
- Box 17
Masonry 1856, 1867
- Box 17
Engravings 1860
- Box 17
Civil War and Reconstruction 1869-1893
- Box 17
Newspaper Clippings 1873-1889
- Box 17
Speeches 1877
- Box 17
Photographs n.d.
- Box 18
Index of Subjects and Commonplace Book ca. 1845-1849
- Box 18
Law Notes, Memoranda, and Scattered Accounts 1846-1871
- Box 18
Account Books 1849-1873
2 items
- Box 19
Account Books 1857-1894
2 items
- Box 19
Memoranda Books 1859-1867
2 items
- Box 19
Letter Press Copybook 1871-1875
- Box 19
Cash Books 1872-1895
2 items
- Box 19
Check Books 1881-1891
6 items
- Box 20
Envelopes ca. 1850-1895
2 folders
- Box 20
Letters not chronological 1870s
- Box 20
Fragments of letters removed ca. 1860-1895
- Box 20
Fragments ca. 1860-1985
2 folders