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Lemuel P. Conner Family Papers, 1846-1913 and 1935
Addition of 597 items and 7 manuscript volumes
Lemuel Parker Conner (1827-1891) was born in Natchez and
attended Yale University. He studied law under John T. McMurran
of Natchez. In 1848, he married Elizabeth Francis (Fanny)
Turner; the couple had ten children. He served as a lieutenant
colonel under General Braxton Bragg during the Civil War. After
the war, he managed Killarney and Rifle Point plantations in
Concordia Parish, La.
In the 1880s, he resumed practicing law in Vidalia and St.
Joseph, La., and opened a firm with his son, Lemuel P. Conner,
Jr. (1861-1943), who had graduated from Louisiana State
University in 1882. The younger Conner married Mary Macrery
Britton in 1888, and they had four children. They lived at
Clover Nook in Natchez, and Conner continued to practice law
in the area. In 1927, he was elected to the office of City
Clerk in Natchez, and he served in that position until his
retirement in 1941.
The Lemuel P. Conner Family Papers comprise family and
business correspondence, legal and business papers, plantation
records, printed items, manuscript volumes, and photographs.
Items relate to family, social, and economic life; plantation
operation and cotton culture; slavery and labor problems; and
politics of the 19th and 20th centuries.
The accretion includes a scrapbook kept by Mary Macrery
Britton Conner (ca. 1898-1903) that includes photographs of
former family slaves and their descendants, African-American
baptisms, and newspaper clippings relating to
African-Americans. One ledger is filled with newspaper
clippings relating to New Orleans and Natchez from the 1870s
to the 1880s, including Natchez city [financial?] statements,
1863-1888, articles on elections, sexton's reports, and
separately printed broadsides of Natchez city financial
statements. Three additional ledgers contain accounts of the
Bank of the United States in Natchez (1841-1858) and of the
Commercial and Railroad Bank of Natchez (1842-1860) and an
inventory (ca. 1935?) of Clover Nook. Lemuel P. Conner, Jr.'s
notebooks for his chemistry and history classes at Louisiana
State University (1881) are also present. Photographic prints
and negatives show Conner family members and residences, as
well as some Natchez scenes.
Notes on the images: Pages from Mary Macrery
Britton Conner's scrapbook.
1. Photographs of Mammy, Mandy, and an unidentified former
slave of the related Chotard family, at Elgin. The notation
indicates that Mandy's grandparents came from Nashville over
the Natchez Trace with Grandma and Grandpa McCrery in 1805.
2. Photographs of former slaves of the MacCrerys and their
descendants Louisa, the Ayres nurse; Russ; Old All Right; and
La Belle Talton, ca. 1905-1906. [unclear]
3. Scenes at Cedar Grove Plantation and a baptism. Cedar Grove
had been the home of the Sharp family and is located on
Kingston Road, just southeast of Natchez.
4. Baptisms in the Mississippi River under the hill at
Natchez, ca. 1913, and at Dixie Pond.
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