Jordan and Davis Records, 1831-1897


Summary Information
Title: Jordan and Davis Records
Inclusive Dates: 1831-1897

Creator:
  • Jordan and Davis (Firm)
Call Number: McCormick Mss AM

Quantity: 2.0 c.f. (4 archives boxes and 3 card boxes)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Records kept by Samuel Francis Jordan (1805-1872) and his brother-in-law, William W. Davis, ironmasters, merchants, and millers, covering chiefly the period when they operated as partners, circa 1833-1853, at Jane Furnace and Gibraltar Forge in Rockbridge County, Virginia. The records include correspondence, accounts, promissory notes, indentures, and agreements to hire slaves for labor. A few items refer to Jordan's operation of the Buena Vista Furnace, purchased in 1848. Also included is correspondence after the partnership was dissolved, and an inventory of Gibraltar Forge was made. The records then became those of Davis, whose son, James C. Davis, was his partner for a time.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-mcc000am
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Scope and Content Note

The collection consists of two series, RECORDS and a CHRONOLOGICAL CARD INDEX. The RECORDS are arranged in file folders labeled by year. The papers are arranged randomly within the folders.

The portion of the collection which documents the partnership consists of correspondence, accounts relating to orders for iron and purchases of supplies and equipment, promissory notes, indentures, and agreements to hire slaves for labor. Evidence of trade in kind and cash sales involving other ironmasters and merchants is common, including particularly trade with W. M. Bryan at Vesuvius Furnace, James S. Dickinson at Bath Forge, John W. Jordan at California Furnace, William H. Jordan at Buena Vista Furnace, William Weaver at Buffalo Forge, Compton and Taylor, McDaniel and McCorkle, Montgomery and Irvine, and James M. Webb & Co.

The records from the period after dissolution of the partnership include five letters from William Davis' son, James C. Davis, 1862-1865, while he was a Confederate soldier. Included also are letters from Baptist ministers such as J. William Jones, and letters from W. A. Kuper and Mathew Pilson regarding the Howardsville and Rockfish Turnpike Company, of which William Davis was a director.

The CHRONOLOGICAL CARD INDEX describes each document in the collection. Each card contains the name of the person or business that created the document, followed by a description of the nature of the document, the recipient, if applicable, and the date of the document. The cards are arranged by year, like the records themselves, though the cards begin in 1829 so apparently describe some documents not now present in the collection. Though under tabs for each year, from 1829 to 1854, the arrangement under each year's tab is random, requiring that users browse all the cards in a given year to find a specific business or person. From 1855 to 1897 and Undated [No Date], cards under each year's tab have an alphabetical arrangement making it easier to find a business or person. To access an item listed in the index, match the date on the index card with a year in the records section.

Contents List
Series: Records
Box   1
1831-1842
Box   2
1843-1852
Box   3
1853-1857
Box   4
1858-1897 and undated
Series: Chronological Card Index
Box   5
1829-1849
Note: Note that the Card index pre-dates the records which start in 1831.
Box   6
1850-1858
Box   7
1859-1897 and undated