Monday, January 24, 2011

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to B. F. Moore, August 7, 1858, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D010 [Bibliographic Details] [8-7-1858] WorthJ:L1590-10

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Letter from Jonathan Worth to B. F. Moore, August 7, 1858

Asheboro, Aug. 7th, 1858.
You will have perceived that I am elected by a very large majority, beating my Whig opponent, Lane, 1,056, and my democratic apponent about 500. I did not learn that no successor was appointed for Ellis 1 till I got your letter, and immediately wrote Judge Saunders enclosing my resignation to all the judges couched in the terms you suggested. I have heard nothing from him.
If democratic feeling runs too strong for the judge to appoint Foster, as I requested, get him to appoint my son-in-law, Samuel S. Jackson. He is temporarily a tutor at Chapel Hill, expecting to return to this place, which is his residence, and resume the practice of the law soon, and I would be glad if the appointment were conferred on him for his own benefit at next Fall Term. I desire this only in case the judge should make objections to appointing Foster for political reasons.
I am embarrassed as to my resignation but say nothing about it, even to my friends, and presume nothing will be said unless Judge Saunders or the successor of Judge Ellis shall bring it to the attention of others. Will they do so? Under the very large majority in my favor and considering that I have done all I could to resign I trust they will not be disposed to occasion the trouble and inconvenience and expense which might possibly grow out of it, if the matter should acquire any notoriety. If you can in any way serve me in this matter, consistent with what you deem proper on your part and mine, I shall be much obliged.

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to John M. Dick, July 5, 1858, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D009 [Bibliographic Details] [7-5-1858] WorthJ:L1590-9

Letter from Jonathan Worth to John M. Dick, July 5, 1858

Asheboro, July 5th, 1858.
You will have heard that I am a candidate for the Legislature and consequently must resign my office as Clerk and Master to the judge who is to ride this circuit this Fall. I know of no one who desires the appointment and would like to have Mr. Foster, Mr. Long or my son-in-law, J. J. Jackson, appointed, who upon the contingency of my defeat or on my return from the Legislature would resign so that I might be re-appointed if it should be the pleasure of the Court.
Will you do me the favor to let me know which of the Judges is to ride this Circuit this Fall?

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to Alfred G. Foster, June 10, 1856, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D008 [Bibliographic Details] [6-10-1856] WorthJ:L1590-8

Letter from Jonathan Worth to Alfred G. Foster, June 10, 1856

Asheboro, June 10th, 1858.
Having decided to be a Candidate it becomes necessary for me to resign my office of Clerk and Master in Equity. There is no one here competent to discharge the duties of the office, and I know of no one who desires to fill it. It may suit me after serving a session in the Legislature or, by possibility, after being beaten, to resume the office. In 1840 my friend H. B. Elliott accepted the office, appointed me his deputy and resigned on my return from the Legislature. Will you oblige me in like manner?

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I still hear Dr. Lane will run, and rumor says that Geo. (not Billy) Patterson, of Alamance, is debating the question whether he shall not raise the Democratic flag. I hear of no man of much influence or intelligence of either party who is the open friend of Lane, but on the contrary that all such in both counties are zealously for me; but an anxiety prevails among my friends that he will out-electioneer and beat me among the non-freeholders. I can not see good grounds for these fears. I hear very cheering accounts from Alamance and believe I shall have little trouble if no Democrat comes into the field; and am by no means sure that the appearance of a democrat would not produce a rally of our party friends on me. I look upon a four weeks tour of electioneering with such a vile competitor as Lane with anything but pleasurable anticipations, but I am resolved to keep my temper and hope to beat him bad enough to keep him out of anybody's way in the future.
What are the prospects in your neighborhood? Will B. Craven be against me, and if so, how many can he carry?
LaGrange.

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to Calvin H. Wiley, March 8, 1858, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D007 [Bibliographic Details] [3-8-1858] WorthJ:L1590-7

Letter from Jonathan Worth to Calvin H. Wiley, March 8, 1858

Asheboro, March 8th, 1858.
I have been grievously oppressed with business for a few weeks past, so that I have not attended to everything in due time. I recd. from you a letter, now mislaid, in which you stated you thought there was error in my account as chairman, or that it was not quite intelligible. My recollection is that you did not specify the difficulty. I think there can be no inaccuracy and suppose the point is this, in this County no schools are taught in the summer, and the principle of division long adopted by us makes the calculation distributing the money among the districts troublesome. The money received in the spring would not be used by the districts, if divided, till the Fall Dividend and the County tax come to hand. Immediately after they come to hand I make up my account, and this is the account sent you in the Fall of the next year and consequently does not embrace the Spring dividend received from the State after the account is made out. All my accounts show that I am charged only with the funds received

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All the intelligent men of our party in both Counties, so far as I can learn, will support me and I can not doubt the result of the election. But as this is the year when free suffrage 1 takes effect, if he is a candidate he will try to raise some new issue with me, will talk about aristocracy, start innumerable rumors, etc., and the contest will be unpleasant and pernicious to our party whatever may be the issue.
If anybody can influence him to desist and hold off it is yourself. I do not desire you to exercise that influence as a personal favor to me, but to prevent a schism in our party. A personal contest must have this effect. Possibly the question may arise in your mind, why not avoid this by withdrawing yourself? This answer is that the most intelligent and orderly citizens of this county will not support Lane under any circumstances, but if our party will bring forward any good man I will withdraw more than willingly.
[The remainder of the letter is missing.]

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to Calvin H. Wiley, March 8, 1858, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D007 [Bibliographic Details] [3-8-1858] WorthJ:L1590-7

Letter from Jonathan Worth to Calvin H. Wiley, March 8, 1858

Asheboro, March 8th, 1858.
I have been grievously oppressed with business for a few weeks past, so that I have not attended to everything in due time. I recd. from you a letter, now mislaid, in which you stated you thought there was error in my account as chairman, or that it was not quite intelligible. My recollection is that you did not specify the difficulty. I think there can be no inaccuracy and suppose the point is this, in this County no schools are taught in the summer, and the principle of division long adopted by us makes the calculation distributing the money among the districts troublesome. The money received in the spring would not be used by the districts, if divided, till the Fall Dividend and the County tax come to hand. Immediately after they come to hand I make up my account, and this is the account sent you in the Fall of the next year and consequently does not embrace the Spring dividend received from the State after the account is made out. All my accounts show that I am charged only with the funds received

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All the intelligent men of our party in both Counties, so far as I can learn, will support me and I can not doubt the result of the election. But as this is the year when free suffrage 1 takes effect, if he is a candidate he will try to raise some new issue with me, will talk about aristocracy, start innumerable rumors, etc., and the contest will be unpleasant and pernicious to our party whatever may be the issue.
If anybody can influence him to desist and hold off it is yourself. I do not desire you to exercise that influence as a personal favor to me, but to prevent a schism in our party. A personal contest must have this effect. Possibly the question may arise in your mind, why not avoid this by withdrawing yourself? This answer is that the most intelligent and orderly citizens of this county will not support Lane under any circumstances, but if our party will bring forward any good man I will withdraw more than willingly.
[The remainder of the letter is missing.]

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to George McNeill, December 27, 1856, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D006 [Bibliographic Details] [12-27-1856] WorthJ:L1590-6

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Letter from Jonathan Worth to George McNeill, December 27, 1856

Asheboro, Dec. 27th, 1856.
You are at liberty to refer to me and to command any influence I possess in relation to obtaining the situation you desire in the University, but it will not be possible for me to attend the meeting of the trustees at which the appointment is to be made. I have no doubt your scholastic attainments would enable you to fill the chair of adjunct Professor of Languages with credit to yourself and the University. I wished to have answered by the last mail but I knew that my new son-in-law, S. S. Jackson, was

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promised by the faculty the post of tutor of the Greek and Latin languages; that he had, at the request of Gov. Swain, lately visited Chapel Hill and thought I might be able on seeing him to get some information on the subject which might be useful to you. His understanding is that no adjunct professor of languages is to be appointed and he is unable to inform me whether any persons have been fixed upon by the faculty to be recommended for the other vacancies. He graduated with the first distinction 18 months ago and I understand was invited by the faculty to be a candidate, and I suppose will of course receive the appointment of tutor.
We are all well and should be happy to hear that you had been restored to perfect health.

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth, July 12, 1856, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D004 [Bibliographic Details] [7-12-1856] WorthJ:L1590-4

Letter from Jonathan Worth, July 12, 1856

Asheboro, July 12th, 1856.
My Dear Sir: -- I thank you for your friendly letter of the 6th. I am as you know a Whig of the original parcel, but I am attached to the Union in much [next three lines illegible] hence I thought both parties ought to have nominated for the presidency and vice-presidency those who in the late turmoil had the moral courage to breast the storm while the issue was uncertain. Hence I had decided if the democrats nominated Cass or Douglas and the Whigs nominated any man who, though he might be for the compromise measures, was willing to avoid the displeasure of the extremists by suppressing his opinions, I would vote

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for the democrat. Such I think was the position of General Scott. I thought he was sound on the compromise but that he was willing for the sake of the presidency to refrain from a public avowal of his position at the instance of the abolition Whigs, and thereby allow them to use his name as a means of breaking down Filmore and Webster. The abolition Whigs knew they could not nominate a man of their own stamp with any chance of success, but were willing to support one who had rendered himself less obnoxious by having been less prominent and who was willing to offer them the courtesy of his silence till after the nomination as a bid for their votes. He took pains that the South should know his real sentiments, but under color of a high sense of decorum and dignity procured the support of the abolition Whigs by refraining from a public avowal of his opinion through the press. These are (I am sorry to say, are) my views.
But I did not hesitate a moment to decide on supporting the nominess of the Whig Convention in preference to those of the democrats. The democratic nomination was subject to all my objections against Scott, and would not carry out one of my principles while the Whig nominee would. Besides, I have never doubted the success of the Whig nomination. I think Scott will get more votes than Filmore or Webster. Churubusco, Chapultepec, Mexico will have the claims of the battle of New Orleans. And it has become a settled precedent with Whig presidents to [next line illegible] the Whig Convention made a provision for that very contingency which meets my heartiest approval. I shall support the nominee by every fair means in my power.
I formed my opinion of Filmore while he was in the House of Representatives at the head of the Committee of Ways and Means. I regarded him then, and I have since become confirmed in it, as one of the very few men in the high political station who "would rather be right than be President."

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I have perhaps troubled you too much with my humble views.
This county will do all you will expect from her. I have the vanity to believe that I constitute my full share in forming and establishing her political position, and, however it may have been formed, no county in the State has been more stable for the last 12 years.
I should be glad to be satisfied that Scott's refusal to publish his opinions on the compromise before his nomination sprang from no motive unworthy of the frank and noble solider.

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to Alfred G. Foster, June 10, 1856, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D008 [Bibliographic Details] [6-10-1856] WorthJ:L1590-8

Letter from Jonathan Worth to Alfred G. Foster, June 10, 1856

Asheboro, June 10th, 1858.
Having decided to be a Candidate it becomes necessary for me to resign my office of Clerk and Master in Equity. There is no one here competent to discharge the duties of the office, and I know of no one who desires to fill it. It may suit me after serving a session in the Legislature or, by possibility, after being beaten, to resume the office. In 1840 my friend H. B. Elliott accepted the office, appointed me his deputy and resigned on my return from the Legislature. Will you oblige me in like manner?

-- [57] --

I still hear Dr. Lane will run, and rumor says that Geo. (not Billy) Patterson, of Alamance, is debating the question whether he shall not raise the Democratic flag. I hear of no man of much influence or intelligence of either party who is the open friend of Lane, but on the contrary that all such in both counties are zealously for me; but an anxiety prevails among my friends that he will out-electioneer and beat me among the non-freeholders. I can not see good grounds for these fears. I hear very cheering accounts from Alamance and believe I shall have little trouble if no Democrat comes into the field; and am by no means sure that the appearance of a democrat would not produce a rally of our party friends on me. I look upon a four weeks tour of electioneering with such a vile competitor as Lane with anything but pleasurable anticipations, but I am resolved to keep my temper and hope to beat him bad enough to keep him out of anybody's way in the future.
What are the prospects in your neighborhood? Will B. Craven be against me, and if so, how many can he carry?
LaGrange.

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth, December 1, 1855, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D003 [Bibliographic Details] [12-1-1855] WorthJ:L1590-3

Letter from Jonathan Worth, December 1, 1855

Asheboro, N. C., Dec. 1st, 1855.
Yours of the 20th ult. is just received. The gentlemen of the bar practicing in this county, with their Post Office annexed, find below:
Geo. C. Mendenhall, Wm. P. Mendenhall, Jamestown, Guilford Co., N. C.
John A. Gilmer, Ralph Gorrell, Robt. P. Dick, James T. Morehead, Greensboro, N. C.
J. M. Leach, James Long, Lexington, N. C.
Wm. W. Long, Long's Mill, Randolph County, N. C.
D. W. C. Johnson, Eden, Randolph County, N. C.
Jonathan Worth (residing in Randolph County), James M. A. Drake, R. H. Brown, Asheboro, N. C.
J. J. Jackson, Pittsboro, N. C.
The undersigned and his son-in-law, J. J. Jackson, practice in Co-partnership in the counties of Randolph, Chatham, Moore and Harnett. There is no other partnership among the members of the bar here so far as I know. I understand your inquiry as to partnerships to apply to legal and not mercantile co-partnerships.

Worth, Jonathan, 1802-1869, Letter from Jonathan Worth to Thomas Bragg, October 10, 1855, in The Correspondence of Jonathan Worth, vol. 1. Hamilton, Joseph Grégorie de Roulhac, ed., Raleigh, NC: Edwards & Broughton, 1909, pp. 656. S1590-D002 [Bibliographic Details] [10-10-1855] WorthJ:L1590-2

Letter from Jonathan Worth to Thomas Bragg, October 10, 1855

Asheboro, Oct. 10th, 1855.
The 41 Sec. of the Act of the last session relating to County Schools, forbidding the chairman to pay a draft in favor of a teacher unless he exhibit a certificate from the committee of examination, in effect repeals the 4th Sec. of the Act of 1852 chartering Normal Colleges. (See Acts of 1852, page 161), if the Legislature have power to repeal this provision in the N. College Charter.
I am chairman for this County, and upon the reasoning in the Mills vs. Williams, 11 Ired., 558, conclude that the Legislature have the power to repeal, but I feel by no means certain that my conclusion is correct.
The responsibility of deciding on this question at their peril ought not to rest on chairmen. I submit for your consideration whether it would not be well to get the opinion of the Att. Genl. and publish it, that there may be uniformity of action on the part of chairmen.