A typed copy of a 1782 letter from Francis Marion to William Alston in which he orders him to take command of new companies to serve in Georgetown, South Carolina, and watch for incoming vessels.
A brief biography describing John Julius Alston's upbringing, education, time in the Confederate military, and ultimate death. This section is part of a larger report on graduates of Harvard College from the class of 1857.
A certificate appointing John Julius Alston to the post of Aide-de-Camp to the Brigadier General of the fourth Brigade Infantry with the rank of Captain on January 30, 1860. This was signed by William Henry Gist, William R. Huntt, William Alston Pringle, and James Simons.
A certificate naming John Julius Alston an attorney in the state of South Carolina on April 4, 1860, signed by John Belton O'Neall, Job Johnston, Francis H. Wardlaw, and Thomas J. Gantt.
A certificate naming John Julius Alston a solicitor in South Carolina on January 16, 1861, signed by John Belton O'Neall, Job Johnston, and Thomas J. Gantt. Chancellor Wardlaw was noted as absent. At the bottom, "United States of America" is crossed out and replaced by "Commonwealth of South Carolina."
A certificate appointing John Julius Alston to the post of Senior First Lieutenant in the Battalion of Artillery in the Regular Enlisted Force of South Carolina on August 13, 1861. This was signed by Francis Wilkinson Pickens, James A. Duffus, and William H. Peronneau.
A typed, one-page letter from John Joseph McVey to Susan Alston in which he offers her $60 for her copy of Audubon's Quadrupeds of North America, explaining that the low price is due to the two missing volumes of the text.
A one-page typed letter from E. T. Viett to Susan Alston in which he includes a bill for the $200 that she advanced him and a tracing of the monument that she ordered. The tracing no longer remains with the letter.
A one-page typed letter from E. T. Viett to Susan Alston in which he thanks her for her check for $150 and updates her on the progress of the monument that she ordered.
A telephone bill from the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company totaling $2.00. On the back there is a notice for the universal telegram service.
Susan Alston's paid bill for butter from Welch & Eason totaling $3.15. On the bottom of the page, someone refutes that one of the deliveries was ever made and clarifies the preferred schedule for grocery delivery.
Susan Alston's paid bill from Welch & Eason totaling $2.45. On the bottom of the page, someone refutes the charge for coffee, noting that Miss Alston only purchases butter from Welch & Eason.