A letter to the Bishop W. A. Guerry from the State Advisory Board of the American Jewish Relief Committee requesting contribution towards the committee's work to aid Jewish sufferers of the war in Europe. Rabbi Dr. Jacob S. Raisin is listed as a member of the Advisory Board.
Letter from Lord Charles Montagu to General William Moultrie at Haddrell's Point, S.C. offering Moultrie a commission in a British regiment and asking him to join Montagu in Jamaica.
A letter from James McHenry to Moses Young. McHenry expresses his happiness with Young's increasing fortune and encourages him to visit Ireland, in addition to discussing other matters. The letter was send November 11, 1779 but received February 1780 in Charles Town.
Letter from General William Moultrie to Lord Charles Montagu in which Moultrie turns down Montagu's offer of a commission in a British regiment, calling it a "dishonorable proposal."
A letter from William Ball in Edinburgh, Scotland to his father John Ball at Kensington Plantation discussing his travels, classes in physics, chemistry, and anatomy, the "Corsican Hero," and Lord Nelson's death fighting against the French and Spanish.
Broadside issued in Charleston by a J. Stapleton, which gives orders for everyone to report the number of "sequestered Negroes" in their possession and forbids them from carrying out "any Negroe that does not belong to them."
A letter from William Ball in Edinburgh, Scotland to his brother John Ball Jr. at Comingtee Plantation discussing an upcoming birth in John's family, their brother Isaac's courtships, and the statement that "war resounds from all quarters." The letter goes on talking about the inhabitants of Edinburgh and their excessive alcohol and tea drinking, tobacco use, nervous disorders, and the "badly attended" theater.
Copy of a letter sent by General William Moultrie at Christ Church Parish (S.C.) to Lieutenant Colonel Nisbet Balfour concerning the British Army's sending of Continental soldiers on prisoner ships, which Moultrie argues is a breach of the articles of capitulation negotiated before the surrender of Charleston. The last page contains a copy of a letter reporting Balfour's verbal reply.
A letter from John Ball Sr. in Charleston, South Carolina to financial agent George Lockey discussing money for his son William at University of Edinburgh, the belief that war will break out, John's brother suffering from a fever and a worm damaging the plantation crops.