Letter from James Simons, July 4, 1803

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- Title:
- Letter from James Simons, July 4, 1803
- Date:
- 1803
- Creator (Personal):
- Simons, James
- Description:
- A letter from James Simons in London, England discussing soldiers suffering from dysentery, the skills but unsuccess of the attending surgeon, and asking for help from an "old negroe woman" who provided a remedy for the disease and Col. Gordon "had not lost a slave with it since she had attended the plantation hospital." The letter goes on stating that the French name for the plant is "Zezegery," resembles mint, how the plant is used, and the improvement of the soldiers. The other side of the letter written by James Simons states that a man from Jamaica identified the plant as the "Binnea" which is "cultivated in almost every plantation in this country by our negroes for their own use."
- Collection Title:
- Ball Family Papers, 1631-1895
- Contributing Institution:
- South Carolina Historical Society
- Media Type:
- Manuscripts
- Personal or Corporate Subject:
- Ball family
- Topical Subject:
- Medicine, Slave records, Dysentery, Physicians, Health, Diseases, Letters, Soldiers, Plants, Cultivators, Surgeons, Sick, Letter writing, and Enslaved persons
- Geographic Subject:
- London (England)
- Language:
- English
- Shelving Locator:
- 11-516-19 (1134.00)
- Date Digital:
- 2023-08
- Digitization Specifications:
- 600 dpi, 24-bit depth, color, Epson Expression 10000XL. Archival masters are tiffs.
- Format:
- image/jpeg
- Copyright Status Statement:
- Public Domain.
- Access Information:
- For more information and re-use requirements contact the South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston, SC, 29401.
- Admin ID:
- 290752
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