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Cassius M. Clay Collection

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

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Cassius M. Clay Collection, 1827-1901 | Eastern Kentucky University - Special Collections and Archives

By Kyle Beeler

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Collection Overview

Title: Cassius M. Clay Collection, 1827-1901Add to your cart.View associated digital content.

Primary Creator: Clay, Cassius Marcellus (1810-1903)

Extent: 1.47 Cubic Feet

Date Acquired: 11/22/2002. More info below under Accruals.

Subjects: Clay, Cassius Marcellus, 1810-1903.

Languages: English, Russian, French

Scope and Contents of the Materials

This is an artificial collection brought together from several different sources. The bulk of the material is in scrapbook form. These were put together by C.M. Clay and cover many different subjects. They consist mostly of news clippings about C.M. Clay or articles and editorial comments about political issues that were relevant at the time. Also included is correspondence including letters from his mother and sister as well as other individuals such as J. Reid of the New York Tribune; the sculptor Joel Tanner Hart; Berea College President, William Frost and Curtis Field Burnam. Also included are speeches given by Clay at various venues, legal documents, photographs and a manuscript copy of Clay's autobiography.

Biographical Note

Cassius Marcellus Clay was born in Madison County, Kentucky, on 19 October 1810. He was the son of Green Clay, a Kentucky soldier of the War of 1812 and a cousin of Henry Clay. He was educated at Centre College, Danville, KY and at Yale, where he graduated in 1832. Influenced to some extent by William Lloyd Garrison, he became an advocate of emancipation and advocated a system of gradual emancipation. In 1835, 1837 and 1840 he was elected as a Whig to the Kentucky legislature, where he helped secure the establishment of a public school system and a much-needed reform in the jury system. In 1841 he was defeated on account of his anti-slavery views. In 1845 he established, at Lexington, KY an anti-slavery publication known as The True American, but in the same year his office and press were wrecked by a mob, and he removed the publication office to Cincinnati, OH. In the Mexican War he served as a captain of a Kentucky company of militia.

He left the Whig party in 1850, and as an anti-slavery candidate for governor of Kentucky polled 5000 votes. In 1856 he joined the Republican party, and wielded considerable influence as a Southern representative in its councils. In 1861 he was sent by President Abraham Lincoln as minister to Russia; in 1862 he returned to America to accept a commission as major-general of volunteers, but in March 1863 was reappointed to his former post at St. Petersburg, where he remained until 1869. Disapproving of the Republican policy of reconstruction, he left the party, and in 1872 was one of the organizers of the Liberal - Republican revolt, and was largely instrumental in securing the nomination of Horace Greeley for the presidency. In the political campaigns of 1876 and 1880 he supported the Democratic candidate, but rejoined the Republican party in the campaign of 1884. He died at his estate, Whitehall, in Madison County, KY on 22 July 1903.

Subject/Index Terms

Clay, Cassius Marcellus, 1810-1903.

Administrative Information

Repository: Eastern Kentucky University - Special Collections and Archives

Accruals:

1981-027, copies of letters and photographs

2002-087, 7 letters from Sallie Dudley Clay and Eliza Smith; Cassius M. Clay's mother and sister.

2002-040, Cassius M. Clay Scrapbooks from Dorris Museum Collection.

2000-005, Miscellaneous items from Dorris Museum Collection.

Access Restrictions: Condition of the original scrapbooks varies but one is very fragile. Special handling required.

Acquisition Source: N/A


Box and Folder Listing


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Box 02Add to your cart.
Item 01: Scrapbook No. 7Add to your cart.

It is mostly speeches by C.M. Clay or articles about him and about politics.  Literature is more eclectic than the other books and contains far ranging topics.  The titles of some of the clippings are: "Dressing Mutton"; "The Clay-Harris nuptials"; "Honest Money = What is it?", and "Roaring Republicans."

This scrapbook contains articles that have been pasted over an account book that dates from 1868-1875.  Although it is mostly speeches or articles, as described above, the most interesting feature of this volume is the underlying text of the account book that includes copies of letters and notations about letters that Clay sent to various merchants about goods and services that he had ordered.  It was used for the Contingent Fund of Green Clay, deceased.

Item 02: Lithograph of a Dinner Party in Russia, 1866Add to your cart.
Dinner Given to the American Embassy 6 January 1866 by the Moscow Merchantry [merchant class] at the Practical Academy of Commercial Sciences (Original title in Russian) (From Dorris Museum Collection, #286)
Item 03: Russian Trade Pamphlet, 1865Add to your cart.
A volume in Russian with trade statistics from 1860-1861. (From Dorris Museum Collection, no accession number noted)

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