Isaac I. Stevens papers, 1831-1892

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Stevens, Isaac Ingalls, 1818-1862
Title
Isaac I. Stevens papers
Dates
1831-1892
Quantity
5.98 cubic feet (9 boxes)
Collection Number
0111 (Accession No. 0111-001)
Summary
Mexican War and Civil War soldier, Army engineer, surveyor, and first governor of Washington Territory
Repository
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu
Access Restrictions

Open to all users.

Additional Reference Guides

Languages
English
Sponsor
Funding for encoding this finding aid was partially provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities

Biographical NoteReturn to Top

Isaac Ingalls Stevens (1818-62) was the first governor of the Washington Territory (1853-57) and represented the territory in Congress from 1857-61. He was an enthusiastic proponent of westward expansion and an early booster of the commercial potential of the Pacific Northwest. He served with distinction with the U.S. Corps of Engineers under General Winfield Scott in the Mexican War in 1847. As superintendent of the government survey of a northern route for a transcontinental railroad in 1853 and as the first governor of Washington, he played an important part in promoting the settlement of the Pacific Northwest. His handling of Indian affairs in the territory, particularly the Indian War of 1855, was controversial even at the time and earned him a reprimand from President Franklin Pierce. The treaties he signed resulted in the rapid removal of the Indian population to reservations. They also established Native American fishing rights and became the basis of subsequent negotiations between the state and the Native American population.

Isaac Stevens was born on March 28, 1818, in North Andover, Massachusetts. He attended Phillips Academy in Andover and graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1839, the first in his class. In 1840 he was commissioned second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Between 1840 and 1853, he worked on coastal defenses in Newport, Rhode Island, New Bedford, Massachusetts, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Portland and Bucksport, Maine. He married Margaret Lyman Hazard of Newport on September 8, 1841. They had five children: Hazard, Virginia, Kate, Maude, and Susan.

Stevens spent most of 1847 with the engineer corps in General Winfield Scott’s Mexico campaign. After the siege of Vera Cruz, he was made adjutant to Major John L. Smith, commander of the engineer corps attached to Scott’s army. The nine-member engineer corps selected sites for fortifications, constructed field works, and provided information about unfamiliar terrain and enemy positions. The contributions of corps members Robert E. Lee, P.G.T. Beauregard, and George B. McClellan to the success of the Mexican campaign are well known, but Stevens’s contributions have received less attention. Stevens saw action at Cerro Gordo, Contreras, Churubusco, and Chapultepec, where he was seriously wounded on September 13. He was promoted to brevet captain for gallant and meritorious conduct at the Battles of Contreras and Churubusco and brevet major for the wound he took at Chapultepec.

After the war, Stevens returned to Bucksport, Maine, where he continued supervising construction of Fort Knox. In 1849, he moved to Washington, D.C., to become assistant in charge of the U.S. Coast Survey under survey director Alexander Bache, a fellow army engineer. As Bache’s assistant, Stevens ran the Washington office of the survey from 1849 to 1853. He reorganized the office into eight divisions, increased staff and improved efficiency, and served as the liaison between the survey and Congress and the public.

While he was living in Washington, Stevens also lobbied Congress on behalf of the army and the Army Corps of Engineers. In this capacity, he oversaw passage of the Fourteen Year Bill, which sped promotions for young officers. In 1851, he subsidized publication of 1,000 copies of a short book, Campaigns of the Rio Grande and Mexico, a defense of General Scott’s role in the war.

Frustrated with his prospects for advancement in the army during peacetime, Stevens decided to seek his future in politics and the West. He campaigned for Democratic presidential nominee Franklin Pierce in 1852, writing a series of letters to the Boston Post and a pamphlet defending Pierce’s war record. He also stumped for Pierce during the final weeks of the campaign. In return, Pierce named Stevens governor of the Washington Territory on March 17, 1853. Stevens also lobbied for the job of organizing and leading a government survey party to explore a northern route for a transcontinental railroad. Secretary of War Jefferson Davis appointed Stevens superintendent of the survey in March 1853. Stevens spent the next three months organizing the expedition, which set out from St. Paul in June. The party traveled west through the Dakotas, Montana, and Idaho and arrived at Ft. Vancouver on November 19, 1853. The survey identified the first rail route from St. Paul to the Puget Sound and gathered information about the region’s topography, geography, flora, and fauna, identifying several previously unknown species. Survey artists John Mix Stanley and Gustavus Sohon created a pictorial record of the expedition that included some of the first graphic representations of the regions explored. The survey report was published in 1859.

Stevens arrived in Olympia to begin his term as governor on November 25, 1853. As governor, he convened a territorial legislature, settled claims to the territory by the Hudson Bay Company, petitioned Congress for funds to purchase land for a university, and established a territorial library. As superintendent of Indian affairs in the territory he oversaw the implementation of U.S. government policy toward Native Americans, which resulted in their removal to small reservations. When an Indian war erupted east of the Cascades in 1855, Stevens authorized a strong military response. West of the mountains, he instigated attacks on the Hudson Bay Company settlers, who had intermarried with the native population. In April 1856, after removing settlers whom he believed to be aiding the enemy and placing them in the military's custody, Stevens declared martial law in Pierce County to ensure a military trial. A declaration for Thurston County soon followed. However, only the territorial legislature possesed the authority to declare martial law, and a bitter political and legal battle ensued. Stevens was forced to repeal the declaration and fight subsequent calls for his removal.

From 1857 to 1861, Stevens represented the Washington Territory in Congress and worked for ratification of the Indian treaties he had brokered there. He was active in the presidential campaign of 1860 and a delegate to the Democratic national conventions in Charleston in April and Baltimore in June. He supported the candidacy of John Breckinridge and was appointed chairman of the Democratic National Party Executive Committee in Baltimore.

When the Civil War began, Stevens entered the Union Army as colonel of the 79th Regiment of New York Volunteers, known as the Highlanders. His success in bringing discipline to the mutinous regiment contributed to his commission as brigadier general from Washington Territory in September 1861. Assigned to the command of General Thomas W. Sherman, Stevens spent the first year of the war in coastal South Carolina and took part in the bombardment of Port Royal, near Charleston, in November 1861. On June 16, 1862, he commanded the main assult force in the Battle of Secessionville, fought on St. James Island. In August 1862, he joined General John Pope's forces at Culpeper Courthouse, Virginia, passing through Newport News and Fredericksburg on his way. He commanded a division at the Second Battle of Bull Run and the Battle of Chantilly, where he was killed on September 1, 1862. Stevens is buried in Newport, Rhode Island.

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

The Isaac I. Stevens Papers document Stevens’s career from 1840 to 1853, from his appointment to the Corps of Engineers to the beginning of his term as territorial governor. There is less material on his years as governor and superintendent of Indian affairs. Stevens's Civil War letters provide an account of interactions between the union army and freed slaves in coastal South Carolina in 1861 and 1862. There is also a description of conditions in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in the summer of 1862.

The great majority of material is found in accession 111-1. This accession contains 4.42 cubic feet of correspondence, speeches and writings, diaries, and documents from the period 1831-62. It consists primarily of general and outgoing correspondence from 1831-62 and files of research notes that Stevens created in the course of writing books and articles about the Mexican War, the army, politics, and the Northern Pacific Railroad survey.

Stevens’s general correspondence is arranged into two series. The first is a series of undated letters from the period 1831-45, arranged alphabetically by correspondent. The second is dated correspondence from 1831-62, arranged chronologically. These letters provide a record of Stevens’s professional and personal life from his student days at West Point to his death in 1862. They document Stevens’s career in the Army Corps of Engineers, his service in the engineer corps in the Mexican War, his planning and administration of the Northern Pacific Railroad exploration and survey, his involvement in national Democratic party politics in the 1850s and early 1860s, and his service in the Civil War in South Carolina in 1861 and 1862. Major correspondents include Isaac Stevens, Sr., Margaret Hazard Stevens, and other Stevens family members. A complete alphabetical listing of correspondents is linked to the inventory below.

The accession also contains two bound volumes of outgoing letters. The first is a letterpress copybook containing copies of Stevens’s letters from the period 1849 to 1851. They document his efforts to lobby Congress for more funds for the U.S. Army and the development of his ideas about reorganizing the army and improving professional opportunities for young officers. The volume includes a circular memo Stevens addressed to the breveted officers of the Corps of Engineers and letters he wrote circulating his book, which he called “my little work on the Mexican War,” to fellow army officers. Major correspondents include Brigadier General Joseph Totten, Captain G.A. Smith, Major Barnard, and Major Hunt. A second bound volume of letters within the Pacific Railroad Survey subject series documents Stevens’s activities as he organized and planned the Northern Pacific Railroad survey expedition in the spring of 1853. It includes a draft of a memo addressed to Secretary of War Jefferson Davis in which Stevens outlines his plan for the survey. There are also letters hiring members of the expedition party and letters to the quartermaster general’s office ordering supplies and providing for re-provisioning of the party out west.

Stevens’ diaries date from March 28 to May 5, 1847, and constitute a daily account of his experiences in the early months of the Mexican War. They contain descriptions of the Mexican people, architecture, and terrain, the progress of the war, and commentary on the military capabilities of fellow corps member Robert E. Lee. Stevens’s letters to his wife from this period, filed in the chronological General Correspondence, contain an account of the siege of Vera Cruz.

A large series described as Speeches and Writings consists of materials created by Stevens in the course of writing his book, Campaigns of the Rio Grande and Mexico , newspaper articles, and speeches, and in lobbying Congress to improve the status of the army. Research materials include military data and records, notes, officers’ accounts of the Mexican campaign, and data on the number and strength of army troops on the western frontier. Speeches and articles Stevens wrote on the Mexican War, for the presidential campaign of Franklin Pierce, and promoting a northern route for the transcontinental railroad are also described as Speeches and Writings. The content of each folder is listed on the inventory.

Aside from correspondence, the collection contains relatively little material that pertains to Stevens’s term as governor and superintendent of Indian affairs or superintendent of the Northern Pacific Railroad survey. Among the subject series is a folder of information about the Blackfoot language that was gathered at Fort Benton and Piegan Camp in September 1853. The North Pacific Railroad Survey subject files pertain mostly to the lengthy efforts of Stevens and his heirs to win reimbursement for expenditures for the survey work. A folder on military service in Texas in the Speeches and Writings of Others series contains a description of Indian settlements there in the 1850s. Among the main Speeches and Writings series is an obituary Stevens wrote for his nephew and aide, George W. Stevens. The accession also contains four photostat copies of Governor Stevens's declarations of martial law in Thurston and Pierce counties in 1856.

The accession contains one subgroup, Stevens Family Correspondence. It consists of six folders of General Correspondence between members of the Stevens family during the period 1839-62. These letters include descriptions of Olympia during Stevens’s term as governor. The bulk of this subgroup consists of the incoming letters of Isaac Stevens, Sr., and Margaret Stevens.

Accession 111-2 consists of positive microfilm copies of the two series of Stevens's General Correspondence and other selected material from Accession 111-1. The copies are contained on four reels of positive microfilm. The accession includes two sets of microfilm, one set of which is available for interlibrary loan. The arrangement of the materials on the microfilm follows that of the originals prior to their reprocessing. An index to the correspondents can be found in the inventory of Accession 111-1. The originals of the materials known on the microfilm as Supplements to Isaac Stevens's Papers are found in the Incoming Letters, Outgoing Letters, and General Correspondence of Others in Accession 111-1. Similarly, the microfilmed Speeches and Writing includes materials from the Subject Series and Report series of Accession 111-1. Only the period from April 5 to December 12, 1847, of Stevens's Mexican War Diary has been filmed.

Use of the CollectionReturn to Top

Alternative Forms Available

Portions of the Isaac I. Stevens Papers have been microfilmed (as indicated in the inventory below) and are available on Microfilm A13147 in the Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries and through Interlibrary Loan.

View selections from this collection in digital format

Restrictions on Use

The creator's literary rights are in the public domain.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

Acquisition Information

The materials in Mss. Acc. No. 0111-001 of the Isaac I. Stevens Papers were acquired by the University of Washington Libraries in 1934 from Kate Stevens Bates and in1960 from Albert Culverwell.

The photostat copies of Stevens's declarations of martial law were acquired from the Pacific Northwest Quarterly in April 1975.

Processing Note

Mss. Acc. No. 0111-001 is a merger of materials received in 1934 and 1960. The accession was reprocessed in 2002, at which time Mss. Acc. No. 0111-003, the photostat copies of Stevens's declarations of martial law, was merged.

The microfilm that comprises Mss. Acc. No. 0111-002 was filmed from the original papers in 1965 at the University of Washington under a grant from the National Historical Publications Commission.

Separated Materials

The Hazard Stevens Papers, 1863-1899 (Mss. Acc. No. 4909-001), were previously part of the Isaac I. Stevens Papers. This collection contains correspondence, legal documents, reminiscences, writings, and documents from Hazard Stevens’s service with the 1st Regiment of Loyal Virginians (1863-65), family and business correspondence, a diary, and biographical notes Hazard Stevens gathered about his father, Isaac I. Stevens.

Two portrait photographs of Stevens were transferred to the division's photography collections in 2002.

Bibliography

Buerge, David M., "Big Little Man: Isaac Stevens (1818-1862)." In Washingtonians: A Biographical Portrait of the State, edited by David Brewster and David M. Buerge. Seattle: Sasquatch Books, 1988, pp. 73-95.

Doty, James, The Journal of Operations of Governor Isaac Ingalls Stevens of Washington Territory in 1855, edited by Edward J. Kowrach. Fairfield, Wash.: Ye Galleon Press, 1978.

Hazard, Joseph Taylor, Companion of Adventure: a Biography of Isaac Ingalls Stevens, First Governor of Washington Territory. Portland, Or.: Binfords and Mort, 1952.

Richards, Kent, Isaac I. Stevens: Young Man in a Hurry. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press, 1979.

Stevens, Hazard, The Life of General Isaac Ingalls Stevens. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1901.

Related Materials

The records of Washington's territorial governors, including those from the Stevens administration, can be found at the Washington State Archives. The Archives also have a small amount of Stevens Family materials.

Additional papers of Isaac Ingalls Stevens can be found at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.

The Washington State Historical Society holds additional papers of Isaac Ingalls Stevens and Hazard Stevens.

University of Oregon Libraries holds the Kate Stevens Bates Papers and the Hazard Stevens Papers.

A typescript copy of the journal of operations of Governor Stevens maintained by his secretary, James Doty, is held by the Oregon Historical Society Library.

Tulalip Agency Papers at Washington State University includes correspondence of Stevens and others chiefly regarding the Tulalip, Lummi, Snohomish, and Puyallup Indians.

Eastern Washington State Historical Society at the The Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture (formerly the Cheney Cowles Museum) in Spokane has a collection of Stevens Family papers.

Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top

 

Incoming LettersReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
1/1
Crosbie, Henry R.
1856
1/2
Douglas, James
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4, part 2 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1855
1/3
Gosnell, Wesley B., Special Indian Agent, Report to Stevens
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4, part 3 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1856

Outgoing LettersReturn to Top

Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
1/4
Stevens to Edmund Sylvester
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4, part 5 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1853
1/5
Letterpress Copybook
1849-1851

General Correspondence - Alphabetical, 1831-1845Return to Top

Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 1 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
1/6
Bache, A. D.
1/6
Bache, E.
1/7
Benham, H. W.
1/7
Canby, [E.]
1/7
Gilmer, J. F.
1/8
Green, Charles G.
1/8
[Hazard, M. W.]
1/8
Hardcastle, E. L. F
1/8
Harrison, M.
1/9
Kurtz, J. D.
1/9
Lee, I. F.
1/10
Lee, Robert E.
1/10
Lyman, E. B.
1/10
Mason, J. L.
1/10
McClellan, George B.
1/11
Palmer, W. R.
1/12
Reno, J. S.
1/12
Ringgold, T. L.
1/12
Scarritt, J. M.
1/13
Sherman, Thomas W.
1/13
Smith, H. L.
1/14
Stevens, G. W.
1/14
Stevens, H. B.
1/14
Stevens, Hazard
1/15-18
Stevens, Isaac I.
1/19
Stevens, Isaac
1/19
Stevens, Margaret
1/20
Stevens, Margaret L.
1/20
Stevens, Mary
1/20
Stevens, Morel
1/21
Stevens, Oliver
1/22
Stevens, Susan
1/23
Stevens, ?
1/23
Tower, Zealous B.
1/23
U.S. Patent Office
1/23
Wallace, C. I.
1/24
Woodbury, D. P.
1/24
Wright, H. G.

General Correspondence, ChronologicalReturn to Top

Also available on Microfilm A13147, reels 1-4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.

Correspondents include: Abbott, James H. ; Abemathy, Alexander J. ; Abert, James W. ; Adair, John ; Aiken, F. A. ; Alden, James ; Aldrich, Cyrus ; Allen, Edward J. ; Alvord, Benjamin ; Anderson, B. P. ; Anderson, John ; Andrew, John ; Andrews, Horace ; Arnold, L. G. ; Bache, A. D. ; Bache, E. ; Bailey, J. W. ; Bauregard, G. T. ; Benham, H. W. ; Berteau, F. G. ; Bishop, David H. ; Bishop, Susan S. ; Blake, Samuel ; Blunt, Charles E. ; Bowen, Fred ; Boynton, Edward C. ; Breckinridge, John C. ; Brooks, C. T. ; Buchanan, E. B. ; Cain, John ; Campbell, L. M. ; Canby, E. ; Carpenter, S. D. ; Cass, Lewis Chase, W. H. ; Clark, Frank ; Cranston, W. M. H. ; Cullum, George W. ; Cummings, Asa ; Currier, B. H. ; Cushing, T. ; Davis, Jefferson ; Doe, J. M. ; Dorwin, C. ; Dunnell, Jacob ; Dundas, William H. ; Eaton, William ; Edwards, L. A. ; Ely, Sumner S. ; Evans, Elwood ; Evans, John ; Fessenden, W. P. ; Field, H. ; Fitzhugh, E. C. ; Folsom, I. L. ; Foster, J. G. ; Fowler, W. M. ; French, John (C.) ; Frost, John ; Frye, William ; Fuller, W. J. A. ; Gardner, C. K, ; Gay, D. W. ; Gibson, A. A. ; Gilmore, Q. A. ; Gllman, Henry ; Gllmer, J. F. ; Goldsborough, H. A. ; Gove, Warren ; Green, Charles G. ; Green, W. B. ; Gunn, Thomas ; [G, W. H.] ; Halnes, Augustine ; Hale, John P. ; Hall, Frye ; Halleck, H. W. ; Hardcastle, E. L. F. ; Hardee, W. J. ; Hardin, L. B. ; Harding, B. F. ; Harrison, M. ; Hayes, John L. ; Hazard, E. H. ; Hazard, E. L. ; Hazard, M. W. ; Hazard, N. W. ; Hazard, T. G. ; Henry, Joseph ; Herbert, Henry W. ; Hllgard, J. E. ; Hill, John ; Hills, Joel ; Hinckley and Egery ; Holden, Oliver ; Holinan, J. D. ; Hooker, J. (Joseph?) ; Hoven, N. W. ; Humphreys, A. A. ; Hunt, E. B. ; Hunt, H. I. ; Hunt, Montgomery ; Jackson, John H. ; Jenklns, Thurston.H. ; Johnston, B. W. W. ; Judson, William H. ; Kautz, August V. ; Kelly S. S. ; Kennedy, Joseph C. G. ; King, Horatio ; Kinney, Samuel ; Kurtz, J. D. ; Lane, Joseph ; Lansdale, Richard Hyatt ; Latham, Milton S. ; Lawton, A. R. ; Lawton, R. B. ; Leadbetter, D. ; Lee, I. F. ; Lee, J. F. ; Lee, John J. ; Lee, Ned ; Lee, Robert E. ; Lincoln, A. B. ; Lyman, E. B. ; McBean, William ; McClellan, George B. ; McFarland, Susan ; McMullan, Fayette ; Mahan, D. H. ; Mansfield, Joseph K. F. ; Manypenny, George W. ; Mason, Charles H. ; Medill, W. ; Meigs, M. C. ; Merlson, Alex ; Miles, Henry ; Millard, M. B. ; Miller, William Winlock ; Mix, Charles E. ; Mordecal, A. ; Morris, J. N. ; Morrow, William M. ; Morion, Francis ; Mosely, H. C. ; Mowry, S. ; Mullen, John ; Munro, P. L. ; Murden, E. 0. ; Nesmith, James W. ; Nones, J. B. ; Ogden, Peter Skene ; Olmstead, David ; Oliver, Samuel ; Osgood, Gayton P. ; Ord, Edward 0. C. ; Owen, D. D. ; Paige, G. A. ; Palmer, A. T. ; Palmer, W. R. ; Parke, Jno. G. ; Peabody, A. P. ; Peck, John I. ; Perry, M. ; Peters, John A. ; Peters, N. ; Phillips, Sam ; Porter, B. F. ; Band, Sam F. ; Beeves, I. S. K. ; Reno, J. S. ; Rice, Henry M. ; Richard, Rev. P. ; Ringgold, T. L. ; Ripley, R. S. ; Roberts, B. L. ; Roble, A. H. ; Rolle, Albert ; Rosencrans, W. S. ; Rundlett, G. H. ; Sanders, John ; Sauerwine, George ; Saunders, Daniel ; Sawyer, Levl ; Sayward, W. G. ; Scarritt, J. M. ; Shannon, Milton ; Shepard, George ; Shennan, Thomas West ; Sinclair, William J. ; Sitgreaves, L. ; Smith, Edward W. ; Smith, Fred A. ; Smith, Gus W. ; Smith, Henry L. ; Smith. J. E. ; Sparhawk, George ; Sprague, William ; Stanberry, Howard ; Stewart, Seaforth ; Stringham, S. H. ; Talt, James A. ; Talcott, Andrew ; Taylor, Francis ; Terlman, G. ; Thomas, J. A. ; Thorn, George ; Tilden, Bryant ; Tinkham, A. W. ; Tolmie, William Frazer ; Totten, Joseph G. ; Todd, James M. ; Tower, George B. N. ; Tower, Zealous B. ; Townsend, D. L. ; Treadwell, Thomas J. ; Trowbridge, W. P. ; Van Bokkelen, J. H. H. ; Wall, William ; Wallace, E. I. ; Watson, George ; Webster, Sidney ; Webster, William ; Weeks, Thaddeus ; Welcker, George A. ; Weston, N. B. ; Wheeler, Jno. ; Whipple, A. W. ; Whitney, James S. ; Wickman, A. ; Wight, R. A. ; Williams, Hez ; Williams, W. ; Wilson, J. S. ; Wilson, John ; Woodbury, D. P. ; Woodby, D. P. ; Woodman, Theodore C. ; Wright, H. George ; Wright, Joseph ; Yantis, Benjamin F. ; Zantzinger, William C.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
1/25-62
1831 - October 14, 1840
1831-1840
2/1-64
October 15, 1840 - September 14, 1849
1840-1849
3/1-86
September 14, 1849 - June 1, 1854
1849-1854
4/1-55
June 3, 1854 - August 28, 1861
1854-1861
5/1-35
September 1, 1861 - November 1, 1862
1861-1862

General Correspondence, TranscriptsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
5/36
Typed copies of the Indian War Correspondence
1855-1857

General Correspondence of OthersReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
5/37
Lane, Joseph, to Captain Hunt re: Stevens
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4, part 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1857

DiariesReturn to Top

Selections available (Mexian War, April 5-December 12, 1847) on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
5/38
Journal, March 28 - April 19, 1847
1847
5/39
Mexican War Diary, April 12 - May 5, 1847
1847
5/40
Mexican War Diary, May 7 - September 11; November 1 - December 12, 1847
1847

Speeches and WritingsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
5/41
Armistice, Notes on: September 6 - October 24, 1847
1847
5/42
Buena Vista, Battle of: Notes and Plan of Battle of Buena Visa, February 22-23, 1847
1847
5/43
Cerro Gordo: "Observations in relation to an immediate movement upon the capitol after the Cerro Gordo," No. 4 and No. 5
No. 4: 10 p.
No. 5: 17 p.
1847
5/44
"Chalo Route"
undated
5/45
Chapultepec: "No. 1"
undated
5/46
"Mexico - Part 7"
undated
5/47
Monterey: Observations in relation to the delay of General Taylor in advancing on Monterey
ca. 1847
5/48
Monterey: Attack on Monterey
ca. 1847
5/49
Monterey: Operations after capture of Monterey
ca. 1847
5/50
Palo Alto, Resaca, and Monterey
ca. 1847
6/1
Quetarro: "Department of Quetarro"
undated
6/2
San Luis: Advance upon San Luis
ca. 1847
6/3
Scott's Campaign and other notes on the Mexican War
42 p.
undated
6/4
Scott's Campaign
162 p.
Narrative of the campaign.
undated
6/5
Scott, General; Captain Lee, etc.
undated
6/6
Taylor Line
ca. 1847
6/7
Valley of Mexico: Abstract of engineer operations in the Valley of Mexico, August and September 1847
Original and two typed copies.
1847
6/8
Valley of Mexico
undated
6/9
Vera Cruz: Notes in regard to investment and siege of Vera Cruz taken in the field, March 1847
1847
6/10
Vera Cruz: Abstraction of operations at Vera Cruz as regards working parties of Lieutenant Stevens, Engineer, March 1847
Typscript copy.
1847
6/11
Hunt's army organization, September 4, 1851
1851
6/12
Fellow Citizens of the County of Thurston, December 19, 1853
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1853
6/13
Vindication of General Pierce, published in the Boston Post, June 1852
2 articles.
1852
6/14
Navigability of the Columbia River, June 30, 1854
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1854
6/15
Fellow Citizens of the County of Thurston Legislative Assembly of the Territory, December 1, 1856
1856
6/16
"Gold Fields in New Caledonia", an address to the Secretary of State on the rights of American citizens in British Columbia
Printed in the Washington Union July 27, 1858.
1858
6/17-19
To President of the Railroad Convention, April 3, 1860
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1860
6/20
Fellow soldiers of the Highland Guard, April 1862
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
1862
6/21
Administration of Aragon
undated
6/22
Army: Observations in relation to increase of Army, Pacific Railroad (increase and reorganization of the army)
undated
6/23
Artillery
undated
6/24
Fortifications: Rough notes on fortifications
undated
6/25
Franklin: Speech on Benjamin Franklin
undated
6/26
Washington Territory, Description of
undated
6/27
Addresses to Public Schools
undated
6/28-31
Class notes and papers
undated
6/32
Memorial to G.W. Stevens
Fragment.
undated

Speeches and Writings of OthersReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/1
"Address before the Dialectic Society of the Corps of Cadets" by Lt. Benjamin Alvord
1839
7/2
Contreras and Churubusco, August 1847
Account submitted by Henry Wacque (?).
1847
7/3
Drafts of "The War with Mexico" by R.S. Ripley
undated
7/4
re: Lieutenant Generalcy (in the Senate)
1852
7/5
re: Military service in Texas
undated
Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/6
"Field notes of the Survey of the N.E. 1/4 of Section Five and the N.W. 1/4 of Section Four in Township No. 17 North of Range No. 2, Wash."
1892
7/7
Report on Snoqualmie Pass Road
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
undated
7/8
Phrenological analysis of Stevens
undated

Subject SeriesReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
14 Years Bill
Box/Folder
7/9
Reports
Statement showing the number and disposition of the troops in the Frontier Dept.
n..d.
Article in regard to bill for securing services of competent officers in staff departments of the Army (S. 413)
undated
Statement showing the several duties of the officers of the Corps of Topological Engineers
undated
box-folder:oversize
9/1
Statement of Lieutenants of the Corps of Engineers who graduated prior to 1845
undated
7/9
Drafts of bill
undated
7/9
Correspondence
1852
7/10-11
Indian Vocabularies
"Materials on the vocabulary of the Blackfoot language and comparative vocabulary of the languages of the Indian tribes of the United States, Fort Benton and Piegan Camp, September 9, 1853"
1853
Pacific Railroad Survey
Box/Folder
7/12
Bound volume of correspondence Stevens drafted as Superintendent of the Pacific Railroad Survey, March-June 1853
Major correspondents include Jefferson Davis.
1853
7/13-14
General Correspondence and notes regarding the Settlement of Accounts from the Pacific Railroad Survey and other business
Includes survey notes.
1857-1865
7/15
Reports: Stevens's Pacific Railroad Survey, compiled by Joseph Henry and A.D. Bache, envisoned as a route to East rivers
Also available on Microfilm A13147, reel 4 in Government Publications, Maps, Microforms & Newspapers Collections in Suzzallo/Allen Libraries.
undated
7/16
Newspaper articles by Isaac Stevens re: Pacific Railroad
1853-1858
box-folder:oversize
9/1
Washington State Capitol Building
Diagrams
undated
Donation claim
1958
Brief of title
1859

Financial RecordsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/17
Check Stubs and Promissory Notes
1846, 1848, 1856

Legal DocumentsReturn to Top

Container(s): Box-folder 7/18

Container(s) Description Dates
Certificate of Marriage, September 8, 1841
1841
Last Will and Testament of Isaac Stevens, June 10, 1853
1853
Document granting Isaac Stevens power of attorney for G. Willard
1859

Military DocumentsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/19
Notes on strength of infantry in the Pacific
undated
7/19
Civil War soldier rolls from Beaufort, S.C., January and February 1862
1862
7/19
Morning report - 46th Regiment, Culpeper, August 16, 1862
1862
7/19
Blank forms for provisions
ca. 1860
box-folder:oversize
9/2
Muster roll, North Carolina, 1863
1863
9/2
Statement of forage for public animals
undated

TreatiesReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/20
Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Treaties made at Walla Walla Valley
Copy.
1855

ProclamationsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/21
Document appointing Charles H. Mason Secretary of Washington Territory, May 15, 1855
1855
7/21
Martial law in Thurston County
1856
7/21
First proclamation as governor
1853
7/21
Order staying execution of judgment
undated
box-folder:oversize
9/3
Martial law in Thurston County
1856
9/3
Martial law in Pierce County
Copy.
1856

ResolutionsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/22
Resolutions of the Council regarding martial laws
undated

PetitionsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/23
re: G.W. Smith, promotion to Major
undated
7/24
Petitions to Stevens seeking employment
1854, 1857
Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
7/25
Distribution lists from various sources for arcticle on Mexican campaign
undated
7/26
"Index to the Executive Documents," 31st Congress, 1st Session
1849
7/27
Indian War documents, 1856-61, in possession of the military, Dept. of Washington
undated
7/28
Inventory to the Isaac Stevens Letters
Arranged by year in this collection.
undated
7/29
"Invoice of Goods Delivered"
undated

DiagramsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
box-folder:oversize
9/4
Diagrams of furnaces for heating shot
undated
9/4
Military uniform, U.S. Corps of Engineers
undated
Container(s) Description Dates
box-folder:oversize
9/5
Plan of the Battle of Buena Vista
Two.
undated
Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
8/1
Confederate money
13 bills.
undated

ClippingsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
8/2-3
Nwespaper arcticles on the Battle of James Island, June 28, 1862
1862
8/4
Newspaper article by Isaac Stevens re: National Defense
1852
8/4
Boston Post article
1851
8/5
Newspaper articles by James G. Swan written for the Boston Transcript
With other clippings about the Pacific Coast.
1857-1858
8/6
Isaac Stevens obituaries
1862

Stevens FamilyReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
General Correspondence
Box/Folder
8/7
Susan Stevens to Elizabeth Stevens
1839
8/8
Letters to Isaac Stevens, Sr.
8 letters.
1831-1847
8/9
Letters to Margaret Hazard Stevens from her mother
14 letters.
1844-1854
8/10-11
Letters to Margaret Stevens from other parties
12 letters, including letters on the death of Isaac I. Stevens.
1847-1862
8/12
Joint letter to Susan Stevens from family
1856
8/13
Condolences on the death of Isaac I. Stevens
1862

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Governors--Washington (State)--Archives
  • Indians of North America--Washington (State)--Treaties
  • Mexican War, 1846-1848--Personal narratives
  • Pacific Coast Indians, Wars with, 1847-1865
  • Pacific railroads--Explorations and surveys
  • Personal Papers/Corporate Records (University of Washington)
  • Soldiers--United States--Social conditions--19th century

Personal Names

  • Stevens, Hazard, 1842-1918
  • Stevens, Isaac Ingalls, 1818-1862--Archives
  • Stevens, Margaret L

Corporate Names

  • Northern Pacific Railroad Company
  • United States. Army--Officers
  • United States. Army. Corps of Engineers

Geographical Names

  • United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Personal narratives
  • Washington (State)--History--To 1889
  • Washington (State)--Politics and government--To 1889