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Finding Aid for the Collection
- Description:
- Description of the collection's creators and contents and University of Michigan-Flint Library
Genesee Historical Collections Center
Name of the collection: Lyman George Willcox
Inclusive years: 1830-1933
Quantity: 2 linear feet + 1 volume + 1
oversize folder
ACQUISITION: This collection was donated to the Genesee
Historical Collections Center in January,
1993, by donor no. 228.
ACCESS: There are no restrictions on access to this
collection.
PHOTOGRAPHS: 64 photographs
PROCESSED BY: Paul Gifford, March, 1993.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Lyman George Willcox was born April 29, 1831, in Rochester,
Michigan, one of four children born to Lyman J. and Hopey
(Greene) Willcox. His father had come from New York State and
later ran a mill in Rochester.
Lyman George (known professionally as Lyman G. or L. G. but
called "George" by his family) attended the district school and
worked on his father's farm until the age of fourteen. He
attended the local academy for two years, and then worked for
two years in his father's mill. He returned to school at the
Romeo (Michigan) Academy, and followed it with work in the mill.
In the fall of 1851 he travelled through Ohio, to Louisville and
St. Louis, wandering through the state of Missouri, but returned
home. After teaching school in Rochester for one year, he
enrolled at Hamilton College, graduating in 1855 with a degree
in law. He later studied elocution in Poughkeepsie, New York.
He went to Kansas in 1856 in order to study the conflict
between the pro-slavery and free-state factions. In 1857 he
went to Omaha, Nebraska, where he practiced law and edited the
Omaha Times. On August 22, 1857, he married Azubah Bingham of
Detroit. She apparently refused to move to frontier Nebraska,
and he lived for the next four years in Detroit, practicing law.
At the beginning of the Civil War, he raised a company of
volunteers and, on September 7, 1861, he was commissioned
captain of Company B, 3rd Michigan Cavalry Regiment. After a
short stay in Grand Rapids, he and his unit were sent at the end
of 1861 to Benton Barracks, in Missouri. In 1862, he was
involved in actions at New Madrid, Missouri; the siege of
Corinth, Mississippi; at Boonville, Mississippi; Tuscumbia,
Alabama; Iuka, Mississippi. On November 18, 1862, he was
promoted to the rank of major. In 1863 he was stationed at
Jackson, Tennessee, and the following year at DeVall's Bluff,
Arkansas. While in Jackson, he addressed a local audience with
a remarkable speech, in which he castigated slave owners and the
"peculiar institution." He resigned his commission on September
12, 1864, due to illness, and returned to Detroit. However, in
December, 1864, he accepted an appointment as major in the U.S.
First Army Corps.
Like other Union veteran officers, he sought political
office through the Republican Party, following the war. He
returned to Detroit, but in 1865 purchased land in Brownstown
Township, Antrim County, Michigan, and in the following year was
elected Prosecuting Attorney of Antrim County. In 1867, he was
appointed Register of the U.S. Land Office in Traverse City,
Michigan. He was appointed Prosecuting Attorney of Emmet County
in 1868. He opened a law practice in Traverse City in
partnership with Edwin Pratt and, from 1868 to 1870, was a
partner and editor of the Traverse Bay Eagle. In 1869, he
visited California.
Leaving Traverse City in 1870, he went to Chicago, where he
was a writer for the Western Rural, an agricultural newspaper.
He had developed an interest in fruit farming and, in 1871,
moved to Centralia, Illinois, where he purchased an orchard.
While there, he practiced law and was in demand as a speaker on
political, agricultural, and legal topics. He was a principal
organizer of the Centralia Public Library.
He returned to Michigan in 1879, joining his brother
Elliott R. Willcox in the practice of law in Pontiac and writing
political columns for the Pontiac Gazette. His success in
bringing the Oakland County vote to the Republicans led to an
appointment in 1882 as Receiver of Public Moneys for the
district of Federal lands subject to sale at Detroit, an office
which he held for five years. His specialty in real estate law
and his experience in journalism resulted in a partnership with
Charles B. Howell in the publication of the Western Land Guide
and Real Estate Lawyer in 1883.
In 1885 he moved to Bay City, Michigan, where he was editor
of the Bay City Tribune. He was appointed in 1886 Assistant
Prosecuting Attorney of Bay County. Gaining sufficient local
Republican support, he was appointed Postmaster of Bay City in
1889, an office which he held for five years. An attempt in
1902 to capture a second appointment to that office was
unsuccessful. He was a presidential elector in 1900. He still
remained an important figure in Bay County Republican politics,
speaking on behalf of senatorial and gubernatorial candidates.
He moved to Saginaw, Michigan, at the end of 1910, in order
to be near his son George. He remained interested in politics
and current affairs for the rest of his life and spoke
frequently at Decoration Day celebrations and the like.
Veterans' organizations, like the Loyal Legion and Grand Army of
the Republic, and reunions of the Third Michigan Cavalry
occupied his interest. He died on September 19, 1918, in
Saginaw.
SCOPE AND CONTENT
The papers of Lyman George Willcox reflect his military,
journalistic, and political career and, to a lesser extent, his
personal life. Certain documents and folders show his career as
a lawyer, but, for the most part, the papers lack any files on
cases he may have handled. The arrangement of the papers is
based largely on the careers he followed at different stages of
his life: military (1861-1865, although veterans' organizations
with items dating much later are also included here); legal
(1856-1885); and political (1866-1915). Personal financial
records also form another series. Other items in the collection
are divided by form: speeches, essays, newspaper clippings,
scrapbooks, and publications.
The earliest papers consist of five letters from Lyman
George Willcox's aunt Harriet, of Oriskany, New York, to her
brother Lyman J. Willcox and two letters from the latter's
sister Angeline (or Angelina) to Lyman; these date from 1830 to
1836 and mostly contain family news. One letter, from Lyman to
Harriet, dated 1833, describes his wife's death, the difficul-ties
of raising four children alone, and the best means of
travel from New York to Michigan. There is one letter from
Polly Gilbert to her sister Hopey (Greene) Willcox, and a eulogy
or epitaph to the latter, written about 1833.
The folder of personal correspondence includes a number of
letters from his college friend Alexander W. Campbell, nephew of
the evangelist Alexander Campbell and a Wheeling businessman.
One 1855 letter offers his impressions of Martin Van Buren.
Other correspondence concerns veterans' reunions,
acknowledgments for speaking, and news of relatives. Although
representative correspondence and other papers from his earlier
life survives, it was only after he moved to Saginaw in 1911
that all his correspondence and papers were saved. During this
period, he returned to Rochester and began to reminisce about
his early years, both in the drafts of his outgoing letters and
in a draft of an article.
Willcox's papers from his Civil War service form a fairly
complete record, although few items from the years 1864 and 1865
appear to have survived. Among the more interesting items are
the orders from superior officers, Willcox's reports of various
missions, some of his hand-drawn maps of areas which experienced
skirmishes, and court martial or disciplinary proceedings
against two officers, Lt. Col. John W. Stephens and Lt. Col.
Gilbert Moyers. There is also a good record of ordnance and
quartermaster stores. Muster rolls of Company B, 3rd Michigan
Cavalry, for 1862 can be found here. Most of the documents
concern his company and its actions in Mississippi, Alabama, and
Arkansas. The major fight was at Corinth, Mississippi, and also
at Iuka, Mississippi, but other skirmishes are vividly docu-mented.
Under the Military series are placed folders with items
concerning his activity in veterans' organizations and reunions,
including the Army of the Potomac reunion in Detroit in 1882 and
3rd Michigan Cavalry reunions.
Willcox's political activities can be found in the papers
under the series heading "Political" as well as in the newspaper
clippings and scrapbooks containing editorials. When he sought
the office of postmaster for Bay City in 1889, he assembled a
large number of letters of support from locally influential
Republicans. He did much the same in 1902. He played an
important role in getting Oakland County to vote Republican
during the election of 1880 and in drawing support for campaign
appearances in Bay City by William Alden Smith during his
senatorial campaign of 1906. Other important correspondents
include Gov. and Sen. Henry P. Baldwin (1814-1892), Sen. Thomas
W. Ferry (who in 1882 warns of a plan to buy off voters), and
Gov. Chase S. Osborn. These mainly concern elections.
A polished orator, Willcox was in demand as a speaker for
traditional Fourth of July celebrations, political rallies, and
literary societies. Titles of the speeches in this collection
can be seen in the folder list. Among other sentiments, he
opposed woman's suffrage, supported the establishment of local
libraries, and was suspicious of the Catholic Church. While he
lived in Centralia, Illinois, he seems to have spoken often, as
most of the speeches were written during that period (1871-
1879).
It would appear that most of the editorials he wrote during
his tenure as editor of the Omaha Times (1857), Traverse Bay
Eagle (1866-1869), as political writer of the Pontiac Gazette
(1879-1880), and as editor of the Bay City Daily Tribune (1885-
1886) can be found here, either pasted in scrapbooks or as
clippings. Apparently he had originally saved his writings in
the form of clippings and at a later time put some of them in
scrapbooks, but never completed the task. The order in the
scrapbooks thus is somewhat jumbled. Most of the subjects
covered by these editorials are national or state political
issues, but local concerns are also included. This is
significant, since some of the above titles have apparently not
survived.
Most of the photographs are portraits of family members.
One photograph likely to be of interest to researchers is one of
the U. S. Land Office at Traverse City, taken about 1868.
The researcher might find it useful to consult a book based
on these papers: Julia A. Cramer, Across the Bloody Chasm: The
Legacy of Lyman “George” Willcox (Melvin, Michigan: the author,
2003) (FLINT ARCH E 514.6 .3rd C73 2003).
FOLDER LIST
BOX 1
LYMAN J. WILLCOX
Correspondence, 1830-1836
Legal documents, 1834-1850
HOPEY (GREENE) WILLCOX
Letter and eulogy, [183-?]
PERSONAL
Letters to Azubah (Bingham) Willcox
1857, 1861
1862-1863
Letters from Oscar H. Bingham to Azubah (Bingham) Willcox,
1862-1863
Letters from relatives, 1871-1888
Correspondence
1854-1910
1911-1916
1917-1918
Postcards and greeting cards, 1911-1917
Reminiscences of Rochester and Grand Traverse Bay, 1916,
1918
Pencil sketch of Hamilton College, [undated]
Masonic certificate, 1863
Genealogical notes, [undated], 1915, 1933
MILITARY
Captain's and major's commissions, 1861-1862
Resignation, 1864
Muster-in and muster-out rolls of Lyman G. Willcox, 1861-
1862
Correspondence, 1862-1884
Orders and dispatches from other officers, 1862-1864
Reports from Willcox to other officers, 1862-1864
Maps
Reports to Willcox, 1862-1863
Special orders, 1862-1864
General orders, 1862-1863
Circulars, 1862-1863
Muster rolls of Company B, 3rd Michigan Cavalry, 1862
Courts martial
General, 1863
Charges against John W. Stephens, Lt. Col., 11th
Cavalry, Missouri Volunteers, [1864?]
Arrest of Lt. Col. Gilbert Moyers, 1862-1863
Quartermaster stores
Pertaining to Company B, 3rd Michigan Cavalry, 1861-
1862
Pertaining to other companies, 1862-1863
Ordnance returns pertaining to Company B, 3rd Michigan
Cavalry
Stores in charge - 3rd quarter, 1862
Invoices and receipts
3rd quarter, 1862
4th quarter, 1862
Various returns, 1862-1865
Miscellaneous, 1862-1865
Receipts for ordnance, 1862-1863
Dispute over horse, 1862
Horse claim, 1863-1872
Letters of recommendation for T. B. Wier, 1861
First Army Corps, 1864
Passes, 1863-1864
Confederate letters, orders, and miscellaneous, 1862-1863
Army of the Potomac reunion, Detroit, 1882
Reunions of Third Michigan Cavalry, 1890-1925
Pension, 1909-1918
Military Order of the Loyal Legion, 1900-1926
Grand Army of the Republic, 1887-1912
FINANCIAL
Nebraska property, 1856-1874
Property in Brownstown Township, Antrim County, Michigan,
1859-1865
Newell land in Antrim County, Michigan, 1864-1867
Property in Grand Traverse County, Michigan, 1868
Partnership in Traverse Bay Eagle, 1868-1870
Law partnership agreement, 1868
Accounts, 1889-1890, 1892
Miscellaneous, 1884, 1910
LEGAL CAREER
Certificate of admission to various bars and courts, 1856-
1876
Notary Public commissions, 1856-1885
Issue of Western Land Guide and Real Estate Lawyer, Nov.
1883
POLITICAL
Correspondence
General, 1868-1915
William Alden Smith, 1903-1912
Letter of introduction, 1866
Republican county convention, 1866
Notification of election as Prosecuting Attorney of Antrim
County, 1866, 1868
General Land Office Register
Appointment, 1867-1869
Receipts from Morgan Bates, 1867-1869
Receiver of Public Moneys commissions, 1882-1887
Postmaster
Letters of support, 1889
Commission, 1889
Petition of support, 1902
Letters of support, 1902-1903
SPEECHES
Fillibustering, 1858
Mexico, 1859
Individual and National Character, 1867, 1868
BOX 2
Woman's Right to Vote, 1873
Progress of Thought, 1874
Philosophy, 1874
The Development of Religious Ideas, 1875
Fourth of July oration, 1876
Memorial Day address, 1915
Veterans reunion, 1918
Miscellaneous, 1863-1918
ESSAYS
Untitled, [1850s?] (missing the first several pages)
Miscellaneous
PUBLICATIONS
Addresses, 1863, 1884; Reminiscences
NEWSPAPER CLIPPINGS
Traverse Bay Eagle, 1867-1869
Personal, 1882-1918
General, 1863-1888
MISCELLANEOUS
Lithographic portrait
Research notes
Pamphlets by Samuel Harris
GEORGE B. WILLCOX
Correspondence concerning Lyman G. Willcox, 1918-1933
Essay, undated
SCRAPBOOKS
Scrapbook containing newspaper editorials and articles
about his postmastership, 1866-1902, transcripts of
family correspondence, 1871-1896, and copies of two
speeches, 1872
Scrapbook containing newspaper editorials from the Bay City
Daily Tribune, 1885
Scrapbook containing mostly political commentaries in the
Pontiac Gazette, 1879-1880; editorials in the Traverse
Bay Eagle, 1866-1867; miscellaneous articles about
Willcox's interests and activities, 1885-1903
Scrapbook containing editorials from the Omaha Times, 1857;
Civil War articles; miscellaneous
Scrapbook kept by Minnie Willcox, 1899
Scrapbook containing Civil War-era clippings, Pontiac
Gazette writings, miscellaneous
Small scrapbook with clippings about Willcox's activities,
1862-1914
[OUTSIZE]
(single volume):
Scrapbook containing mainly editorials from the Bay City
Daily Tribune, 1885-1886
(in large folder):
Diploma from Hamilton College, 1855
Certificate of admission to practice before the Illinois
Supreme Court, 1872
Copy of the Ulster County Gazette (issue of Jan. 4, 1800, a
famous fake), with letter giving its provenance
Poster for Fourth of July 1877 celebration, Kinmundy, Ill.
Poster of proclamation by mayor of Centralia, Ill.,
ordering citizens to arrest gang of robbers, 1878
Poster announcing Hayes campaign oration by L. G. Willcox,
Salem, Ill., 1876
Poster announcing Blaine campaign rally with oration by L.
G. Willcox, Allegan, Mich., 1884
- Date Issued:
- 1993-01-01T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- University of Michigan - Flint
- Collection:
- Lyman George Willcox Papers
- Subject Topic:
- Finding aids
- Rights:
- © University of Michigan - Flint. All Rights Reserved
- URL:
- http://digitalarchives.umflint.edu/cdm/ref/collection/p16210coll1/id/1