1

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

5 revisions
ameoba at Aug 14, 2018 09:56 PM

1

1857-2

A STATEMENT OF THE DONATIONS FROM CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE, TO THE
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, PROVIDED IT IS LOCATED IN THAT VICINITY.

1st. The Citizens propse to donate for the site Twelve Hundred Acres of Land, as shown by a map in the possession of Col. Barney.

2d. A.J. White, Esq., offers the free use of his Marble Quarry. This quarry is three-fourths
of a mile from the great Spring, and is easily accessible, and inexhaustible--specimens of the
marble are here to be seen,

3d. Thomas H. Callaway offers his mineral interest in Eighteen Thousand Acres of Land,
being one-half, which land is fully shown and described in C.A. Proctor's map, (the State As-
sayor. John B. Tipton, who owns the other half, refused fifty thousand dollars for his interest,
and I do not believe that he would take One Hundred Thousand Dollars. Professor Currey,
author of the "Geology of Tennessee," reports favorabley of its indications for Copper and other
valuable minerals.

4th. A. Fitzgerald offers his interest in one of two properties--the institution to take choice
--being one-fourth of the "Johnston property," in Towns County, Georgia, or one-fourth of the
"Cherry Log property," in the vicinity of Duck Town, both believed to be very valuable copper
mines.

5th. Thomas H. Callaway and A. Fitzgerald offer Ten Thousand Dollars each, making
Twenty Thousand Dollars, in the Stock of the Southern Copper Mining Company now being
formed (when said Company shall be organized) free from any demands for working the mines
--One Hundred Thousand Dollars in Cash being set apart by the Company as their working
Capital.

THOMAS H. CALLAWAY.

1

1857-2

A STATEMENT OF THE DONATIONS FROM CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE, TO THE
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, PROVIDED IT IS LOCATED IN THAT VICINITY.

1st. The Citizens propse to donate for the site Twelve Hundred Acres of Land, as shown by a map in the possession of Col. Barney.

2d. A.J. White, Esq., offers the free use of his Marble Quarry. This quarry is three-fourths
of a mile from the great Spring, and is easily accessible, and inexhaustible--specimens of the
marble are here to be seen,

3d. Thomas H. Callaway offers his mineral interest in Eighteen Thousand Acres of Land,
being one-half, which land is fully shown and described in C.A. Proctor's map, (the State As-
sayor. John B. Tipton, who owns the other half, refused fifty thousand dollars for his interest,
and I do not believe that he would take One Hundred Thousand Dollars. Professor Currey,
author of the "Geology of Tennessee," reports favorabley of its indications for Copper and other
valuable minerals.

4th. A. Fitzgerald offers his interest in one of two properties--the institution to take choice
--being one-fourth of the "Johnston property," in Towns County, Georgia, or one-fourth of the
"Cherry Log property," in the vicinity of Duck Town, both believed to be very valuable copper
mines.

5th. Thomas H. Callaway and A. Fitzgerald offer Ten Thousand Dollars each, making
Twenty Thousand Dollars, in the Stock of the Southern Copper Mining Company now being
formed (when said Company shall be organized) free from any demands for working the mines
--One Hundred Thousand Dollars in Cash being set apart by the Company as their working
Capital.

THOMAS H. CALLAWAY.