Edward Hand papers

Edward Hand (1744-1802) was born in Ireland, came to America with the British Army in the 1760s, and served with the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. This collection of his papers includes three bound volumes and two boxes of papers that contain correspondence, accounts and other finan...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hand, Edward 1744-1802. (Creator)
Collection:Edward Hand Papers
Collection Number:0261
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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Physical Description: 1.6 Linear feet ; 2 boxes, 3 volumes
Access: The collection is open for research.
Summary: Edward Hand (1744-1802) was born in Ireland, came to America with the British Army in the 1760s, and served with the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. This collection of his papers includes three bound volumes and two boxes of papers that contain correspondence, accounts and other financial papers, commissions, and a copy of his Valley Forge orderly book from 1776. There is also a group of letters dated 1775 to 1785 that Hand wrote to his wife.
The Edward Hand papers, housed in three volumes and two boxes, mostly span the mid to late 1700s, though the copy of his orderly book in Box 1, Folder 15 dates from 1843, and there is a 1907 auction catalog in Box 1, Folder 16. This collection presents a coherent narrative of Hand's military career through correspondence, accounts, orders, commissions, and other miscellaneous documents. There are no papers related to his family or personal life, save for a group of letters he wrote to his wife during the war. Box 1 contains a mix of Hand's personal correspondence with his wife Katherine (or "Kitty"), letters to various officials, accounts, copies of entries from various orderly books kept during 1776, and other miscellaneous but mostly military-related papers. In the first seven folders are Hand's letters to his wife dating from 1775 to 1778, 1780 to 1781, and 1783 to 1785. Despite the missing years, these letters thoroughly document Hand's service with the military during and after the Revolutionary War. He often commented on the conditions at the camps and gave some opinions about movements and the enemy. Because the correspondence is so regular throughout the course of the war, it helps chronicle Hand's state of mind, as well as his physical well-being. In his early letters, he expressed optimism and enthusiasm. "You will be surprised when I tell you that I am perfectly hearty," he wrote on 29 August 1775, ". . . I am certain we have nothing to apprehend from the Enemy." As the conflict dragged on, his positivity gave way to weariness and he frequently noted his desire to return home. "Every thing is quiet here now," he wrote from Fort Pitt in late 1777, "God Grant that it may continue so, and that I may soon have the Happiness to hold you + our Dear Little [babies] in my longing arms." In some of his later letters he also discussed troop movements and current events. On 29 March, 1780, he noted that every day he was required to attended "a very troublesome Court Martial" [of Dr. William Shippen Jr.]. He apologized on 8 July 1781 for not writing due, in part, to his obligation "to march with a part of the Army to the vicinity of Kings Bridge." Hand continued to write to his wife after the war and further discussed his military experience, westward expansion, and dealings with Indians. In Box 2 are oversized financial papers and accounting sheets from Hand's work as Pennsylvania's inspector of revenue, Survey No. 3, a position he held from the 1790s till his death. In five folders are accounts of tax collectors and abstracts on taxes collected on a variety of goods, such as distilled spirits, parchment, and vellum. The three bound volumes contain papers that further document either Hand's military career (1771 to about 1785) or his work as inspector of revenue (about 1785 to 1803). As this last date suggests, there a few papers dating from after Hand's death in 1802. The military-related papers in Volume 1 primarily consist of requests sent to Hand for supplies, orders from commanding officers, and updates on troop movements. There are occasional letters or drafts of letters from Hand, as well as scattered agreements, indentures, and seemingly unrelated papers, such as a scientific essay from Lewis Nicola, written in 1771, on the Great Flood mentioned in the Bible in Genesis, chapters 7 and 8. The later papers at the end of Volume 2 and in Volume 3 are comprised mostly of receipts related to Hand's work as inspector of revenue. The vast majority of these receipts are signed by one "Henry Miller, Supervisor." There are also more accounting sheets, financial papers, and occasional letters, extracts, notes, and essays, such as one on courts martial (Volume 3). It is not always clear if these miscellaneous writings were Hand's original thoughts or if he copied them from other sources.