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Information about Pardons during the Civil War in Richmond, VA
Written Accounts
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1864-07-21, Richmond Dispatch; Three men refused pardons although evidence has been discovered that the murder may have been done by another.
1864-07-27, Richmond Dispatch; A man scheduled to hang petitions the Governor for a pardon
1864-07-28, Richmond Dispatch; Two men sentenced to death for desertion are pardoned and sent back to their command.
1864-07-30, Richmond Dispatch; The Governor of Virginia granted a pardon to a slave convicted of larceny by the Hustings Court
1864-08-01, Richmond Dispatch; The Governor refused to pardon a slave sentenced to transportation
1864-08-06, Richmond Dispatch; Man, for the sixth time, charged with desertion
1864-09-02, Richmond Dispatch; Man sentenced for the game of faro denied a pardon by the Governor
1865-03-18, Richmond Sentinel; two negroes who were sentenced to be hanged for burglary are released on the condition that they join T. P. Turner's "black brigade"
1865-04-11, Richmond Whig; clarification on reports about Lincoln in Richmond, and describes Lincoln's meeting with Campbell to have related to peace with all the states, not just Virginia.
1865-06-22, National Archives; Asa Snyder, a fellow Richmond industrialist, writes to President Johnson urging the pardon of J. R. Anderson
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