Summer 2025 PD for K–12 teachers: Registration is now open!
The black hawk chronicle. [Vol. 1, no. 3 (June 22, 1863)]
22 June 1863
Union newspaper with tongue-in-cheek war reports, mentioning Grant at Vicksburg and Naval Operations in the Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers.
GLC08308
to Maria
January 26, 1864
Wells, Edmund C., fl. 1864-1865
writing from onboard a ship. filled with interesting lines like "take a dutch man and saturate him with whiskey and lager and give him the everlasting pipe and he is a nice animal..."
GLC08311.10
21 June 1865
tells her when to expect him. tells her to kill the flies before he comes homes. Written in a camp near Alexandria
GLC08311.48
The Capture of Burgoyne
1777
Satirical "Proposals for an exchange of General Burgoyne - Ascribed to his excellency William Livingston esq. governor of the state of New Jersey." In unknown hand, possibly written by a group.
GLC08320
[Anti-15th Amendment]
1870
"Hedgehog's Grand Combination of Powers of Darkness. . .The whole to conclude with Hedgehog's celebrated feat of swallowing a live negro!. . ." Reconstruction
GLC08395
Why Don't You Take It?
1861-1877
features a dog with a collar that reads Scott looking at some kind of meat while another dog with a collar that reads Jeff walks by.
GLC08413.06
Before Election. After Election.
1864
Republican Party (U.S. : 1854- )
Cartoon type anti McClellan ballot. Humorous scenes of before and after General George McClellan is defeated in the presidential election of 1864. He ran on the Democratic ticket.
GLC08498.02
National gazette. [Vol. IV, no. 434 (December 6, 1823)]
6 December 1823
Fry, William, 1777-1855
Part of a signature cut off at masthead appears to be "J. M. Sanders." The entire front page and part of the second page is taken up with the President James Monroe's message to Congress that announced the Monroe Doctrine, which was designed to keep...
GLC08794
Grant's Petersburg progress. [Vol. 1, no. 1 (April 3, 1865)]
1865/04/03
First issue. Whimsical and humorous newspaper published by soldiers. Includes story about a newly imposed dog tax in Illinois.
GLC06107.05
Grant's Petersburg progress. [Vol. 1, no. 4 (April 10, 1865)]
1865/04/10
Whimsical and humorous newspaper published by soldiers. Printing news of Gen. Lee's surrender. Includes humorous advertisement for the capture of Jefferson Davis.
GLC06107.06
A Grand Slave Hunt or Trial of Speed for the Presidency... [cartoon]
1854-6[?]
Lithograph cartoon. Rest of title: "...between the celebrated Nags Black Dan [Webster], Lewis Cass and [Robert Y.] Hayne." Lithograph cartoon depicting the U.S. Capitol in background and Millard Fillmore carrying a copy of Fugitive Slave Bill.
GLC07432
to Aaron Jeffery
1876/08/03
Archer, Robert, fl. 1842-1875
Letter from Aaron's grandfather praising young Aaron's style and the fact that "not a word was misspelt." Also, mentions visiting guests, pleasant weather, and that he doesn't "...know what got into [Aaron's] hens. they stopped laying as soons as you...
GLC01896.098
"The night after Christmas"
1866/12/26
Printed copy of Archer's parody of "'Twas the Night Before Christmas" poem. In Archer's "The Night After Christmas," children all over the town had eaten sweets to such an extent that it made them all sick. Instead of hearing the clattering of hooves...
GLC01896.117
to Dr. Jeffery
1889/08/08
Goodwin, Mary Frances, fl. 1860-1890
Explanation of why Maimie is in Roanoke, news of the death of Hanna Fitz-Hugh, discussion of Jeffery's and her own personal ailments [rheumatism], fondness for Roanoke which she visits in an attempt"to sun up" and feel better, mentions fondness for...
GLC01896.120
Johnny, what are you doing my son?
Only 2 lines: Oh! Nothing, only trying to hit Frank on the fingers with the hatchet...
GLC02745.104
The Boy on La Bosse Street/How a Little Boy Took Lessons in Politeness
Two stories about boys. One will not chop wood for his mother but when he hears his father coming home, he chops the wood very fast and gets it to his mother before his father gets in. In the other story a boy is taught to say "Good morning...
GLC02745.108
to William North
18 September 1788
Von Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin, 1730-1794
Whimsical letter written by Von Steuben in retirement and in debt in New York to his former aide North, who was also in retirement at Duanesburg, New York. Refers to North as "my dear Bill." Looks back on the last year. Mentions that "you did cut...
GLC02542.12
to Harry A. Woodring re: Christmas greetings, with envelope
1939/12/25
Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945
Signed as President to his Secretary of War. The envelope has a silver foil seal reading "Please DO NOT OPEN until CHRISTMAS." Typed on White House stationery. Alluding to wartime rationing, FDR jokes "This metal [on the envelope seal] can be...
GLC02793.084
to Eliza Cook
20 April 1863
Cook, Gustave, 1835-1897
Fuss about Cook's lack of mail: "I will venture that no other wife in Texas, or sweetheart even, gets half as many letters from her lover as you do. Is it not so? And yet I do not get letters from you as often as many do from others. How come this...
GLC02570.43
Charles Blanchard Obituary
20 May 1918
He liked his home town. He was genial and humorous. He loved reading Dickens.
GLC02745.102
'A Sayre [Satire] upon the Times'
1702
Livingston, Robert, 1654-1728
Verse entitled "A Saytr upon ye Times." Caustic critique of an "Unhappy York," where a manipulative church and king have allowed the colony's political affairs to become rife with corruption and hypocrisy. In New York "villians triumph under a...
GLC03107.00692
to Murat Halstead re: newspaper writer
1894/05/17
Harrison, Benjamin, 1833-1901
Amusing personal letter written on mourning stationery, concerning his recent trip to New York and Brooklyn. He writes that since he has been free of work for the last year, he can be considerably more genial. "Few of the newspaper writers seem to...
GLC05797
to William Stedman re: embargo, Florida and the Miranda expedition
1806/03/15
Ellery, William, 1727-1820
Ellery thanks Stedman, Federalist representative from Massachusetts, for his letters, remarks that "I cannot perceive any good arising out of partial restrictions of trade with G.B. but I can see great evil springing from a total non-Importatation...
GLC06827
To the Youth of Alabama: We are calling to arms! [recruitment broadside]
1864/03/25
Rivers, William J., fl. 1864
Recruiting "Cavalry to be composed of those under [age] 18" to fight under Gen. Pillow. Once mounted in an album or scrapbook. On verso were adhered four undated newsclippings: two poems, one news story describing the positions of former Confederate...
GLC06851
Governor Dorr's extra [anti-Dorr illustrated broadside]
1845 ca.
Satirical propaganda attacking Dorr for fleeing the "battle" of Acote's Hill, calls supporters "rabble" from New York, etc. (Losses affecting cartoon on left center.)
GLC07256
Showing results 251 - 275