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[Receipt from Jane Knickerbocker to Nelson Rifenburgh]
2 May 1865
Knickerbocker, Jane, fl. 1865
Receipt from Jane Knickerbocker to Nelson Rifenburgh. It is worth $237.86 and represents interest on the estate of Mr. Jacob Rifenburgh.
GLC08914.041
[Certificate from the Paymaster General's Office]
18 July 1876
Certificate from the Paymaster General's Office. It is addressed to Mary A. Rifenburgh of Germantown, NY. It entitles her to a total of $112.96 in pension in 8 installments worth $14.12 each. To do so was required by an act of Congress on April 10...
GLC08914.042
to unknown
30 August 1815
Adams, Abigail, 1744-1818
Sends two letters from John Quincy Adams (not included). Quotes her husband's comments on the situation in France: "One cannot indulge even a sentiment of compassion for the condition of France, where the Armies of all Europe are ravaging and...
GLC08917.01
[Engraving of Abigail Adams]
1783-1815
Sartain, John, 1808-1897
Engraving made from a painting by Gilbert Stuart, with a copy of Adams signature underneath.
GLC08917.02
to Horatio Hale
1 May - 2 May 1821
Hale, Aurelia, 1798-?
Letter to her brother Horatio, sent upon docking in New York on her way to Georgia. She talks briefly about life on board the ship, including dining with several men from her hometown of Hartford, and complains that they docked in New York three...
GLC08934.001
to Sarah W. Hale
25 June 1825
Hale, Horatio, fl. 1821-1826
This letter is from Horatio Hale to his sister Sarah, written from Brazil. In the letter, he refers several time to Sarah's health, advising her to show "a degree of fortitude beyond most of your sex," because he thinks that positive thinking has a...
GLC08934.016
05 May 1826
This letter to her brother may have gotten wet at some point, because much of the text is blurred and difficult to read. She mentions concerns about "negroes" several times during the letter, saying that an area which she traveled to (the name is...
GLC08934.019
27 May 1828
This appears to be the first letter to her sister in many months. She speaks at length about matrimony and says that she has spent eighteen months deliberating on it. She says that she has been reflecting on whether to "marry a respectable, pious and...
GLC08934.025
19 September 1829
She expresses that she is deeply unhappy with their move to Mount Meigs following her husband buying land in the area, saying that although being a planter in the area can be very lucrative (which she measures in money and in number of slaves), it is...
GLC08934.026
06 March 1830
She is sad that she is separated from her friends and family, and urges her sister to come visit if her physcians will permit it, and asks if their brother James can loan them the money for travel or if she will have to borrow it. She also suggests...
GLC08934.027
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