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to Colonel (Fellows)
20 September 1869
Goodruff, Charles H., fl. 1869
He gave the Colonel's regards to Major. Boynton and relayed the message that he would like to see his book.
GLC02745.084
Advertisement for Major Boynton's book
1861-1877
Guide to West Point and the US Military Academy
GLC02745.085
Includes full description and a list of maps and illustrations. Press notices in the back.
GLC02745.086
to James Dundas
24 May 1781
Dundas, David, Sir, Bart, 1749-1826
Mentions the marriage of D. Erskine and the parliamentary elections. Describes his first visit to the opera, which he detested. Compares listening to songs in foreign languages (he does not understand) to "those poor bigots who say their prayers in...
GLC02549.17
26 August 1780
Discusses sending his ill wife away to convalesce, referencing an essay by Montaigne in which he mentions being fonder of his wife after they have been apart. She will be "Sea Bathing, which I believe to be the most powerful restorative we have."...
GLC02549.13
to James Dundas [fragment]
December 11, 1780
Discusses his wife Isabella's bathing in the sea for health reasons, describing the Russian practice. Notes that James became corpulent and compares him to "Sir. J: Falstaff." Gives news of various old friends, including one currently in India....
GLC02549.59
to Guy Fenton
February 19, 1962
Pulowski, Xavier-Franncis, fl. 1961
Written on mourning paper. He mentions a painting at the Louvre that shows the drowning of Marshal Poniatowski. He was moved when he saw Fenton's name on the cover of Country Life. He enjoys Victorian authors like Dickens.
GLC02766.042
to Mrs. M B Dawes
15 August 1921
Dawes, Charles G., 1865-1951
He ordered 5 copies of his book for his mother.
GLC02679.59
to my dear mother
1 August 1921
The publishers sent him the first copy of his book. He is very pleased with it and will send her one as well.
GLC02679.58
23 May 1921
He encloses a letter from General MacArthur which he says is not encouraging. He got hold of a copy of a letter by William Dawes Jr. in 1774. He read an account of Harriet Beecher Stowe and her involuntary drunk.
GLC02679.52
17 November 1920
Written while waiting on a friend to go to the Opera. He has decided to publish is notes on the war. He will include some of the letters he wrote her.
GLC02679.42
to General Dawes
7 June 1919
Clemenceau, Georges, 1841-1929
He thanks him for a book that represents the work that they accomplished (the French and the Americans).
GLC02679.67
The Improvement of the Age
Appears to be an essays about how people are becoming more enlightened and prejudices and ignorance are fading away. Much of it is unclear, however.
GLC02745.109
Charles Blanchard Obituary
20 May 1918
He liked his home town. He was genial and humorous. He loved reading Dickens.
GLC02745.102
to Ethan A. Jenks
31 June 1900
Hopkins, William P., fl. 1973
Hopkins, who previously served in the Seventh Regiment, Rhode Island Volunteers, transmits blank paper and stamps to Jenks, requesting Jenks to record the details of his service during the Civil War. Based upon his research, Hopkins wrote The...
GLC02750.043
Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, late president of the United States : delivered before the New England Historic-Genealogical Society, Boston, May 3, 1865 by Elias Nason
1865
Nason, Elias, 1811-1887
Published by William V. Spencer. Inscribed " Conn. Historical Society Hartford Conn." Discusses Lincoln's life and accomplishments. Includes a poem on page 27 entitled "The Burial of Lincoln."
GLC02913.04
to Roscoe G. Greene re: Grey's Elegy, the Constitution
1840/03/04
Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848
Adams comments at length upon punctuation in Grey's "Elegy in a Churchyard" (and the powers of Congress as limited or expanded by a semi-colon in the Constitution. He also writes that "No land of slavery could ever have produced Grey's Elegy."
GLC02847
to Thomas Paine
7 September 1795
Washington, George, 1732-1799
President Washington thanks "Thos Paine - of Boston" (not the famous author of "Common Sense," who was in Paris until 1802) for a poem inscribed to him.
GLC02858
Georgius Agricola De Re Metallica
1912
Hoover, Herbert, 1874-1964
Also authored by Lou Henry Hoover. Translated from the first Latin edition of 1556 and published by the Mining Magazine, Salisbury House, London, England. Inscribed by Hoover to Edwin A. Elsbach. De Re Metallica or "On the Nature of Metals" was...
GLC02796
to Reverend Colman
January 14, 1814
Adams, John, 1735-1826
Adams in retirement to Colman (also called Coleman by Abigail Adams in GLC 2515), a minister in a neighboring Massachusetts town. References various works of literature and says Spencer's Fairy Queen is a work of genius. Jokingly says his life has...
GLC02852
Answer to the 5 Nations
1700/08/29
Earl of Bellomont, fl. 1700
The Earl of Belloment states that he is happy to satisfy the Indians' request for a minister, and expresses his hope to translate the Bible into their language. He asks that they send 3 Sachem's sons of each nation to New York, where they will learn...
GLC03107.02060
Answer to the 5 Nations [in Dutch]
GLC03107.02061
to Robert Livingston re: transcription of a journal
1701/09/26
Nanfan, John, fl. 1688-1702
Nanfan asks Livingston to trascribe/translate a journal, and to send it home to the Ministers the following evening. Docketed on address leaf.
GLC03107.02066
Observations on Paine's Rights of Man, in a series of lectures, by Publicola
[1792]
Edinburgh edition. First separate printing, originally published in Boston newspaper June-July 1791. Disbound. Attributed to John Quincy Adams by himself (see GLC 958.07)
GLC04398
to Mr. Lally
1933 circa
Benet, Stephen Vincent, 1898-1943
Affirms that "Five Men and Pompey" was his first published work. States that "We had a sketch of John Dos Passos in 'Books' recently, and there will be others. I don't know when or if we'll get together in book form." In 1933 Benet and his wife...
GLC04463.10
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