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Displaying 3821 - 3840 of 41199
Manuscript Collections Latimer, George. Letters
Description
Latimer, George. Letters, 1836. 6 items. Location: Misc.:L. Sugar merchantof the firm of Latimer & Fernandes in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico. These six letters from George A. Latimer and the firm of Latimer & Fernandes to Sidney Mason concern the Puerto Rican sugar trade with the United States. They were written from various locales in Puerto Rico and the Northeastern United States and date from the period Aug. 8-Nov. 26, 1836. Mss. 3858.
Manuscript Topic
Business
Sugar
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1836
Description
Polk, Horace M. (Horace Moore), 1819-1883. Letter, 1860 Nov. 5. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Horace M. Polk was a planter on Bayou Bartholomew near Bastrop, Morehouse Parish, La. Polk on Bayou Bartholomew writes his father-in-law, Major John H. Bills of Bolivar, Tenn., about the presidential election and the possibility of secession by southern states if Lincoln is elected. He also discusses an inheritance case, an investment in land, and delays in picking cotton. Mss. 3916.
Manuscript Topic
Politics
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1860
Description
Austin, Moses, 1761-1821. Account, 1803-1804. 1 account. Location: Misc. Moses Austin was the founder of the American lead industry and the first man to obtain permission to bring Anglo-American settlers into Spanish Texas. This account itemizes purchases of dry goods from John Stewart by Moses Austin and his son, James Elijah Brown Austin, between December 14, 1803, and February 21, 1804, at Mine a Breton, Louisiana Territory. Mss. 3940.
Manuscript Topic
Business
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1803
Description
Livingston, Edward, 1764-1836. Letter, 1802 May 20. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Edward Livingston was U.S. Representative for Louisiana (1823-1829), U.S. Senator for Louisiana (1829-1831), U.S. Secretary of State in the Cabinet of President Andrew Jackson (1831-1833), and Minister Plenipotentiary to France (1833-1835). Edward Livingston writes Elisha Jenkins, the New York state comptroller, requesting his company at a dinner with Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin and others. Mss. 4130.
Manuscript Topic
Politics
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1802
Description
Winsor, Daniel Loring, b. 1804. Letter, 1847 Dec. 4. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Daniel L. Winsor was a ship captain and agent for Magoun & Son, shipowners of Boston, Mass. Winsor in New Orleans, La., writes Messrs. Magoun & Son in Boston, Mass., regarding the cotton trade and General Zachary Taylor's visit to New Orleans. Mss. 3963.
Manuscript Topic
Business
New Orleans to 1861
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1847
Description
Hingst, Anna Bryant, b. 1901. Memoirs, 1988. 1 manuscript, 1 typescript. Location: Misc. Anna Bryant Hingst was born and lived in Lottie, La., and worked at the state hospital in Pineville and trained in nursing at Baton Rouge. Anna Bryant Hingst describes her life in rural south Louisiana, including her family and friends, girls' and women's lives, dating and courtship, childbirth, schooling, social customs, medical care, life in the orphanage in Baton Rouge, her work at the state hospital in Pineville, training in nursing at Baton Rouge, and her marriage to Henry Hingst. Mss. 4193.
Manuscript Topic
Women
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1988
Description
Davezac, A. (Auguste), 1780-1851. Letter, 1824 Oct. 30. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Auguste Davezac was personal aide to Andrew Jackson during the defense of New Orleans in 1814-1815 and twice served as chargé d'affaires to the Netherlands (1831-1839 and 1845-1850). Davezac in New Orleans, La., writes John G. King in Baltimore, Md., regarding a production involving himself and Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de Lafayette. Mss. 3913.
Manuscript Topic
Business
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1824
Manuscript Collections Ford, Hezekiah. Letter
Description
Ford, Hezekiah. Letter, 1815 Apr. 23. 1 item. Location: Misc.: F. Hezekiah Ford in Madison County, Mississippi Territory, writes to his brothers describing the difficult journey from Virginia to Mississippi that he just completed with his sister and brother-in-law, musing on what to do with himself next, asking his brothers to conclude his business in Virginia to raise money needed to survive in the wilderness, and remarking on the high prices for slaves and cotton. Mss. 3989.
Manuscript Topic
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1815
Description
Carriere, Oliver P. Correspondence, 1973-1979. 57 letters. Location: Misc. Judge Oliver P. Carriere was a New Orleans jurist whose hobby--the study and play of the game of poker--was translated into one of the largest and most comprehensive collections on that subject in existence. This correspondence between Carriere and Dr. Don Black, a pediatrician in Paris, Tex., concerns the collecting of literature on poker. Mss. 3957.
Manuscript Topic
Performing Arts
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1973
Manuscript Collections Hottinger, Jacob. Letter
Description
Hottinger, Jacob. Letter, 1856 July 15. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Jacob Hottinger in New Orleans, La., writes his friend, Jacob Kreis, to find where he is living so he can reestablish contact with him. He had learned that his wife, the daughter of Martin Führer of Cincinnati, had known the Kreis family in Tennessee and that they may have moved to St. Louis, Mo., or Montgomery, Ala. Hottinger had moved to New Orleans the previous fall and he and his wife had a baby girl recently. He complains of the heat, reports no yellow fever or cholera, and notes that murders and killings occur daily. In German. Mss. 3907.
Manuscript Topic
German
New Orleans to 1861
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1856
Manuscript Collections Skolfield, Samuel. Letter
Description
Skolfield, Samuel. Letter, 1848 July 29. 1 item. Location: Misc.:S. Samuel Skolfield in Baton Rouge, La., writes George W. Chase in Lewiston, Me., discussing business matters, the upcoming presidential election, his own brief conversations with Zachary Taylor, and news of local deaths, including a man who became drunk and died from a fall from his horse. Mss. 3973.
Manuscript Topic
Business
Politics
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1849
Description
Union Soldier Parker Letter and Train Ticket, 1862 Dec. 18-22. Location: Misc.:U. Letter by Parker to his brother details occupation of Baton Rouge, La., by federal forces in December 1862. Parker mentions the ironclad Essex and the presence of the 25th Connecticut Infantry Regiment and Nims Battery (2nd Massachusetts Light Artillery). He describes the influx of slaves into the city and notes that wealthy citizens have already evacuated. In reference to Port Hudson, Parker boasts, "if we go up the river we will give them hell." Letter is written on printed notice to planters from the Baton Rouge Foundry. Printed train ticket for one trip from Petersburg to Wellsville, Va. Mss.4902
Manuscript Topic
African Americans
Civil War
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1862
Description
Dupuy, Eliza A. (Eliza Ann), 1814-1881. Letter, 1854 Jan. 2. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Eliza Ann Dupuy was a Mississippi author best known for her novel about Aaron Burr, The Conspirator (1850). Dupuy in Rodney, Miss., writes to a Mr. Gallagher about the death of writer and editor, Thomas H. Shreve. Mss. 3948.
Manuscript Topic
Literature
Women
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1854
Description
Mouton, Alexander, 1804-1885. Letter, 1874 May 1. 1 letter. Location: Misc. Alexander Mouton was a representative for Lafayette Parish in the Louisiana Legislature (1828-1837), a U.S. Senator for Louisiana (1837-1842), governor of Louisiana (1842-1846), and president of the Louisiana state secession convention in 1861. Mouton at Ile Copal Plantation near Lafayette, La., briefly recounts his political career and muses that he may be the only surviving senator from Andrew Jackson's administration. Mss. 4130.
Manuscript Topic
Politics
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1874
Manuscript Collections Woods, George H. Letter
Description
Woods, George H. Letter, 1865 July 7. 1 item. Location: Misc.:L. Union Officer. George H. Woods in Washington, D.C., writes the Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton, seeking appointment as an Inspector in the Subsistence Department with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Mss. 3858.
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1865
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