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Materials Related to Viduarri, Trevino, and Bruni

9/1: Maps including a 1939 map of Mexico, a 1922 map of Laredo and a 1939 map of land development in Sota la Marina, Mexico.

9/2: Income tax returns and related papers, 1937-1941.

9/3: Papers, sketch maps and genealogies related to controversy over Dolores settlement between Martinez and Vidaurri families, Case of Proceso Martinez et. al. vs. Antonio Trevino et. al. 1925-1930.

9/4: Uribe and Martinez copies of oil and gas leases, La Trinidad Ranch and adjacent Uribe lands, 1929-1936.

9/5: Correspondence, notes, copies of legal papers and a photograph related to Martinez-Viduarri controversy concerning public use of a road from Dolores Ranch to [UNK] farm, 1924-1944.

9/6: Letters and copies of contracts about Mercurio Martinez's rental properties, 1936-1941.

9/7: Papers related to financial affairs of Proceso Martinez, 1933.

9/8: Copies of legal papers, notes and documents related to the case of Jesus Maria Trevino et. al. vs. Consolacion H. Bruni, et. al. and other matters concerning the Jose Vasquez Borrego Grant. Genealogies of the descendents of Jesus Trevino and Cosme Martinez are included, 1918-1941.

9/9: Copy of a petition of delinquent Zapata County tax payers and related materials, 1944.

9/10: Correspondence, notes and copies of legal papers related to Gutierrez lands, 1914-1945.

9/11: Notes and copies of legal documents related to the case of Mercurio Martinez vs. Alfredo Vidaurri, concerning a verbal attack on Martinez vs. Vidaurri over land ownership in the Dolores Ranch, 1936-1940.

9/12: Notes and copies of legal documents related to the case of Antonio M. Bruni et. al. vs. Heirs of Jose Vasquez Borrego, including an account of all individuals from whom Bruni purchased land or interest in land, 1918-1933.

9/13: Copies of papers related to Vidaurri, Borrego, and -Bruni lands including a January 18, 1939, copy of a court opinion in the case of Baldomero Chacon et. al. vs. Consolacion H. Bruni, et. al. and a November 21, 1935 discussion of Spanish laws concerning wills by Jesus M. Tercero of Neuvo Laredo, Mexico, 1782-1939.

Mercure de France Weekly Periodical

Box 29/1-13: Mercure de France, weekly periodical, 1786, with gaps (1 issue per folder).

Box 30/1-13: Mercure de France, weekly periodical, 1786-1787, with gaps (1 issue per folder).

Box 31/1-13: Mercure de France, weekly periodical, 1787, with gaps (1 issue per folder).

Dawson French Laws and Decrees

Material in folders 1-10 came to Cushing Library in a third three-ring binder with the handwritten spine title "Decrees 1790s, Chartres-printed." Material in folders 11-18 came from a second binder titled "Decrees 1790s, Chartres-printed." Material in folders 19-29 came from a binder titled "Decrees: Royal press + Nantes," with the accompanying note "to use, Order: 1) of use for contents stamped/signed at end; 2) Royal press; 3) Nantes."

35/1-10: 50 laws and decrees, 1790s.

35/11-18: 33 laws and decrees, 1790s.

35/19-29: 62 laws and decrees, 1790s.

Dawson French Laws and Decrees

Material in folders 1-15 (and folders 32-34 through 32-36) came to Cushing Library in one three-ring binder with the handwritten spine title "Decrees," with the accompanying note "Entered," possibly meaning that RLD entered descriptions of this material in one of his computer-file bibliographies. Material in folders 16-25 came from a second binder titled "Decrees," with the accompanying note "Entered." Material in folders 26-40 came from a third binder titled "Decrees," with the accompanying note "Entered."

33/1: National assembly document, Undated, 12 pp.

33/2: 2 laws, 1791-1792, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/3: 1 decree, circa 1791-1792, 6 pp.

33/4: 3 laws, 1792, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/5: 1 law, 1792, 7 pp.

33/6: 1 law (1792) and 1 royal decree (1790), each printed on one sheet.

33/7: 8 laws and decrees, 1791-1792, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/8: 2 laws and decrees, 1791-1792, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/9: National convention document, Undated, 7 pp.

33/10: 1 law, 1792, 8 pp.

33/11: 10 laws and decrees, 1790s, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/12: 7 laws and decrees, 1790s, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/13: Decree, 1793, 8 pp.

33/14: Decree, 1790s, 8 pp.

33/15: 5 laws and decrees, 1790s, each printed on one folded sheet.

33/16-25: 65 laws and decrees, 1790s.

33/26-40: 46 laws and decrees, 1790s.

Dawson French Laws and Decrees

Material in folders 1-2 (and folders 33-26 through 33-40) came to Cushing Library in a third three-ring binder with the handwritten spine title "Decrees," with the accompanying note "Entered-little [second word illegible]," possibly meaning that RLD entered descriptions of this material in one of his computer-file bibliographies. Material in folders 3-15 came from a fourth binder titled "Decrees," with the accompanying note "Entered-little [second word illegible]." Material in folders 16-30 came from a binder titled "Rev. decrees-docs... signing," with the accompanying note "Poss use." Material in folders 31-37 came from a binder titled "Decrees: Bourges," with the accompanying note "Entered f poss use, Order: Bourges (incl. id'ing)."

34/1-2: 6 laws and decrees, 1790s.

34/3-15: 39 laws and decrees, 1790s.

34/16-30: 35 laws and decrees, 1790s.

34/31-37: 53 laws and decrees, 1790s.

Printed Volumes and Periodicals

Material in folders 1-9 came to Cushing Library in a second three-ring binder with the handwritten spine title "Pamphlets (& covers)," with the accompanying note "Done." Material in folders 10-23 came from a dark blue binder titled "Pamphlets."

42/1-9: 9 printed volumes, 18th century.

42/10-21: 12 printed volumes, 18th century.

42/22: Journal du departement de la Haute-Vienne, 5 issues, some in duplicate copies, circa 1792.

42/23: Periodical with varying titles, each of which includes the words de la feuille villageoisie, 3 issues, 1791-1792.

Autograph Letters, Notes and Quotations, and Other Abolitionist Materials

ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed

  • Benjamin Bacon. Bacon was an original member of the Anti-Slavery society.

    ALS to autograph seeker C.L. Farrington (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). October 2, 1873. 1 p.

  • Henry Ward Beecher. Beecher was a social reformer, clergyman, and the brother of Harriet Beecher Stowe.

    Partial ALS, n.p., Undated. 1 p. "It is his way. It does us all good to have someone who piles on the screws - especially when we know at bottom he is most friendly."

  • William Birney. Birney was Union Army general during the Civil War, and was noted for encouraging thousands of free black men to enlist.

    ALS to Lewis Cist (Paris). March 8, 1852. 1 p.

  • Phillips Brooks. Brooks was an Episcopal clergyman and the author of O Little Town of Bethlehem.

    ALS to Mrs. Waters (Boston, Massachusetts). February 3, 1886. 1 p.

  • Blanche K. Bruce. Bruce, the child of plantation owner and his house slave, was the first African-American to serve a full term in the U.S. Senate, representing Mississippi during the Reconstruction era.

    ALS to Harry Hause (Washington, D.C. ), thanking his "host" after a recent visit. November 16, 1886. 2 p.

  • Benjamin Butler. Butler was a Massachusetts politician and Union General.

    ALS to David R. Godwin (Washington, D.C. ). June 12, 1876. 1 p.

  • William Channing

    ALS to Mrs. Chapman (Boston, Massachusetts), apologizing for sending a manuscript he suggests is unworthy of Liberty Bell, the journal of the American Antislavery Society. October 23, 1845. 1 p.

  • David Lee Child. Child was the husband of writer and reformer Lydia Maria Child.

    ALS to J. Bailey, arranging a meeting. n.p., July 17, 1829. 1 p.

  • Thomas Clarkson. Clarkson was one of the most important British abolitionists of the late 18th century.

    ALS to John B. Murray who served as Brigadier General in the Union Army, and later helped establish Memorial Day. (Playford Hall, England), arranging a visit. April 15, 1842. 2 p.

  • Cassius Marcellus Clay

    AQS, "Life, Liberty, and Love". n.p., 1860. 1 p.

  • George H. Cook. Cook was a professor of chemistry at Rutgers University whose geological survey of New Jersey became the predecessor for the U.S. Geological Survey.

    ALS regarding the purchase of a telescope (New Brunswick, New Jersey). August 27, 1863. 2 p.

    ALS (New Brunswick, New Jersey), regarding teaching science to future clergymen. May 3, 1865. 2 p. "I am every day stirred up by their fears lest they should learn something which would render their faith weak or unsound. It is a hard lesson for men to learn that one belongs to the finite the other the infinite…."

  • Daniel De Vinne

    ALS (Rye, New York). April 8, 1850. 2 p.

  • Orville Dewey

    ALS to Elizabeth Arnold (Paris). April 26, 1842. 2 p.

  • G. M. Emerson

    ALS to Joseph Kidder (Boston, Massachusetts). June 27, 1863. 1 p.

  • David Francis

    ALS to Governor Samuel T. Armstrong (Boston, Massachusetts). March 4, 1835. 2 p.

  • William Lloyd Garrison

    Copy of Wendell Phillips letter in Garrison's hand, August 1852. 1 p.

    ALS, responding to an invitation to speak at the New England Woman Suffrage Association. May 10, 1859. 2 p. "Where my hear and heart are in this matter you need no assurance from me, but I dare not, now, give you a positive pledge."

    AQS, "Liberty for each, for all, and for ever!". January 1, 1872.

    Post-mortem examination of Garrison, containing the results of the autopsy and account of the disease leading to his death. 3 p.

  • Joshua R. Giddings

    ALS to anti-slavery politician Charles Sumner, regarding New England delegates to the Peace Convention in Paris. June 8, 1849. 1 p. "Our Free Soil movement is on the advance in this state. Our forces are consolidating, and we are making preparations for the election in October…"

    AQS, n.p., regarding the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Undated. "When the Representative of a State is struck down the people feel the blow."

    With one additional ALS.

  • Francis Gillette

    Letter sent from Gillette to an unknown woman, seeking her services as a school teacher for a recently built school in Bloomfield, Connecticut. July 25, 1851.

  • Sarah and Angelina Grimke, and Theodore Dwight Weld

    Three Autographs on one page, n.p., Undated (circa the 1870s). RARE

  • R. R. Gurley. Gurley was a Clergyman and the U.S. Commissioner to Liberia.

    ALS (Washington, D.C.). August 24, 1832. 1 p.

  • R. G. Hazard

    ALS to William Pitt Fessenden, July 28, 1864. 2 p.

  • Thomas Wentworth Higginson

    ALS, regarding hymns. July 23, 1908. 2 p.

  • Samuel Gridley Howe

    ALS (Boston, Massachusetts) June 7, circa the 1870s. 1 p.

    Invitation from the Perkins Institution for the Blind, announcing a meeting of the Trustees. Embossed to be read like Braille. Obituary from the Providence Journal included.

    With three additional ALS.

  • William Jackson

  • William Jay

    ALS, thanking an anonymous man for a ticket and discussing introduction for a speaker (Sumner). November 23, 1854. 1 p.

    ALS, discussing lot rentals. (New York). December 19, 1835. 1 p.

  • Oliver Johnson

    Autograph Poem Signed, "The Peace of God", n.p., Undated. 2 p.

    AQS, "God is wrath, even as he is love". (New York). January 8, 1886. 1 p.

    ALS to Rev. William Hayes Ward (Orange, New Jersey) pleading for work. February 2, 1879. 4 p. "I tell you frankly that I am in a dire strait. I have struggled hard for almost three years to get my paper on a paying basis…I look now into the faces of my dear wife and child with anxiety much as I never before experienced…".

    ALS to Thomas Wentworth Higginson (New York), regarding abolitionist Moncure Conway. October 6, 1885. 3 p. "I very much regret my inability to join in person the good company of friends and admirers of Mr. Moncure D. Conway, over which you are called to preside on Friday evening next. I greatly honor him for his high position in the world of thought and am moreover deeply indebted to him for light and inspiration upon many important subjects. In point of fidelity to his convictions and the boldness with which he has uttered them, he has set an example worthy of general imitation. I am glad he has returned to his native land, and I desire to lend my voice to the chorus of welcome that will greet him on the occasion to which I have referred. May his light still increase in brightness, and his hand grow strong for the work before him."

    AQS, "Thanks be to God! Not a slave in all the Land!" (Clifton Springs). September 15, 1889. 1 p.

    ALS to an anonymous Charles, discussing a speech that was sent but was incomplete. 1 p.

    ALS, of payment sent for an article, (New York). December 31, 1866. 1 p.

  • Jean Kina. Kina was a Haitian revolutionary leader and former slave.

    Note Signed, warrant for rations. September 12, 1795. Exceptionally rare autograph.
    Winslow Lewis.

    ALS, request for letter to see someone in London. Envelope addressed to Winslow Lewis. March 1872. 1 p.

    Invitation and ALS, expressing his father's inability to accept an invitation due to being absent from the city. May 7, 1872. 1 p.

  • J. L. Lovejoy

    ALS, Cincinnati, Ohio, October 28, 1839. 1 p.

  • Zachary Macaulay

    ALS, regarding the disposition of an estate. Macaulay was the leader of a Parliamentary effort to end slavery in Britain. October 10, 1823. 4 p.

  • Samuel May

    ALS to H.W. Clarke, regarding Civil War relief efforts. (Syracuse, New York). March 10, 1863. 2 p.

    Copy of a letter from Samuel May, (Syracuse, New York). January 8, 1866. 1 p.

  • James M. McKim

    ALS. 2 p.

  • Edward Joy Morris

    Note signed, regarding a Whig gathering Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 18, 1844. 1 p.
    ALS, giving dates of his service in Congress (Washington, D.C.). February 8, 1858. 1 p.

    Letter signed (possibly clerically), thanking an unidentified woman for a likeness of her husband, who gave Morris advice during his time in Liberia. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). August 9, 1863. 1 p.

    Letter signed (possibly clerically), mentioning favorable news regarding diplomatic appointments to Liberia. (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). May 22, 1866. 1 p.

  • Theodore Parker

    ALS to Miss H.E. Horn regarding Goethe (West Roxbury, Massachusetts). October 15, 1846. 3 p.

    Two additional ALS, three ANS, and one cabinet card.

  • William W. Patton

    ALS, answering his sister, who was evidently skeptical of the anti-slavery movement's methods (New York). September 16, 1839. 4 p.
    Transcript: "Dear Sister,
    Dr. Bates a few moments ago handed me your letter & I hasten to reply. And this I do the more readily because I feel confident that a satisfactory answer can be given to your questions. You wish to know, what good all this agitating will do?
    I could first ask what good cause or what great moral reform action ever succeeded without agitation. How did our Savior & the apostles endeavor to propagate the gospel? Was it not by traveling extensively over the known world & promulgating the truth? Was it not by rebuking sin everywhere & under all forms - proclaiming the utter wickedness of the human heart - denouncing idolatry as folly & wickedness & holding up the cross as the only hope of a lost world? They spoke the truth also sternly & made no compromise with wrong. In rebuking the Jews for their treatment of the Savior they said, whom 'ye have take by wicked hands have crucified and slain' 'But ye denied the Holy One & the Just & desired a murder to be granted unto you.' And while the church followed their example, almost miraculous success attended their efforts.
    Again when Papacy threw her mantle of gloom over the church - when a deathlike stupor had seized the disciples of the cross, what aroused them, save the trumpet tones of Luther & his associates, spurning with indignation the idea of Papal supremacy & infallibility. They awoke the plebian & the senator - the peasant & the king - how? By agitation. And the happy results we feel every day.
    Alcohol had slain its thousands - the drunkards hell was fast filling up. We were branded abroad as a nation of drunkards. How is it that such a change as we now see has been wrought? Why is it that one state after another is prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquor & we stand far in advance of the rest of the world on this subject? It has been accomplished by agitation.
    Nearly one millions of slaves groaned beneath West Indian bondage & the slave traders covered the ocean, sailing under the flags of all civilized nations yet not a voice uttered warning or rebuke; but now how different the sight. The freeman lifts his free arms to heaven & thanks his God & the abolitionists of England the lash is beneath his feet, & the chain rent asunder falls to the ground. And how was this brought to pass. By the agitation of such men as Wilberforce, Clarkson & Sharpe. Years did they agitate, & now God has brought about the result.
    And now, shall we follow the path which Experience points out, or (monstrous anomaly) leave sin to cure itself.
    But permit me to mention of our plans & opinions. First, we believe the slaveholder has a conscience, aye a conscience, slumbering though it may be. This conscience we would address. We would show him that though he may not distinctly be aware of it, yet in reality he is robbing his fellow man - treading under foot precious rights & [curtailing love on many such]. Do you say, that he will not hear & is only enraged; so does the rum seller stop his ears or assail you in his rage when you tell him, he is filling up the drunkards grave, & feeding the fires of the drunkards hell. But in his cooler moments, his conscience will whisper, it is all true. Is it right so to speak to the rum seller & to hope for beneficial results, then is it right thus to address the slaveholder & equally to anticipate the time when Slavery's expiring groan shall scare be heard for the songs of the emancipated.
    Secondly. We believe, if we can convince the slaveholders that free labor is far more profitable to the South than is slave labor, that their self interest will liberate the slaves. To establish this position we have a mass of overwhelming arguments & facts.
    Thirdly. We believe that the South has a sense & a deep sense of honor. What then will she do, when a worlds scorn shall scathe her. When to be a slaveholder shall be as counted a foul spot on a mans character. Lynching & bowie knives will ill contend against the brand of shame. Was not Robinson acquitted of the murder of Helen Jewett & yet he dared not, he could not reside in this city. Why? Because every body believed him quietly & infamy had marked him as her own.
    Fourthly. We believe that the South wishes to live securely. Therefore we point her to a nation of enemies growing up in her midst. We mention her hopeless condition in case of a war & thus wish to show that it is always unsafe to do wrong.
    'Why then do you labor at the North?' Because in several of the so called free states slaves are yet held. Because a burning, withering prejudice is bowing the colored man to the earth, blighting his hopes for time & often for eternity. Because the free colored man is shut out of our schools & our colleges & put in a place of degradation in the courts of God! Because no mechanic will take him for an apprentice & no merchant receives him as a clerk. Because if the colored man was elevated & it was seen that he could hold stations of honor & respectability such a grief of universal condemnation would go forth against slavery as will cause it to vanish from the earth. Because several of the nominally free states permit slaveholders from the South to hold slaves within their bounds for 6 or 9 months, & others lay heavy fines & imprisonment upon those who aid the panting fugitive. Because the North has the majority in Congress & hence the power & obligation to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, in Florida, also to break up the slave trade between the states, which is the main thing that renders slavery profitable in Delaware, Maryland & Virginia, which being removed these states would be forced to emancipate their slaves. Because the Northern church has palliated this crime & failed to rebuke it, while at the same time it has influence sufficient to cause its members at the South to renounce slavery. (See my last letter about communing with slaveholders) Because in a word, slaveholders as a general thing will never listen to us, as long as so many uphold them at the North.
    But says, the objector, 'I have seen a great deal of quarreling & disturbance arise from so much agitation.' Well, what then. This is not denied, but what does it prove? That it is wrong to continue because incidental disturbances arise? Why then did not Paul stop when he was mobbed wherever he went? Why did Peter & John continue so fanatical, when they were scourged for Christs sake? Did not Christ tell us to expect trouble whenever truth grappled with error. Math. X:34,6. Could we expect a system which is so bored by the civil passions of the heart to be given up without a severe & protracted struggle?
    Such is my answer, given as briefly as possible, to your questions. Had I time, I might sustain my position by many more arguments. But I have tried to be brief. If my answer is not satisfactory to Miss Bonny & others, please as soon as possible specify wherein I have failed. I have not undertaken to show how bad slavery is, inasmuch as I took it for granted that she allowed its wickedness. Therefore my attention has been confined to a general statement of our plan & the reasons for it. May God teach us all right that we may do what is well pleasing to him. For it matters little whether we have mans condemnation or not, so long as the smile your Savior is on us. Mother sends her love. I have had a cold for 4 weeks. The Dr. forbids to sing or speak much. The Plans look quite well & has one pedal to another alongside of it. Last Wednesday I went on to Uncle Mag office & on Saturday brough[t] Ludlow, & Aunt Catharine home. Had a very pleasant time there & got most well of my cold, but was put almost entirely [back by singing & talking yesterday (Sabbath).] Write soon."

    AQS, "He that doeth good is of God; but he that doeth evil hath not seen God" (Chicago, Illinois). February 14, 1877. 1 p.

    With one additional ALS.

  • Wendell Phillips

    AQS, "Count that day lost / Whose low descended sun / Sees at the thy hand / No worthy action done / These lines John Brown taught to each his children." September 1871. 1 p.

    Four additional AQS, two ANS, two ALS, and a Cabinet card.

  • Parker Pillsbury

    ALS (Concord, New Hampshire). September 8, 1896. 2 p. "I joined Mr. Garrison in the tenth year of his warfare, and I hope and think he would say I never deserted him in any of his finest battles on whatever field. And I hope ere long to meet him under other and brighter skies, to renew our conquests upward and onward…"

  • A. M. Powell

    ANS, on Office of the National Anti-Slavery Standard stationary (New York). June 26, 1866. 1 p.

  • F.B. Sanborn

    ANS (Boston, Massachusetts) January 11, 1910. 1 p.

  • Gerrit Smith

    An 1864 Note Signed, three ALS (one mounted on an acidic page from the autograph album), and an 1848 printed speech on land reform. (5 items total)

  • Henry B. Stanton

    ALS, sending a manuscript for publication. October 17, 1844.

    ALS, n.p., Undated. 1 p. "…why would it not be a good plan for some of our New York stump orators to 'change works' with some of yours? Some of your Conscience Whigs can do great good, very great good, in the central & western parts of this state. They would have great influence with the Whigs of this region. In return for them, let some of your Barnburners go there. Their noble enthusiasm would wear off prejudices which you Whigs have to contend, and they might make deep inroads upon Hunkerism in Massachusetts…"

  • Thaddeus Stevens

    ALS, February 17, 1861. 1 p.

  • Alvan Stewart

    ALS, from an early political abolitionist regarding his publication and the legal assault on slavery. June 16, 1845. "I did not receive your letter until Saturday night & I hasten to answer it. The Argument I delivered in eleven hours before the Sup. Court of N. Jersey I think eminently calculated for lawyers [?] & those wise men constructing society courts the muse who[?] and the exponents of the law & Constitution. It covers all the questions under the federal Constitution as well as N. Jersey, I have had lawyers men who were my political enemies order fifty of these. The Argument will be as I understand 45 to 50 compact pages, & are $125.00 at per thousands at the office. In fact it is altogether the most labored production of my life, & covers our entire question, under all aspects, as my adversaries compelled me by their attacks to give a history of & define the Liberty party - its objects, aims, the course of slavery in different ages, demonstrating the declaration of independence a practicality & showing condition of slave states, as compared with free, showing 6 millions ruined, 3 of Black & 3 of poor Southern whites…"

  • P. F. Streeter

    ALS (Baltimore, Maryland). August 22, 1861. 4 p. "This city is quiet, but feelings are bitter, and the secessionists believe 'Old Jeff' [Jefferson Davis] will be here before long. I do not agree with them. Troops are beginning to arrive and encamp on our hills. A great hospital is to be established here. These things will create some activity. As to my own prospects, they are not very bright. I shall lose many secession pupils, and some will not be able to send; but I hope to have some new ones, and enough to justify me in going on."

  • Charles Sumner

    Newspaper clipping discussing a dispute.

    Autograph Manuscript outline of studies in history. 3 p.

    Document Signed, regarding a railroad. February 5, 1845. 1 p.

    Autograph Quotation, "Whether on the gallows high, or in the battle's van, the fittest place for a man to die, is where he dies for man." n.p. Undated.

    Four additional ANS, and one photo with a clipped signature affixed.

  • Lewis Tappan

    ALS, regarding a case before the Presbytery. February 26, 1841. 1 p.

  • George Thompson

    ALS to Oliver Johnson, July 13, 1865, 2 p.
    Clipped signature and AQS "To America!" (Salem, Massachusetts). December 6, 1850. (tipped on the left side onto acidic paper)

  • Francis Todd

    Letter from Todd to an attorney regarding a transaction of $1000 in Newbury Port. June 11, 1842.

  • John Weiss. Unitarian minister

    ALS, to a younger unidentified colleague (New York). November 21, 1852. 4 p. "My Dear Friend,
    I have been trying very hard to think that I can come to Washington, for I should like to do it. But I am forced to decline it, for a variety of reasons which press upon me. Rev. Bowen will have left us, and no one will take his place at present: so that the entire responsibility of study will come upon me. If I preach at all away from home, it will be for Rev. Bowen's installation at Williamsburg. Then, the journey and preaching would use me up for a week: a thing not to be considered, if any one were here to take care of the [evening] Sunday. The besetting difficulties are too great even for my strong desire to come.
    I rejoice that you are going to be settled at Washington: and I have no doubt that you can say there just what you please. My advice to you would be to go on as you have begun, making your Anti-slavery occasionally, at timely moments, just as strong as you have made it previous to your call. The most that a man can desire is to have the liberty to speak a timely word at some conjuncture which enhances its meaning and prevents it from being spent upon the air. If a man waits for the chances which must inevitably occur in our legislation, and so long as the power of slavery seeks its opportunity, he will have the satisfaction of bearing his testimony at the most useful moment for his own conscience and for the cause of truth. All else, relating to any special topic, is comparatively aimless, lacking the time's enforcement - which justifies it from the charge of dilettantism and superfluity of independence by bringing the evil up to be hit, and marking every hit a palpable one. Particularly in Washington, where people hear of effects being produced by speaking strongly to the point at some critical moment, I should judge it to be the best cause for the preacher of anti-slavery truth to watch the providential chances, and concentrate this special moral energy of his upon the evil when it has a '[name].'
    Let me desire for you every success and spiritual blessing, and though distant from us may you yet feel the sympathy of all who believe as you do, who will be ready to countenance for you, and who will feel strengthened by your efforts."

    With one additional ALS.

  • Elizur Wright

    ALS, regarding becoming an auxiliary to the National Liberal League. August 31, 1880. 2 p.

  • Other letters

    Ones addressed to famous autograph collectors Lewis Cist and William Buell Sprague, are from Francis Gillette (Senator from Conn.); William Jackson; William Jay (2 letters); Winslow Lewis; J. C. Lovejoy; James Miller McKim (2 ALS); A.M. Powell; and Francis Todd.

Thomas Affleck, Jr.

These letters are typed carbon copies of the original handwritten letters, some have handwritten typo corrections.

A9-10
Thomas Affleck Memorandum Book. 1841-1843. Typed copy of original, 24 leaves.

A9-20
Thomas Affleck Order Book. 1853-1856. Typed copy of original, 17 leaves.

A9-30
Thomas Affleck Receipt Book. 1829. Typed copy of original, 13 leaves.
Receipts:
Small Beer
American Mode of Salting Meat
Ginger Beer Powder
Soda Water
Lemondae
Curds and Whey
Marking Ink
Grease Stain Remover, from Silks
Iron Mould Stain Remover, from Linen
Rendering Muslins or cloth Waterproof
Harness maker's Jet
Copal Varnish
Cabinet Varnish
Black Varnish for Stoves
Transparent Crystal Varnish for Paintings
Polishing Varnish
Boiled Linseed Oil
English Verdig(ris) Paint
York Brown Paint
King's Yellow Paint
Dutch Pink Paint
French Green Paint
Green Varnish
Prussian Blue Paint
Stone Colours
Mahogany ens
Wainscot
ewood
French Gray
Indian Ink
Printer's Ink
Ink

A9-40
Thomas Affleck Receipt Book. 1831. 12 leaves.
Receipts:
Fancy Snuffs
Prince's Mixture Snuff
Paris Rapee Snuff
French Carrot Snuff
Longuin Mixture Snuff
Rhodium
Plain Brown or Black Snuff
Cabinet Varnish
Transparent Crystal Varnish for Paintings
Polishing Varnish for Furniture
Transparent Varnish
White Hard Varnish
White Polishing Varnish
French Polish
Crystal Varnish
Varnish for Coloured Drawings
Silver Wash
Soft Spirit Varnish
Picture Varnish
Green Varnish
Common Turpentine
Varnishes
Gold Varnish
Boiled Linseed Oil
English Verdigris
York Brown
King's Yellow

A9-50
Thomas Affleck Receipt Book. 1831. 7 leaves.
Receipts:
Two pages of quotes from Thomson, Shakespeare, Bennett
Receipt for Glue for external
A new, powerful Manuse
Recommendations for increasing milk production
Remedy for corns on the feet
Prevention of rot in sheep
Remedy for blistered feet
Preface to "Hints to small Holders on Planting and Cattle"

A9-60
Thomas Affleck Receipt Book. undated. 6 leaves.
Receipts:
Mushroom Ketchup
Dry Pounce [keeps ink from sinking into parchment]
Boot Top Liquid
Blackening Lump
Bone Black
Blacking Bone Black
Water Proof Liquor
Nankeen Dye
Black Ink Galls
Bruised Galls
Japan Ink
American Cement
Red sealing wax
Black wax
French Sealing wax
Gold sealing wax
Furniture cream
Common varnish
Transparent varnish
White varnish
White hard varnish
White Polishing varnish
Transparent Copal varnish
French Polish
Crystal Varnish
Red Varnish
Transparent Jassan for Tin ware
Varnish for coloured drawings
Silver Wash
Lacquer
Soft Spirit Varnish
Picture Varnish

A9-70
Thomas Affleck Record Book, Part 1. 1859 63. 124 leaves.

A9-80
Thomas Affleck Record Book, Part 2. 1867 71. 162 leaves.

A9-90
Photograph of Thomas Affleck, circa 1867. 2 1/2 x 4 inches.

Photographic negative of Isaac D. Affleck and his teacher, Carl Allen, Head of Bastrop Military Institute.

A9-100
Calling card belonging to Thomas Affleck of Glenblythe. 1 card.

Krueger, E.P. [Brenham] to Thomas Dunbar Affleck [Galveston]. February 23, 1964. 3 leaves, with original envelope.

Two stapled index cards with address and phone information on Williams. Possibly the beginning of a genealogy of some sort.

Two photographs of Glenblythe, one of the house and one of a buggy. 5 x 4 inches each.

A9-110
"Thirty Years of a Mississippi Plantation: Charles Whitmore of 'Montpelier'" by Mark Swearingen. Reprinted from The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 1, No. 2. May 1935. 1 pamphlet. Attached:

Swearingen, Mark [Tulane Univ., New Orleans] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. July 25, 1935. 1 leaf.

Swearingen, Mark [Tulane Univ., New Orleans] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. July 15, 1935. 1 leaf.

Thomas Affleck, Jr.

These materials are typed carbon copies of the original handwritten letters, some have handwritten typo corrections.

A5-10
Thomas Affleck diary entries. December, 1829. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-20
Thomas Affleck diary entries. January June, 1831. Typed copy of original, 52 leaves.

A5-30
Thomas Affleck diary entries. January March, May June 1832. Typed copy of original, 37 leaves.

A5-40
Thomas Affleck diary entries. March May, 1832 and April 1833. (voyage across Atlantic). Typed copy of original, 20 leaves.

A5-50
Thomas Affleck diary entries. June August, 1832. Typed copy of original, 20 leaves.

A5-60
Thomas Affleck diary entries. February March, 1833. Typed copy of original, 16 leaves.

A5-70
Thomas Affleck diary entries. July October, 1833. Typed copy of original, 8 leaves.

A5-80
Thomas Affleck journal entries. 1854-1856. Typed copy of original, 239 leaves.

A5-90
Thomas Affleck Letter Book, Part 1, Pages 101-200. 1850-1854.
There are 45 letters totaling 70 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Wold and Company [New Orleans]. January 2, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Hovey and Company [Boston, Mass.]. January 2, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to B.M. Norman. January 6, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. January 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Robert Sears [New York, New York]. January 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to E.J. Capell [Centerville, Miss.]. January 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to J.W. Blessing [Memphis, Tenn.]. January 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Mason and Metcalf. January 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to J. Beaumont [Port Lavaca, Tx.]. January 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to William H. Pearce [New Orleans]. January 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Wold and Company [New Orleans]. January 13, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Col. Wade Hampton. January 13, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Charles W. Vick [Vicksburg, Miss.]. January 13, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to George G. Sheppard [New York, New York]. January 14, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Mr. Braiser [Natchez, Miss.]. January 14, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Comstock and Company. January 15, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John Nielson [Pass Christian, Miss.]. January 15, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A.M. Holbrook [New Orleans]. January 16, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to a. McVicar. [Comstock & Co., New Orleans]. January 16, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to S.S. Jackson [Cincinnati, Ohio]. January 16, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. January 17, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas to S.S. Boyd. undated. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to B.M. Norman. January 18, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A. McVicar [Comstock & Co., New Orleans]. January 20, 1851. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Dr. Wharton [Grand Gulf, Miss.]. January 22, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Dr. Junius Smith, L.L.D. [Greenville, South Carolina]. January 22, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John Lambert [Vicksburg, Miss.]. January 23, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. undated. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Williams Phillips and Company [New Orleans]. January 24, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Shipping receipt for plants by Thomas Affleck to John Hearin, Wilmington, Ark. January 24, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. January 25, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to D. McComb [Memphis, Tenn.]. January 25, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A. McVicar [Comstock & Co., New Orleans] January 31, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John A. Warder [Western Horticultural Review, Cincinnati, Ohio]. February 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to E.I. Elder [Woodville, Miss.]. February 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Dr. George E. French [New Orleans]. February 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John W. Burrows. February 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. February 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Ingleside] to James Reynolds. February 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John B. Weld [New Orleans]. February 3, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. February 3, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-90
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Dr. R.L. Buck. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Thomas Affleck Letter Book, Part 2, Pages 202-275. 1850-1854
There are 64 letters totaling 86 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Charles Kock [New Orleans, La.]. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Charles Kock [New Orleans, La.]. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to B.M. Norman. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Norment Cooper and Company [New Orleans]. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Williams Phillips and Company [New Orleans]. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Thomas A. Adams. undated. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Thomas A. Adams. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. February 8, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Charles Kock [New Orleans]. February 15, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. February 25, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Gray and Campbell [New Orleans]. February 25, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Thomas Rivers [Sawbridgeworth, England]. February 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to George G. Sheppard [New York, New York]. February 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to C. Odier and Company [New Orleans]. March 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to E. Zwilchenbart and Company [Liverpool, England]. March 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. March 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Gray and Campbell [New Orleans]. March 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to W.P. Holloway [Grand Gulf, Miss.]. March 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Robert Sears [New York, New York]. March 3, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to W.P. Holloway [Grand Gulf, Miss.]. March 11, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Invoice for trees sent by Affleck to H.M Youngblood. March 12, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Mississippi] to William Skirving [Liverpool, England]. March 3, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Dr. F.A.W. Davis [Natchez, Miss.]. March 24, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Andrew Brown [Natchez, Miss.]. March 24, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Levi Dolbear [Natchez, Miss.]. March 25, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Watt and DeSaulles [New Orleans]. April 2, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John M. Nelson [Pass Christian, Miss.]. April 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. April 5, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A. McVicar [New Orleans]. April 5, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A.M. Holbrook [New Orleans]. April 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Weld and Company [New Orleans]. April 9, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Watt and DeSaulles [New Orleans]. April 10, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to D.P. Gay [New Orleans]. April 10, 1851. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Weld and Company [New Orleans]. April 10, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Johnston [New Orleans]. April 10, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to J.K. Randall and Company [Mobile, Alabama]. April 21, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to George M. Heroman, Bookseller [Baton Rouge]. April 21, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to C.C. Cleaves [Memphis, Tennessee]. April 21, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. April 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Johnston [New Orleans]. April 29, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Weld and Company [New Orleans]. April 29, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to B.M. Norman. May 1, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. May 3, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A. Hart. May 10, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. May 13, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A.B. Allen and Company [New Orleans]. May 6, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John McKie, Binder [New Orleans]. May 12, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to E. Cooley, Jr. [Point Coupee, La.]. May 13, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A.M. Holbrook. May 13, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to George M. Heroman [Baton Rouge, La.] May 14, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to G.G. Skipwirth [Clinton, La.]. May 14, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. May 21 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to David Young [Hanover Neck, New Jersey]. May 23, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to E. Johnston [New Orleans]. May 23, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to T.S. Waterman [New Orleans]. May 23, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. May 23, 1851. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to J.V. Jones [Atlanta, Georgia]. May 24, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Samuel Lawrence [Lowell, Massachusetts]. May 24, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to J.C. Morgan [New Orleans]. May 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to George W. Kendall [New Orleans]. May 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Mr. Sherman. May 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to A. Marshall [Rodney, Miss.]. May 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to F.D. Gay [New Orleans]. May 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to John B. Weld [New Orleans]. May 28, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to L. Johnson and Company [Philadelphia, Penn.]. June 7, 1851. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A5-100
Affleck, Thomas [Washington, Miss.] to Samuel Lawrence [Lowell, Massachusetts]. June 7, 1851. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Thomas D. Affleck

A10-10
The Gulf Coast Lumberman, Vol. 44, No. 23. March 1, 1957. Attached to page 21 is: Brown, A.J. [Asst. Editor, Houston] to Thomas D. Affleck [Galveston]. April 10, 1957. 1 leaf. Affleck, T.D. [Galveston] to A.J. Brown [Houston]. April 11, 1957. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

A10-10
Reprinted article Thomas Affleck: Missionary to the Planter, the Farmer and the Gardner. 1 pamphlet.

A10-10
The Gulf Coast Lumberman, Vol. 44, No. 23. March 1, 1957. Signed by T.D. Affleck on the top of the cover page.

A10-10
The Gulf Coast Lumberman, Vol. 44, No. 23. March 1, 1957. With note on cover page to "see page 20". Inserted on page 20 is (2x):
Reprinted article Thomas Affleck: Missionary to the Planter, the Farmer and the Gardner. 1 pamphlet.
Description of Glenblythe by Thomas Affleck, written October 7, 1865. 5 leaves, carbon copies.

A10-20
Typed note regarding Thomas Affleck's dog "Billy."

A10-20
Printed sketch of "Billy", Thomas Affleck's dog, by C. Foster. 7.5 x 5.5 inches.

A10-20
Printed sketch of "Billy", Thomas Affleck's dog, by C. Foster. 9 x 10 1/2 inches. 20 copies.

A10-30
Directory of Resident Communicants of First Presbyterian Church, Galveston. January 1, 1965. 13 leaves.

A10-30
Hand-drawn sketch of Glenblythe as I.D. Affleck proposed to remodel it.

A10-30
Newspaper article from The Houston Post. May 17, 1942. "Great Choctaw Doctor Taught Medicine to Pioneer," by J. Frank Dobie.

A10-30
Newspaper article from The Galveston Daily News. February 22, 1970. "Area's First Commercial Fig Orchard Reported To Be In Alvin Back In 1895," by Pat Faour.

A10-30
Newspaper article from Austin Statesman. January 20, 1905. "Alamo Purchase Bill Will Soon Be In Order For Consideration."

A10-30
Newspaper article from The Houston Post. December 20, 1964. "Move Afoot To Preserve Old Baylor," by Bob Johnson.

A10-30
Newspaper article from Brenham, Texas' Press. circa 1890s. "Reminiscences of Glenblythe." This article relates the story of Caroline a slave owned by the Afflecks.

A10-30
Manuscript of Caroline, the summary of an incident related by I.D. Affleck. 5 leaves, carbon copies.

A10-30
Hand-drawn sketch of Glenblythe. 1 leaf.

A10-40
Folder containing account book information

A10-40
Account book excerpts from the estate of C.S. Smith's [Mrs. Thomas Affleck's first husband] cotton plantation near Natchez, Miss.] 4 leaves, photocopies and 4 leaves, original handwritten.

A10-40
Account book excerpt from I.D. Affleck's cotton sales in Brenham. Dated April 15, 1867. 1 leaf.

A10-40
Certificate from The Agricultural Horticultural and Botanical Society of Jefferson College, Brenham. Awarded to Mrs. Ann M. Smith, for best peaches. August 7, 1841.

A10-40
Reprint of article from Journal of Agriculture for October 1856. "Agricultural Notes In Ohio and Michigan" by R. Russell, Kilwhiss. 1 pamphlet.

A10-40
Printed diagram of Dr. Newell's Improved Cotton Press. 1 leaf.

A10-40
Advertising flier for McComb's Labor Saving Press, patented February 27, 1849. 1 leaf.

A10-40
Printed article "Replies to Interrogatories Concerning the Culture of the Tea Plant In China and India." 4 leaves.

A10-40
Advertising flier, "Proposals for Establishing a Reading Room, to be called The Pittsburgh Literary Reading Room." December 10, 1832. 1 leaf.

A10-40
French/English translations of the Quadrille dance calls. 1 leaf.

A10-40
Manuscript "Glenblythe," possibly by Mrs. Mary Hunt Affleck. undated. 1 leaf.

A10-50
Softcover book, A Tentative List of Subjects for 'The Handbook of Texas' 1945.

A10-50
Inserted inside is correspondence between The Texas State Historical Association and Affleck (25x):
Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to T.D. Affleck. January 12, 1952. 1 leaf, TLS.

Biography of Mary Hunt Affleck. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Affleck, T.D. [Galveston] to Dr. H. Bailey Carroll [Austin]. January 10, 1952. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. January 3, 1952. 1 leaf, TLS.

Revised biography of Mary Hunt Affleck. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Affleck, T.D. [Galveston] to Dr. H. Bailey Carroll [Austin]. December 25, 1951. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. December 21, 1951. 1 leaf, TLS.

Affleck, T.D. [Galveston] to Dr. H. Bailey Carroll [Austin]. December 2, 1951. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. November 28, 1952. 1 leaf, TLS.

Affleck, T.D. [Galveston] to Dr. H. Bailey Carroll [Austin]. November 23, 1951. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to Mr. William M. Morgan [Galveston]. November 19, 1951. 1 leaf, TLS.

Biography of Thomas Affleck. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Biography of Isaac Dunbar Affleck. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Biography of Mary Hunt Affleck. 2 leaves, carbon copy.

Morgan, William M. [Galveston] to Dr. H. Bailey Carroll [Austin]. November 15, 1951. 1 leaf, TLS.

Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. December 20, 1949. 1 leaf, TLS.

Friend, Llerena [Research Associate] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. November 12, 1949. 1 leaf, TLS.

Affleck, T.D. [Galveston] to Dr. Walter Prescott Webb [Univ. of Texas]. November 17, 1949. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Affleck, Jr., Thomas D. [Austin] to "Mother and Father". November 14, 1949. Handwritten, 2 leaves.

Affleck, T.D. to "My dear Son". October 27, 1949. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Biography of Thomas Affleck. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Biography of Isaac Dunbar Affleck. Typed, 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Affleck, Jr., Thomas to "Mother and Father". Handwritten, 2 leaves.

Affleck, T.D. [Austin] to Doctor Carroll. June 10, 1945. 1 leaf, carbon copy.

Carroll, H. Bailey [Austin] to T.D. Affleck [Galveston]. June 21, 1945. 1 leaf, TLS.

A10-60
Manuscript of Thomas Affleck and Ante Bellum Agriculture by Fred Cole of LSU and associate editor of Journal of Southern History. December 28, 1940. Typed, 20 leaves, with handwritten corrections.

A10-60
Envelope inscribed "Ingleside", home of Thomas Affleck, Washington, Miss. (I.D. Affleck was born there). Contains (3x):
Drake, W.M. [President, Trustees of Jefferson College, Washington, Miss.] to Thomas Dunbar Affleck [Galveston]. August 25, 1952. 1 leaf, TLS.
Description of "Ingleside", 2 leaves, carbon copies.
Photographs of "Ingleside", two interior and two exterior. All 5 x 7 inches, black and white. 1952.

A10-60
Manuscript The Story of A Cake by Mary Hunt Affleck. Typed, 3 leaves.

A10-70
Softcover book A National Program for the Publication of Historical Documents. Washington, 1954.

A10-70
Soft cover booklet The Story of The Alamo by Arie M. Claiborne. San Antonio, 1901.

A10-70
Booklet Texas Field and National Guardsman. Mention on page 386 of Capt. Thos. D. Affleck, Quartermaster.

A10-80
Booklet Historic Preservation. Vol. 13, No. 1, 1961. Mention on page 7 of Thomas Affleck.

A10-80
Softcover book Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 1973. Two chapters are highlighted, "A Glimpse of Life on Ante bellum Salve Plantations in Texas" and "The Houston Mutiny and Riot of 1917."

A10-90
Booklet "Life of Col. J.F.H. Claiborne." There is a handwritten note stating Col. Claiborne married third cousin of T.D. Affleck, Martha Dunbar.

A10-90
Booklet Agricultural History. Vol. 31, No. 3. July 1957. Attached: Two mourning cards for Thomas Affleck, who died December 30, 1868.

A10-90
Reprint of excerpt from De Zavala Chapter, Daughters of the Republic of Texas. 1 folio.

A10-90
Reprint of letter regarding Attitude of the Daughters. 1 leaf.

Thomson Letter, Picture, Booklet, and Biographical Information

1/1: Letter, August 5, 1832

  • One handwritten letter in ink on both sides of a sheet of paper (measuring 31 cm by 37 cm).
  • Originally folded in half to form four pages, each measuring 31 cm by 18 and a half cm. When further folded the fourth page became the address area and is postage stamped in red: "Little Rock Arks, Sep 6." Traces of the red sealing wax remain on this page.
  • This is the only original letter referred to in the booklet of transcriptions [see Item 1/4.] for which the location was known by the family as of its donation to the repository in March 2002.

1/2: Photographic reproduction of an oil painting portrait of Alexander Thomson (probably in his old age). "Alexander Thomson" is written in pencil on the back of the cardboard on which the picture is pasted. Undated

1/3: Thomson Biographical Note, handwritten in pencil on a sheet of St. Louis Southwestern Railway Lines letterhead, undated and unsigned. circa 1940s-1950s

  • Discrepancies such as referring to Washington, TX as Old Washington, indicate the information must have been composed at least after the American Civil War, and at least as late as 1885 since Yellow Prairie was renamed Chriesman in that year.
  • Furthermore, if the present note was either composed or copied down contemporary with the stationary, then it may have been written sometime during the period 1947-1951, when F. W. Green served as President of the Cotton Belt Line of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Lines, as indicated on the letterhead.

1/4: Photocopies of Booklet by Ralston P. Haun, circa 1980

  • The photocopies include the booklet cover featuring an image of the Alamo, a flyleaf printed with "Ana Gardner Thomson," the original owner of the booklet, the Contents page, pages 1-55 of text, transcriptions of five other letters and two memoirs, and a typed letter dated May 1, 1980 (signed Jim Glass, Houston, Tex.) which details the authorship and provenance of the original booklet, and as much as is known in the family about the subsequent disposition of the documents transcribed therein.
  • Glass states that only three copies of the booklet were produced around 1936. Of the transcribed letters, one is dated 1833, the rest in the 1840s to 1860s. The memoirs are by James Monroe Hill and Jane Hallowell Hill.

Family Documents

1/1: Origin of Burchard/Birchard Genealogy Summary, Undated

1/2: Burchard/Birchard Genealogy Trees, 1865-1922

1/3: Phineas Sr. and Clarissa Birchard, 1995; Undated

1/4: Amasa Franklin Burchard, 1833-1856; Undated

1/5: Land Grants and Surveys for Independence Texas, 1836-1841

1/6: Amasa Burchard's Heirs Claim Property, 1838-1883; Undated

1/7: Phineas Jr. and Elizabeth Burchard, 1848-1915; Undated

1/8: Reuben Marmaduke Potter - Relation to Phineas Jr. Burchard, 1875-1885; Undated

1/9: Anderson F. Burchard, 1898

1/10: Gladys Burchard Struwe, 1902-1955

1/11: Charles Edgar Struwe, 1983-1998

1/12: John W. Burchard - Independence Historical Marker, 1993-1998; Undated

Envelopes, Postcards, Newspaper Clippings, and Correspondence

1/1
Letter written March 5, 1836, to J.R. Kennard, Attorney at Law, in reference to a transfer of funds from John Bryan.

1/2
Envelope received on October 26, 1836, by J.R. Kennard with no stamp.

1/3
Envelope with letter dated January 5, 1867, from Governor James W. Throckmorton to Judge J. R. Kennard in regards to the proceedings of a court case involving the use of U.S. Army troops to protect African Americans. Letter contains references to General Charles Griffin, Commander of the Texas sub-district. Stamp forcefully removed.

1/4
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on May 6, 1875. No Stamp.

1/5
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 21, 1875. Stamp included.

1/6
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on September 11, 1875. Stamp included.

1/7
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 14, 1876. Stamp included.

1/8
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 11, 1877. Stamp included.

1/9
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 1, 1877. Stamp included.

1/10
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on October 17, 1877. Stamp included.

1/11
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 17, 1878. Stamp included.

1/12
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 20, 1878. Stamp included.

1/13
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 30, 1879. Stamp included.

1/14
Twenty-one newspaper clippings sent to Mrs. Jessie Youens during the fall of 1881. Stamps included.

1/15
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 25, 1883. Stamp included.

1/16
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 17, 1887. Stamp included.

1/17
Notice sent to Mr. A. Stone on June 14, 1895, from the County Clerk to appear in
court in regards to property taxes.

1/18
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on August 10, 1875. Stamp included.

1/19
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 26, 1896. Stamp included.

1/20
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on August 7, 1896. Stamp included.

1/21
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on December 21, 1896. Stamp included.

1/22
Flag Envelope sent to Miss Anna Youens from George C. Rexhouse on July 24, 1898. Stamp included.

1/23
Envelope sent to Miss Annie and Miss Emmie Youens on July 15, 1901. Stamp included.

1/24
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens from G.C. Rexhouse on August 11, 1902. Stamp included.

1/25
A postcard sent on February 5, 1904, from Mr. William Youens to Mrs. William Youens discussing approaching trip home. Stamp included.

1/26
Envelope sent to Mrs. Will Youens from Mr. Will Youens on February 15, 1904. Stamp included.

1/27
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on June 1, 1904. Stamp included.

1/28
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. Will Youens in 1905. Stamp included.

1/29
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens from Hall Art and Wall Paper Co. on June 9, 1905. Stamp included.

1/30
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from J. Youens & Co. on October 18, 1905. Stamp included.

1/31
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on October 31, 1905. Stamp included.

1/32
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. Will Youens on November 11, 1905. Stamp included.

1/33
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on November 14, 1905. Stamp included.

1/34
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. Will Youens on December 6, 1905.
Stamp included.

1/35
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. Will Youens on February 28, 1906. Stamp included.

1/36
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. J. Youens & Co. on March 18, 1906. Stamp included.

1/37
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on March 27, 1906. Stamp included.

1/38
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. J. Youens & Co. April 4, 1906. Stamp included.

1/39
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie and Miss Annie Youens on April 6, 1906. Stamp included.

1/40
Envelope sent to Mr. C. K. Youens from Mr. William Youens, June 29, 1906. Stamp included.

1/41
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens from Camp Mabry Branch YMCA on August 8, 1906. Stamp included.

1/42
Post Card sent to Miss Annie Youens on September 19, 1906. Stamp included.

1/43
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on September 24, 1906. Stamp included.

1/44
Fabric postcard sent to Miss Anna Youens from H.C. Youens sent on October 16, 1906. Stamp included.

1/45
Postcard sent to Miss Anna Youens from G.C. sent on October 26, 1906. Stamp included.

1/46
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. Will Youens on November 3, 1906. Stamp included.

1/47
Postcard sent to Miss Annie Youens on November 28, 1906, from Ruth acknowledging she received her letter. Stamp included.

1/48
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from Mr. Will Youens on November 29, 1906. Stamp included.

1/49
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens from W. O'Neal on December 3, 1906. Stamp included.

1/50
Christmas postcard sent to Miss Annie Youens from G. C. Rexhouse on December 22, 1906. Some damage to left-side of postcard. Stamp included.

1/51
Happy New Year's postcard sent to Miss Annie Youens from G.C. Rexhouse on December 29, 1906. Stamp included.

1/52
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on January 17, 1907. Stamp included.

1/53
Postcard sent to Miss Annie Youens from G. C. Rexhouse on February 1, 1907. Stamp included.

1/54
Envelope sent to Will Youens from Mrs. L.K. Huckaby on February 9, 1907. Right side torn. Stamp included.

1/55
Mississippi River postcard sent on February 23, 1907, to Miss Anna Youens from G. C. Rexhouse regarding his previous night's entertainment. Stamp included.

1/56
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on April 10, 1907. Stamp included.

1/57
Postcard of Indiana Court House sent to Miss Annie Youens on June 17, 1907, from Ruth. Stamp included.

1/58
Envelope sent to Miss Mary Youens on June 21, 1907. Stamp included.

1/59
Postcard of Altman, Colorado sent to Miss Annie Youens in 1908, from Ruth saying they were just in Colorado. Stamp included.

1/60
Postcard of the L.C. McLain Orthopedic Sanitarium sent to Miss Annie Youens on May 11, 1908, from H.C. Rexhouse thanking Annie for her Easter greetings. Stamp included.

1/61
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on August 31, 1908. Envelope damaged. Stamp included.

1/62
Christmas postcard sent to Miss Annie Youens on December 24, 1908, from Ruth Reder. Stamp included.

1/63
Happy New Year's postcard sent to Miss Annie Youens on December 30, 1908. Stamp included.

1/64
True Love's Offering postcard sent to Miss Anna Youens on February 12, 1909, promising a longer letter soon. Stamp included.

1/65
Postcard sent to H.P. Youens on April 5, 1909, from Will Youens inquiring about his safety after the fire. No picture on postcard. Stamp included.

1/66
Postcard sent to Herbert P. Youens on April 27, 1909, from Will Youens describing his budding garden and the good weather. No picture on postcard. Stamp included.

1/67
Envelope sent to H.P. Youens on May 2, 1909. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/68
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens from Hall Art and Wall Paper Co. on June 5, 1909. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/69
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens from A.P. Terrell on June 5, 1909. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/70
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens from J.B.L. on June 6, 1909. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/71
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens on June 9, 1909. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/72
Envelope sent to H.P. Youens from Central East and West Lines on June 10, 1909. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/73
Envelope sent to H.P. Youens on July 3, 1909. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/74
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on September 6, 1909, from Houston Electric Co.
Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/75
Galveston, TX Medical College postcard sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on October 18, 1909, from Jared telling of his schooling and asking Herbert to write. Stamp included.

1/76
St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Beaumont, TX postcard sent to Will Youens on November 2, 1909, telling him of his upcoming move. Stamp included.

1/77
Envelope sent to Mr. and Mrs. Will Youens and family on December 23, 1909. Top is torn. Stamp included.

1/78
Christmas postcard sent to Mrs. Will Youens on December 24, 1909, from Carrie. Stamp included.

1/79
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on February 11, 1910. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/80
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on February 16, 1910. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/81
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on February 24, 1910. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/82
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on March 1, 1910, from Sunset Route. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/83
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on May 21, 1910. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/84
Envelope sent to Mr. H.E. Youens on June 13, 1910. Top is torn. Stamp included.

1/85
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from H.P. Youens on July 10, 1910. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/86
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert P. Youens on July 25, 1910. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/87
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens from H.P. Youens on August 7, 1910. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/88
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens from F.J. Kerstan on December 23, 1910. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/89
Small folder envelope sent to Mr. W. Youens on January 16, 1911. Top and Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/90
Flowered postcard sent to Mrs. Will Youens on February 13, 1911, from C.K. Youens telling her he will be headed home soon.

1/91
Envelope sent to William Youens from Miss Rubie on August 26, 1911. Seal on front of the envelope and stamp included. Top is torn.

1/92
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert P. Youens from Rosenbaum Bros., The Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. on November 29, 1911. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/93
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens in 1912. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/94
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 20, 1912. Top is torn. Stamp included.

1/95
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert P. Youens on August 17, 1912. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/96
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on August 29, 1912. Left-side torn. Stamps included.

1/97
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens from Will Youens on September 2, 1912. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/98
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens from Will Youens on October 1, 1912. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/99
Envelope sent to Mr. Youens on November 20, 1912. Top and back torn. Stamp included.

1/100
Envelope sent to Misses Annie and Emmie Youens on December 15, 1912. Stamp included.

1/101
Christmas and New Year postcard sent to Miss Em Youens on December 25, 1912, from Margeret T. Baylor. Stamp included.

1/102
Greetings and New Year postcard sent to Miss Anna Youens on December 30, 1912, from Maude B. inquiring about her Christmas. Stamp included.

1/103
Envelope sent to Mrs. Will Youens on January 20, 1914, from L&M Adjustable Dress Form Co. Envelope damaged. Stamp included.

1/104
Postcard of Oklahoma City Court House Mr. William Youens on May 18, 1914, from Herbert Youens telling him of a safe arrival. Stamp included.

1/105
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 20, 1914. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/106
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on May 27, 1914, from Herbert Youens talking of work conditions and the weather. No picture on the postcard. Stamp included.

1/107
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 5, 1914. Left-side torn. Stamps included.

1/108
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 28, 1914. Stamp included.

1/109
Postcard of the Scarritt Building in Kansas city, Mo. sent to Mr. William Youens from H.P. Youens on July 13, 1914, telling him they are leaving the next day. Stamp included.

1/110
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens from H.P. Youens on July 18, 1914, telling him of his upcoming departure from South Dakota to Canada and Washington. No picture on the postcard. Stamp included.

1/111
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens from Ancient Order of United Workmen on July 21, 1914. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/112
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens from H. B. Stocking on July 28, 1914. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/113
Envelope sent to H.P. Youens on July 30, 1914. Right-side torn. Stamps included.

1/114
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on September 12, 1914. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/115
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on October 1, 1914, from H.P. Youens telling him that he has applied for a job, but if he does not get it, he will be leaving for Sacramento, CA. No picture on the postcard. Stamp included.

1/116
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on November 2, 1914. Top is torn. Stamps included.

1/117
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on November 9, 1914. Right-side torn. Stamps included.

1/118
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 1, 1914, from Young Men's Christian Association. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/119
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 13, 1914, from Young Men's Christian Association. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/120
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on December 28, 1914. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/121
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 30, 1914. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/122
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens in 1915. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/123
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on January 5, 1915, from Hotel St. Michael. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/124
Young Men's Christian Association envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 9, 1915, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/125
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 20, 1915. Right-side torn. Part of one stamp missing, other half and one stamp included.

1/126
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 28, 1915. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/127
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 24, 1915. Top and right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/128
Envelope sent to Miss Annie C. Youens on August 30, 1915. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/129
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on September 9, 1915. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/130
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on October 15, 1915. Bottom torn. Stamp included.

1/131
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on October 25, 1915. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/132
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on November 8, 1915. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/133
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on November 15, 1915. Bottom torn. Stamp included.

1/134
Envelope sent to Miss Annie C. Youens on November 22, 1915, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/135
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 2, 1916. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/136
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on January 31, 1916, from Foreman F.K. Pingrey. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/137
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 11, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/138
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on February 18, 1916. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/139
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on February 27, 1916. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/140
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on March 8, 1916, from H.P.Y. Right-side torn. Stamps included.

1/141
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 9, 1916. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/142
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on March 19, 1916. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/143
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on March 28, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/144
Envelope from Lee & Lee, General Agents for The Union Central Life Insurance Co. sent April 3, 1916. Top Torn. Stamp included.

1/145
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 16, 1916, from F.N. Pingrey. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/146
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 25, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/147
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 7, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/148
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on May 18, 1916. Bottom torn. Stamp included.

1/149
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 26, 1916. Stamp included.

1/150
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on July 17, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Stamp included.

1/151
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 24, 1916. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/152
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 31, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Stamp included.

1/153
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 6, 1916, from Herbert Youens. Envelope frail and top is torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/154
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on August 14, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/155
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 23, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/156
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on September 6, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Stamp included.

1/157
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on September 29, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/158
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on October 6, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/159
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on October 18, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/160
Envelope sent to Misses Annie and Emmie Youens on October 27, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Stamp included.

1/161
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on November 6, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/162
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on November 29, 1916, from H.P. Youens. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/163
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on December 1916, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/164
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert Youens on December 4, 1916, from Mrs. William Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/165
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 12, 1916. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/166
Envelope and one-page letter sent to Mrs. William Youens on December 27, 1916, from H.P. Youens telling her about the weather in Flagstaff, Arizona. Bottom torn. Stamp included.

1/167
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens in 1917. Left-side torn. Stamps included.

1/168
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on January 2, 1917, from H.P. Youens asking for a letter and telling him of the weather in San Antonio. No picture on postcard. Stamps included.

1/169
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 3, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/170
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 14, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/171
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 25, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/172
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 29, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/173
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 7, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/174
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on February 13, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/175
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on February 23, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Stamp included.

1/176
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 8, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/177
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on March 13, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/178
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 28, 1917, from Lee & Lee, General Agents of the Union Central Life Ins. Co. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/179
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 29, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/180
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on April 4, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/181
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 20, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/182
Envelope sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on May 2, 1917. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/183
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on May 5, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/184
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 9, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/185
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 30, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/186
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on June 4, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/187
Envelope and one-page letter sent to Mr. William Youens on June 19, 1917, from H. P. Youens saying that he will have to work and that he hopes to be able to help out soon. Written in St. Louis, MO. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/188
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 28, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/189
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 8, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/190
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on July 16, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/191
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on July 22, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/192
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on August 4, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/193
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 9, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/194
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on August 18, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/195
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on August 22, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/196
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on September 17, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/197
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on November 11, 1917, from H.P. Youens saying his job is going well, the amount of pay, and the weather is good in Nevada for the time of year. No picture on the postcard. Stamp included.

1/198
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens on December 1917. Right-side damaged along with part of third stamp. Other two stamps included.

1/199
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens on December 11, 1917, from Rosenbaum Bros., General Agents. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/200
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on December 13, 1917, from H.P. Youens telling his father he has joined the Army Aviation for the duration of the war. Stamp included.

1/201
San Antonio, TX postcard of the Alamo sent to Mr. William Youens on December 14, 1917, from H.P. Youens stating that he made it through and that he will be receiving his army clothes the following day. Stamps included.

1/202
San Antonio, TX postcard of the Alamo sent to Miss Annie Youens on December 20, 1917, from H. P. Youens stating he had been assigned to a squad and that he will be stationed in San Antonio. Stamp included.

1/203
Bank Transaction notice sent to Mr. H.P. Youens on December 21, 1917, from The First National Bank. Stamp included.

1/204
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 22, 1917, from H.P. Youens. Damaged. Top torn. Six stamps included.

1/205
Envelope sent to Herbert P. Youens on December 22, 1917. Right-side torn. Stamps included.

1/206
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on December 30, 1917, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/207
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens in 1918, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp not included.

1/208
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens in 1918, from H.P. Youens. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp. Top torn.

1/209
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 3, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Right-side damaged, along with one stamp included.

1/210
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 4, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Right-side torn. Stamp partially damaged.

1/211
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on January 8, 1918, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/212
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on January 16, 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/213
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on January 18, 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/214
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 22, 1918. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/215
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 24, 1918. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/216
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 27, 1918, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/217
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on February 7, 1918, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Left-side top corner damaged. Stamp included.

1/218
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on February 14, 1918, from Herbert Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/219
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 18, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/220
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 25, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Right-bottom corner damaged. Stamp included.

1/221
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 28, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/222
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 3, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/223
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 11, 1918, Top and left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/224
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on March 31, 1918, from H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp not included.

1/225
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/226
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 7, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/227
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on April 18, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Right-side torn. Stamp not included.

1/228
Envelope sent from the Union Central Life Insurance Co. April 18, 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/229
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on May 1918, from Sgt. Herbert P. Youens. Left-side torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/230
Envelope sent from Lee & Lee, the Union Central Life Insurance Co. May 1, 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/231
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on May 4, 1918, from Sgt. Herbert P. Youens. Soldier's envelope. No Stamp.

1/232
Envelope sent from the Union Central Life Insurance Co. May 6, 1918, to Mr. William Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/233
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 11, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top and left-side torn. Soldier's envelope. No stamp.

1/234
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on May 19, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens saying all is well and that it is raining where he is stationed. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/235
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 24, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Right-side torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/236
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 4, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/237
Postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on June 10, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens describing the weather conditions in France. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/238
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 19, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/239
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on July 5, 1918, from Sgt. Herbert P. Youens. Top damaged. Soldier's envelope. No Stamp.

1/240
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 6, 1918. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/241
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on July 10, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/242
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 18, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/243
Amboise postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on June 19, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens saying he received his father's letter. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/244
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on July 24, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/245
Aix-Les-Bains postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on August 8, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/246
Letter/envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on August 11, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens telling her there was good news from the front line and because of his approaching birthday, he hopes to get a letter as a present. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/247
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on August 20, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/248
Chateau de Saint-Christophe-en-Bazelle postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on September 9, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens describing the rainy weather conditions. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/249
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on September 17, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/250
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on September 25, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/251
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens in October 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top and right-side torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/252
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on October 16, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/253
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 19, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top and left-side torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/254
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on November 10, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/255
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on November 27, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Soldier's envelope, thus no stamp.

1/256
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 4, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/257
Envelope sent by Pacific Mutual December 13, 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/258
General Pershing postcard sent to Mr. William Youens on December 21, 1918, from Sgt. H. P. Youens stating that they will be moving soon and he received his Christmas package. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/259
Postcard sent to Miss Emmie Youens on December 24, 1918, from Sgt. H.P. Youens asking her to send any form of reading material, such as magazines. Soldier's postcard, thus no stamp.

1/260
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 31, 1918. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/261
Knights of Columbus War Activities envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on February 4, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/262
Envelope sent to Mr. Emmett Ford on February 25, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/263
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on April 9, 1919. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/264
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on April 17, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/265
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on May 6, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/266
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on May 8, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/267
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 14, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/268
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens in June 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/269
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens in June 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/270
Envelope sent to Mr. Hebert P. Youens on July 19, 1919, from First National Bank. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/271
Envelope sent to Miss Annie Youens on July 21, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/272
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens in August 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/273
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens in August 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/274
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on August 23, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/275
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on November 21, 1919, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/276
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert P. Youens on March 14, 1920, from W.J. Youens. Right-side torn. One stamp damaged, another stamp included.

1/277
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 30, 1920, from Lee & Lee. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/278
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on September 2, 1920, from E.C. Youens. Top torn and is very fragile. Stamp included.

1/279
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 1, 1920. Top torn and has purple paper inside. Stamp included.

1/280
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on January 28, 1921, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/281
Envelope sent to Mr. H. P. Herbert on February 5, 1921. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/282
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 30, 1921, from E.C. Youens. Top torn. No stamp.

1/283
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on May 30, 1921. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/284
Envelope sent to Mr. Herbert on June 26, 1921. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/285
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 16, 1921, from Sgt. H.P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/286
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on December 16, 1921. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/287
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on March 20, 1922. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/288
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 29, 1922. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/289
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on October 2, 1922. Top torn. Stamps included.

1/290
Envelope sent to Mr. and Mrs. William Youens on December 23, 1922. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/291
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on June 6, 1925, from Herbert Youens. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/292
Envelope sent to C. K. Youens in June 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/293
Envelope sent to Miss Emmie Youens on June 8, 1926, from Herbert Youens. Bottom torn. Stamp included.

1/294
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on June 15, 1926, from Mr. William Youens. Bottom torn. Stamp included.

1/295
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 19, 1926, from the First Presbyterian Church. Left-side torn. Stamp included.

1/296
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 20, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/297
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on June 21, 1926, from Bessie Youens. Stamps included.

1/298
Envelope sent to Mrs. C. K. Youens on June 22, 1926, from Mr. William Youens. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/299
Envelope sent to Mr. William Youens on June 23, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/300
Envelope sent to Mrs. C. K. Youens on June 24, 1926, from Mr. William Youens. Right-side torn. Stamp included.

1/301
Postcard sent to Miss Emmie Youens on June 24, 1926, from William Youens describing what he had eaten and saying he should only be there for another week. No picture on postcard. Stamp included.

1/302
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on June 25, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/303
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on June 26, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included

1/304
Postcard sent to Mrs. William Youens on June 26, 1926, from Cliff telling his mother that his father will be able to make the journey home and that the Dr. will next treat his ear. No picture on postcard. Stamp included.

1/305
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on June 28, 1926, from self-addressed W.J. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/306
Envelope sent to Mrs. Will Youens on June 28, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/307
Postcard sent to Mrs. William Youens on June 30, 1926, from Cliff telling his mother that his father made the journey home by ambulance. No picture on postcard. Stamp included.

1/308
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on July 2, 1926, from self-addressed W.J. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/309
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on July 3, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/310
Envelope sent to Mr. Will Youens on July 5, 1926. Top torn. Stamp included.

1/311
Envelope sent to Mrs. William Youens on August 16, 1926, from H. P. Youens. Top torn. Stamp included.

Thomas Affleck, Jr.

These letters are typed carbon copies of the original handwritten material, some have handwritten typo corrections.

A4-10
Undated miscellaneous items. There are 6 items, totaling 13 leaves.

Land Measures of Texas, as used at the General Land Office. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

To the Editor of the Dumfries Weekly Journal. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

An Act to Incorporate, the Natchez and Washington Plank Road Company. Typed copy of original, 5 leaves.

Underdraining No. 2. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

Letter regarding teaching young boys core subjects before teaching them Latin or Greek. Included is a letter regarding ants. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

Letter from Affleck to unknown regarding the formation of a neighborhood Farmer's Club. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

A4-20
Articles from The Western Farmer and Gardener, Vol. III, 1842 and other publications 1843 and undated.

Editorial from Vol. III, No. II, page 23. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

Article "The Cincinnati Independent Shooting Club" from Vol. III, No. II, pages 25 26. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Article "Taking Stock to Louisiana State Fair," from Vol. III, No. III, page 41. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article "Common School Laws Science and Agriculture," from Vol. III, No. III, pages 52 53. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

Article "A Trip to the South," from Vol. III, No. IV, pages 78 85. Typed copy of original, 11 leaves.

Article "A Trip to the South," from Vol. III, No. VI, pages 122 123. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Article "To Charles Foster, Esq.: A Stroll in the Woods Near Baton Rouge," from January 28, 1842 issue. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Article "Wine Making," from Vol. III, No. VI, page 140. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

Article "The Controversy between Dr. Martin and Mr. Mahard," from Vol. III, No. VII, pages 146 147. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

Article regarding the marriage of Thomas Affleck to Mrs. Anna M. Smith, from Vol. III, No. VIII, page 192. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article "The Wool Trade." Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Article regarding Western Farmer and Gardener's Almanac. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article Projected Trip to Europe, and The Fair at Baton Rouge." Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

Article "The Poor Indian." Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

A4-30
Articles from The American Agriculturist and other periodicals. 1843-1848, 1854.

Article regarding using the "Cherokee Rose Hedge" for fencing purposes. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

Letter to the editor regarding the Fair being over. April 29, 1843. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Article "The Jefferson County Agricultural and Horticultural Society Fair." Typed copy of original, 1 page.

Article "Southern Agricultural Implements." (1844), pages 305 306. Typed copy of original, 10 leaves.

Letter to The Albany Cultivator (1844), pages 278 279 from Thomas Affleck. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Incomplete article regarding the yields and procedures for growing in the area (probably Brenham). Typed copy of original, 5 leaves.

Last page of a letter signed by Affleck regarding a disease. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article fragment, this portion regarding Cultivation of Turnips, and Lime and Marl. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Last page of a letter signed by Affleck regarding cotton crops. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Letter to the Editor of The Albany Cultivator. November 16, 1844. Typed copy of original, 7 pages.

Letter to the Editor of The Albany Cultivator. July, 1844. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Article "Cotton seed for Cows and Value of Grade Durhams." February 15, 1843. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article regarding Norman's Southern Agricultural Almanac, VI (1847), page 356. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article "The Cow Pea, Peach, Cuba Tobacco, etc." III (1844), pages 181 2. Typed copy of original, 8 leaves.

Article "Rust in Cotton." II (1843), pages 150 51. Typed copy of original, 5 leaves.

Article "The Cherokee Rose and Hedging in The South," De Bow's Review, V (1849), pages 175 79. Typed copy of original, 15 leaves.

Article "Mississippi Her Agriculture, etc." Vol. I (1844), pages 83 84. Typed copy of original, 10 leaves.

Article "Show of the Agricultural, Horticultural and Botanical Society of Jefferson College." Vol. III, (1844), pages 197 98. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

Incomplete article regarding implements. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Incomplete article regarding implements. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article regarding The Plantation Record and Account Books. Vol. VI (1847), page 356. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article "Climate and Production of the South." Vol. I (1844), page 60. Typed copy of original, 2 leaves.

Article "A Rat Proof Cellar." November 30, 1843. Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

Article "The Fair at Fayette." May 23, 1843. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

Article "A Plow for Turning Under the Cow Pea." Vol. III (1844), pages 362 63. Typed copy of original, 2 pages.

Letter to the Editor of the Natchez Courier. October 24, 1854. Typed copy of original, 10 leaves.

Article in Prairie Farmer, "Sundry Comments by Thomas Affleck." Vol. VI (1846), pages 106 107. Typed copy of original, 5 leaves.

Article "Destruction of the Cotton Crop by Insects." Vol. V (1846), pages 341 343. Typed copy of original, 10 leaves.

Article "Southern Agricultural Implements." Vol. III (1844), pages 247 48. Typed copy of original, 5 leaves.

Article "Sheep at the South." Vol. V (1846), pages 115 117. Typed copy of original, 8 leaves.

Article "The Cherokee Rose Rosa Laevigata, and Hedging in the South." From DeBow's Review, Vol. V (1848), pages 82 86. Typed copy of original, 9 leaves.

A4-40
Newspaper clippings, 1846 and undated. There are 4 articles totaling 6 leaves.

"Partnerships to Woolen Manufacturers." Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

"Lost Silver Is Recovered." Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

"Diamond Jubilee is Closed." Typed copy of original, 1 leaf.

"As a resident of..." Included: Harper, L. to W.H. Bulloch, Esq. October 26, 1846. Typed copy of original, 3 leaves.

A4-50
Article from The Concordia Intelligencer (Vidalia,La.). March 9, 1844. Typed copy of original, 17 leaves.

A4-60
Letters from Weekly Herald and Herald (Dallas, Tx.), 1866. There are 6 letters totaling 29 leaves, all are typed copies of originals.

Letter from Mr. Affleck from the Galveston News, printed in The Dallas Weekly Herald. May 26, 1866. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Letter from Mr. Affleck from the Galveston News, printed in The Dallas Weekly Herald. June 2, 1866. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Letter from Mr. Affleck from the Galveston News, printed in The Dallas Herald. June 9, 1866. Typed copy of original, 6 leaves.

Letter from Mr. Affleck from the Galveston News, printed in The Dallas Herald. June 16, 1866. Typed copy of original, 4 leaves.

Letter from Mr. Affleck from the Galveston News, printed in The Dallas Herald. June 23, 1866. Typed copy of original, 7 leaves.

Letter from Mr. Affleck from the Galveston News, printed in The Dallas Herald. June 30, 1866. Typed copy of original, 6 leaves.

A4-70
Typed copy of Thomas Affleck's Bee Breeding In The West (Cincinnati: E. Lucas), 1841. 41 leaves.

A4-80
Typed copy of Thomas Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac and Plantation and Garden Calendar for 1860 (New York: David Felt, and New Orleans: H.G. Stetson and Co.), 1859(?). 7 leaves.

A4-90
Typed copy of Thomas Affleck's Hedging and Hedging Plants in the Southern States (Houston: E.H. Cushing), 1869. 28 leaves.

A4-100
Typed copy of Thomas Affleck's Texas and Her Resources (Dumfries, Scotland: W.R. M'Diarmid and Co.). undated. 20 leaves.

Series 1, Ku - Wal

2/1: Kummings, Donald D., November 3, 1986 - September 23, 1999

2/2: Larson, Kerry C., [1988?]

2/3: Leon, Philip W., February 2, 1996; Undated

2/4: Lorca, Federico Garcia, [1930s?]

2/5: Loving, Jerome, September 8, 1976 - January 28, 2001

2/6: Lowenfels, Walter, December 13-29, 1970; Undated

2/7: Lynch, Michael, March 14, 1986

2/8: Martin, Robert K., October 16, 1992; Undated

2/9: Matkovic, Marijan, 1992

2/10: Matthiessen, F.O., [1941?] -December 5, 1980

2/11: Mendelson, Moris, [1954?]

2/12: Metzgen, Charles R., [1961] - July 4, 1962

2/13: Mickle Street Review, December 3, 1987; Undated

2/14: Miller, Edwin Haviland, [1961] - August 23, 1977; Undated

2/15: Miller, James E. Jr., August 25, 1986 - August 22, 1995

2/16: Moore, Bill, December 8, 1984; Undated

2/17: Myerson, Joel, [1990s]

2/18: Olivia, Jesus Sierra, 1965-1996; Undated

2/19: Padgett, Ron, [1992?]; Undated

2/20: Papers on Language and Literature, Supplement to, Summer 1969

2/21: Peltola, Nilo, January 18, 1978

2/22: Pound, Louise, [1949] - June 29, 1958

2/23: Price, Kenneth M., [ May 30, 1984] - August 8, 1990

2/24: Reynolds, David S., January 2, 1994 - September 2, 1998

2/25: Salska, Agnieszka, [1985]

2/26: Sarrailh, Michele, [1988] - October 17, 1989

2/27: Schmidgall, Gary, [1997?]

2/28: Sill, Geoffrey, October 8, 1992

2/29: Smuts, Jan Christian, November 9, 1973; Undated

2/30: Snodgrass, W.D., 1996

2/31: Strassburg, Robert, August 24, 1987 - September 29, 1998

2/32: Strassburg, Robert, October 16, 1998 - May 16, 2002

2/33: Svensson, K.A., November 7-24, 1964

2/34: Szuba, Andrezej, February 26, 1995 - May 18, 1995

2/35: Translations (Misc.) on Walt Whitman's Works, [1955] - November 23, 1991; Undated

2/36: Traubel, Horace, 1896 - September 20, 1996; Undated

2/37: Vondrasek, Bets ("West Hills Review"), January 18, 1980; Undated

2/38: Waggoner, Hyatt H., March 12, 1968; Undated

2/39: Walt Whitman on Charles Dickens, August 11, 1842 - December 6, 1974; Undated

2/40: "Walt Whitman Quarterly Review", Fall 2001

Abstracts by Land Owner Name (Da - Ri)

5/1: Abstracts - Samuel Davidson, July 1843 - May 1910; Undated

5/2: Abstracts - A. D. Lancaster, November 1852 - July 1972

5/3: Abstract - Melvin Langham, April 1847 - December 1879

5/4: Abstracts - Abner Lee, Jr., February 1854 - June 1979

5/5: Abstracts - J. P. Mitchell, June 1879

5/6: Abstracts - D. B. Posey, November 1860 - July 1878

5/7: Abstracts - C. Raney, May 1855 - March 1868

5/8: Abstracts - Wilson Reed, July 1860 - September 1879

5/9: Abstracts - P. Rector, August 1857 - August 1877; Undated

5/10: Abstracts - J. A. Rhodes, July 1850 - May 1877; Undated

5/11: Abstracts - James Riley, May 1868 - March 1872; Undated

Abstracts by Land Owner Name (Bl - Bo)

3/1: Abstracts - Block 106, March 1867 - January 1880

3/2: Abstracts - Block 109, August 1867 - August 1877

3/3: Abstracts - Block 110, August 1867 - August 1877

3/4: Abstracts - Block 112, August 1867 - January 1875

3/5: Abstracts - Block 113, November 1866 - October 1874

3/6: Abstracts - James J Bowman, June 1857 - December 1876

3/7: Abstracts - Thomas Bowman, October 1844 - December 1873

3/8: Abstracts - Thomas Bowman, January 1874 - June 1879; Undated

3/9: Abstracts - W. C. Boyles, June 1866 - June 1879

Engravings, Maps, and Plans

1/3
Engravings: "San Antonio de Bexar." Annotated by hand in ink: "Drawn by E. E. from a Sketch by Lt. Mcdowell," and in right margin in pencil: "Reserve," 1846

"Ruins of the Church of the Alamo. San Antonio de Bexar." Annotated by hand in ink with date, and in right margin in pencil: "Reserve," [ ca.1846].

"Interior View of the Church of the Alamo." Annotated by hand in ink with date, and in right margin in pencil: "Reserve," 1847.

"Mission Concepcion, Near San Antonio de Bexar." Annotated by hand in ink: "Built 1754," and same in pencil, with "Reserve" in right margin also in pencil, 1847

"Mission of San Jose Near San Antonio de Bexar". Annotated by hand in ink with date, and with "Reserve" in right margin in pencil, 1846

"Watch Tower Near Monclova." One of two versions of the hand-colored engravings. Shows blue sky and mostly gray stone. [1846]

"Watch Tower Near Monclova." One of two versions of the hand-colored engravings. Shows sky in lavender, gray, pale pink, and yellow, with much more sepia, tan, green, and touches of white in the building stones and vegetation. Annotated by hand in ink with: "drawn by E. E. from a Sketch," and with "Reserve" in right margin in pencil, [1846]

"Church Near Monclova." One of two versions of one illustration in the hand-colored engravings. Shows bright blue sky with white clouds and pale yellow at the horizon, green vegetation, and pale tan ground. Annotated by hand in pencil with "Quincy" in the lower right corner, [1846]

"Church Near Monclova." One of two versions of one illustration in the hand-colored engravings. Shows bright blue sky with white clouds and pale yellow at the horizon, green vegetation, and pale tan ground. Annotated by hand in ink: "drawn by E. E. from a Sketch," and in pencil with "Reserve" in the right margin, [1846]

1/4
Map: Untitled. Hand-drawn manuscript map showing area extending from San Antonio de Bexar, Tex. to Caldwell, Texas area. A draft version of "Plan of the Vicinity of Austin and San Antonio, Texas," ca. 1848.

Map: Hand-drawn manuscript map. "Plan of the Vicinity of Austin and San Antonio, Texas," [ca. 1848].

Map: Printed proof for publication. "Map Showing the Route of the Arkansas Regiment from Shreveport, La. to San Antonio de Bexar, Texas," [ ca. 1848].

1/5
Plans: 2 copies, one a hand-drawn draft in ink with pencil, the other probably printer's proof for publication. "Plan of the Ruins of the Alamo near San Antonio De Bexar." Drawn by Edward Everett, 1848.

Plan: Hand-drawn manuscript plan in ink. "Plan of San Antonio de Bexar, Texas. Drawn from recollection by E. E.," undated.

1/6
Report: Printer's Proof titled Report of The Secretary of War, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, a map showing the operations of the army of the United States in Texas and the adjacent Mexican states on the Rio Grande; accompanied by astronomical observations, and descriptive and military memoirs of the country, 1 March 1849. Published as Senate Executive Document No. 32, 31st Congress, 1st Session, in 1850. 1 March 1849.

Handwritten "Index to Col. Hughes Report" is kept with this pre-publication copy of the report. The added title page for the printed report reads "Memoir Descriptive of the March of A Division of the United States Army, Under the Command of Brigadier General John E. Wool, from San Antonio de Bexar, in Texas, to Saltillo, in Mexico," By George W. Hughes, Captain Corps Topographical Engineer, Chief of the Topographical Staff. 1846.

Journals and Memoir

1/2
Journal entries. Caption title: "San Antonio de Bescar. September 1846." 11 Sept. 1846-4 April [1847]

Half sheets (6) of ruled paper, torn in half horizontally, and stitched along left margin. Signed "Edward Everett" in pencil in upper left corner of top sheet. Had been folded and labeled on the back in pencil "Original journal, San Antonio 1846."

Journal entries. Continues recounting events in San Antonio, 16 -20 Dec. 1846

Half sheet of unruled pale blue paper, originally torn along left margin, recto filled and verso bearing single one-line entry.

Journal entries. Records events near the Rio Grande, 26 Dec. 1846-2 Jan. 1847

Large folded sheet of white paper, faintly ruled in blue. Had been folded and labeled on back in ink Memorandums of Journey to Rio Grande, with penciled annotations Journal and Dec. 26 '46.

Memoir. Titled "At San Antonio Texas, in the Quartermasters Department, U.S.A. 1846-1848," [1899?]

Handwritten in ink on 8 x 5 inch machine ruled sheets of notepaper, this memoir records Everett's activites not only in the Mexican War (1846-1848), but through some part of the Civil War, that page being annotated in pencil with 1899 and the note that it was "substituted ... in the copy sent to Quincy." The memoir is the most substantial and heavily edited part of this series. Pages are numbered in ink at top margin 1a, 2a, 1-38, 38a, 39-70, 70b [1899 substitute page], 71. Later published, all or in part, under the title "Military Life" in Transactions of the Illinois Historical Society…for 1905.

Letters

1/1
Letters from Edward Everett to Samuel W. Everett. June 21, 1846 - May 16, 1847

Letter to Edward Everett from Capt. James O. Morgan. Copy of formal notice of having been wounded. September 11, 1846

Letter to Edward Everett from Captain James Harvey Ralston. Certificate of disability. July 10, 1847

Letter to Col. R. Jones from Edward Everett. Application for pension due to a disability. September 18, 1847

Letter, "To All Whom it may concern" from Col. William Weatherford. Honorable discharge. June 18, 1846
Handwritten copy in ink of official record. January 26, 1849

Letter, "To Whom It May Concern" from Captain James D. Morgan. Granting on one year's furlough due to injury. May 26, 1847
Handwritten copy in ink of official record. January 26, 1849

Letter to Edward Everett from W. H. Bissell. Short note on "his bill passing the House". January 9, 1852

Letter to "Dear Father" from Taylar Clark. April 13, 1863

Letter to "Dear Parents" from Henry. September 6, 1863

Letters

1/1
The Roger L. Brooks Collection of Unpublished, Unrecorded Letters of Matthew Arnold. Photocopy of typed list, 5 leaves.

The Roger L. Brooks Collection of the First and Successive Rare Editions of the Works of Matthew Arnold. Photocopy of typed list, 13 leaves.

List of Matthew Arnold's letters in the Texas A&M University. Library. Typed list, 3 leaves.

1/2
Arnold, Matthew to the Revd. F[rederick] Temple. December 22, 1848, re: Lord Lansdowne approving Tabulas Statements for apprenticeships. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/3
Arnold, Matthew to Mr. (?Henry) Willett. June 15, 1863, re: thank you for gifts, list about birds and their eggs. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/4
Arnold, Matthew to "My dear Sir" (a French correspondent), re: Spinoza, A French Eton, Joubert, and Auerbach's Life of Spinoza. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/5
Arnold, Matthew to George Grove. November 15, 1865, re: Heine's visit to England. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/6
Arnold, Matthew to Austin Abbott, Esq. October 19, 1867, re: tour of inspection, meeting. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/7
Arnold, Matthew to "Dear Madam." December 31, 1867, re: a memoir she had written of Lacordaire, and offers to send him a book containing a Celtic legend. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/8
Arnold, Matthew to Dr. Heaton (?Henton). May 11, 1868, re: declining an invitation to lecture at the Philosophical and Literary Society of Leeds. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription

1/9
Arnold, Matthew to Charles Elliot Norton. July 29, 1868, re: renting a house at Harrow. ALS, 1 leaf, with addressed envelope and typed transcription.

1/10
Arnold, Matthew to the Revd. Edward White. February 24, 1869, re: books about nonconformist churches. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/11
Arnold, Matthew to the Revd. George Greenwood. December 2, 1869, re: religious views, Latin quote. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/12
Arnold, Matthew to the Marquis of Ripon. November 14, 1872, re: health, going on vacation. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/13
Arnold, Matthew to Frederick Every, Esq. July 7, 1873, re: being placed on list of Vice Presidents. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/14
Arnold, Matthew to Professor Lethbridge. September 12, 1873, re: interest in education in India. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/15
Arnold, Matthew to W. Fraser Rae. May 12, 1876, re: Professor Everett's article. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/16
Arnold, Matthew to Swire Smith, Esq. October 13, 1876, re: distributing prizes to students. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/17
Arnold, Matthew to "Dear Sir." January 31, 1877, re: thank you for copy of Rippor Grote's(?) lecture. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/18
Arnold, Matthew to T.O. Russell. June 19, 1878, re: signing memorial with Celtic language on it. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

Arnold, Matthew to T.O'N. Russell, Esq. September 1, 1883, re: lecturing on Irish literature in America. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/19
Arnold, Matthew to Ed(ward) Dannweather (i.e. Danweather). July 22, 1879, re: meeting about son. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/20
Arnold, Matthew to A(lexander) Strahan. December 3, 1879, re: declining to write article on Lefsing(?), returning to Combeth(?) magazine. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/21
Arnold, Matthew to "My dear Mills." June 12, 1880, re: election to Grillin's Club, giving a lecture in Cambridge, views of school systems. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

Arnold, Matthew to "Dear Mills." March 18, 1888, re: inability to meet, Lowell being blackballed. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

Arnold, Matthew to "My dear Mills." June 4, (no year), re: letter from Lowell, Arnold's essay, Sunday Schools. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/22
Arnold, Matthew to W.W. (William Wetmore) Story. October 18, 1882, re: introduction to Mr. and Mrs. Blake. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/23
Arnold, Matthew to Lyulth Stanley. February 15, 1883, re: refusal to go anywhere. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/24
Arnold, Matthew to Dr. (Edward) Everett. December 7, 1883, re: inability to meet. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/25
Arnold, Matthew to Mr. Montefiore (perhaps Claude Joseph Goldsmid Montefiore). December 23, 1885, re: being in Germany, making a speech. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/26
Arnold, Matthew to Miss Crommelin. May 27, 1884, re: use of his life history. ALS, 1 leaf, with envelope and typed transcription.

1/27
Arnold, Matthew to Morris Hudson, Esq. March 25, 1885, re: error in volume of Wordsworth. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/28
Arnold, Matthew to F.H. Hawkins, Esq. September 5, 1885, re: refusal of all invitations. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/29
Arnold, Matthew to Dr. (Wendall) Phillips. January 18, 1886, re: sending volume to Arnold. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/30
Arnold, Matthew to Mrs. Fison. April 12, 1886, re: losing black diary, thank you for the reception. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription. There is a note written on back by someone else re: the funeral of Mr. Arnold's brother-in-law.

1/31
Arnold, Matthew to Mr. Rawnsley. September 10, 1886, re: refusal of library project. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/32
Arnold, Matthew to "My dear Charles," (a schoolfellow of Arnold's at Laleham). April 29, 1887, re: nephew Edward A. Arnold, pressure in the reviews and magazines. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/33
Arnold, Matthew to L.S. Metcalf. December 30, 1887, re: speaking to American and English audiences. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/34
Arnold, Matthew to D. Lothrop, Esq. June 11, (no year), re: arranging a meeting. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/35
Arnold, Matthew to Mrs. Mitchell. February 17 (a Saturday, no year), re: arranging a meeting. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

Arnold, Matthew to Mrs. Mitchell. March 16, (no year), re: meeting with Forsters. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/36
Arnold, Matthew to Lady Reay. February 24 (no year), re: Lord Reay's arrival. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

Arnold, Matthew to Lady Reay. "Thursday" (no other date), re: health, luncheon date. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/37
Arnold, Matthew to (John Daniel) Morell. March 6, (no year), re: death of Morell's wife. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/38
Arnold, Matthew to (Henry Hart) Milman. April 15, (no year), re: Milman's letter, writing Mr. Gray. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/39
Arnold, Matthew to Mrs. Gordon. July 3 (no year), re: dining engagement. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/40
Arnold, Matthew to "My dear Martha" (Buckland). August 3, (no year, possibly 1878), re: Arnold's poems. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/41
Arnold, Matthew to Messrs. Macmillan. August 8, (1881), re: sending Little Byron to Countess Brownlow. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/42
Arnold, Matthew to (George Lillie) Craik. October 20, (no year), re: sending essays to colonists and money to Arnold, luncheon engagement. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/43
Arnold, Matthew to Mr. Elloit. October 21 (no year), re: thank you for list. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/44
Arnold, Matthew to "My dear Mrs. Flower" (Constance de Rothschild, wife of Cyril Flower). November 30, (no year), re: article promised Mr. Knowles, engagement schedule. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/45
Arnold, Matthew to The Revd. F.W. Farrar. December 23, (no year), re: question about speech grammar used at Harrow. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/46
Arnold, Matthew to (Charles Elliot) Norton. Monday, (December 3, 1883), re: schedules, meeting. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/47
Scrap of poem, 3 1/2 lines, written out and signed by Arnold.

1/48
Scrap of paper, torn from Inspectorate Report, with dates of April 7 & 8, 1864, signed by Arnold.

1/49
Signature on folded sheet of letter paper: Matthew Arnold, New York, December 30, 1883.

1/50
Signature on correspondence card: Matthew Arnold. May 19, 1885.

1/51
Arnold, Matthew to Sir William. April 16, 1869, re: review of Arnold's essays, arrival of Italian Prince at Harrow. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/52
Arnold, Matthew to Mr. Bruee. July 9, 1866, re: merits of schoolmasters, Mr. Hardy's letter, successor of Mr. Bruee. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/53
Arnold, Matthew to Miss Kingsley. Undated, re: dining engagement. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

1/54
Postcard photo of painting of Arnold by G.F. Watts, National Portrait Gallery, London.

1/55
Super, Bob [The University of Michigan Department of English Language and Literature] to Donald Dyal. June 12, 1984, re: list of the Matthew Arnold Manuscripts. TLS, 1 leaf.

1/56
Arnold, Matthew to Lord Archbishop Richard Chenevix of Dublin. April 2, 1868, re: giving consent to have some of his work used in the archbishop's collection. ALS, 1 leaf, with typed transcription.

Military Correspondence

S1-1/1: This folder contains the following documents,

  • A - Field Notes. Burns' account of activities in Northern Mexico and Texas borderlands. Handwritten-very difficult to read, 1 leaf, 1 page, circa 1848-1849.
  • B - Letter from W. W. Burns to Major F. J. Porter. Letter from Burns to his commanding officer appealing a negative decision concerning leave requested. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 10 August 1858.
  • C - "Special Orders" from the War Department for Captain William W. Burns. Orders for Burns to take over duties in Subsistence Department at Leavenworth KS. Handwritten Formal Document. 1 leaf, 1 page, 16 February 1861.
  • D - Orders from Head Quarters Department, of Ohio for Captain Wm Craig. Orders for man to transfer-copied to Burns. Handwritten Formal Document. 1 leaf, 1 page, 21 June 1861.
  • E - Letter to Capt. W. W. Burns from R. Macfeely. The letter concerns a discussion about rations and of transferring funds for Volunteers. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 1 page, 5 August 1861.
  • F - Letter from Burns to an unspecified General. The letter discusses troop movements-unsigned, a draft (?) Handwritten, 1 leaf, 23 January 1862.
  • G - Confidential letter to Burns from S. Williams. The letter requests an explanation in regard to a letter written on the 23rd (refers to item 1/6 possibly). Handwritten letter, 1 leaf, 3 February 1862.
  • H - Letter to unspecified General. The letter fully explains the situation requested in the previous Letter G. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 7 February 1862.
  • I - General Orders No. 13. Command to troops to "March toward the enemy." Handwritten, 1 leaf, 15 April 1862.
  • J - Letter (copy) to "Captain J. H. Taylor" from John Sedgwick. Report discussing military maneuvers and strategy. Handwritten, 2 leaves, 31 May 1862 - 1 June 1862.
  • K - Note from J. H. Taylor to "Gen" (copy). The short note discusses a bridge to be built and a wounded officer. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 5 June 1862.
  • L - Letter/ report to Sedgwick from Burns. Discusses military movements and casualties. Handwritten, 1 sheet, 4 leaves, 2 pages, 5 June 1862.
  • M - Letter from S. Williams to Burns. Order to move troops. Handwritten, 1 sheet, 1 leaf, 2 pages, 5 June 1862.
  • N - Battle Narrative "Seven days Fight before Richmond." Journal entries describing battles at Mechanicsville, Gaines' Mill, Peach Orchard, Savages Station, etc. Handwritten, 2 leaves, July 1862.
  • O - Battle Narrative: "Report of the Battles at Orchard Station, Savages, Glendale & Malvern." A lengthy description of engagement. Handwritten. 1 sheet, 2 leaves, 4 pages, 4 July 1862.
  • P - Battle Narrative. Description of engagement of June 29 and 30th as well as July 1 and 2nd. Handwritten, 1 sheet, 1 leaf, 2 pages, 5 July 1862.

S1-1/2: This folder contains the following documents,

  • A - Notebook section. This is a torn-away portion of a ruled notebook (5 ½ X 8 ½). This was written well after the fact and is a report of actions during several battles plus copies of letters. Handwritten, 6 leaves, 12 pages, 6 July 1862.
  • B - "Special Orders" from Head Quarters Dept. of the Potomac granting medical leave for W. W. Burns. Orders for twenty-day medical leave. Formal Printed Document filled-in with handwritten specifics. 1 leaf, 7 July 1862.
  • C - General Order. This appears to be a draft of Burns' farewell to troops after being relieved. Handwritten. 1 leaf, 1 page, 8 July 1862.
  • D - Letter from Brig. General John Sedgwick to S. Williams recommending promotion for Burns. Letter recommending numerous people, including Burns, for promotion. Handwritten Formal document. 1 leaf, 11 July 1862.
  • E - Letter from Burns to Maj. F. A. Walker. "Application for the command of the division now commanded by Brig Genl French." Handwritten, 1 leaf, 29 October 1862.
  • F - Letter from Burns to Adjutant Genl. 9th Corps. The letter describes detail of battle and tactical maneuvers. Handwritten, 1 sheet, 2 leaves, 3 pages, 15 December 1862.
  • G - Letter from Burns to Senator John Sherman. Request for a recommendation for confirmation of the appointment to Major General. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 10 January 1863.
  • H - Letter from Burns to John Sherman et al. Correspondence surrounding Burns' appointment to Major General. Handwritten letters and facsimile transcription (apparently) of other documents-all in Burns' handwriting. 5 leaves, 10 January 1863.
  • I - Fragment of a copy of a telegram from Rosecrans to Burns with Burns' note. Writing concerns the request for Burns to join Rosecrans with a note but this is an incomplete set. Handwritten, 2 leaves, 2 pages, 24 January 1863.
  • J - Letter from Burns to Butterfield. Letter of a formal request for transfer to Rosecrans. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 4 February 1863.
  • K - Special orders: relieving Burns of duty by Hooker. Copy of order in Burns' handwriting. A handwritten formal document, 1 leaf, 7 February 1863.
  • L - Special orders: relieving Burns of duty by Hooker. This is the same text as 1/27, with some discrepancies-an original? In Burns' handwriting but modified? Handwritten formal document. 1 leaf, 7 February 1863.
  • M - General Orders: Burns' farewell to troops before joining Rosecrans. Letter to troops from Burns thanking them for service. Handwritten formal document. 1 leaf, 8 February 1863.

S1-1/3: This folder contains the following document,

  • A - Resignation sent to President A. Lincoln. Mimeographed copies of handwritten formal documents and one typewritten copy of a document on file. 7 leaves, 6 March 1863.
  • This is a problematic set of papers. They are mimeographed (20th century) copies of documents that chronicle the unfortunate events leading to Burns never receiving his supposed appointment to Major General and his resulting decision to resign. Additionally, there is a footnote written by possibly him but in the third person. There is a typed "copy" (Undated) that was alleged to have been written by Sedgwick recommending the appointment.

S1-1/4: This folder contains the following documents,

  • A - Letter from Isaac Wistar to Burns. This letter is from an apparent colleague and implores Burns to reconsider resigning. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 14 March 1863.
  • B - Letter from Isaac Wistar to Burns. This letter is an expansion of the thoughts expressed in the A/ 15 letter. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 21 March 1863.
  • C - Letter from Burns to "Schalk." This may have been written to an Emil Schalk who wrote a book called Summary of the Art of War (1862 or 63?) Lengthy description of Seven Days and Fredericksburg Battles. Handwritten, 2 sheets, 4 leaves, 8 pages, 15 May 1863.
  • D - Letter (apparently) from Burns to a [Fry?]. Rather tersely written letter of inquiry to someone who was, it seems, an intermediary in the non-appointment dealings-possibly James Barnet Fry. Handwritten letter, no signature. 1 leaf, ca. 1863.
  • E - Letter was written by Winfield Scott Hancock after the failed attempt to capture Petersburg by tunneling under the Union lines. It is a firsthand account and is very difficult to read. Handwritten. 1 leaf, 2 pages, 3 August 1864.
  • F - Letter-believed to be from Burns by handwriting comparison-to unknown General. The letter discusses an accompanying campaign document (not with the letter) and references individuals who could either hinder or help. Handwritten letter, no signature. 1 leaf, 21 October 1864.
  • G - Narrative written by Burns. This is another account of his non-appointment debacle. 1 leaf, 4 pages, circa 1865
  • H - Special Orders for Burns. Orders to transfer to Hilton Head S. C. with Subsistence Department. Printed form filled-in with handwriting, 1 leaf, 8 December 1865.
  • I - Letter from James B. Fry to Burns. Letter to Burns in support of his getting an appointment. Handwritten letter. 1 leaf, 2 December 1865.
  • J - Letter from Dent to Burns. The letter refers to someone's sentiments toward Burns. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 17 February 1868.
  • K - Letter from Burns to E. R. S. Canby. The letter refers to some miscommunication concerning the relief of Burns. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 19 February 1868.
  • L - Special Orders No. 195. Orders for Burns to report to duty to Division of the Pacific. Printed Notice, 1 leaf, 26 November 1873.
  • M - Letter from O. E. Babcock to W. W. Burns. Acknowledgment of receipt by President of the document (undoubtedly related to the mysteriously missing appointment) from Burns. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 8 August 1874.
  • N - Letter to O. E. Babcock from Wm. W. Belknap, Secretary of War. The letter is a follow-up to an apparent inquiry made by Babcock on behalf of Burns and his unfulfilled appointment. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 3 October 1874.
  • O - Commission Notice. Form notification from Adjutant General's Office of Burns' being appointed Assistant Commissary General of Subsistence with the rank of Lieutenant Col. Printed form filled-in blanks, 1 leaf, 16 February 1875.
  • P - List of Officers of the Subsistence Department. The printed list includes the name of William W. Burns under Lieutenant-Colonels and as "Chief C. S. Mil Division of the Pacific and the Department of California. Purchasing and Depot C. S. at San Francisco." Printed list, 1 leaf, 1 May 1876.
  • Q - Memorandum from the War Department. The memo is a printed form with blanks to be filled-in concerning missing information on actions in the civil war. This requests information from Burns on the Siege of Yorktown. A printed piece with handwriting, 1 leaf, 28 August 1876.
  • R - Report of the Operations of Burns Brigade at Yorktown to Hon. J. D. Cameron, Secretary of War. Lengthy retrospective and description that was apparently requested by the Secretary's office. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 4 pages, 6 September 1876.
  • S - Clarification letter from Vincent to Burns. Notice of clarification in an erroneous record of absence. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 8 September 1876.
  • T - Burns' journal entry. This is, possibly, a copy of entries taken from the Army Register, but includes and unsigned commentary-handwriting is that of Burns-two copies, one appears to be a draft but has material changes made to the content of the commentary. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 1879.
  • U - Letter from Burns to Hancock. Personal letter. Handwritten. 1 leaf, 3 September 1880.

S1-1/5: This folder contains the following documents,

  • A - Unsigned letter to Committee on Military Affairs from Burns. Possibly a draft of a letter-in Burns' handwriting but unsigned. Handwritten, 1 leaf, circa 1880.
  • B - Letter from Burns to W. S. Hancock. Lengthy letter of explanation of "what happened" concerning his promotion, or lack thereof. Handwritten, 3 leaves, circa 1880.
  • C - Narrative concerning the Peninsular Campaign. This appears to be an incomplete draft of something written to answer someone's inquiry (Urbb? Webb?). Handwritten, 3 leaves, 3 pages, circa 1881.
  • D - Letter from Burns to General W. L. Sherman. Another appeal concerning Burns' non-appointment. Handwritten letter, 1 leaf, February 1881.
  • E - Letter to Burns from General W. L Sherman. An apparent response to item 1/55. Handwritten letter, 2 leaves, 20 February 1881.
  • F - Letter from M. Halstead to W. W. Burns. The letter is a copy of another, presumably, because it is in Burns' handwriting. 1 leaf, 11 June 1881.
  • G - Letter to "The President" from W. D. Bickham. Letter of reference for Burns. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 30 June 1881.
  • H - Letter from Burns to "The President." Letter of appeal for Major General Commission. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 1 July 1881.
  • I - Statement. Journal entry writing style but does not appear to be Burns' handwriting. Handwritten. 3 leaves, circa 1881.
  • J - Letter from Burns to General Rosecrans. Letter of explanation and reassurance that the battle of Chickamauga was not his fault. Handwritten letter. 3 leaves glued along the edge to bind together, 25 February 1882.
  • K - Notice. Formal notice to Burns of commission as Colonel and Asst. Commissary General of Subsistence. Form filled-in with handwriting. 1 leaf, 8 January 1885.
  • L - Letter from Burns to Sec of War, Endicott. Another appeal concerning the non-appointment to Major General. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 21 January 1886.
  • M - Formal Notice of Burns' retirement. Printed notice of retirement from active duty "by command of Major General Schofield: Chauncy McKeever, Acting Adjutant General." *NOTE: Backside of notice has a lengthy handwritten statement in what seems like that of an older person… in pencil. Reads like a psychological or character profile describing the personality and habits of, presumably, Burns? Author unknown but could be Burns' own synopsis of himself. Printed and Handwritten in pencil, 1 leaf, 4 September 1889.
  • N - Retrospective narrative of Burns' career. Written in the third person, this incomplete narrative was written by Burns (judging from the handwriting). Handwritten. 1 sheet, 2 leaves, 2 pages, circa 1889.
  • O - "Extract from Cincinnati Commercial." Burns apparently copied a portion of a news article from the newspaper. Handwritten, 1 leaf, Undated.
  • P - Incomplete letter from Burns; receiver unknown. The narrative concerns a battle at Malvern. Handwritten. 1 sheet, 2 leaves, 1 page, Undated.
  • Q - Statement in Burns' handwriting concerning his retirement. Reads like a draft of a legislative resolution. Handwritten, 1 leaf, Undated.
  • R - Copied battle description. This appears to be a copy made by Burns in his later years-possibly an excerpt from a book written by Charles Banes. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 2 pages, Undated.
  • S - Statement in Burns' handwriting concerning retirement having been wounded in action. Reads like a draft of a legislative resolution. Handwritten, 1 leaf, Undated.
  • T - Copy of battle description almost verbatim to 1/69. This document is another copy from, presumably, the book written by Charles M. Bane titled: The History of the Philadelphia Brigade…. Handwritten, 1 sheet, four leaves, 2 pages, Undated.
  • U - Statement in Burns' handwriting concerning retirement and retention of rank. Reads like a draft of a legislative resolution. Handwritten, 1 leaf, Undated.
  • V - Statement made to Genl McClellan upon which he wrote his endorsement of Genls Sumner and Sedgwick's recommendation." This is a report of Savages Station and Glendale made to McClellan. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 1 page, Undated.
  • W - Printed copy of Act. Same as referred to in 1/72 along with handwritten revision as a footnote by Burns. Handwritten page, 1 leaf, Undated.
  • X - "Salient Points to Peninsular Campaigns." Memorandum written by Burns. Handwritten, 1 leaf, 1 page, Undated.
  • Y - Personal statement. It seems to be a portion of something larger…narrative of Burns' career. Judging by the T-bars in the handwriting, this is a match to that in 1/64 and is most likely not that of Burns. Handwritten page, 2 leaves, Undated.
  • Z - Personal statement. Narrative written by Burns. Handwritten page. 1 leaf, Undated.
  • AA - "Etat de service in Command of Volunteer Troops…." A lengthy partial chronology of Burns' war-time career (1861-1863). Handwritten, 2 Sheets, 8 leaves, 8 pages, Undated.
  • BB - Notebook section. This is a torn-away portion of a ruled notebook (5 ½ X 8 ½). This was written well after the fact and is a report of actions during several battles plus copies of letters. Handwritten, 6 leaves, 12 pages, Undated.
  • CC - Statement in Burns' handwriting concerning his retirement. Reads like a draft of a legislative resolution. Handwritten, 1 leaf, Undated.
  • DD - "Savages Station" and "Nelson's farm- 'Glendale'." Brief descriptions of these two battles. Handwritten, 2 leaves, 1 page, Undated.
  • EE - Map sowing unknown battlefield layout. Hand-drawn in pencil with ink notations, 1 leaf, 1 page, Undated.

Abstracts by Land Owner Name (Ro - Sp)

  • TxAM-CRS C000492-6
  • Box
  • 1849 - 1880
  • Part of J. W. Batts

6/1: Abstracts - Samuel W. Robertson, February 1849 - June 1878

6/2: Abstracts - Joseph E. Scott Part 1, January 1853 - July 1871

6/3: Abstracts - Joseph E. Scott Part 2, August 1872 - January 1880; Undated

6/4: Abstracts - Sherman, April 1861 - September 1864

6/5: Abstracts - J. M. Splane, May 1869 - November 1876

6/6: Abstracts - Minster Springs, January 1872 - February 1876

6/7: Abstracts - Unidentifiable, Undated

Thomas Affleck's Southern Rural Almanacs

A13-10
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1851 by Thomas Affleck. 1 original book, some pages missing.

A13-20
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1851 by Thomas Affleck. 1 original book, some pages missing.

A13-20
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac (probably 1851) by Thomas Affleck. 1 original book, some pages missing.

A13-30
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1852 by Thomas Affleck. 3 original books, some pages missing.

A13-40
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1856 by Thomas Affleck. 1 original book, some pages missing.

A13-50
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1857 by Thomas Affleck. 1 original book, some pages missing.

A13-60
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1858 by Thomas Affleck. 1 original book, some pages missing.

A13-70
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 2 original books, some pages missing.

A13-80
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 1 reprinted book.

A13-90
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1855 by Thomas Affleck. 2 leaves. The attached note states these two leaves are all that can be found of the 1855 edition.

A13-100
Catalog of Fruit and Ornamental Trees and Plants Cultivated at The Southern Nurseries. By Thomas Affleck. 1851 edition. 2 copies.

Thomas Affleck's Southern Rural Almanacs

A14-10
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1851, 1952, 1953, and 1954 by Thomas Affleck. Original editions bound into one volume.

A14-20
Bee Breeding in the West by Thomas Affleck. Published by E. Lucas, Cincinnati, 1841. 1 original copy, hardcover. Handwritten inscription states "T.A., Personal Copy."
Material inside (2x): Newspaper clipping regarding beekeeping. Possibly from a Dumfries paper, and 1.5 leaves from Southern Rural Almanac.

A14-30
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 2 original books, some pages missing.

A14-40
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 2 original books, pages missing in both books.

A14-50
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 2 original books, some pages missing.

A14-60
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 2 original books, some pages missing.

A14-70
Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac for 1860 by Thomas Affleck. 2 original books, some pages missing.

A14-80
Portions of Affleck's Southern Rural Almanac by Thomas Affleck. undated

Theses and Manuscripts

2/1
"A History of Texas Artists and Sculptors", Frances B. Fisk. [Abilene, TX: Privately Printed, 1928]. (copy)

2/2
"The Creative Arts in Texas, A Handbook of Biography", Goldie Capers Smith. [Dallas: Cokesbury Press, 1926]. (copy)

2/3
Brewerton File, "Brewerton Court-Martial Record", 1852 (related 2/4-2/5)

2/4
Brewerton File, "A Brief History of the Lower Rio Grande Valley" by Frank C. Pierce. 1917 (wooden front and back cover handmade in the Dominican Republic) (related 2/3, 2/5)

2/5
Brewerton File, "Mexican War Veterans" by Wm. Hugh Robarts, 1887. (related 2/3-2/4)

2/6
Fort Duncan Restoration Association 1994-1996

2/7
"Art and Artists of Texas", Esse F. O'Brien [Dallas: Tardy Publishing Co., 1935] (partial copy)

2/8
Scrapbook, Department of Architecture, Texas Tech University, Lubbock - Art in Texas Towns and Cities (photocopies of new articles)

2/9
Thesis, "History of the Growth of Art Interest in Texas in the Last Two Decades" by Jess Edith Self, 1941.

2/10
Thesis, "History of the Fort Worth Art Association" by Resa C. Oglesby, 1950.

2/11
Report Thesis, "Murals and Sculpture of the Public Works of Art Project and the Treasury Section in the Southwest" by Mallory B. Randle, 1967.

2/12
Thesis, "The History of the TCV Art Department through 1969" by Leon Wilson, 1970.

2/13
"The Women Who Challenged: Interviews with Nine Artists" by Paul Rogers Harris, 1990.

2/14
Thesis, "Advocating Art: The Texas Fine Arts Association, 1911-1943" by Edward Eugene Prohaska, 1993.

2/15
Typescript, "The Light-Hearted Recollections of an Octogenarian" by Leslie Howard Turner, 1996.

2/16
Typescript, "Biographical Sketches of Fifteen Texas Artists", Caroline Remy, Center for American History, University of Texas, Austin, 1966

2/17
"History of the Dallas Print & Drawing Collectors Society" by Violet Hayden Dowell, undated

2/18 - 2/24
Manuscripts, undated

P. Scott Regressions

2/01: Regression charts 1852, 1856

2/02: Regression charts 1852, 1857

2/03: Regression charts 1856, 1857

2/04: Regression charts 1852, 1858

2/05: Regression charts 1856, 1858

2/06: Regression charts 1857, 1858

2/07: Regression charts 1852, 1859

2/08: Regression charts 1856, 1859

2/09: Regression charts 1857, 1859

2/10: Regression charts 1858, 1859

2/11: Regression charts 1852, 1859 Congressional

2/12: Regression charts 1856, 1859 Congressional

2/13: Regression charts 1857, 1859 Congressional

2/14: Regression charts 1858, 1859 Congressional

2/15: Regression charts 1859 Congressional and Gubernatorial

2/16: Regression charts 1852, 1860

2/17: Regression charts 1856, 1860

2/18: Regression charts 1857, 1960

2/19: Regression charts 1858, 1860

2/20: Regression charts 1859, 1860 Gubernatorial

2/21: Regression charts 1859, 1860 Congressional

2/22: Regression charts 1852, 1861

2/23: Regression charts 1856, 1861

2/24: Regression charts 1857, 1861

2/25: Regression charts 1858, 1861

2/26: Regression charts 1859, 1861 Gubernatorial

2/27: Regression charts 1859, 1861 Congressional

2/28: Regression charts 1860, 1861

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