| 22 | Author: | Kane, Eliza | Add | | Title: | Letter inviting Mrs. Brown and Miss Linn to tea, n.d. | | | Published: | 1996 | | | Description: | Permit me to request the favor of
Mrs. Brown & Miss Linn's company
to tea this evening. I expect Mrs.
Bayard and the addition of your
society will contribute much to
the happiness of your friend. | | Similar Items: | Find |
23 | Author: | Knowes, Edward C. | Add | | Title: | Letter to Mrs. Fannie Grimes, March 2, 1871 [a machine-readable transcription] | | | Published: | 1996 | | | Description: | The sisters of one Henry. R. Brooks, deceased Pvt of Company
"G"
23d
U.S. Colored Troops having made a Claim
against the U.S. Government for the Bounty &c
due the above named soldier, it is necessary
for the claimants to furnish evidence of two persons
who write showing that the said soldier left
surviving him no widow, child, or children,
father, mother, brother, or sister other than the
applicants,=Julia Washington, Luberta and
Jane Brooks,=and that said named sisters
and the deceased soldier were children of the
same mother | | Similar Items: | Find |
32 | Author: | Hamilton, Alexander | Add | | Title: | Letter to Angelica Schuyler Church (November 8, 1789) [a
machine-readable transcription] | | | Published: | 1996 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | UVA-LIB-ASChurchletters | | | Description: | After taking leave of you on board of the Packet, I hastened home to sooth
and console your sister.[1] I found her in bitter
distress; though much recovered from the agony, in which she had been, by
the kind cares of M.rs
Bruce[2] and the Baron.[3] After composing her by a flattering picture of
your prospects for the voyage and a strong
infusion of hope, that she had not taken a last farewell of you; The
Baron little Phillip[4]
and myself, with her consent, walked down to the Battery, where with aching
hearts and anxious eyes we saw your vessel, in full sail, swiftly bearing
our loved friend from our embraces. Imagine what we felt. We gazed, we
sighed, we wept; and casting "many a lingering
longing look behind" returned home to give scope to our sorrows, and
mingle without restraint, our tears and our regrets. The good Baron
has more than ever rivetted himself in my affection : to observe his
unaffected solicitude and see his old eyes brimful of sympathy has
something in it that won my whole soul and filled me with more than usual
complacency for human nature. Amiable Angelica!
how much you are formed to endear yourself to every good heart. How deeply
you have rooted yourself in the affections of your friends on this side the
Atlantic! Some of us are and must continue
inconsolable for your absence. | | Similar Items: | Find |
35 | Author: | Hamilton, Elizabeth | Add | | Title: | Letter to Angelica Schuyler Church (n.d.) [a machine-readable
transcription] | | | Published: | 1996 | | | Subjects: | University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | UVA-LIB-ASChurchletters | | | Description: | My very Dear beloved Angelica I have seated my
self to write to you, but my heart is so sadend by your Absence that
it can scarcly dictate, my Eyes so filled with tears that I shall not be
able to write you much but Remember. Remember.
my Dear sister of the Assurances of your returning to us, and do all
you can to make your Absence short. tell Mr. Church
for me of the happiness he will give me, in bring- =ing you to me, not to me alone but to fond parents
sisters friends and to my Hamilton who has for you all the affection
of a fond own Brother. I can no more. | | Similar Items: | Find |
|