59 resultados para Brookfield, William Henry, 1809-1874
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This folder contains five bills and receipts.
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This folder contains eight handwritten account statements and notes primarily related to the collection of subscriptions for Croswell's maps and pamphlets, as well as the disbursement and storage of his printed maps and pamphlets.
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Contains an itemized list of costs for painting and glazing tasks to be completed and supplies needed by Watson for Holden Chapel. Tasks include painting Doctor Warren's room twice, painting window sashes and shutters, transporting glass from Boston, and setting each window pane. Supplies needed include oil, white lead, and putty.
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Floor plan of renovations for the first floor of Hollis Hall, as drawn by William Rotch Ware in 1874. Includes dimensions for student chambers, hallways, and coal furnaces.
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Floor plan of renovations for the second floor of Hollis Hall, as drawn by William Rotch Ware in 1874. Includes dimensions for proctor's rooms, student chambers, hallways, and coal furnaces.
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Floor plan of renovations for the third and fourth floors of Hollis Hall, as drawn by William Rotch Ware in 1874. Includes dimensions for Pi Eta Society rooms, student chambers, hallways, and coal furnaces.
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Floor plan of renovations for the first floor of Stoughton Hall, as drawn by William Rotch Ware in 1874. Includes dimensions for student chambers, hallways, and coal furnaces.
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Floor plan of renovations for the second floor of Stoughton Hall, as drawn by William Rotch Ware in 1874. Includes dimensions for student chambers, proctor's rooms, hallways, and coal furnaces.
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Floor plan of renovations for the third and fourth floors of Stoughton Hall, as drawn by William Rotch Ware in 1874. Includes dimensions for student chambers, H.P. Club Rooms, hallways, and coal furnaces.
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Hand-sewn marbled paper binding. Catalogue interleaved with unlined pages holding occasional biographical notes. Annotations appear to be written in more than one hand.
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Hand-sewn marbled paper binding. Catalogue interleaved with unlined pages holding occasional biographical notes.
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President Edward Holyoke and Tutors Henry Flynt, Joseph Mayhew, and Thomas Marsh accused Prince of "sundry crimes & misdemeanors" and "sundry evil actions," including weakening and undermining the College government, showing contempt towards his fellow Tutors and towards Hollis Professor John Winthrop (who he claimed "knew no more of Philosophy than a Brute"), and making insulting remarks on numerous occasions. Prince was accused of calling others "Fool, Rogue, Rascal, Puppy &c." and of calling Col. Brattle "a Devilish Lyar." He was also accused of "appearing often times, to be what is commonly stil'd the worse for Drink" and of neglecting his duties towards his students.
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Brattle claims to have heard Prince say, in regard to Henry Flynt, that "he hop'd to have an opportunity to stomp upon his grave" and that fellow Tutor Daniel Rogers was "a Cursed Fellow, Ignoramus, Blockhead, and that he was not fit to be admitted a freshman."
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This legal agreement, a guarantee of financial support for entering student James Savage (A.B. 1803), was signed on July 25, 1799 by his two guarantors, William Tudor and John Cooper. The document was also signed by two witnesses, William Tudor's sons John Henry Tudor and Frederic Tudor. The agreement specifies that, in the event of Savage's failure to settle all financial obligations to the President and Fellows of Harvard College during the course of his studies, the two guarantors would be responsible for a payment of two hundred ounces of silver. It seems that the Tudors and Cooper were relatives of Savage, thus explaining their desire to assure his entry to Harvard by entering into this financial obligation.
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Handwritten receipts for fees and debts collected.