50 resultados para Wheeler, William A. (William Almon), 1819-1887
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One letter requesting information Tudor may have regarding minerals for Cleaveland’s second edition of his treatise on mineralogy and geology. Also includes a two-page description of Gay Head by Frederic Tudor.
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One letter regarding the death of Tudor’s father and the acreage of his estate.
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Three letters regarding Tudor’s literary works.
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Four letters on topics including Gilman’s literary work, his upcoming move to Charleston, South Carolina, to become pastor of a Unitarian church, and his impressions of the city once there, as well as subscriptions for Tudor’s work on James Otis.
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Two letters explaining the elder William Tudor’s debts.
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One letter requesting information on the state of national agriculture, manufacturing, and industry on behalf of the Philadelphia Society for the Promotion of National Industry.
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Four letters regarding the construction of an Episcopal church in Boston, and the various literary and intellectual pursuits of both men.
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One letter inquiring if the president corresponded with James Otis, or if he was aware of any fellow Virginians who had contact with Otis while he was alive. Tudor was seeking to obtain letters, or extracts of letters, that Otis had written. Following the onset of mental illness, Otis destroyed his personal papers, leaving few original materials documenting his life and career.
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One letter regarding a meeting between the elder William Tudor and the King of England at the Court of Saint James.
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Five letters in which Lee relays his efforts to obtain a political appointment for Tudor from President James Monroe. He also reports on the activities of Tudor’s brother-in-law, Charles Stewart, and a meeting between John Quincy Adams and Tudor’s brother-in-law, Robert Hallowell Gardiner.
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Two letters regarding Tudor’s research into James Otis.
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Two letters on topics such as Mason’s search for original documents relating to the Constitution and the admission of Missouri to the union as a slave state.
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Two letters expressing condolences for the death of the elder William Tudor and thanking Tudor for his concern over an unnamed affliction of McCauley. McCauley also includes in both letters bank drafts for Delia Tudor Stewart.
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One letter, written from London, regarding an exhibition of Newton’s art and improvements of the English School in cabinet painting.
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One letter regarding an "unpleasant" reserve between them.