104 resultados para thesis and papers.
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One letter requesting Tudor’s assistance with a financial transaction.
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One letter sent from Valparaiso, Chile, noting the achievement of peace between Peru and Colombia, and the status of the presidency in Chile. Swett also writes regarding the prospects of the Chanca silver mine and offers updates on two of the other partners in the enterprise, Nixon and McCall.
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One letter thanking Tudor for his assistance with Rio de Janeiro port authorities.
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One letter requesting assistance with sending a sick American citizen back to the United States.
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Two letters thanking Tudor for sending Peruvian mineral specimens to Harvard and requesting he send additional mineral and fossils, as well as reports on other "natural phenomena" for publication.
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Letter enclosed with correspondence to Tudor from the United States.
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Four letters addressed to Tudor, one letter addressed to B. Llaveria. In Spanish.
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Six letters in Spanish.
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Legal document from Commonwealth of Massachusetts relating to the case between John Dorr and Paschal P. Pope; it empowers Tudor to take the depositions of Eliphalet Smith and Henry D. Tracy, and includes questions by the attorneys for each, Charles Loring (Pope, defendant) and Bradford Summers (Dorr, plaintiff).
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Proclamation signed by Condy Raguet and Thomas Bedwell, Jr., listing five resolutions adopted by a meeting of American citizens in Rio de Janeiro in celebration of the visit of the Marquis de Lafayette to the United States.
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One list of costs related to the mine. In Spanish.
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Public proclamation, signed by Cesareo Sanchez. In Spanish.
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Undated narrative by an American scribe detailing the events of the 1822 Chilean Revolution.
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Consists of seven account books kept by Dr. Sylvester Woodbridge (1754-1824) from 1792 until his death containing entries that record charges for medical visits and administration of medicines, and sales of sundry and grocery items, as well as occasional personal notes and the names of Woodbridge's apprentices and their participation in his Southampton, Massachusetts, medical practice. Woodbridge's methods of treatment were typical for the era: he most commonly prescribed vomits and purgatives for patients. Volume 6 contains loose pages and letterbooks tucked in related to accounting and to the amount and type of wood Woodbridge was buying for his house, and papers dated after his death.