226 resultados para Letters.
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Two letters explaining the elder William Tudor’s debts.
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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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Two letters requesting General Knox’s removal from the Tudor family residence at Franklin Place.
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Two letters regarding Lee’s business activities and an offer to help Tudor find a commercial position in Europe.
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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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Four letters in which Otis relays his thoughts on the Boston judicial system and losing his Senate seat in 1822. Also included is correspondence responding to Tudor’s request for information on his uncle, James Otis.
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Two letters regarding commissions executed by Tudor on her behalf and on behalf of Elizabeth Degen.
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Four letters relaying information about Russell’s travels and social activities, including her observations on the manners of Southerners she had encountered.
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Three letters in which Sedgwick writes about education, the arts, and various social interactions.
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Three letters relaying news of Spear’s travels and friends. She also offers frank romantic advice to Tudor, particularly regarding a young lady he met in Baltimore, Miss Patterson.
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Six letters in which Vaughan writes about prominent scientists, artists, and musicians, such as violinist Louis Ostinelli and engraver Jacob Perkins. Other topics include social interactions with Tudor’s sisters Delia Tudor Stewart and Emma Tudor Gardiner, and Emma’s husband, Robert Hallowell Gardiner.
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Three letters regarding James Otis correspondence in the John Dickinson papers, and an American Philosophical Society publication Vaughan was sending to the Boston Athenaeum library.