34 resultados para Palmer family (George Palmer, 1795-1834).
em Harvard University
Resumo:
This layer is a digital raster graphic of the historic 15-minute USGS topographic map of the Palmer, Massachusetts quadrangle. The survey date (ground condition) of the original paper map is 1886-1887, the edition date is June, 1893 and this map has a reprint date of 1941. A digital raster graphic (DRG) is a scanned image of a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) standard series topographic map, including all map collar information. The image inside the map neatline is geo-referenced to the surface of the earth and fit to the Universal Transverse Mercator projection. The horizontal positional accuracy and datum of the DRG matches the accuracy and datum of the source map.
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One-leaf handwritten draft of a Croswell genealogy begun by William Croswell in 1812.
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One-page letter from Croswell to George Richards, the Pastor of the Universal Society in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, requesting information about teaching opportunities in the area.
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One leaf containing the response of Pastor George Richards to Croswell's September 1, 1794, request for information on teaching opportunities.
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One-page letter from Croswell to Dr. Dingley in New York City, requesting information on teaching opportunities in the area.
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Note regarding the return of Mrs. Crocker's books.
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Draft of a letter requesting to borrow a treatise.
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This folder contains three receipts.
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This paper notebook contains six pages of financial entries made by Croswell between 1795 and 1800, followed by a bibliographical plan for the arrangement of the Harvard College Library, dated September 1822.
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This diary, which John Henry Tudor titled A Registry of College Adventures, documents his life as a student at Harvard College. The entries describe his daily activities and notable events, including trips to the theater, hunting outings to "shoot Robbins," adventures with other students in local taverns, visits with his family in Boston and at the family estate, Rockwood, and the illumination of Cambridge in honor of George Washington's birthday. Tudor created and recorded a humorous classology, describing his peers at Harvard in a sometimes scathing manner, and also recorded information about those obliged to leave the College, usually following pranks or other unacceptable behavior. He also recounts his own involvement in pranks and other antics, which he believed to be the only antidote to the dullness of college life, and in one entry he describes an evening when he and several friends "disguised [them]selves like Negroes" and wandered into scholars' rooms without detection. Tudor was a member of the Hasty Pudding Club and the Porcellian Club ("the Pig club") while at Harvard and describes club meetings in several entries. There are also more reflective and personal entries, describing Tudor's feelings about his aging grandmother, his brother William's departure for Holland, and his desire for a "wife who shall make [him] happy[,] an affectionate dog [and] a farm & garden."
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One-page brief handwritten letter requesting Baldwin appear in Cambridge in his capacity as a member of the committee for examining the senior and junior classes.
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One-page brief handwritten letter requesting Baldwin attend an examination and committee meeting.