93 resultados para Tilmon, Levin, 1807-1863.

em Harvard University


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This brief handwritten note, signed by the parent of a Liverpool student, certifies Croswell's proficiency as an instructor.

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Draft of an agreement between Croswell and Turner related to their evening school in Liverpool.

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Printed advertisement for the evening classes of William Croswell and Charles Turner in Liverpool with handwritten notes on the verso.

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One-page draft of a letter from Croswell, in Liverpool, to James White of London requesting help in finding work.

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This folder contains five bills and receipts for purchases made by William Croswell in Liverpool, England.

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One-page document containing a draft of a proposal for subscriptions for the printing of a celestial map.

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This folder contains a broadside with an 1807 printed proposal for a Mercator celestial map that is appended with a handwritten list of subscribers, dated December 1810, as well as two copies of printed recommendations for the map.

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This folder contains five documents related to Croswell's voyage and stay in Liverpool, England.

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This document, signed by 108 students, contains a confession for their part in the 1807 student rebellion. Students were required to sign this confession in order to avoid expulsion.

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Written in defense of the students’ actions, this publication sought to clear the students in the eyes of the public. They argued against the stern disciplinary stance of the Corporation, warning that "it is possible to kill the spirt by too rigorous an adherence to the letter of the law." According to the students, the cause of the upheaval was the "black, nauseous and intolerable" food served in Commons. Although they admitted that there were some students who "delight in mischief, anarchy, and confusion," they argued against the whole student body being charged for the crimes. Instead, they held that their offense, "retiring peaceably from the hall," should be punished, as usual, only by the "small fine of fifty or one hundred cents."

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Draft of a report written by a Committee of the Corporation, appointed at the meeting on April 3 "to consider the expediency of making further regulations relative to Commons."

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This report expressed the opinion of the Committee that, despite the students' complaints, Commons should be not changed in any meaningful regard (save for the method of purchasing beef). Among other reasons for explaining the inflexible position of the Corporation, they stated, “alacrity, cheerfulness and docility are the companions of temperance; petulance, disquietude and perverseness are the intractable offspring of indulgence.” In addition, they suggested that students should refrain from sampling delicacies in town to better appreciate the "plain, simple, and wholesome food of the hall."

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Accompanies report dated May 19, 1807.

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Published copy of the 1807 College Laws with the admittatur of undergraduate Simeon Putnam signed by President Samuel Webber on September 23, 1807.