986 resultados para Abington, Mrs. (Frances Barton), 1737-1815.
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Arancel de derechos de aduana y navegación marítima del Reyno de Francia /por Mr. Magnien.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Partial transcription: Buffalo, August 15, 1815 This day settled all accounts between… respecting the purchase and sailing of the Schooner Ranger until she was laid up in the fare of 1811. For the value of the…of the said Schooner destroyed by the enemy in January 1813 and the rigging & c taken by the U.S. Navy Officers for the use of the Government a [Joint][appreciation] is to be made... Government for our mutual benefit. Porter & Barton for [the firm] of Porter Barton & Co. George Kibbe
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Letter (2 typed pages) to Mrs. Percy Band from Donald E. Loker, former American History master of the DeVeaux School, Niagara Falls, New York. Mr. Loker is enquiring about Maria and Sarah Woodruff. Samuel DeVeaux was married twice. He married Maria Woodruff, and after her death in 1815, he married her widowed sister, Sarah Woodruff, 1962.
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Letter (2 page typed form letter with a handwritten note from Don Loker) regarding a special service held by DeVeaux School to re-inter the body of Mrs. Maria Woodruff, the first wife of Judge Samuel DeVeaux. Her body was originally buried at DeVeaux School in Niagara Falls, New York. The location of the ceremony was the cemetery in St. Davids, Ontario. Maria died on April 23, 1815 at the age of 19. This notice was sent by Rev. Alec Pudwell, chaplain of DeVeaux School, Niagara Falls, New York, May 6, 1963.
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The Mrs. J. Palmer Lockwood Journal consists of a 76 page journal kept by Mrs. J. Palmer (Leize) Lockwood concerning how the poem Carolina by Henry Timrod became the South Carolina state song. There is also a description of how Mrs. Lockwood worked to popularize the song, three copies of Timrod’s poem, and a copy of a poem titled “Carolina” by Mary Frances Wickliffe, Winthrop faculty member from 1895 to 1919.
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Resumen: Descripción: retrato de Ana Grant de tres cuartos de figura mirando de frente y con unas gafas en la mano
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Includes sketches by Thackeray and quotations from Thackeray's letters
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Caption title: A statement of the circumstances attending the last illness of Joanna Southcott.
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v. 6. The village convict, by C. H. White. The Denver express, by A. A. Hayes. The misfortunes of Bro' Thomas Wheatley, by Lina R. Fairfax. The heartbreak cameo, by L. W. Champney. Miss Eunice's glove, by A. Webster. Brother Sebastian's friendship, by H. Frederic.--v. 7. The bishop's vagabond, by Octave Thanet. Lost, by E. Bellamy. Kirby's coals of fire, by Louise Stockton. Passages from the journal of a social wreck, by Margaret Floyd. Stella Grayland, by J. T. McKay. The image of San Donato, by Virginia W. Johnson.--v. 8. The brigade commander, by J. W. De Forest. Split zephyr, by H. A. Beers. Zerviah Hope, by Elizabeth S. Phelps. The life-magnet, by A. A. Adee. Osgood's predicament, by Elizabeth D. B. Stoddard.--v. 9. Marse Chan, by T. N. Page. Mr. Bixby's Christmas visitor, by C. S. Gage. Eli, by C. H. White. Young Strong of "The Clarion," by Milicent W. Shinn. How old Wiggins wore ship, by Captain R. T. Coffin. "--mas has come," by L. Kip.--v. 10. Pancha, by T. A. Janvier. The ablest man in the world, by E. P. Mitchell. Young Moll's peevy, by C. A. Stephens. Manmat'ha, by C. De Kay. A daring fiction, by H. H. Boyesen. The story of two lives, by Julia Schayer.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Note concerning portraits of Barton: p. 34.
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Appendix contains brief sketch of the author.