962 resultados para Anonymous letters.
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Three letters regarding various bills to be paid.
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Three letters regarding book shipments and the advantages to shipping goods from Paris.
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Two letters, signed John B. Sartori, the founder of the first spaghetti factory in the United States, regarding the production and sales of pasta.
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Two letters regarding Tudor’s account with Schwartz and diplomatic news.
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Four letters about goods and foodstuffs Tudor sold through the firm, including cocoa. Also includes reports on market trends.
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Four letters regarding prices current, the impact of tensions between England and France on speculation, and market demands for items like cocoa, cochineal, and codfish.
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Four letters regarding market demand for items like sugar and coffee, and prices current. Two letters include duplicate correspondence from Gothard Martini and John A. Morton, whose firm Martini joined after Strobel & Martini apparently dissolved.
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Four letters regarding the "miserable" sales of Tudor’s cocoa and various financial transactions.
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Four letters regarding billings, the movements of Tudor’s cargo, and sundry items Tudor ordered through the firm.
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Two letters regarding bills outstanding.
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Four letters regarding a shipment of fish, and market for flour and wheat. Includes one duplicate letter, and two bills of lading.
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Two letters, one regarding accounts related to the Birmingham nail factory, and one letter in which Williams writes of becoming naturalized and finding a wife.
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Two letters regarding payment of bills.
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Document certifying Mercein as proprietor legally deposited a copy of Tudor’s book. Docketed on the verso, "For value received, I transfer the within to William Tudor, Esq. William A. Mercein July 31, 1820"
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Five letters discussing the political atmosphere in South America and offering information on the Brazilian emperor and Austrian minister and news of visitors he received.