987 resultados para Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 1806-1861.
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William Van Every, son of McGregory and Mary Wilcox (Jaycocks) Van Every, was born in New York state in 1765. During the Revolutionary War he joined Butler’s Rangers and served under Captain John McDonnell. He was granted three lots of land in the Township of Niagara, with additional lands granted at later dates. William married Elizabeth, daughter of George Young. Elizabeth was the widow of Col. Frederick Dochstader and mother of Catherine Dochstader, b. 1781. William Van Every died in 1832, his wife Elizabeth in 1851. Both are buried in the Warner Cemetery, in present day Niagara Falls. The children of William Van Every and Elizabeth Young were Mary, Elizabeth, Phoebe, John, Peter, William, Rebecca, Samuel and Joseph. Source: Mary Blackadar Piersol, The Records of the Van Every Family, Toronto : Best Printing, 1947. And, Patricia M. Orr, Historic Woodend, sponsored by Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority, 1980?
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UANL
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliographical footnotes.
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Covers, ads, prospectus, etc. Philadelphia: 1806-24. 1 v. 8vo.
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Contains songs from "Paracelsus," and from "Pippa passes," selections from: "Dramatic lyrics," "Dramatic romances," "Men and women," "Dramatis personae," "Pacchiarotto, with other poems," "Dramatic idyls," "Jocoseria" and "Asolando."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes recipes for wine, mead, and other liquors; illustrations of kitchen stoves using coal; illustrations of layout of dishes for multi-course meal. Sample recipes: To bake herrings, To make cream pancakes, To make a blanc-mange of isinglass, To make cowslip wine.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"The earlier portion is derived from letters, many of them originals, deposited in The Cottonian and Harleian collections in the British museum. The latter portion is transcribed from a contemporaneous manuscript [owned by John Bowes ... of Streatlam castle]"--Pref., p. ix.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Sequel and conclusion to the author's Coke of Norfolk and his friends, 1906; and Annals of a Yorkshire house, 1911.
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"Appendix to the Rev. D. Coker's Journal" (pages [41]-52) includes "Letter from Nathaniel Peck to his mother in Baltimore".