342,394 research outputs found

    Thomas B. Catron's corrections for statehood bill

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    Thomas B. Catron's corrections for statehood bil

    Letter from Thomas B. Hall, Camp Beauregard, Alabama, to cousin Mary, [presumably in Mobile, Alabama], September 17, 1861

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    Mr. Thomas B. Hall arrived in Camp Beauregard, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, a few days before writing his cousin. He tells of his journey, acquaintances, drills, sore feet, good food, and good life. The only thing that he misses is seeing the fairer sex. He reminisces about a summer visit with Cousin Mary as well as an attempt to see her in Montgomery

    Letter from Thomas B. Hall, Union City, Tennessee, to cousin Mary, [presumably in Mobile, Alabama], September 28, 1861

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    Mr. Thomas B. Hall arrived at midnight to a camp near Union City, Tennessee. He writes of the hardships endure while traveling. In camp, he feels blue and does not know anyone in his company from two weeks earlier. Movement of the enemy and his company is given. If his company had gotten to camp earlier, they would have been involved in a fight at Fulton

    Letter from S. Y. Thomas, Yorkville, Tennessee, to Jane B. Ireland, Richmond, Virginia, July 11, 1848

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    A letter from S. Y. Thomas, of Yorkville, Tennessee, to his sister Jane B. Ireland, of Richmond, Virginia, dated July 11, 1848, which discusses family matters, family deaths, illness in the vicinity, religion, and the 1848 presidential election

    Bernard Williams

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    An edited multi-author volume assessing the moral philosophy of the late British philosopher Bernard Williams. Contributors: Adrian Moore, John Skorupski, Alan Thomas, Robert B Louden, Michael Stocker, A. A. Long, Edward Crai

    Thomas-Prescott Letter : March 1864

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    B. H. Thomas is responding to the Reid Institute's unwillingness to fund an applicant named Thompson. Thomas is upset because he thinks the Institute is making it difficult for people without wealth to attend

    Thomas W Thomas Letters, 1809

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    Papers, chiefly 1834-1863, of Thomas W. Thomas, soldier, lawyer, and judge of Elberton, GA concerning his law practice and his friendship with US Senator Robert Toombs. His papers primarily concern his various legal cases, but also discuss politics, the Civil War, and other topics sporadically. Included in the collection are papers, 1834-1864, of Drury B. Cade who operated a canal boat on the Savannah River. Items of special interest include letter, 3 April 1842, from John Reeves Jones Daniel attacking the Whigs; letter, 1849, to Zachary Taylor concerning liquor seized during the Mexican War; letter, 1857, concerning a suit to secure title to land originally granted to Eli Whitney; and there are a number of Civil War letters in the collection

    Raymond B. Witt correspondence with Thomas F. Pettigrew, 1960 December 20

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    Letter from Raymond B. Witt, attorney for the defendants in Mapp v. Board of Education about using Thomas Pettigrew, professor of social psychology, as an expert witness in an appellate trial

    Raymond B. Witt correspondence with Thomas F. Pettigrew, 1960 December 20

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    Letter from Raymond B. Witt, attorney for the defendants in Mapp v. Board of Education about using Thomas Pettigrew, professor of social psychology, as an expert witness in an appellate trial

    Thomas-Prescott Letter : February 24, 1866

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    B. H. Thomas is writing to two messengers, Reid and Patrick, about the location of Amos' grave site. He wrote on a document written by a member of the Transportation and Telegraph Department that authorized the removal of Amos' remains from Virginia so they could be brought back to Michigan. Thomas asks the messengers not to mention that Amos died of smallpox, for this could ruin any chance they had of getting his body back home
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