418,559 research outputs found

    Letter from Stephen D. Martin to Janice M. Martin, 26 November 1944

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    Stephen D. Martin writes to his six year old daughter, Janice M. Martin, while stationed overseas during World War II; he asks about school and praises her for helping her mother

    Letter from Stephen D. Martin to Janice M. Martin, 20 November 1944

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    Stephen D. Martin writes to his six year old daughter, Janice M. Martin, while stationed overseas during World War II; he is proud of how well she is doing in school and asks about her friends and siblings

    Letter from Stephen D. Martin to Janice M. Martin, 2 March 1944

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    Stephen D. Martin writes to his five year old daughter, Janice M. Martin, while stationed overseas during World War II; he received her letter and asks about school and her sister Nancy

    Letter from Stephen D. Martin to Janice M. Martin, 6 November 1944

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    Stephen D. Martin writes to his six year old daughter, Janice M. Martin, while stationed overseas during World War II; he asks how she is doing in school and comments on a picture he'd gotten from her mother and how much she'd grown

    Letter from Stephen D. Martin to Janice M. Martin, 28 August 1944

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    Stephen D. Martin writes to his six year old daughter, Janice M. Martin, while stationed overseas during World War II; he read her letter and received a picture of everyone playing in the yard; asks her to help her mother as much as she can

    Martin Matthews Book

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    A notebook tracking the attendance, probationary periods, and other notations for members of Methodist Circuit Quarterly Meetings taking place between 1856 and 1873. Martin Matthews was a Presiding Elder of the Methodist Episcopal Church during the time the book was created

    Martin family deed

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    Document deeding property to Giles M. Martin and family in the village of Warren, Trumbull County, Ohio, February 24, 1863. Angelique Marie "Lilly" Martin was born in England in 1822 to French parents Gilles Marie Martin and Angelique Le Petit Martin. In 1830, her family left England for New York, where Gilles Martin taught French. The family eventually settled in Marietta, Ohio, three years after arriving to the United States. Spencer was home schooled by her mother and began drawing landscapes and portraits at a young age. She became famous for her domestic scenes, which she was commissioned to paint for housewives and prominent local businessmen in Marietta and later for middle class homes in New York City. During the Civil War, Spencer's work took on a more serious tone and in the later part of the 19th century she began to focus on rural life and detailed landscapes. She studied with Ohio artists Sala Bosworth, Charles Sullivan, and James Beard. Lilly married Benjamin Rush Spencer, an English tailor living in Cincinnati, soon after meeting him in 1844. The couple had 13 children, seven of whom survived. In 1848, the family moved to New York City, where Lilly showed her work at the National Academy of Design and the American Art-Union. Despite her popularity, she did not get enough commissions to support her family and began experimenting with lithographs, eventually becoming one of the most popular producers in New York City. After a brief time in New Jersey, the family moved to a farm in Highland, New York, in 1879, where they lived until Benjamin Spencer died in 1890. Lilly Martin Spencer continued her art career until her death on May 22, 1902

    Letter: Minnie Martin Averill to Ida M. Tarbell, August 7, 1927

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    Handwritten letter of 3 pages with letter, Minnie Martin Averill to Mannie Boras, August 7, 192
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