4,759 research outputs found

    Hellas, her monuments and scenery by Thomas Chase, M.A. Trübner and Co., 60, Paternoster Row, London. Cambridge Sever and Francis 1863

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    Preface: by Chase, THomasDedication: by the author to Cornelius Conway Felton, .D.Content description: TitlePagination: PP8+220PVolumes: 1Edition:1stText Genre:Prose / Journa

    Chase, Stephen A., letter, Salem, [Mass.?], January 12, 1854, to Robert I? Murray, [New York]:

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    Letter of introduction for Peter Still written by Stephen A. Chase, which notes, in part, that Still’s tale “unfolds a phase in the history of slavery strongly illustrative of its evils, its oppressions, its injustice and its opposition to all that is good and kind and Christian.

    Folder 2: A: Folder 1, March-May, 1989

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    Political advertisement addressed to Peter Brooks and paid for by Scott Chase for City Council. Features a message from John Bryant, David Cain, John Pouland, Ken Molberg, Bobbie Sue Holbrook, and Sandy Kress that endorses Chase in the May 6, 1989 Dallas City Council election for District 5. Focuses on Chase's emphasis on crime and transportation issues

    Camp Chase Hospital records

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    This volume contains case descriptions of Union Army officers admitted to the Camp Chase Hospital during its operation in 1862. Each entry includes the officer's name, rank, company, regiment, age, civilian occupation, place of residence, date of entry into service, date of onset of health problems, description of health problem, whether or not the officer can return to service, and if so, when. Officers represented in these pages include Peter Sullivan, Thomas H. Ford, Franklin Cosgrove, J.B. Burrowes, John J. Throckmorten, William A. Sutherland, Benjamin P. Runkle, Alvah S. Skillman, Stewart Barnes and Daniel Lepley. Camp Chase, located in Columbus, Ohio, was a recruitment and training center for the Union Army and as a prison camp for captured Confederate soldiers during the Civil War

    The Family History of Chase Theodore Uhlich

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    The Family History of Chase T. Uhlich 28 November 2022 Chase T. Uhlich authored this family history as part of the course requirements for HIST 550/700 Your Family in History offered online in Fall 2022 and was submitted to the Pittsburg State University Digital Commons. Please contact the author directly with any questions or comments: [email protected] This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

    PETER SELLERS WITH DR. CHASE AND DR. DIACUMAKOS

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    Peter Sellers with Merrill Chase and Elaine Diacumakos at the June 11th alumni reunion, 1984https://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/sellers-exhibit/1007/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from Irah Chase to T.Z.R. Jones

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    3 p.Irah Chase, the father of the author of Letter 286, Thomas S. Chase, writes another letter in a series concerning his daughter Emma to T.Z.R. Jones. The “mutual misunderstanding” between Emma and Mrs. Stone mentioned by Thomas is also the subject of this letter, and Irah suggests that Emma return for the next term in order to repair her relation with Mrs. Stone. Irah also clarifies the status of Mollie, T.Z.R. Jones’ daughter, who was mentioned in Letter 286. Mollie is a friend of Emma’s, and Irah does not want to see them separated. The rest of the letter consists of Irah articulating a sincere reconciliation grounded in Christian faith, culminating in the written recitation of the Lutheran hymn Blest Be the Tie That Binds by John Fawcett

    Peter Maughan dead at Ellen Maughan\u27s home

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    Transcript of a biographical sketch of Peter Maugham, a pioneer of Wellsville and the Cache Valley, Utah, written by Mae Spencer of Logan, Utah, and read by Libbie McHaslam at Ellen Maughan\u27s home, copied by James Erickson on Oct. 22, 1936; also a transcript of an interview with Heber Chase Vaughan about his father, Peter Maughan, transcribed by J. W. Kennington of Logan, Sept. 8, 193

    Camp Chase surgeon's report

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    This Civil War-era surgeon's report dated August 4, 1862, describes the conditions of the training camp and Confederate prison at Camp Chase, located in Columbus, Ohio. Post-surgeon L. C. Brown outlines the layout of the camp, hygienic issues of concern to its inhabitants, and the general health of those housed at the camp and in its hospital. Established in 1861, Camp Chase served as a recruitment and training center for the Union Army and as a prison camp for captured Confederate soldiers during the Civil War
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