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Manuscripts

Plan of tenements on South Fork Bullskin


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    Plan of the tenements on the South Fork of Bullskin :

    Manuscripts

    The autograph plan, made most likely in 1772, shows the tracts leased to Joseph Kerlin, Abraham Swanger, William Peterson, Jacob Fryer, William Bartlett, and Kennedy (no first name provided), as well as the one sold to Philip Pendleton in January 1772.

    mssHM 5508

  • Plan of tenements on South Fork Bullskin

    Plan of tenements on South Fork Bullskin

    Manuscripts

    Autograph document. Plan shows the tracts leased to Joseph Kerlin, Abraham Swanger, William Peterson, Jacob Fryer, William Bartlett, and Kennedy, as well as the one sold to Philip Pendleton in January 1772.

    mssGW

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    Memorandums of George Washington to William Pearce?

    Manuscripts

    Autograph manuscript. Listed in Founders Online as to William Pearce. (1 page)

    HM 5287

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    Letter from George Washington, headquarters Valley Forge, to Brigadier General George Weedon

    Manuscripts

    Letter signed. In hand of Richard Kidder Meade. Identified in Founders Online as Circular to Brigadiers of the Virginia Line with note that copies also were sent to William Woodford, Peter Muhlenberg, and Charles Scott. Place name given only as "headquarters." (1 page)

    HM 5452

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    Account book of Leland & Harwood Lumber Company of Oakland, California. Note: the day book also includes what appears to be a transcript of the 1841 "Cruise of Brig O.C. Ramona;" an undated entry entitled "Thoughts on creation;" two entries about a South American journey; and an 1882 inventory of furniture

    Manuscripts

    The collection was assembled by author and collector Grahame H. Hardy. The documents and manuscripts demonstrate the range of legal, administrative, municipal, and real estate-related transactions initiated by railroad and mining interests, businessmen, and municipalities in the San Francisco Bay area, Northern California, and western Nevada. Included in this series are legal proceedings, title deeds, mining reports and claims. Correspondence includes business and personal letters to and from Northern California lawyers, railroad and mining entrepreneurs in California and Nevada, and parties involved in the construction of the Nicaragua Canal. Included in this series are letters pertaining to the case of Daniel Sill, a San Francisco-based blacksmith and the trial of A.J. Jackson, an African American tried and acquitted in Marysville, California. Lastly, ephemera include four items: a Mission Homestead Association certificate of stock; one check payable to Jack H. Haverly, a promoter of minstrel shows, from theater producers and brothers, Gustave Frohman and Charles Frohman; the baptism certificate of Everett Loftus Saxondale Kenna; and an undated glossary of mining terms. Prominent persons and organizations featured in the collection include: California Academy of Sciences, founded in 1853 as the one of the first scientific academies west of the Atlantic seaboard; Central Pacific Railroad Company, established in 1861 and financed in part by Leland Stanford and Collis P. Huntington, who are also mentioned in the collection; William Heath Davis (1822-1909), San Francisco merchant and author, spouse of Maria de Jesús Estudillo, who played a key role in the founding of the California cities of Oakland and San Diego; John Brooks Felton (1827-1877), San Francisco Bay Area lawyer and judge, as well as one-time mayor of Oakland, California; Joseph Pendleton Hoge (1810-1891), former U.S. Representative of Illinois and later lawyer and judge of the San Francisco Superior Court; and M.G. Upton, former official reporter of the California Assembly and author of the urban planning critique, "The Plan of San Francisco" (1869).

    HM 72682

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    Hays, John Coffee, 1817-1883 and Richard Roman. 1 letter to David Smith Terry, 1823-1889. Note: includes a copy of letter

    Manuscripts

    The collection was assembled by author and collector Grahame H. Hardy. The documents and manuscripts demonstrate the range of legal, administrative, municipal, and real estate-related transactions initiated by railroad and mining interests, businessmen, and municipalities in the San Francisco Bay area, Northern California, and western Nevada. Included in this series are legal proceedings, title deeds, mining reports and claims. Correspondence includes business and personal letters to and from Northern California lawyers, railroad and mining entrepreneurs in California and Nevada, and parties involved in the construction of the Nicaragua Canal. Included in this series are letters pertaining to the case of Daniel Sill, a San Francisco-based blacksmith and the trial of A.J. Jackson, an African American tried and acquitted in Marysville, California. Lastly, ephemera include four items: a Mission Homestead Association certificate of stock; one check payable to Jack H. Haverly, a promoter of minstrel shows, from theater producers and brothers, Gustave Frohman and Charles Frohman; the baptism certificate of Everett Loftus Saxondale Kenna; and an undated glossary of mining terms. Prominent persons and organizations featured in the collection include: California Academy of Sciences, founded in 1853 as the one of the first scientific academies west of the Atlantic seaboard; Central Pacific Railroad Company, established in 1861 and financed in part by Leland Stanford and Collis P. Huntington, who are also mentioned in the collection; William Heath Davis (1822-1909), San Francisco merchant and author, spouse of Maria de Jesús Estudillo, who played a key role in the founding of the California cities of Oakland and San Diego; John Brooks Felton (1827-1877), San Francisco Bay Area lawyer and judge, as well as one-time mayor of Oakland, California; Joseph Pendleton Hoge (1810-1891), former U.S. Representative of Illinois and later lawyer and judge of the San Francisco Superior Court; and M.G. Upton, former official reporter of the California Assembly and author of the urban planning critique, "The Plan of San Francisco" (1869).

    HM 72711