Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Manuscripts

Joseph Banks letter to Mr. Phillips

Image not available



You might also be interested in

  • Image not available

    Joseph Banks letter to a bookseller

    Manuscripts

    mssHM 20670

  • Image not available

    Joseph Banks letter to an unidentified recipient

    Manuscripts

    mssHM 7289

  • Image not available

    Joseph Campbell letter to "Dear Mr. Griffis,"

    Manuscripts

    This letter is chiefly about the Irish writer Joseph Campbell (1879-1944). Campbell does talk a little about some of his own publications and writing. Mr. Griffis had gotten the two authors confused. The letter was written in New York City.

    mssHM 78349

  • Image not available

    Joseph Lane letter to Joseph S. Ruckel

    Manuscripts

    Lane writes to Joseph Ruckel regarding the acquisition of a patent for Ruckel. However, as Ruckel did not fill out his name properly on land warrant forms, Lane writes "if I do not succeed, you will know the fault is not mine." Includes printed clipping with a biography of Joseph Lane, with the handwritten date "1987."

    mssHM 29248

  • Image not available

    Joseph Whitaker letter

    Manuscripts

    In this letter, written from Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, to an unknown addressee, Joseph Whitaker describes the Native Americans in the area: "...not many deer now the Indians kill about all there is a few Indians about all the time they speak muskrats and fish on the ice in the winter the muskrats build a kind of house of pieces of old bog one of them is worth a shilling to them. The skins they sell for six pence and eat the rest they don't wash themselves once a month and when they have good luck they paint themselves with all kinds of paint...." Whitaker also talks briefly about his farming and hunting.

    mssHM 82459

  • Image not available

    Joseph Cross letters

    Manuscripts

    Two autograph letters from Joseph Cross to his parents. The first letter, dated Dec. 7, 1806 (HM 62947), was written from Fort Michilimackinac. Cross describes an expedition in which he and a group of soldiers searched for and rescued nine soldiers who went missing while taking supplies to Fort Saint Joseph. Cross found the men on a "desart island," starving to death and contemplating "the horrid plan of killing and eating one of their number." He then proceeds to list the adventures that he had since his last letter home, including traveling "396 miles up Lake Michigan among the Indians," descending "the celebrated Falls of St. Mary in an Indian canoe," being shot at by two Indian "centinels" and "blown up in a gun room" after the stored ammunition caught on fire. He was injured in the last incident, but "owing to the skill and great attention of our Surgeon and good health and constitution" made full recovery, "without a scar."

    mssHM 62947-62948