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Manuscripts

Settlement with the Church for claim against the estate of Brigham Young

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    Brigham Young deed of sale to Fanny Young Thatcher for a lot in Salt Lake City

    Manuscripts

    Printed deed from Brigham Young and Mary Ann Angell Young selling, for $7500, a lot in Salt Lake City to Brigham's daughter Fanny Young Thatcher.

    mssHM 26585

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    Brigham Young letter to Joseph A. Young

    Manuscripts

    Letter to Joseph A. Young from his father Brigham Young in Salt Lake City. Young writes of his approval of Wyoming as an "outfitting point on the Missouri," that Joseph has been "much blessed in [his] railroad contract," of his own trip to Ogden and plans for future travels throughout Utah, a visit to his cotton and woolen factory, and that "Uncle Sam's prospectors on the Bench" are in the mountains looking for gold and silver.

    mssHM 23244

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    Brigham Young letter to Charles Slaughter Morehead

    Manuscripts

    Letter to Charles Slaughter Morehead thanking him for sending two volumes of the acts of the General Assembly of the State. Signed by Brigham Young.

    mssHM 20437

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    Brigham Young letter to Edward Wheelock Tullidge

    Manuscripts

    Letter to Edward W. Tullidge from Brigham Young in Salt Lake City. Young writes that he believes Tullidge could do "considerable good by correcting many of the false impressions...respecting us and our doctrines" through his articles, that he has asked Tullidge's wife to sign a bill of divorce, and that some of the southern settlements have suffered from Indian "depredations."

    mssHM 17480

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    Brigham Young letter to Dodd, Brown, & Co

    Manuscripts

    Letter from Brigham Young to Dodd, Brown, & Co. in St. Louis, written on Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution letterhead. In the letter Young seeks to "refute untruthful rumors in circulation" about the instability of the Mercantile Institution, and writes that while "there are persons in [Salt Lake City] who...seek to injure the Institution's business and...destroy its credit," it is actually a prosperous enterprise and he vouches for its notes and accounts. Young also explains the resignation of a superintendent named Cooper on the grounds of ill health. Enclosed with the letter is a statement of liabilities and assets of the Mercantile Institution for the half-year ending April 1, 1875.

    mssHM 27512