Manuscripts
William Lodge Kidd Records of Sunday sermons heard: manuscript
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William Kidd journal of a British naval surgeon
Manuscripts
Journals kept by William Kidd as a naval surgeon on H. M. ships "Bacchante," "Tromp," "Peloris," and "Raleigh."
mssHM 46983 (Vol. 1-14)
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A concise account of the Typhus Fever at present prevalent in Ireland...: manuscript
Manuscripts
This is the paper William Kidd read before the Royal Physical Society in 1817 regrading the Typhus Fever epidemic in Ireland.
mssHM 47866
![Sermones : [manuscript]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Frail.huntington.org%2FIIIF3%2FImage%2F22APN4K2PRB8%2Ffull%2F%5E360%2C%2F0%2Fdefault.jpg&w=750&q=75)
Sermones : [manuscript]
Manuscripts
ff. 1-122v. [Antonius Azaro de Parma]. Sermones. Latin. ff. 123-126v. [Sifridus, abbas S. Crucis]. [Four sermons]. Latin. Four sermons commemorating a soul, of which only the first is attributed to Sifridus. On ff. 127-128v, an added sermon. Back pastedown. Latin. Added prayers to St Livinus: (i) "Dextera tua quesumus [...] per intercessionem beati livini martiris tui atque pontificis ... eripiat. Per ..."; (ii) "Deus quidam(?) ... sancti livini martiris tuis atque pontificis ..."; (iii) "Deus qui es vigo(?) ..."; (iv) "Tribue quesumus omnipotens et misericors deus intercessionibus beati livini martiris tui atque pontificis ..."; and miscellaneous notes including "stadium est spacium ccor. xxv pedes" (?) and pen-trials. 1 item. [Donatus]. [Ars minor]. Latin. Contains part of the section De nomine, with a red initial at "Magister nomen appellativum ...". This fragment serves as spine-lining for the main codex; it is conjoint with the front pastedown.
mssHM 58203
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James Welch Brier sermons
Manuscripts
This small group of material consists of handwritten sermons by Brier and notes for sermons. Some of the sermon titles are: "Churchism," "The Dispensation of the Spirit," "Divine Union," and "The Existance [sic] of God." Also included are sermons and notes regarding baptism, and church history. There is also one notebook of Brier's with religious notes. The majority of the collection is undated (the notebook is dated 1887). There is also one letter written by Reverend Brier to Reverend J. E. Dwinelle, of Sacramento; it is about Charles Eliot Norton, evolution and religion (letter is also undated). It is assume that all of this material was written after Brier came to California in 1850.
mssHM 79810-79823
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William Power sermons
Manuscripts
A collection of autograph sermons preached by William Power ca. 1635-1638, closely written with additions and corrections in his same hand, occasionally with notes on the date or place of praching. All apparently npublished.
mssHM 70161
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Correspondence, documents, ephemera, manuscripts, and financial records
Manuscripts
The archive extends over six decades, from 1803 to 1869. Included in the archive are letters and manuscripts covering William Congreve's career in rocketry. The most notable of these is his diary of the 1807 Copenhagen bombardment, which represents the first truly successful large-scale use of the Congreve war rocket in combat. Other noteworthy manuscripts include a signed draft and a fair copy of a "Report to the Commissioners of the Navy" dated October 1813, in which Congreve summarized his war rocketry activities from 1805 to 1813; a letter dated November 1813 relating to "the expense, or rather the economy of the Rocket System"; bills for materials used in rocket construction; an undated letter to a Captain Elliot discussing the subject of a "rocket cavalry"; letters discussing a plan of "applying Rockets for throwing ropes ashore from shipwrecked vessels"; and letters in which Congreve writes of his achievements and his attitude towards his work. The archive also contains manuscripts and letters relating to some of Congreve's other inventions: naval guns, bombships, and Congreve's design for a paddlewheel boat, which is detailed in a long letter illustrated with Congreve's sketches. Also included are a long series of love letters that Congreve wrote to his wife, Isabella, and another series of long, detailed letters written to Congreve during the last few months of his life by his secretary, R. Drake, discussing, among other things, Congreve's political career as a Member of Parliament, his precarious financial position, the publication of his Treatise on the General Principles, Powers, and Facility of Application of the Congreve Rocket System (1827), and negotiations with the British East India Company for exclusive rights to the Congreve war rocket for use in India. Included in the remainder of the archive is a letter from Congreve's father, William Congreve Sr., to Sir Joseph Banks (1743-1820), president of the Royal Society, discussing the elder Congreve's responsibilities at the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich. Another series of letters, some written by Congreve, concern a will of which Congreve's aunt, Miss Mary Congreve, was the executrix. There are numerous letters written by Isabella Congreve after Congreve's death in 1828, mostly on financial matters-- Congreve's affairs were left somewhat embarrassed upon his death, and the archive includes several records of bills and promissory notes, both paid and owing. Lastly, there are several letters presumably written by Congreve's descendants, the last dated Feb. 1, 1869.
mssCongreve