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Manuscripts

Jane Lathrop Stanford letter to "Mr. Simkins,"

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    Ellen Kean letters to Mr. Boyd and [Mr. Lovell]

    Manuscripts

    The first letter was written to Mr. Boyd in the third person as Ellen Tree and not signed (HM 63345); the second was written to [Mr. Lovell] and signed Ellen Kean (HM 63346).

    mssHM 63345-63346

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    Mary Jane Brooks letter to Fanny Davis

    Manuscripts

    In this letter to her sister Fanny Davis, Mary Jane Brooks writes that as she is now sixty years of age, she is unable to work as in her youth. She asks for back payment on rent for Fanny's house, where she lived for twenty-five years without payment, or suggests Fanny buy the property outright. She also writes of details of mutual friends in San Francisco.

    mssHM 19795

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    Ann S. Ludlum letter to Eliza Jane Brown Anderson

    Manuscripts

    In this letter, Ann S. Ludlum thanks Eliza Jane Brown Anderson for the gift of "the album with the photographs of your husband and family" and relates the news of the mutual friend, Mrs. Colo. Chambliss. She notes that San Antonio, Texas "is improving rapidly," with "things are beginning to resume the appearance of old times," and people in "the country" being "very anxious to resume their political relations with the government."

    mssHM 75842

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    Mary Jane Brooks letters to Thomas and Priscilla Marsh

    Manuscripts

    In this first letter (HM 19797, dated 1853, September 14), Mary Jane Brooks describes her journey to California "according to agreement" to her sister Priscilla and her husband Thomas Marsh. Much of this letter contains Brooks' description of Kingston, Jamaica, where she stopped en route to California. She laments that she has not yet found a man to run away with her. HM 19798, written August 12, 1886, and includes an envelope. Brooks is still in San Francisco, and writes of people she is seeing and letters written and received. The last letter in this sequence was written 1886, September 2. Brooks writes that she has reached her sixtieth birthday, but feels "old beyond my years." She discusses the possibility of getting her share of the farmstead left by her father, and hopes her sister will cooperate.

    mssHM 19797-19799

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    Charles Villiers Stanford note to unknown recipient

    Manuscripts

    This is a signed, handwritten note by Stanford to an unknown recipient. In the note he apologizes for not having a copy of his Elegaic Ode (his 1884 musical composition to Walt Whitman's 1865 elegy for Abraham Lincoln, When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd).

    mssHM 81268