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Manuscripts

Joseph Cleary journal

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    Joseph Goldsborough Bruff letter to the "President of the United States" with a poem "To the promoters of disunion,"

    Manuscripts

    In this letter to the "President of the United States With the Compliments of His very Humble and Obdt. Servant J. Goldsborough Bruff," is a 28-line poem entitled "To the Promoters of Disunion. E. Pluribus Unum. One and inseparable; United we stand, but divided we fall." There is also a 16-line "Invocation" and a sketch by Bruff of a man with a cannon. It is written on a pictorial lettersheet with an image of Washington, D.C. entitled "View of Washington City." The poem is dated 1860, December 10 while a note about the sketch is dated 1860, December 17.

    mssHM 72872

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    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

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    H. T. Scott journal

    Manuscripts

    This journal is H.T. Scott's account of his overland journey to California. Most of the daily entries document he and his party distance traveled that day, and where they camped. Upon arriving at Sonora in the final entry, Scott writes, "We can get plenty here to eat we was very glad when we could see the town sum." Dated 1852, April 13 through August 23. Also included is a photocopied facsimile of the diary.

    mssHM 52095

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    Pierre Joseph Jeunot journal

    Manuscripts

    The journal that Jeunot kept during his service in the West India Islands and Virginia. The manuscript contains detailed information on vessels of the French fleet, the combined French and Spanish fleets, together with a list 124 English vessels, and gives detailed accounts of the French operations at Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Kitts, Tobago, and St. Christopher as well as a long account of the engagement in Chesapeake Capes (Sept. 5, 1781). The manuscript also includes the Articles of Capitulation of the Islands of Tobago and St. Christopher, as well as the "Capitulation of York in Virginia made between Lord Cornwallis Commander General of the British Troops in Virginia and Maryland..." and a list of the French regiments engaged in the siege of Yorktown, together with a list of the ships engaged and the names of their commanders. Also included are contains directions for making fuses, disquisitions of the artillery employed in the French fleet, some poems, religious reflections, scattered daily entries penned in the early 1800s (in a different hand), etc.

    mssHM 578

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    Autobiography and journal of James Holt

    Manuscripts

    The first part of the manuscript is an autobiography recorded by James Holt which covers the years from approximately 1824 until the late 1840s. It recounts his childhood experiences in England, including his time as a printer's apprentice, his religious background, his introduction to Mormonism through one of his printing masters, his disappointment that his family did not share his zeal for the new faith, his receiving word of the deaths of Joseph and Hyrum Smith ("massacred by a mob in Carthage Jail...although many false reports had...been circulated, this we felt to be true," he wrote), a copy of his patriarchal blessing, a blessing for Sarah Rostron, parody song lyrics (I am Brave Old Oak), some family genealogy, and an extract from a work on "Apostolical [sic] succession." The second, brief part of the manuscript is a diary kept by Holt while he was living in Salt Lake City in 1853. He writes of training with the Nauvoo Legion (although he was probably already in Utah at the time) and of "suspicious appearances among the Indians" leading a group of mounted men going south to arrest all "strolling Mexicans, Spaniards and other strangers" who may have been supplying the Indians with guns "in exchange for Indian children." The final paragraph of the diary was written in an unknown hand and recounts Holt's death in 1856. Included with the manuscript are notes on the Holt family, a sketch, and two maps.

    mssHM 35255

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    Joseph Verot letter to Charles Covilland

    Manuscripts

    Verot requests Covilland to send payment for interest for the month of May, as Verot needs it for his son's expenses. In French. With printed bill of exchange to order, filled in to Joseph Vero by hand, in the total of two thousand four hundred twenty francs. Includes unattributed translation into English.

    mssHM 43210