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Manuscripts

William Davenport & Co. account book relating to ship voyages, 1777-1784

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    An account of voyage on S.S. "Eurydamus" as surgeon from Liverpool to Seattle

    Manuscripts

    Beginning with the departure of the S. S. Eurydamus from Liverpool in March 1923, this journal recounts the experiences of an unnamed individual who is employed as the doctor aboard this freighter. It includes substantial descriptions of the passage through the Panama Canal as well as the doctor's experiences and observations while ashore in Los Angeles, Hollywood, San Francisco, Victoria BC, Vancouver BC, and Seattle and Tacoma. The doctor also writes about prohibition, Chinese people in California, and anti-Asian immigration laws.

    mssHM 83441

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    Medical account book

    Manuscripts

    This account book includes patient names and fees paid for medical treatment from 1851 to 1881. The author is unknown but might be in Ohio. There is some mention of the treatment performed and reason for visit such as: childbirth, prescriptions of medicine, treatment of wounds, and even some dental work. There are 23 pages of newspaper clippings from newspapers in Ohio (the clippings are sometimes glued over the medical information). The clippings include poems and short articles, many of which are written by Thomas C. Harbaugh, a writer from Ohio. The clippings are from 1895 to 1897. Several pages have been cut-out of the volume.

    mssHM 75114

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    Letters and Reports on the Publication of Voyages Métallurgiques

    Manuscripts

    Four letters and two reports concerning the posthumous publication by Gabriel Jars (1729-1808) of Voyages Métallurgiques, written by his brother Antoine-Gabriel Jars (1732-1769). The papers date from 1770 to 1779 and include three letters written by Gabriel Jars from Lyon, France: one two-page letter (including address), dated 1770, October 20, is addressed to Auguste Denis Fougeroux de Bondaroy in Paris; one item consists of the last page a letter, dated 1772, 30 August, to an unidentified recipient; and one two-page letter, dated March, 1779, to "Monsieur." Also includes one letter, dated 1773, written from Paris by Fougeroux de Bondaroy to Monsieur Berlin care of Monsieur Parent[?]-fils (one page); and two unattributed reports, one entitled Rapport d'un Ouvrage de Monsieur Jars and dated 1779 (3 pages) and one untitled, undated report (10 pages, including one page consisting of sketches). Each of these reports contain annotations, including in the margins.

    mssHM 83036-83041

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    Williams, Dimond & Co. 1 letter to John M. Cavarly

    Manuscripts

    The materials of the collection are arranged chronologically. There are ten pieces of correspondence, six of which relate to particular voyages and four are letters from John M. Cavalry to his daughter. The Scrapbook Pages are also filled with correspondence relating to Pacific Mail Steamship Company. The other scrapbooks contain clippings from newspapers regarding voyages, ships, and amusing anecdotes. The Bound Scrapbook used to be a ship's log and there are pages that are not covered in newspaper clippings. The photographs include one photograph of the John M. Cavarly, a photograph of the steamer "City of New York," and a photograph of her officers, including Captain Cavarly. The manuscript, Annie's captain, is a work of fiction about the lives of John M. Cavarly, his wife and their family based upon some of the materials in this collection and those held in the Kathryn Hulme Collection in Yale University Library. Subjects in the collection include: the CSA Florida; John Newland Maffitt; United States mail steamers; Pacific Mail Steamship Company; sailing anecdotes; ship captains and their spouses; steamboats and steamboat disasters; Steamboat lines to China; Steamboat lines of the Pacific Ocean; and United States Civil War naval operations.

    mssCavarly papers

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    Letter book of William Upton

    Manuscripts

    The first half of the volume deals with Upton's work in the construction of a dry dock at Sevastopol in the Crimea, including its funding, design, progress, and the constant supplying of materials. The second half of the volume details his life as an engineer and refugee during the Crimean War and his efforts to find further employment and full reimbursement for his loss of property at the outbreak of the war. Upton talks in detail about how his neighbors in Sevastopol had to flee their villas at the approach of troops, and the looting of his property. There are copies of letters by Upton begging for a new job after the war. He wrote several notable people including Lord Raglan and even Emperor Napoleon. The volume also includes a proposal to beautify, improve and develop the banks of the River Thames which Upton sent to the editor of the Illustrated London news in 1856. A letter to Upton (1855, May 7) and a draft of another letter were found In the front cover of the volume. About half of the volume is made up of blank pages; Upton only wrote in the first half of the volume.

    mssHM 74299

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    Memoranda and account book

    Manuscripts

    In this diary, Hurlbut describes his journey from Vermont to California via steamboat. He landed at Sacramento in April, 1852, and set to work making a land claim and searching for gold. The bulk of the volume contains notations concerning financial accounts and related details. Volume has pre-printed pages, dated January 1 through December 31, 1852.

    mssHM 2273