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Manuscripts

Alexander Spotswood letter to William Augustine Washington, Heywood

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    Alexander Spotswood letter to the Council of Trade

    Manuscripts

    Report to the Council of Trade contains accounts of a massacre committed by a troup of Tuscarora Indians upon Enlgish, Swiss, and Palatine settlers of North Carolina and complaints about pacifist Quakers refusing to work on fortifications.

    mssHM 59962

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    William Wirt, Washington, D.C., letter to Henry Thompson, Baltimore, Maryland

    Manuscripts

    William Wirt writes to his friend Henry Thompson requesting to purchase two cows from him to provide milk and butter for his family. Wirt also discusses seeking a buyer for his horses and gives a history of them. Autograph letter signed.

    mssHM 55657

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    William Lawrence Austin letter to Joseph Burn Austin

    Manuscripts

    William Lawrence Austin wrote this letter to his father, Joseph Burn Austin, in the midst of the Leadville silver boom. Leadville had been founded only two years earlier, but not all is well. Lawrie writes to his father in South America from a smelting works in Leadville, Colorado, seeking financial help. "My dear Papa, Can't you borrow the money to keep Cecil at Yale under a guarantee from me to pay it back with interest? It is really too bad for me to be taking all these chances...I am overworked, under paid, & tied up in such a way, than a human being can't be expected to stand it." One of his co-workers, Abarci, left some time ago and two more are going to leave the smelting works soon. He suggests, "Now I'll give you the boys' plan & you can see what a temptation it is to me. They intend to start an assay office up town, then add on a store, to consist of simply miner supplies, then do a general professional business besides. We will be working for ourselves..." He is confident that "...we will make the strongest team in the country." Lawrie is in despair because he must endure the dangers of the smelting works and shortchange his own future by attending to his brother's needs first, a brother who spends his time reading novels and his money on "pleasure seeking." He states, "You don't know how interesting life has been becoming for me, & I must stay in the poisonous fumes of furnaces, & give up every thing...I have to look far enough into the future, anyhow, in order to see a blue sky, but to think that I must give up my Leadville, & start again at some future day, possibly in some camp, & certainly without one cent to back me is very hard Papa." He concludes, "You must pay some attention to my case, as well at Cecil's. You could not keep one man in a hundred as you are keeping me, & there will be a final blow up, if you keep on, & that I want to avoid if possible." The letter is simply signed "Lawrie."

    mssHM 80808