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Letter: Personal

Source 266 – Personal Letter: Note referencing book author

March 22, 2025 by Admin

Author: unknown
Title: handwritten
Date: undated [pre-1887 or 1905?]
Curator: Christine Fisher 
Detail: it’s possible that this note is in search of more information regarding Marcus Nelson’s final days

RE: Miss Dix – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothea_Dix 
RE: Mary A. Livermore – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Livermore

Book: My Story of the War: A Woman’s Narrative of Four Years Personal Experience by Mary A. Livermore, published by A.D. Worthington and Co.

  • Page 141 – Pittsburgh Landing reference
  • Page 197 – Pittsburgh Landing reference
  • Page 651 – Pittsburgh Landing reference

Miss Dix, Trenton N.J.
Formerly with U.S. Sanitary Commission

Mary A. Livermore, Hartford, Conn.
Care A.D. Worthington and Co.

Filed Under: Letter: Personal Tagged With: Nelson, Marcus S.

Source 136 – Personal Letter by Martin Hoorn

February 13, 2017 by Admin

Author: Martin Hoorn – Coldwater, Mich
Title: Letter to Helen J. Hoorn
Date: undated
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note:

Mom, you had better put up my lunch tonight so it will be ready in the morning eh. Did you break my stypid pencil, the one for cuts and sores. pop

(Response)
Pop, I might be right back so won’t say much. Only I love you the whole universe. Yours only.

Filed Under: Letter: Personal Tagged With: Hoorn, Martin, Thomas, Helen J.

Source 135 – Personal Letter by Martin Hoorn

February 13, 2017 by Admin

Author: Martin Hoorn
Title: Letter to Helen J. Hoorn
Date: undated
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note:

This is just your pop again [sketch]. Don’t have to remind of that “flop”? again do you.
Miss you so! Kiss you so!
I love you so much! You know.
pop

[Response]
Hello Poppie.
My dearest little kerchunk. I love you.
So I’ll never slew or go thru
the ice
toodle do.
Your sweetie pie

Filed Under: Letter: Personal Tagged With: Hoorn, Martin, Thomas, Helen J.

Source 134 – Personal Letter by Martin Hoorn

February 13, 2017 by Admin

Author: Martin Hoorn
Title: Letter to Helen J. (Thomas) Hoorn
Date: unknown
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note:

Mom, So Sorry I made you blue!! You took them as orders and I did mean them that way.

Reasons – I wanted to find out if you would quit if I told you too.
Reason for Cancellation – I promised you that you could work until May 30 no later.. and I try not to go back on my word. If you make up your mind to quit before it is entirely up to you for if you did it would be nice to have you home. I remain yours. N.Y. correspondent, pop

Filed Under: Letter: Personal Tagged With: Hoorn, Martin, Thomas, Helen J.

Source 083 – Personal Letter by Robert Thomas

February 11, 2017 by Admin

Author: Robert Thomas
Title: Letter to unknown [presumably his parents, Charles and Iva Thomas]
Date:
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note:

[beginning of letter missing]
…served in the smaller of the four glasses. Then came cold cuts and a potato salad and some green vegetable salad. And the wine is again changed and served in the next glass. Of course you have more than one glass. The only way you can stop is to leave the glass full. Then came turkey potatoes, peas and a few other items I don’t remember. And again the wine is changed. Then came another salad of a green that looked a little and tasted a little like onion. It comes from Belgium but it was very good and of course the wine was again changed this time to a wine that was 24 years old. Then came the desert that was similar to pie and the drink was champagne. By this time I was not only awful full but feeling very good. Simonne and I then spent the afternoon looking Paris over. Trains was not running very regular so I caught Air France and flew to London on Friday after noon. Checked in to the Bailys Hotel. I went out to go down town and on the under ground ran in to a girl I knew. So I spent the night at her parents place in Points End. Next morning I went out to get a paper and never returned. From there I went to Edinburgh, Scotland where I brought in the New Year. I then went back to London and decided that there that I was not quite ready to go to Germany, so I went back up to Blackpool for a couple of days and then back to London. There I tangled with two Irish girls from Ireland going to Munich, Germany. So the three of us took in London, then Paris for another night and then home. I had nothing planned. I just moved when and where ever the urge directed me, and of course I know people all over so when I decided I wanted to see some place or some one I just moved on. I had a very good time and a good rest.

The weather was very cold when I got back here with about four inches of snow, but now it is warm again and the snow is gone. Everything else is about normal.

I am sending along another $900. My papers are still mixed up and they still owe me 6 months pay. Let me know if you got the $1500 and this.

Every one be good. Bob [Thomas]

Filed Under: Letter: Personal Tagged With: Thomas, Robert

Source 075 – Personal Letter by Unknown

February 11, 2017 by Admin

Author: unknown
Title: Letter to George [presumed to be George S. Thomas]
Date: undated
Curator: Christine Fisher
Note: [presumed to be Laura Jenks]

[first four pages missing; starts with page 5 of a letter]
Now George, there are some things you ought to know. and perhaps it will be well for me to mention them to you. When our brother Hamilton died in Duke Center I received a dispatch from James’s wife. She had already sent for Edwin to come and see to the burial of our brother and he came at once. Now of course I notified Ashur and Mary. as soon as Manley heard the news he at once ? out for Duke Center and while he was on the way out there Edwin was on the way here, now all that could be said could not stop Manley from going, so Edwin blamed all of us for it was in July and the burial had to be postponed for Manley to return from his trip so the outcome was they demanded pay for Manley’s expenses which was duly paid. As it was in Mary’s and Edd hands they done as they liked about it but if I had went out there Mary and Edd would refused to paid. I tell you this so you will see why we received so little of heirs [?] estate he had on his person nineteen hundred dollars when Edwin settled with me he said there was a dividend of 40 dollars for each of us. You know weather you received it or not. I got none of the 40 dollars. Now you see we can’t allow Hatties expenses and all of Edds journeys if we do there will be nothing left. Edwin has a charge that I shall not allow if I can help it. The summer before Mary died some one notified Edwin that Mary was dead or dying so he came up and while in Marathon he notified the Goodales so they met for a funeral and found our sister very much alive, and Edd would not tell who his informant was. And to this day Jenks nor myself don’t know who sent for Edd. He and Mary had a time over it. Now if Hattie wants pay for the journey up here that time let her get it from the one who sent for Edd. All Harvy Hill knows Mary did not send for him at that time. She told every one she did not know anything of it.

Now George Edwin owed me and he kept the debt alive by paying me a small sum occasionally. He paid me my expenses out to see you when James and the rest came. The amount was fifty-five dollars. It run for a long time. He never got ready to settle it up and I think it ought to come out of the money from the house and premises Mary willed him. She also herself and Ashur hired Katie two months while she was ill. Katie & Jenks done all til Edwin came up. Katie never had her pay. Now I have told you some of the matters and it is all just as I have written. Read this over careful and write soon. And if you see any flaws in anything let me hear what you think.

In regards to Edwin Jenks he will help settle this matter with a very little cost only what he has to write he will do for us for a very small amount. But Mr. Miller will want all there is. Edwin had over six hundred dollars charged to Mary but he finally cut of some charges. When he saw he could not live. I was glad he did on account of James’s heirs for it would be bad to cheat any of us and add to the Jamesons already vast amount of wealth.

Now George read careful every thing I have penned is strictly true. Good by from your loving sister. Give my regards to all.

Filed Under: Letter: Personal Tagged With: Ashur, Goodale, Goodale, Manley, Harvey Hill, Hattie, Jameson, Jenks, Edwin, Katie, Miller, John

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