Postal data: posted, postmarked [flag postmark]; (VINCENNES OCT 8, 1907? IND), stamp; Postcard type: divided back (THIS SPACE MAY BE USED FOR CORRESPONDENCE; FOR ADDRESS ONLY); Logo (POST CARD); Written message (Hello Anna, Almost cold enough for...
Postal data: unmarked, unposted (STAMP HERE - DOMESTIC ONE CENT - FOREIGN TWO CENTS) printed inside stamp box; Postcard type: divided back (MAY WRITE MESSAGE IN THIS SPACE; SPACE BELOW FOR ADDRESS ONLY); Logo (POST CARD) printed over Creator...
Postal data: posted, postmarked (NORTH CLARENDON, VT, SEP 27, 1910 1 PM); ([indiscernible] 1910, VT), stamp; Postcard type: divided back (This Space for message, This part for address only); Logo (POST CARD); Written message: Sept 27[?] 1910, Yours...
Birth certificates--New York (State)--New York; Slavery--New York (State)--New York
Birth certificate of Mary Ann, born April 6, 1810, to a 'Negro Woman Servant named Anna' belonging to New York City physician Joseph Bloodgood. In document, the word 'Slave' has been crossed out and replaced with 'Servant.'
Postal data: unmarked, unposted (PLACE STAMP HERE) printed inside stamp box inscribed with the letters (AZO) on all sides with a triangle pointing upward in all four corners; Postcard type: divided back (CORRESPONDENCE HERE; NAME AND ADDRESS HERE);...
Cities & towns; Canals; Waterways; Aqueducts; Rivers; Water towers; Buildings; Commercial facilities; Signs (Notices); Utility poles; Black and White Postcards
Four-page letter dated September 17, 1854, from D. McF. [Daniel McFarland] in Sauk City [Wisconsin] to Lysander Spooner [probably in Boston, Massachusetts], describing his circumstances in Wisconsin, and his plans to move further West.
Two-page letter and envelope dated July 12, 1886, from Daniel McFarland in New York to Lysander Spooner in Boston, Massachusetts, disucssing mutual acquaintances such as George Atkins and John Curtis.
Two-page letter and envelope dated April 9, 1884, from Danl. [Daniel] McFarland in New York to Lysander Spooner in Boston, Massachusetts, discussing mutual acquaintances and noting that "all our friends are dead."
Bentall writes to Mrs. Markham thanking the Markhams for their contribution and cooperation with the Christian Socialist. Bentall also praises Markham and his poems which are frequently used in the Christian Socialist. He also writes about prices...
Abbott sends Mrs. Markham a photograph from the Westfield lunch party. Abbott also writes of Earle and is disheartened that Markham's name was mixed up in the situation.