Fair. Paper is yellowed and darkened along edges. Small rips along edges and corners. Rust stain on upper left corner of Page 1, recto. Both sheets enclosed together in polyester sleeve.
1501 S. Grand Ave
Los Angeles California,
March, 10, 1916
To My Dear Comrade Who Knows All Things:
I am so happy, happier than I have ever been in all my life, to think that my message is to reach the people; and that you are to write the...
Bynner, Witter, 1881-1968. An ode to Harvard and other poems.
6 Ash St
Dear Mr. Edwin Markham:
Did that second copy of my book of poems ever reach you? In hopes that some time you may read and like them, I am faithfully yours
Witter Bynner
April 4 1908
A large canal boat comprised of at least three sections, (GREAT WARDROBE) written on sign at the bow, is seen floating down the curve of a canal, with its reflection clearly visible on the surface of the water. On the left bank is a towpath and...
Jerry Rescue Convention; Antislavery movements--United States
Three-page printed "address" by Gerrit Smith presented at the Jerry Rescue Convention in Syracuse [New York]. On back, addressed to Lysander Spooner in Boston, Massachusetts, in Smith's hand.
Beautiful night view of steamboat "Adirondack" on Hudson River showing ship's lights, moon with clouds and passenger window lights reflected in the water.
Four-page letter from Gerrit Smith in Rochester [New York] to Lysander Spooner dated October 4, 1860, discussing his libel suit expressing desire that Spooner travel to New York to work on the case.
Charles Sumner (1811-1874) was a United States senator from Massachusetts and a campaigner against slavery. This is a draft, ca. 1855, of a version of the speech delivered in New York on May 9, 1855, and published that year under the title "The...
Feb’y 23rd, 1912.
Dear Comrade:
In response to many requests for publication we have now on the press Comrade William A. Prosser’s Open Letter and Challenge to Mr. Raymond Robins in answer to his attack on Socialism, as published in the...
Hotel Carlton
Berkeley, California
April 30, 1919
Dear Mr. Atkins:-
I shall be happy to send you something for the Whitman Celebration. Do you want a poem of twenty or thirty lines or just a message of so many words? And how soon must you have it?...