Container | Contents | ||||||||||||
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BOX 1 | “Varinas sobre las Indias”. Collection, 1677-1739. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 2867. | |||||||||||||
Volume containing seven documents relating to the administration of Spanish
colonies in America. The first is a report of a council held in Madrid, Apr. 8,
1677, by the Duque de Medinaceli (Juan Tomas de la Cerda y Aragón), the Marquès de
Mancera (Antonio Sebastián de Toledo), Diego de Portugal, and José de Avellaneda,
to discuss proposals of Varinas for improving the defenses of the Spanish colonies
in America, ending the corrupt practices of civil servants and the abuses of the
clergy, and raising new taxes from the natives in the colonies. The second is a
letter dated Mar. 1, 1695, from Varinas to King Charles II written while Varinas
was imprisoned at Oran, North Africa, under suspicion of being a paid foreign
agent, in which he asks either to be executed or restored to freedom. The other five documents by various officials of the Spanish government cover the years 1738-1739 and relate primarily to differences between Great Britain and Spain over the boundary of Florida, particularly with Georgia, and the rights of trade and navigation of British ships in Europe and America as reflected in various treaties, agreements, and decrees from 1648 to 1738. The documents include instructions for the Spanish plenipotentiaries who were to meet with the British, and legal and political pleas for the Spanish position that generally illustrate the historical rivalry between the two powers |
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BOX 2 | Bégon, Michel (1638-1710). Journal, 1632-1685. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 3694 | |||||||||||||
Journal entitled “Relation de mon Voyage aux Isles de l’Amerique,” covering the
years of Bégon’s service in the French West Indies. The first part is devoted to
background information regarding Bégon’s commission, preparations for embarkation,
the welcoming ceremonies upon his arrival on the island of Martinique on Nov. 22,
1682, and his first official visit to the other islands accompanied by the Comte
de Blenac and others. The remainder of the journal combines reports of his official activities with his observations of life on the islands. The entries highlight the activities of the French community, noting official visits, social occasions, and religious ceremonies; record the arrival and departure of ships, including slave ships; describe in detail the flora, fruits, animals, and game available, illnesses common to the islands, and weather conditions; and review the political situation recounting the conflict between the English and the Caribes on St. Domingue, attacks by the Spanish, and the activity of pirates in the area. The latter part of the journal concerns Bégon’s six-month trip to St. Domingue from July 17, 1684, to Jan. 2, 1685, where he visited each quarter of the island in order to prepare a special report for Louis XIV concentrating on the areas of religion, security, a judicial system, and promotion of commerce. His report to the king and several related papers are included at the end of the journal. |
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Microfilm available (acc. 17,540). | |||||||||||||
BOX 3 | Cortés, Hernando (1485-1547). Report, 1524. | ||||||||||||
1 item. | |||||||||||||
Phillips No. 3764 | |||||||||||||
Fourth Relacion of Cortés’ five letters to Charles V, King of Spain, Oct. 15, 1524, in which he reviews and continues the second report sent via Juan de Rivera. Incorporating the reports of his captains, particularly Pedro de Alvarado, Cortes discusses the explorations, subjugations, and founding or settling of towns and provinces along the South Sea coast and in the Panuco region; the quelling of rebellions in provinces already conquered and punishment of captains and others who disobeyed his orders; the activities of Francisco de Garay and Diego Velásquez, with particular reference to their attempts to subvert his command; the arrival of Juan Bono de Quejo with dispatches for Cristóbal de Tapia by which Juan de Fonseca, bishop of Burgos, archbishop of Rosano, and president of the royal council for the Indies, sought to interfere in Cortés’ command; the expeditions of Pedro de Alvarado to Uclatan and Guatemala and of Cristóbal de Olid to Honduras; the subsequent defection of Olid; and the financial costs of his explorations. Cortés makes special pleas to the king to send plants for cultivation, to aid him in obtaining adequate supplies and ammunition, and to revoke the prohibition against exportation of mares and breeding animals to New Spain ordered by the government in Hispaniola. He further urges the king to send religious officials to oversee the conversion of the Indians and to prevail upon the pope to send a bishop with powers of confirmation and consecration, especially from the Orders of St. Francis and St. Dominic. | |||||||||||||
BOX 4 | “Testamentos y Sueñno de España”. Collection, 1745 and undated. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 4279 | |||||||||||||
Three manuscripts relating to Spain. 1. “Testamento de España,” an anonymous satire of Ferdinand VI’s reign; 2. “Testamento Politico,” by José de Carvajal y Lancáster (1698-1754), dated 1745, in which he discusses the various ministries of the Spanish government and then America under the heading “Yndias,” “Estado de Yndias,” “Guerra de Yndias ,” “Marina de Yndias,” “Hacienda de Yndias,” and Comercio de Yndias.” He recommends the formation of five trading companies for different parts of Latin America and offers some general considerations of policy. Seeing the recovery of Minorca and Gibraltar as an urgent necessity, he suggests Oran and Mers-el-kebir be exchanged for Gibraltar plus a tenth share in the American trade for twelve or fifteen years; 3. “Sueña Politica de España,” a satire against the government of Gaspar de Guzmán, Conde de Olivares, by Melchor de Fonseca y Almeida. | |||||||||||||
BOX 5 | Pujati, Giuseppe. Manuscript book, 1766. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 5478 | |||||||||||||
Entitled “Elementi de Geografia Antica e Moderna,” the volume is divided into two
parts. The first part, consisting of three major divisions, defines and gives
historical derivations of basic geographical terms used to describe the earth as a
sphere, such as horizon, meridians, equator, polar and tropic circles, and zodiac
notations; summarizes the various concepts and early knowledge relating to the
solar system from creation by a Supreme Being through the contributions of
Ptolemy, Tycho Brahe, and Copernicus; and describes the continents of Europe,
Asia, Africa, and America and the areas or countries about which he had knowledge.
The main areas described on the American continent include “New Britain,” Canada,
New England, Virginia, Florida, Mexico, “New Mexico,” land areas of Central
America, the Amazon, Brazil, Peru, Chile, Paraguay, “Magellanica,” lands of the
Antarctic, and “islands of America.” The second part of the volume is a narrative of the ancient history of Europe, Asia, and Africa. At the end of the volume is a discourse on the history of geography, citing early maps, the role of the early navigators and conquerors in expanding the field of geographical knowledge, the contributions of such Greeks and Romans as Aristotle Agatharchides, Julius Caesar, and Mark Anthony; the explorer, Marco Polo; and authors of early and late geographical works which portray the progressive development of geography as a science. |
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BOX 6 | Beverini, Bartolomeo (1629-1686). Book, 1697. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 5745 | |||||||||||||
Volume entitled “Notizie di Molte Famiglie di Lucca si estinte che Viventi,” compiled by Father Bartolomeo Beverini of the Congregazione della Madre di Dio. Genealogical record of the various families of the city of Lucca. Arranged in three sections: first, by family names; second, by churches; and third, by an alphabetical listing of names. Includes heraldic drawings and an index to names which follows p. 240. | |||||||||||||
BOX 7 | “Historia della Fameglia Zabarella” Book. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 5819 | |||||||||||||
A history of the Zabarella family transcribed and copied by diverse authors. Includes genealogical charts and table of contents for major branches of the family. May be part of a set, since Phillipps Ms. 5818 and 5820 also had the same title. | |||||||||||||
BOX 8 | Ironside, Edward (1736?-1803). List, 1785-1786. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 6647 | |||||||||||||
List of inscriptions taken from monuments in churches and churchyards of Isleworth, Teddington, Fulham, Hampton, Sheperton, Tottenham, Finchley, and Friern-Barnet in Middlesex County. Includes drawings of coats of arms and an index to names of people buried. Presented to George Harrison, 1786. | |||||||||||||
BOX 9-11 | Great Britain. Council for Foreign Plantations. Journal, 1670-1686. | ||||||||||||
3 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8539 | |||||||||||||
Record of matters relating to trade and the colonies coming before the Privy
Council. Volume 1 is Journal of the Council for Foreign Plantations, Aug. 3, 1670,
to Sept. 20, 1672; Council for Trade and Plantations, Oct. 13, 1672, to Dec. 22,
1674. Volume 2 is Journal of the Lords of the Committee for Trade and Foreign
Plantations, Mar. 31, 1677, to Apr. 14, 1679; volume 3 is Journal of the Committee
for Trade and Plantations, Jan. 13, 1685, to Dec. 8, 1686. A list of lords
appointed to the committee precedes the journal entries in volume 2, which also
contains an index of chief matters contained in the volume. These journals were
published by the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress in 1948. Microfilm of part 1 available (acc. 16, 172). |
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BOX 12 | Great Britain. Treaties, etc. Treaties, 1574-1654. | ||||||||||||
3 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8551 | |||||||||||||
Treaties concluded between Great Britain and Portugal in 1574 during the reign of Elizabeth I, in 1654 during rule of Oliver Cromwell, and an undated draft of a treaty with Portugal as it was presented in Council. | |||||||||||||
BOX 13 | Great Britain. Privy Council. List, 1660-1667. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8712 | |||||||||||||
List of committees appointed by the Council Board between Aug. 8, 1660, and Oct. 2, 1667. | |||||||||||||
BOX 14-20 | “Project d’une histoire des traitez faits entre les estats de 1'Europe...” Collection, 1598-1693. | ||||||||||||
7 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8752 | |||||||||||||
Collection of copies of peace treaties made in preparation for writing a history of European peace treaties. Subdivided into books, volumes 1-5 cover treaties, negotiations, and agreements of the major countries of Europe as well as duchies and principalities from the Peace of Veruins to that of Nimegue, 1598-1679. Volumes 6-7 trace the history of treaties from the Peace of Nimegue to the end of the year 1693, with volume 7 being devoted to a history of negotiation concluded at Ratisbone between France and the Holy Roman Empire covering the years 1552-1684. Volume 7 includes related documents, decrees, memoirs, and correspondence. Volumes 2 and 4-7 contain tables of contents. | |||||||||||||
BOX 21 | Great Britain. Surveyor and auditor General of Revenues in America. Accounts, 1701-1712. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8785 | |||||||||||||
“The Accounts of Her Majesties Revenues in America as brought in and presented to
the Honble. Commrs. of Accompts by William Blathwayt . . .” is a detailed record
of all receipts and expenditures generated or incidental to governing the colonies
of New York from Sept. 29, 1701, to May 18, 1709; Massachusetts Bay from May 28,
1701, to May 31, 1712; New Hampshire from 1701 to 1712; Virginia from Apr. 25,
1701, to June 20, 1711; Jamaica from Sept. 20, 1701, to May 25, 1711; Barbados for
Dec. 1, 1705; and Bermuda from 1704 to 1711. Covers duties on goods imported,
expenses for journeys and entertaining French and Indian factions, fines,
forfeitures, licenses, nursing of soldiers, quitrents, rewards, salaries, taxes,
and many other items. Customs accounts list ships, merchants, masters, ports of
origin, quantity, and value of cargo. Volume includes a table of contents, and, on
page 707, a list of names of governors, lieutenant governors, treasurers,
receivers, and deputy auditors with manner of appointment, salaries, and
allowances as of Sept. 10, 1711. Microfilm available (acc. 14,454). |
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BOX 22 | Great Britain. Committee for Trade and Plantations. Journal, 1683-1688. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8791 | |||||||||||||
Original office book kept by William Blathwayt, secretary for trade and
plantations, recording letters, petitions, proclamations, communications, minutes,
and other matters coming before the Committee for Trade and Plantations. The names
of colonies, people, or subjects involved are listed in the left margin. Most
entries relate to colonies in North America and the West Indies, but some concern
the Royal African Company and the East India Company. Microfilm available (acc. 14,454) |
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BOX 23 | Great Britain and France. Commission to adjust All Differences in America. Papers, 1687-1697. | ||||||||||||
18 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 8794 | |||||||||||||
Commission composed of Earls of Sunderland (Robert Spencer),Middleton (Charles Middleton), and Godolphin (Sidney Godolphin) representing Great Britain and Sieur Paul Barillon d’Amoncourt, Marquis de Branges, and Sieur Francis Dusson de Bonrepaus representing France, formed to negotiate issues remaining in dispute between France and England in America following the Treaty of 1632. The volume contains petitions, memorials and replies, and other papers relating to final possession of the island of St. Lucia, restitution for losses sustained by the Hudson Bay Company and on the island of St. Christopher, reimbursement for expenses incurred by James Kirk in occupying land in Canada returned to the French, and payment for a sloop owned by James Wall seized by the French in the West Indies. The volume also includes the agreement signed Dec. 11, 1687, by the commissioners disallowing acts of hostility by either country after Jan. 11, 1689. | |||||||||||||
BOX 24 | Great Britain. Court reports, [15th-16th centuries] | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 9071 | |||||||||||||
Reports of cases in various counties relating mainly to monasteries through the reign of Henry VIII. Includes an index and a “Summa” of the tithes in Rochester and Kent. Names of early owners are inscribed in various parts of the volume. | |||||||||||||
BOX 25 | Great Britain. Memorandum book, 1747-1761. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 9278 | |||||||||||||
Memorandum book of miscellaneous information regarding British military personnel
and naval ships. Includes lists of officers killed in North America by year and
battle; lists of officers by rank or units, giving dates of commission, promotion,
resignations, or deaths; officers in America under command of Sir Jeffery Amherst;
officers in Gibraltar, Africa, East Indies, and Quebec; a catalog of ships and
naval commanders including those in North America, the West Indies, the East
Indies, and in the Mediterranean; list of ships in the French navy between 1756
and 1761; and a list of French and British ships lost in the war of 1756. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) |
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BOX 26 | Gascoigne, Richard (1579-1661?) Collection. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 9765 | |||||||||||||
Volume of genealogical records relating to the Newmarch and Neville families of
Yorkshire. Bulk of volume consists of genealogical tables of the Neville family.
Contains drawings of Neville family coats of arms and concludes with essay on
history of Neville family. Microfilm available (acc. 17, 333). |
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BOX 27 | Great Britain. Mary II (1689-1694) and William III (1689-1702). Letter patent, 1693. | ||||||||||||
1 item. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 10117 | |||||||||||||
Letter patent to establish a free school in Virginia, 1693. Microfilm available (acc. 16,311). |
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BOX 28 | Great Britain. Records, 1647-1733. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 10449 | |||||||||||||
Listing of marriage licenses granted between 1647 and 1773. Extracted from registers in the Vicar-General and Faculty offices between 1791 and 1803. Preceded by a table of contents and an alphabetical index of last names. |
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BOX 29 | Virginia (Colony). Collection, 1683-1717. | ||||||||||||
17 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 11010 | |||||||||||||
Collection of papers relating mainly to financial affairs of the colony. Includes
undated draft and an incomplete copy of instructions and powers granted under the
Great Seal to Lord Thomas Culpeper as lieutenant and governor general of Virginia
fulfilling terms of his commission of July 8, 1675; a memorandum of agreement
between Culpeper and commissioners of the Crown regarding all matters of
differences relating to his service as governor of Virginia, dated Feb. 1, 1684;
rent rolls of Accomack County for 1683 incorporating records for 1680 and 1882; an
abstract of the militia of Virginia by counties, 1698; an affidavit of James
Blair, Apr. 25, 1704, regarding memorial charging Francis Nicholson with
maladministration; William Byrd’s last quitrent account (1703) and bond of
Messieurs Perry relating to payment of Byrd’s receipts due the Crown; Robert
Carter’s accounts for 1704; revenue and quitrent accounts from Oct. 25, 1714, to
Apr. 25, 1717; a letter from William Lowndes to Alexander Spotswood, lieutenant
governor of Virginia, Mar. 14, 1717, relating to Blathwayt’s deputy; an undated
account of measures undertaken to improve collection of revenues; an address of
the Virginia Council and House of Burgesses seeking authority to use quitrent
receipts to make up deficit in government operating funds; and the report of the
committee receiving the petition of tobacco and wine merchants concerning bonds
given in part for import duties. Microfilm available (acc. 16,311). |
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BOX 30 | New Hampshire (Colony). Collection, 1687-1707. | ||||||||||||
10 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 11568 | |||||||||||||
Collection of financial papers. Includes record of outstanding revenue accounts for several towns and provinces from 1687 to 1688 signed by Governor John Usher; acts for raising funds to defray public charges, June 8 and Oct. 5, 1697, Apr. 5, 1698 and Nov. 21, 1699, Mar. 8, and Sept. 13, 1701; extracts from the minutes of Council, Dec. 17 and 22, 1707. The acts and extracts were certified as true copies by Charles Story, Feb. 23 and Dec. 30, 1707. | |||||||||||||
BOX 31 | Great Britain. Court reports, [15th-16th centuries] | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 11910 | |||||||||||||
Reports of legal cases in various counties during the reign of Henry VII. Appears to have been collected by J. Lucas, who was appointed Filazer in 1503. Text of reports is in Latin, but various verses by J. Lucas at the beginning of the volume are in early modern English. | |||||||||||||
BOX 32 | “Cartularium Sancti Johannis de Beverley”. Cartulary, [15th century] | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 11915 | |||||||||||||
Cartulary of the monastery at Beverley in East Riding of Yorkshire and rededicated
to St. John of Beverley. Contains transcriptions of charters of the thirteenth,
fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries, and some undated ones, with names of
witnesses. Includes charter dated Dec. 13, 1450, issued to John Rolleston,
establishing foundation of the Chantry in the Collegiate Church of St. John in
which the charter of Henry VI, dated 1449, is cited. The last charter is one of
Edward IV, dated Sept. 10, 1464. At end of volume is a “Rentals” showing what the
Chantry received. Microfilm available (acc. 17,369). |
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BOX 33-34 | Macartney, George (1737-1806). Letterbooks, 1777, Feb. 5-1779, June 29. | ||||||||||||
4 vols. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 13379-13380, 13383, 13385*-13388 | |||||||||||||
*Note: Sir Thomas Phillipps duplicated manuscript numbers 13377-13457 in printing Part 2 of his catalog. | |||||||||||||
Although the letters cover routine administrative matters such as settlement of uninhabited lands, civil and military appointments, judicial proceedings, granting of licenses for exportation, and the imposition of martial law when necessary, they high light the impact of the American Revolutionary War on life in the West Indies. The letters provide detailed records of the activities of French and American privateers, emphasize difficulties encountered in securing and maintaining adequate protection for the islands and their export trade, describe problems in transporting food and military equipment, and demonstrate Macartney’s use of diplomacy to control the seizures of Negroes and ships by French and American privateers who found refuge in French harbors. The letters also note the arrival and departure of ships and identify ships cruising in area waters. The letterbooks, which are individually indexed, also contain instructions to sea captains, some of which pertain to gathering intelligence, and a few military returns. Major correspondents include the Admirals John Byron (1723-1786), Samuel Barrington (1729-1800), and James Young (d. 1789); the French Governors d’Argout and Francois de Bouillé (1739-1800); lieutenant governors of the island of Tobago, Peter Campbell and John Graham; and Governors Valentine Morris and Edward Hay. Other correspondents include Thomas Fairholme, John George Felton, James Grant, William Howe, Joseph MacLaughlin, Robert Morse, and Walter Robertson. | |||||||||||||
BOX 35 | Grenada (Colony). Governor Administrative forms. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 13408, 13379* | |||||||||||||
*Note: Sir Thomas Phillipps duplicated manuscript numbers 13377-13457 in printing Part 2 of his catalog. | |||||||||||||
Volume containing examples and forms to be used for all administrative, legal, and military contingencies expected to be encountered in governing the colonies of the British West Indies. Includes examples and forms for oaths of office, civil and military commissions, civil and military orders, format for responding to official queries, fiats, instructions for execution of legal proceedings, leaves of absence, licenses, legal briefs, writs, subpoenas, pardons and reprieves, proclamations, court procedure, lists of court fees, legal precedents, types of orders issued by specific courts, warrants, ship papers, and extracts from minutes of governing councils. Several documents used in Barbados, Grenada, Dominica, Antigua, etc., covering the years 1653-1772, are copied as examples. | |||||||||||||
BOX 35 | Cooper, John Gilbert (1723-1769). Letters, 1746-1754. | ||||||||||||
30 items (microfilm only). | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 13846 | |||||||||||||
Mainly letters written to the bookseller Robert Dodsley (1703-1764) concerning the
printing of Cooper’s Life of Socrates (1749), Letters Concerning
Taste (1754), pamphlets, and several essays on serious and humorous subjects which
he wished to have published in Dodsley’s Museum. Cooper wrote some of his articles
under the pseudonym Philaretes. A few of the letters discuss orders for books
which Cooper wanted to purchase, and two refer to literary criticism of his Life
of Socrates. Microfilm (acc. 6192) |
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BOX 36 | Berlandier, Jean Louis (d. 1851). Papers, 1845-1846. 39 items. | ||||||||||||
39 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 15461 | |||||||||||||
Various documents pertaining to encounters between Mexican troops and U. S.
soldiers around the city of Matamoros and the Battle of Palo Alto during the war
between the United States and Mexico. Includes a description of Matamoros with an
assessment of its possibilities for defense; extracts from newspapers relating to
Taylor’s military artillery; memoranda describing the encampment locations of
Mexican and American troops and the Battle of Palo Alto, including measurements
and diagrams; letters and papers describing the fortifications; a plan to follow
for defense against an attack by American troops on the banks of the Rio Bravo;
and several maps depicting troop positions around Matamoros, the Battle of Palo
Alto on May 8, 1846, the Battle of Resaca de la Palma on May 9, 1846, and other
maps of the city of Matamoros. Microfilm available (acc. 18, 1786; negative 17,742) |
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BOX 36 | Berlandier, Jean Louis (d. 1851). Papers, 1826-1847. | ||||||||||||
27 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 15464 | |||||||||||||
Miscellaneous papers relating mainly to Mexico, Lower California, and Texas. Includes barometric observations in Mexico, 1826-1827; extracts from orderly books giving orders of the day issued at Matamoros during the Revolution of 1838; a description of Baja California covering produce, animal life, “aspecto,” and slaves; a memorandum of distances from frontier of Upper California to Cape San Lucas; minutes of a meeting between General William J. Worth and Rómulo Vega on the right bank of the Rio Grande, Mar. 28, 1846; copies of documents posted for the safety of the inhabitants of Octolan by the governor following the earthquake of Oct. 2, 1847; a memorandum of the capitulation of General Yucatocos y Pena Barragan, Apr. 23, 1843, taken from a New Orleans newspaper; a description of the yellow fever epidemic in New Orleans in October-November 1832; some letters to Berlandier; and miscellaneous notes covering an election in Texas, trees of Galveston, extracts from a Galveston newspaper, notes on Academie de Beaux-Arts, and other miscellaneous items. | |||||||||||||
BOX 36 | Mexico. Commision de limites. Notes, 1827-1831. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 15466 | |||||||||||||
Volume entitled “ Calculs astronomiques 1827-1831,” in which are recorded the measurements and calculations made by members of the Boundary Commission appointed by the Mexican government to survey the boundary of Northeastern Mexico as defined in the Adams-Onís Treaty of 1819. The commission, under the direction of Manuel de Mier y Téran, included Jean Louis Berlandier as botanist and zoologist. Although calculations for Mexico City done by Téran are found at the beginning of the volume, those made during the survey journey begin Nov. 10, 1827, at Huehuetoca and are recorded for each city or locality on the journey northeastward to the Trinity River (in Texas), where the commission split into two sections. One, including Berlandier, returned to Bexar, and the other went to Nacogdoches. The remainder of the volume contains calculations for Nacogdoches from June 4, 1828, to Feb. 28, 1829; for Matamoros from Mar. 8 to July 20, 1829, and Aug. 10 to 18, 1831; and for Anahuac (Texas) from Nov. 13 to 20, 1831. Sir Thomas Phillipps’s catalog of his collection lists this manuscript as two volumes entitled “Calculations astronomiques et Geographiques.” | |||||||||||||
BOX 37-40 | Berlandier, Jean Louis (d. 1851). Journal, 1826-1834. | ||||||||||||
7 vols. in 4 containers (1: vols.1-2; 2: vols. 3-4; 3: vols. 5-6; 4: vol.7) | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 15470 | |||||||||||||
Entitled “Voyage au Mexique,” the journal records Berlandier’s service as botanist and zoologist with the Mexican Boundary Commission which surveyed the boundary between Mexico and the United States as defined by the Adams-Onís Treaty of 1819. Volumes 1-2 cover Berlandier’s departure from Geneva, his observation while crossing the ocean aboard the “Hannah Elizabeth.” and the months spent in Mexico prior to beginning his official duties with the commission, particularly his stay around Tampico, the journey to Mexico City, and collection trips to Tuluca and Cuernavaca. Berlandier’s service with the Boundary Commission described in volumes 3-6 traces the route of the survey team from Mexico City north-northeast passing through Tula, San Juan del Rio, Queretaro, San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, San Felipe, Jaral, San Luis Potosi, Catorce, Ventura, Saltillo, Monterrey, Carrizal Lampagos, and Laredo, where they met with General Anastasio Bustamante. The team continued northward through Bexar and San Marcos until it reached the Trinity River, where it split, as one group headed by General Téran went on to Nacogdoches and Berlandier’s group returned to Bexar by a southerly route. From Bexar Berlandier made several trips between Goliad and Copano in the Arkansas Bay area, and a trip to New Orleans before resuming his journey southward to Laredo, east to Matamoros, and finally back to Mexico City. Volume 7 concerns a botanical exploration undertaken in 1834 in association with Rafael Chowell to replace the collections of Texas plants damaged in crossing the Colorado River during a storm on the return trip of the Boundary Commission. Besides descriptions of plant and animal life, for which Berlandier usually gives local and scientific names, the journals contain his observations and comments on the climate, landscape, products, people, industries, customs, religion, and history. Volumes 3-6 were published in 1850 as Diario de Viage de la Commission de Limites . . . A translation of the journal by Shelia M. Ohlendorf and others, Journey to Mexico During the Years 1826 to 1834, was published by the Texas State Historical Association in cooperation with the Center for Studies in Texas History, University of Texas at Austin, in 1980. | |||||||||||||
BOX 37-40 | Phillipps No. 15512 See 15530 | ||||||||||||
BOX 41-42 | Berlandier, Jean Louis (d. 1851). Journal, 1846-1847. | ||||||||||||
2 vols. in 2 containers | |||||||||||||
15530 | |||||||||||||
Journal of Berlandier’s experiences during the war between the United States and Mexico. Volume 1 (15530), covering the period Dec. 6, 1846, to Mar. 1, 1847, focuses on his journey from Tula de Tamaulipas to Matamoros, passing through the major towns of San Luis Potosi, Matehuala, San Carlos, and San Fernando, and several haciendas and rancheros along the way. Contains descriptions of terrain, climate and weather conditions, elevation readings, observations of animal life and vegetation, history of the towns and haciendas, references to occupations of inhabitants, produce, news of troop movements and progress of the war in Mexico, including his assessment of the leadership capabilities of General Santa Anna and reflects Berlandier’s friendship with Gen. Tomás Mejía. Volume 2 (15512) covers the period of Berlandier’s forced exile (Mar. 21-May 19, 1847) from Matamoros caused by the actions of Col. Joseph P. Taylor, brother of Gen. Zachary Taylor. Describes the military situation in Matamoros, but is mainly a record of Berlandier’s geographical, zoological, and botanical observations along the coasts and islands of Laguna Madre, where he spent his two months’ exile. | |||||||||||||
BOX 43 | Porter, Samuel. Letters, 1788-1789. | ||||||||||||
6 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 16004 | |||||||||||||
Letters addressed to Porter during a trip to America. Related to his financial investments, the management of his business affairs in England during his absence, and to requests of associates to investigate the status of their business affairs in America during his stay. Correspondents include Nathaniel Fisher, William Jackson, E. G. Lutwyche, E. Pullins, and Nathaniel P. Sargeant. | |||||||||||||
BOX 44 | Shays’s Rebellion. Collection, [1786] | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 16058 | |||||||||||||
Notebook containing documents copied mainly from the Massachusetts Centinal , the Massachusetts Gazette, and Worcester Magazine or extracted from correspondence between Aug. 14 and Oct. 26, 1786, describing events which culminated in Shays’s Rebellion. Includes an unsigned eyewitness description of the insurrection at Exeter, Sept. 25, 1786; a copy of a paper circulating in Bristol Co. aimed at preventing the sitting of courts for the purpose of taking property by distress; Governor James Bowdoin’s speech to the General Court, Sept. 28, 1786, relating to acts of insurgents; a petition of the Worcester County Convention to the general Court citing grievances against the court and government; resolutions of the Society of the Cincinnati, Boston, Oct. 11, 1786, condemning acts of insurrection and calling for support of the government; a summary of Rufus King’s speech to the Massachusetts House of Representatives, Oct. 11, 1786; and a summary of the proceedings of the legislature signed by James Bowdoin, Oct. 19, 1786. | |||||||||||||
BOX 45 | Florida. (Colony). Collection, 1573-1692. | ||||||||||||
42 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 16198 | |||||||||||||
Collection of file copies of 27 royal orders issued by Spanish monarchs from Philip II to Charles II relating to Florida. Most of the orders pertain to the salaries of the Governors, tesorer, proveedor, or contador of the province. Three documents concern Pedro Menéndez Márquez, contador, and later Governor of Florida, ordering him to pay compensation for ammunition and stores removed from the Fort of San Felipe, appointing him Governor, and granting him expenses of his voyage home and his salary until his successor took over. Other orders command the officials of the province’s exchequer to repay the last Governor, Domingo Martinez de Avendaño, and Captain Salazar for the cost of benches given in the King’s name to the Cathedral of St. Augustine; direct the exchequer in Mexico City to deposit 16,000 ducats in the Casa de Contratacion in Seville to pay for troops to be raised for the defense of Florida against the English of Bermuda and the Indians; and notify Juan Marquez Cabrera, Governor and captain-general of St. Augustine, that his request for reinforcements will be sent with the fleet about to sail for Mexico. | |||||||||||||
BOX 46 | McLane, Louis (1786-1857). Letter, 1830. | ||||||||||||
1 item. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 16208 | |||||||||||||
Copy of a letter, dated Mar. 16, 1830, from Louis McLane, U.S. Minister to England, to the Earl of Aberdeen (George Hamilton-Gordon, 1784-1860), British Foreign Secretary, in which McLane explains a proposal for a change in the interpretation of the 1825 Act of Parliament regulating trade with the British colonies in the West Indies which McLane had submitted to the Earl of Aberdeen on Dec. 12, 1829. In the 39-page letter McLane presents arguments for granting the United States the same trade privileges with the British West Indies as enjoyed by other nations, citing mutual advantages of direct trade between the United States and the colonies as well as some embarrassments which occurred under the operation of the 1825 Act. | |||||||||||||
BOX 47 | “In Octo Libros Physicorum Ariststagirite Peripateticorum Prinipis Siue de Physico audito Disputationes”. Manuscript book, 1610? | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 16235 | |||||||||||||
Manuscript by an anonymous author dealing with the theories and discoveries of Galileo, which it attempts to refute. | |||||||||||||
BOX 48 | Great Britain. Army. Accounts, 1747, July-Sept. | ||||||||||||
123 items. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 17550 | |||||||||||||
Payroll lists, pay orders, bills and receipts for construction work performed at Louisburg by order of the chief engineer, J. J. L. Bastide, with exact descriptions of work completed. Workers include artificers, carpenters, masons and bricklayers, glaziers, laborers, coopers and armourers, and painters. | |||||||||||||
BOX 49 | Texas (Province). Atascosita District. Census, 1826. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 17788 | |||||||||||||
Population census of the Atascosita District of Texas, dated July 31, 1826,
listing age, birthplace, marital status, number of children, occupation or trade,
slaves owned, state of former residence, and remarks about inhabitants. Families
settled by Stephen F. Austin on the San Jacinto River are identified by an
asterisk. The census, signed by Matthew G. White, George Orr, Joseph W. Brown, and
Henry W. Munson, excludes 10 or 12 families living along the Sabine River. Sir
Thomas Phillipps’ catalog indicated a plan of the settlement had originally been
included with the census. (Formerly a part of Berlandier’s papers) Microfilm available (acc. 23,859) |
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BOX 50 | West Indies. Journal, undated. 1 vol. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 17857 | |||||||||||||
Narrative (in Dutch) of a voyage to America and the West Indies during the seventeenth century. Beginning with a description of the Cape Verde Islands, the Cape Verde Islands, the volume records the geography of the islands of Guadalupe, St. Christopher, St. Domingo, St. Vincent, St. Lucia, St. Nicholas, Tobago, and others, noting such elements as water depth measurements, prevailing winds, headlands, and sea routes among the islands. Nautical maps of the coast lines of the islands and other drawings are also included. Present form of the volume is incomplete; it begins with page 30. | |||||||||||||
BOX 51 | Homer, Arthur (1758-1806). Bibliography, [ca. 1799] | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 18378 | |||||||||||||
Planned as a catalog of “Books & Pamphlets, etc. relating to the Slave Trade
& African Company trading to the West Indies,” but expanded to include works
related to Negroes in general in the American plantations or connected with the
subject. Covering the years 1667-1800, the entries include citations for speeches,
essays, poems, acts of Parliament, petitions, correspondence, reports,
proceedings, and other papers found in the libraries or catalogs listed at the
beginning of the bibliography. Microfilm available (acc. 17, 339) |
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BOX 52 | Great Britain. Army. Accounts, 1763-1766. | ||||||||||||
17 items. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 18713 | |||||||||||||
Accounts, receipts, and returns of ordnance and supplies received or issued by Office of Ordnance, St. Augustine, East Florida, between July 27, 1763, and July 25, 1766. Most supplies were delivered to Lieutenant Thomas Ross of His Majesty’s Royal Artillery and receipts are signed by James Moncrief, engineer, or Colonel William Taylor. | |||||||||||||
BOX 53 | New Hampshire (Colony). Papers, 1773. | ||||||||||||
4 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 18740 | |||||||||||||
Depositions of Stephen Peabody, Nathaniel Trask, John Webster, Samuel Little, and Ichabod Shaw, in support of the administration of John Wentworth as governor of New Hampshire, counteracting charges against Wentworth that had been presented to the British government; and alist of townships forfeited by the old grantees in the province from July 1767, the time of the Council. An oversize copy of this list of townships is identified as Phillipps Ms. 36141. These document relate to the land dispute involving Peter Livius. See also Oversize | |||||||||||||
BOX 54-55 | Sharpe, Joshua. Papers, 1736-1773. | ||||||||||||
76 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 18741 (19705, 20029, 20940) | |||||||||||||
Correspondence, financial and legal papers, petitions, and other documents
relating chiefly to legal actions begun in the courts in the colonies and appealed
to the King in Council for final adjudication. Most papers pertain to cases
involving land ownership, trespass, or recovery of debts in Massachusetts, North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. Papers relating to Massachusetts (20929)
cover the years 1754-1766 and include correspondence and documents connected with
the case of Barrell v. Gerrish (1766), the petition of Dudley in an inheritance
case, letters from Timothy Walker regarding in dispute between Massachusetts, and
New Hampshire, and copies of the King’s Warrant granting funds to Massachusetts
for levying, clothing, and maintaining military troops. Papers from Pennsylvania
(20929), covering the years 1756-1758, concern Cadwalader Evans, who wanted
letters patent issued making the islands in the Delaware River and in the Bay of
Delaware a part of the colonies of New Jersey or Pennsylvania and granting the
islands to him and his heirs and assigns. Documents relating to North Carolina
(18741) span the years 1737-1773 and pertain to land grants involving Henry E.
McCulloch, particularly his litigation with William Adair and McCulloch’s
administration of lands held by John Granville; the settlement of a plantation
bond of Thomas Benny; and reviews by committees of the Privy Council of petitions
from inhabitants and local officials and acts passed by the General Assembly.
Among the Virginia papers (19705, 20940), dating from 1752 to 1772, are briefs and
related documents in the case of Charles Lewis against Walter King, Phillip
Ludwell Lee against John Hunter, and Edward and Thomas Hunt against Thomas Newton
and John Taylor, executors of the will of Robert Tucker, and a case concerning
William Parson’s inheritance. Other items in Sharpe’s papers are a petition and
proposals of British merchants involved in the sugar trade, a draft of a clause
pertaining to idiots and lunatics to be incorporated into the commissions of
governors of the colonies in America, an act of 1761 relating to the manning of
the British navy, and an appeal case from the island of Antigua. Correspondents in
the papers include William Adair, Patrick Gordon, Nathaniel Hatch, John Pownall,
John Rutherford, and Timothy Walker. The Joshua Sharpe papers combine Phillipps
manuscript numbers , 19705, 20929, and 20940 as a unit. Microfilm of (acc. 17,339), 19705 (acc. 16,311), and 20940 (acc. 16,311) is available. |
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BOX 56 | Great Britain. Board of Trade. Papers, 1738-1781. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 19402 | |||||||||||||
Accounts, abstracts of accounts, audit reports, correspondence, lists, military returns, pay warrants, and receipts relating primarily to supplying troops and settlers in Nova Scotia, 1749-1765, and to troops under the command of General Thomas Gage, 1774-1775. Also includes record of the examination of accounts of bank annuities, audit of accounts of John Sharpe and Philip Webb, solicitors for the affairs of the Treasury, 1746-1747, 1757-1762; computation of audit fees for auditing accounts of Lord Holland as paymaster-general of British forces and treasurer of Chelsea Hospital, 1757-1767; other miscellaneous accounts, and a few legal papers, viz, a memorandum of Hopkin Walters written aboard the East India ship, Diana, May 18, 1781, for the guidance of his executors, Cator, Know & Wileman; an affidavit of Robert Price in the case of Harris v. Cox, and a record of the trail and conviction of Jane Humphreys at Halifax. | |||||||||||||
BOX 56 | Phillipps No. 19705 See 18741 | ||||||||||||
BOX 56 | Phillipps No. 20929 See 18741 | ||||||||||||
BOX 56 | Phillipps No. 20940 See 18741 | ||||||||||||
BOX 57 | North, Frederick (1732-1792), known as Lord North. Letters, 1783. | ||||||||||||
13 items. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 21638 | |||||||||||||
Letters written to Lord William Henry Cavendish Bentinck between June and November 1783 in which North makes recommendations for appointments; discusses allocations of work space at “Cockpit,” opting to have the Board for the American Sufferers and its pay office move to new locations; presents the case of John Bromsall who wishes to protect his source of income as stamp distributor of Kent; mentions intelligence information received; and expresses his views on the administration of the remaining colonies in North America, suggesting that Sir Guy Carleton be issued a new commission giving him expanded authority to review and make recommendations for the future administration of the colonies. | |||||||||||||
BOX 58 | Great Britain. State Papers Office. Catalog. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 21906 | |||||||||||||
Listing of papers in the State Papers Office divided according to subjects. Covers Admiralty matters, ceremonials, criminal matters, ecclesiastical matters, education, the diplomatic service, including question of privilege and precedence, fishing rights, foreign and domestic trade, military affairs, pretensions and successions to the throne, and ecclesiastical, civil, and military affairs as they relate to Ireland. Includes a list of people employed by the kings and queens to negotiate in foreign countries from 1521 to 1650 and a list of treaties between England and other countries between 1446 and 1675, both arranged by country, and a table of contents on page 179. The second part of the volume, in a different handwriting, is entitled “A Discourse of Parliaments and the method of Proceeding in Parliaments.” It is an analysis of the stages through which a bill must pass from exhibition to the publication of the resultant statute or ordinance. | |||||||||||||
BOX 59 | Maryland (Colony). Potomac District. Accounts, 1696-1706. | ||||||||||||
3 vols. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 23099 | |||||||||||||
Accounts of revenues of the Potomac District, kept by George Muschamp, receiver,
from the beginning of his appointment, March 1696, to 1706, presented to the
Governor-in-Council, July 18, 1707, following examination and certification by
William Bladen, the deputy-auditor and surveyor of the public revenue; and the
Journal of the Committee Especially Appointed to Inspect the Public Accounts for
the period July 10, 1695-1698, copied from the original accounts by Nicholas
Fleatham, clerk of the committee. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) |
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BOX 59 | Maryland (Colony). List, 1694. | ||||||||||||
1 item. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 24159 | |||||||||||||
Record of ships docking at the port of Baltimore from Apr. 30, 1689, to June 21,
1693, giving name of ship, port of origin, whether English or foreign built, type
and size of ship, number of guns, name of master, date of entry, bonding
information, description of goods carried, date of clearance from Baltimore, and
destination port. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) |
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BOX 59 | Robinson, John. Indenture, 1830. | ||||||||||||
1 item. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 24561 | |||||||||||||
Deed between John Robinson of Warwick County, England, his wife, Mary, and Jobbing Smith on the one part and Anthony Robinson and Jobbing Smith on the second part, selling 67 acres and 64 perches of land in Warrington township, Bucks County, Pa., to Anthony Robinson. Unsigned and undated except for year. | |||||||||||||
BOX 60 | Bendlowes, William (1516-1584) Court reports. | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 26208 | |||||||||||||
Reports of court cases in great Britain during the reigns of Henry VII, Henry VIII, Edward VI, Philip, Mary and Elizabeth, kept by sergeant at law Bendlowes. Preceded by prefatory not signed by Godfrey Edward Goldyinge. Volume also includes “The manner and order of the making of newe Serjeants created and made in Myches terme annis XIX et XX Regni Elizabeth Regine,” with the names of those who were created, a memorandum that “the olde Serjeants then lyving were Mr. Bendelowes, Mr. Powtrell & Mr. Meade and no more,” and a list of all the judges from the reign of Henry IV to the reign of Henry VII. Volume is written in “law French” and contains a table of contents. Bendlowes name is variously spelled, “Benloe,” Bendelow,” and Bendelowes.” | |||||||||||||
BOX 61 | Great Britain. Court reports, [16th century] | ||||||||||||
1 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 26752 | |||||||||||||
Entitled “Manuscript of Law” on the spine, volume is no. 16 of a collection of legal cases in Great Britain. Covers the reigns of Henry IV, Richard III, and Henry VII. Includes a chronology of kings of England to Henry VII and a list of birth dates of many members of the Jenour, Frevile, and Bokenham Families. Volume is written in Latin with few entries in “law French.’ The auction house, Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge, attributed this volume to John Jenoure, a prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas in the reign of Henry VII. | |||||||||||||
BOX 62 | Massachusetts (Colony). Treasurer and Receiver General of Revenue. Accounts, 1695-1700 | ||||||||||||
3 vol. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 28880 | |||||||||||||
Accounts of revenue received and expended within the colony, kept by James Taylor.
Volume 1 covers period May 29 to Nov. 7, 1695; vol. 2, May 22, 1697, to May 30,
1698; vol. 3, May 31, 1699-May 27, 1700. Specific acts of the General Assembly
that granted revenue assessments are also included. Revenue collected is listed by
counties further subdivided into towns. Accounts were examined by Isaac Addington,
deputy auditor. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) |
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BOX 62 | Wood, William. Papers, 1731-1745. | ||||||||||||
17 items. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 31915 | |||||||||||||
Papers relating to a petition of William Wood, Jr., Charles Wood, and Francis Wood, merchants, and Kingsmith Eyre to be granted a royal charter of incorporation to make iron from pit coal in air furnaces. Includes results of various tests of iron made by the Wood process, reports on quality of iron imported from the American colonies, arguments for and against the importation of iron, and various selling prices for iron. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) | |||||||||||||
BOX 62 | South Carolina (Colony). Papers, 1662-1728. | ||||||||||||
4 items | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 34782 | |||||||||||||
Papers relating to the Carolinas including a grant to the Earl of Clarendon and
others to the Carolinas; an invoice of supplies purchased in South Carolina by
Robert Quary of Pennsylvania, May 28, 1709, and shipped to Jamaica aboard the
Happy Return, Thomas Sproad, captain; a letter
sent to Lord Craven at request of the Lords of the Committee for Trade and
Plantations relating to privateering in Carolina; and a memorandum listing
advantages to the Crown of purchasing the Carolinas, 1728. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) |
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BOX 62 | Skipwith, Fulwar (1765-1839). Letters, 1796-1802. | ||||||||||||
6 items. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 35843 | |||||||||||||
Letters written by Skipwith, U.S. consul-general in Paris, to Dominique-Vincent
Ramel de Nogaret (1760-1829) and Martin Michel Charles Gaudin (1756-1841),
Ministers of Finance, and to commissioners of the National Treasury relating to
settlement of financial matters including the appraisal of tapestries and
furniture purchased by Henry Sadler, protested bank drafts, the resale of the
Montmorency property, and prize case involving the American naval ship, Severn. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339). |
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BOX 62 | Marshall, Samuel. Memorial, [1784] | ||||||||||||
1 item. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 35868 | |||||||||||||
Amendment to the memorial presented January 1784 to the Commissioners Appointed to
Inquire into the Losses and Services of the American Loyalists in which Marshall,
a loyalist of Bladen County, North Carolina, describes and estimates the value of
property which the commissioners had not considered when reviewing the original
memorial. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339). |
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BOX 62 | Massachusetts (Colony). Papers, 1692-1700. | ||||||||||||
2 items. | |||||||||||||
Phillipps No. 35882 | |||||||||||||
Copy of a letter dated Oct. 4, 1692, from Isaac Addington to William Blathwayt in
which Addington discusses the execution of his duties and reports on events in the
colony following his duties appointment as secretary of the province; and a copy
of proceedings of the General Court for May 29, 1700, relating to the accounts of
James Taylor, treasurer and receiver general of the province, attested to by
Addington. Microfilm available (acc. 17,339) |
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BOX 62 | See 18740 and Oversize | ||||||||||||
36141 | |||||||||||||
BOX 63 | Papers, 1683-1857. | ||||||||||||
48 items. | |||||||||||||
Unnumbered | |||||||||||||
Correspondence, financial papers, memorandum book, power of attorney, and reports. Includes: | |||||||||||||
BOX 63 | Correspondence | ||||||||||||
1683, June 10 Nathaniel Bacon, Sr., to William Blathwayt (in Virginia) 1692, Mar. 22 Joseph Dudley to William Blathwayt (in London) 1765, Feb. 12 Thomas Pownall to George Grenville. Enclosure not with letter. 1788, Aug. 1 J. Temple to Samuel Porter 1789, ca. Mar. 3 Tearent Putnam to Samuel Porter 1789, Mar. 6 Samuel Porter to T. Putnam 1790, Aug. 11 Unknown to Edward Rutledge 1802, Sept. 5 Anthony Merry to Lord Hawesbury 1806, Feb. 24 Anthony Merry to Lord Mulgrave 1806, Apr. 20 Anthony Merry to Charles James Fox 1806, June 1 Anthony Merry to Charles James Fox 1807, Sept. 18 Vincent ___ to Therese LeRay de Chaumont 1817, Jan. 3 Christopher Hughes, Jr., to Lord Holland 1817, Jan 17 Albert Gallatin to Augustus L. Hillhouse 1827, Jan. 6 DeRham & Moon to Lady M. Affleck, with three promissory notes and copy of letter of Dec. 21, 1826 1837, Dec. 11 Comte de Choiseul to Ashley & Sons 1856, Nov. 10 Thomas J. Savage at Alexandria, Ky., to his parents in England 1857, Jan. 24 J. K. Tefft to Sir Thomas Phillipps 1857, May 16 T. G. Kohl to Sir Thomas Phillipps |
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BOX 63 | Other Papers | ||||||||||||
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BOX OV 1 | Phillipps No. 36141 See 18740 for description |