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Start Over You searched for: Date range 1874 Remove constraint Date range: 1874 Subjects Women--Diaries Remove constraint Subjects: Women--Diaries

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Birdsall and Lockman Family Papers, 1860/1878

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Abstract Or Scope

Diaries and letters, 1860-1878, of Celia Birdsall and her uncle Ephraim Lockman. Diaries date from 1872 and 1878 and were written by Celia Birdsall; in them, she details her personal life, funerals, what she did each day, and friends with which she met. The letters date 1860-1870 and were written by Ephraim Lockman. In them, he discusses his work, opening his own doctor's practice, and his location in the city of Buffalo, New York. Lockman graduated from Western Reserve Medical School. There are also cut out dolls with faces and clothes drawn on them.

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Birdsall and Lockman Family Papers, 1860/1878 0.02 Linear Feet

Diaries (Wallingford, Connecticut), 1869/1884

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Abstract Or Scope

Diaries, 1869-1884, of a woman whose first name is Mary who lives in Wallingford, Connecticut. She was born on 11 September 1852, and her diaries contain information about her social life, events she attended, and people with whom she interacted, among other items.

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Diaries (Wallingford, Connecticut), 1869/1884 0.25 Linear Feet

Gregory Family papers, 1829/1920, bulk 1880/1900

1.26 Linear Feet 3 full legal size Hollinger boxes
Abstract Or Scope

The Gregory Family papers follow the family of Virginia Governor John Munford Gregory and wife Amanda Wallace through three generations with letters dating from the 1820's to the 1920's. Most items are letters between family members and grant insight into the daily activities and concerns of the Gregory family. The collection also includes correspondence between members of the Gregory family and other acquaintances, including members of the John Tyler family. While most letters are of a personal nature, some also touch on the issues of politics, education, religion, and agriculture. The collection is rich in genealogical information on the Gregory family and related Croshaw, Graves, West, and White families, as well as history of the family's war involvement. In addition to letters, the collection includes newspaper articles, family documents, and two diaries kept by John M. Gregory's daughter, Mattie Galbraith, in the late 1870's. There are also seven cased images of members of the Gregory Family, including Amanda Wallace Gregory, Amanda's sister (Elizabeth Christie Powell), William Wallace Gregory, and Mary "Mollie" Gregory.

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Gregory Family papers, 1829/1920, bulk 1880/1900 1.26 Linear Feet 3 full legal size Hollinger boxes

Merchant's Wife pocket diaries, 1869/1870

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Three pocket diaries written in 1869-1870 and 1874 by the wife of a merchant. The first diary, from 1869, focuses on the writer's daily life in Massachusetts. She writes about her activities such as music lessons, visits from friends, commemorating the anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, attending lectures at the Ladies' Physiological Institute, going to the Anti-Slavery Convention at the Horticultural Hall, and seeing photograph exhibits. She also mentions writing letters to Erastus, who has gone to San Francisco.

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Merchant's Wife pocket diaries, 1869/1870 0.02 Linear Feet

Pattie Fitzgerald Diary, 1872/1883

0.1 Linear Feet One legal sized folder
Abstract Or Scope

A forty-seven page diary of a Virginia woman named Pattie Fitzgerald. Alongside school, courting, friends and family, Fitzgerald writes about darker things. She mentions feelings of hopelessness, a murder, and nightmares. Death is the focus of several entries.

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Pattie Fitzgerald Diary, 1872/1883 0.1 Linear Feet One legal sized folder

Wasson-Cox Diary, 1826/1946, bulk 1826/1853

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Diary, 1826-1946, of Lydia Wasson (1800-1853) of North Carolina and La Porte, Indiana, her daughter Charlotte Wasson Cox, and her grandson William Wasson Cox (b. 1857). At the beginning of the diary, Lydia Wasson, a devout Quaker, chronicles her life from birth to 1826 when the regular diary entries begin. Toward the end of her life she dictated her entries to her daughter, who after her mother's death continued to write in the diary a few more times at irregular intervals. Charlotte Wasson also titled the diary "A brief sketch of the religious exercises and varied experiences of Lydia Wasson written by herself - age 52 years - at her death in 1852."

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Wasson-Cox Diary, 1826/1946, bulk 1826/1853 0.1 Linear Foot

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