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Start Over You searched for: Names Dew, Thomas R. (Thomas Roderick), 1802-1846 Remove constraint Names: Dew, Thomas R. (Thomas Roderick), 1802-1846

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Lewis (1778-1843) and George W. (1804-1868) Summers Papers

0.4 Linear Feet Summary: 5 in. (1 document case)
Abstract Or Scope
Papers of Lewis Summers, a lawyer, businessman, member of the Virginia House of Delegates, 1817-1818, delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention, 1829-1830, and his brother George W., a lawyer in Charleston, a judge, a member of the House of Delegates, 1830-1832, 1834-1836, the U.S. House of Representatives, 1841-1845, a delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1850, candidate for governor in 1851, member of the 1861 Peace Convention, and delegate to the Richmond Secession Convention, 1861. Correspondence between the brothers is for the years 1818-1843. There are also business, legal, and family papers, speeches, and an autograph book of George W. while a student at the University of Virginia, 1854-1857. Correspondents include George Carlisle, James Craik, James M. Laidley, and Luke Wilcox. Persons mentioned or commented on include John Q. Adams, John C. Calhoun, Lewis Cass, Henry Clay, Thomas R. Dew, Andrew Donnally, Millard Fillmore, John Floyd, William H. Harrison, Andrew Jackson, the Ruffner family, Martin Van Buren, Daniel Webster, and Henry A. Wise.
1 result

Lewis (1778-1843) and George W. (1804-1868) Summers Papers 0.4 Linear Feet Summary: 5 in. (1 document case)

Office of the President. Thomas Roderick Dew Records

1.4 Linear Feet 1 box
Abstract Or Scope

This collection includes correspondence from Dew as well as an account book.

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Phillip H. Jones to Lawrence Washington Letter

.01 Linear Feet
Abstract Or Scope

4 page letter from Phillip Jones to Lawrence Washington dated March 16, 1849 from Louisa Courthouse, Virginia. Jones writes to his fellow William and Mary graduate located in Westmoreland Cort House, Virginia about an inquiry about familial ties to Henry A. Washington, Professor of Political Economy at the College of William and Mary. Jones continues in his letter to confess that he was a student at William and Mary some forty years earlier when "Bishop Madison, St. George Tucker, and George Blackburg lectured in her halls". Jones conveys his delight that Washington was appointed to the college and that its reputation will be restored with the new President of the school, John Johns who also committed to have the college remain in Williamsburg and to restore its neglected infrastructure.

1 result

Phillip H. Jones to Lawrence Washington Letter .01 Linear Feet

University Archives Bound Volumes Collection

8.40 Linear Feet
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains information about the College of William and Mary from the Eighteenth Century to the present. Included in the collection are faculty lecture notes from a variety of classes, scrapbooks, research notes, correspondence, textbooks used at the College of William and Mary, minute and account books, poetry books, student notebooks, a literary manual, and various other miscellaneous bound volumes.

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University Archives Bound Volumes Collection 8.40 Linear Feet

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