Search

Back to top

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Subjects Food prices. Remove constraint Subjects: Food prices. Formats Letters (correspondence) Remove constraint Formats: Letters (correspondence)
Number of results to display per page
View results as:

Search Results

Collection

Cozzens House Hotel collection, 1866-1868

0.25 linear feet

This collection is made up of receipts and other financial records pertaining to the Cozzens House Hotel in Omaha, Nebraska, between 1867 and 1868. Three letters relate to an 1868 legal dispute between the hotel's later lessees and the real estate company Credit Foncier of America.

This collection (140 items) contains 137 receipts, bills, and checks related to the initial furnishing and continuing supply of food for the Cozzens House Hotel in Omaha, Nebraska, between 1867 and 1868. The collection also contains are 3 letters respecting an 1868 legal dispute between the hotel's later lessees and the real estate company Credit Foncier of America.

The Correspondence series (3 items) contains 1 letter to John W. Little of Newburgh, New York, and 2 to Charles G. Little pertaining to a legal dispute between the hotel's owners, the Credit Foncier of America, and a new lessee, Seth W. Hale. The dispute concerned furnishings left behind by the building's first tenants, Edward Cozzens and John M. Bettman. A letter by James W. Savage provides a history of the hotel's ownership and furnishings (October 22, 1868).

Financial papers (137 items), which comprise the bulk of the collection, include checks, receipts, and bills of lading between Edward Cozzens & Co. and local and national merchants. The papers reflect the company's initial attempts to furnish the building and the hotel's ongoing needs after opening. Early documents include an account for the purchase of glassware, serving dishes, furniture, and décor. Later material concerns food, beverages, and ice. Receipts also document the hotel's advertising costs and the need for a commercial job printer to produce menus and stationery. Many of the shipping receipts concern the Chicago & North-Western Railway Company.

Collection

Thomas Darling letters, 1806-1843 (majority within 1806-1831)

24 items

This collection contains letters from Bermuda privateer and merchant Hezekiah Frith to Frances and Thomas Darling, his daughter and son-in-law in New York, as well as letters by Thomas Darling's cousin, Noyes Darling. The correspondence concerns family news from New Haven, Connecticut; international trade; and the effects of the Embargo Act of 1807 in Bermuda.

This collection consists of 22 letters that Bermuda merchant Hezekiah Frith wrote to Frances and Thomas Darling, his daughter and son-in-law, and 2 letters to the Darlings from Thomas's cousin, Noyes Darling. Frith composed his first 6 letters to Thomas Darling, who lived in New York, while living with his daughter Frances and her newborn son in New Haven, Connecticut, from October 24, 1807-November 15, 1807. He shared family news and voiced his concerns about the possibility of war between the United States and European countries. By May 8, 1808, he had returned to Bermuda, where he wrote the remaining letters. Frith often discussed the effects international economic developments, such as the Embargo Act of 1807, on the local availability of food and other goods, occasionally illustrating his arguments by including prices. He wrote twice during the War of 1812 (October 28, 1812 and March 20, 1813) and continued to comment on economic matters until 1831, after which most of his letters concentrated on family news, particularly regarding his children and grandchildren. Of his letters, he addressed 17 to Thomas, 4 to Frances, and 1 to both; 3 of the letters addressed to Frances were written after 1831. The remaining items are 2 letters to Thomas Darling from his cousin, Noyes Darling, who wrote about the Greek writer Xenophon (August 15, 1806) and his inability to take in Joseph, the Darlings' son (February 29, 1820).