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Start Over You searched for: Subjects Teachers--Michigan. Remove constraint Subjects: Teachers--Michigan. Formats Letters (correspondence) Remove constraint Formats: Letters (correspondence)
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Collection

Mary S. Clayton correspondence, 1877-1883

0.5 linear feet

This collection consists of letters written by Mary S. Clayton to her future husband, James F. Jordan, while she worked as a schoolteacher in Almont, Michigan. She discussed her teaching experiences, life in Almont, and her family in Plymouth, Michigan, whom she occasionally visited.

This collection consists of over 230 items, almost all of which are letters. Mary S. Clayton wrote most of the letters to her future husband, James F. Jordan, while she worked as a schoolteacher in Almont, Michigan. Mary began her correspondence in July 1877, shortly after graduating from the Michigan State Normal School, and regularly wrote flirtatious letters to James, also a teacher. She focused on her teaching career and life in Almont, Michigan, and described incidents from the classroom as well as from her social life. She mentioned the Methodist Church, where she occasionally taught classes, local news, and her thoughts on relationships, particularly on flirtation. She wrote most of the letters prior to her marriage to James in 1881. The rest include letters that James wrote to Mary from Buchanan, Michigan, in 1882, as well as letters from family and friends, who wrote from several Michigan towns and from Chicago. Some later letters relate to the custody of Mary's sister Libbie following the death of her father in the spring of 1882.

Collection

Nancie T. Clark Flagler correspondence, 1855-1869 (majority within 1855-1867)

50 items

This collection is made up of letters that friends and family members wrote to Nancie T. Clark (later Flagler) about their lives in and around Coomer, New York, in the mid-19th century. Henry Bolton Flagler, Nancie's fiancé and husband, wrote about his work as a teacher and store clerk in Michigan and his later search for work in Pennsylvania.

This collection (50 items) is made up of letters that friends and family members wrote to Nancie T. Clark (later Flagler) about their lives in and around Coomer, New York, in the mid-19th century. The earliest letters from Clark's friends and family contain social and family news. Henry B. Flagler, Nancie's future husband, first wrote in November 1858, describing his work as a teacher in Stockbridge, Michigan, and as a store clerk in Martin, Michigan. From 1866 to 1867, he discussed his attempts to find employment in the Pennsylvania oil industry and complained about the brevity of his wife's letters. Additional items include 2 letters from E. Button of Sycamore, Illinois, to Malvina A. Putnam of Charlestown, New Hampshire, about her social life and a recent smallpox outbreak (March and April 1855), and a letter from an unidentified Union soldier about his work strengthening fortifications and fighting against guerillas at Fort Tillinghast, Virginia (March 17, 1864).