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Collection

Sir Walter Raleigh, A Discourse of the Peace with Spain and retayning of the Netherlands, 1602

1 volume

Sir Walter Raleigh's A Discourse of the Peace with Spain and retayning of the Netherlands is a 49-page manuscript treatise intended to persuade King James I to maintain a positive relationship with the Netherlands during peace negotiations with Spain in 1602.

Sir Walter Raleigh's A Discourse of the Peace with Spain and retayning of the Netherlands is a 49-page treatise, bound in vellum, intended to persuade King James I to maintain a positive relationship with the Netherlands during peace negotiations with Spain in 1602. Raleigh outlined the reasons for his belief that England should accept an alliance with the Netherlands following a thaw in relations with Spain and discussed relationships between major European powers.

Collection

Smith B. Goodenow, Rocktop: or The Lord Will Direct, 1870

1 volume

This volume is the draft of a novel entitled Rocktop: or The Lord Will Direct, written by Smith Bartlett Goodenow in January 1870. The novel concerns the formative years of a New England boy named Bartlett ("Bartie") Golden, who leaves his home at the age of 10 for Providence, Rhode Island, and eventually decides to become a minister.

This volume contains a 136-page draft of a semi-autobiographical bildungsroman entitled Rocktop: or The Lord Will Direct, written by Smith Bartlett Goodenow in January 1870. The protagonist, Bartlett ("Bartie") Golden, left his fictional New England hometown of "Scotta" for Providence, Rhode Island, at the age of 10. After working a number of odd jobs and receiving an elementary education, Golden decided to enter the ministry; much of the book is devoted to his religious pursuits. The novel concludes with Golden's return home soon after his acceptance to Brown University, following a successful personal evaluation by its president, Francis Wayland. The subtitle, "The Lord Will Direct," is a repeated motif throughout the work. This draft includes small annotations and additions, as well as an authorial note indicating that the story is "true throughout." The volume includes pencil illustrations entitled "Rocktop," "Grandfather's Farm," and "Beneficent Church," as well as an inscription and table of contents.

Collection

Snap Shots on Ranch & Gold-Claim in Colorado and Idaho in September 1895 and Kodak Peeps at Colorado in October, 1893, 1893-1895, 1903

1 volume

This album contains two titled groups of photographs: Snap Shots on Ranch and Gold-Claim in Colorado and Idaho in September 1895 and Kodak Peeps at Colorado in October, 1893. The photographs of ranches, cowboys, prospectors, and scenery in Idaho and Colorado are often accompanied by lengthy captions. A small group of photographs shows land near Pike Lake in Minnesota.

This album (24cm x 37cm) contains two titled groups of photographs: Snap Shots on Ranch and Gold-Claim in Colorado and Idaho in September 1895 (28 items, pp. 1-105) and Kodak Peeps at Colorado in October, 1893 (19 items, pp. 111-187). Additional items include five pictures of land near Pike Lake in Minnesota (pp. 159, 161) and a picture of a home in Poughkeepsie, New York (pp. 186-187). The volume has hard green covers, with the words "Colorado '93 & '95" stamped in gold the black spine. C. S. Green signed the first page, and each section opens with a title page, the text in stylized letters. The photographs of Colorado and Idaho are early Kodak prints.

In both 1893 and 1895, the photographer took pictures of settlers and scenery in Idaho and Colorado, particularly in and around Market Lake, Idaho; Menan, Idaho; Manitou Springs, Colorado; and Powderhorn, Colorado. Pictured buildings include homes, a small hotel, the signal station and cog railroad on Pikes Peak, and railroad stations; railroad tracks and trains are featured in a few items. Portraits of prospectors, cowboys, and ranchers are included. Captions, often lengthy, describe numerous aspects of life in the West, such as the crops and geography of Idaho and gold mining, ranching, and mineral resources in Colorado. The author also commented on less-visited areas of Colorado and prominent features such as the Continental Divide. Laid into the volume are brief essays on a dog named Bobby (1 page) and the Snake and Yellowstone Rivers (3 pages). These appear on the letterhead of Charles S. Green of Roaring Branch, Pennsylvania.

Collection

Snook's Lives of Celebrated Men: Flobby MacSquelsh, 1846

10 pages

"Snook's Lives of Celebrated Men: Flobby MacSquelsh" are sketches narrating the life of the fictional profligate son of a Barbados planter. The story satirizes the plantation culture of nineteenth-century Barbados.

"Snook's Lives of Celebrated Men: Flobby MacSquelsh" are sketches narrating the life of Flobby Macsquelsh, the fictional profligate son of a Barbados planter. The story is told on 10 pages (22 x 32 cm) and divided into 11 parts, each part consisting of an ink sketch and a paragraph of text.

MacSquelsh is referred to as the "hero" in the story. He is depicted as a fat man known for his "intense gluttony." As a child, witnessing the whipping of a slave brings Flobby "intense delight." As an adult, he visits Europe and is placed in the distinguished 179th Highland Rifles corps. He engages in heavy drinking, attends balls, and meets a woman but later has "deserted and undid her." He is unfit for hunting, as he loses control of his horse, kills two hunting hounds, and even loses his umbrella. The story ends with Flobby returning to Barbados, where he successfully proposes marriage to a "Lady of Colour" and inherits his father's plantation property. This satirical story is likely a commentary of the behaviors of the planter elite in the West Indies after the abolition of slavery.

Collection

Sophia McCormick diary, 1811, 1818

1 volume

This 72-page diary is an account of the five-month trip Sophia Cumming McCormick took with her uncle, aunt, and cousin from Savannah, Georgia, to New York City and along the East Coast in 1811. A second, shorter portion of the diary consists of nine entries from 1818, in which McCormick reflected on her spiritual state.

This 72-page diary is an account of the five-month trip Sophia Cumming McCormick took with her uncle, aunt, and cousin from Savannah, Georgia, to New York City and along the East Coast in 1811. A second, shorter portion of the diary consists of nine entries from 1818, in which McCormick reflected on her spiritual state.

The first 65 pages of the diary (May 22, 1811-November 4, 1811) contain daily entries chronicling McCormick's travel experiences. She recorded details about the geographic, physical, and historical features of the cities and towns she and her family visited or passed through. Her accounts of New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Richmond are the most extensive, and include details about specific streets, buildings, and bridges. McCormick's descriptions of Charles Wilson Peale's natural history museum in Philadelphia (located in what is now the basement of Independence Hall) and the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., are particularly colorful.

McCormick's entries from July to September 1811, written while she attended Miss Scribner's School in Morristown, New Jersey, are often brief, though she commented more extensively about Fourth of July celebrations and recorded her thoughts about leaving the school. She also mentioned a Morristown funeral custom, a solar eclipse seen from Trenton, a visit to Thomas Jefferson's birthplace, public water supplies, a Gaelic-language sermon near Fayetteville, North Carolina. Throughout her travels, McCormick recorded the names of churches she attended, along with the ministers' names and sermon topics.

The second part of the diary (7 pages) consists of 9 entries dated between July 11, 1818, and November 1 [1818?]. In these entries, McCormick primarily reflected on her spiritual well-being. She appears to have been traveling during this span of time as well, staying with cousins near Augusta, Georgia.

Collection

Sophia M. Eckley sketchbook, 1853

1 volume

The Sophia M. Eckley sketchbook contains 22 sketches of various landscapes and cottages in Nahant, Massachusetts.

The Sophia M. Eckley sketchbook contains 22 sketches of various landscapes and cottages. An inscription on the first page indicates that the sketchbook belonged to Sophie M. Eckley, and the sketches are of Nahant, Massachusetts, drawn in July 1853. The inside front cover has an engraved retailers' label from N. D. Cotton of Boston, "importer and dealer in English, French and American stationery, drawing and painting materials." Also written inside the front cover is a list of dry goods.

Of the 22 sketches, 21 were made in pencil, with one in pastel. Many blank pages follow the first 21 sketches, and on the very last page is a sketch of a man's head with the caption, "Peter Parleys Picture Book."

The majority of the sketches include captions and are of various landscapes and cottages on the coast of Nahant. Specific landscapes depicted include Sunken Lodge, Spectacle Beach, Deer Island, Pea Island, Caste Rock, and Swallow Cave.

Collection

South Carolina Militia orderly book, 1861

103 pages

The South Carolina Militia orderly book contains brigade-level orders issued under the command of Brig. Gen. James Simons, commander on Morris Island during the siege of Fort Sumter.

The South Carolina Militia orderly book contains brigade-level orders issued under the command of Brig. Gen. James Simons, commander on Morris Island during the siege of Fort Sumter. The importance of the book lies only partly in documenting the build up and reduction of Sumter, but in the insight it provides into the formation of the earliest structures for organization and command in the Confederate army, and the taste it provides of the enthusiasm surrounding South Carolina's defiant entry into war.

Laid inside the cover sheet are two letters:

Charleston, 1861 June 10. Concerning formation of regiments.

Charleston, 1861 June 27. Request for a list of officers.

Collection

Southern Tour Collection, 1885

19 photographs and 1 booklet

The Southern tour collection contains photographs from a traveling party's visit to several locations in the southern United States, including Civil War battlefields, in March 1885, as well as a printed booklet containing sketches of people and various locales.

The collection contains 19 card photographs (13 x 21 cm). Many of these photographs show groups of men at "Magnolia," at the site of the Battle of Seven Pines (Fair Oaks), by a New Orleans train depot, and at Castillo de San Marcos in Saint Augustine, Florida; in one photograph, several men are picking strawberries. Other images show a wooded area in Mississippi, relics on a battlefield, Fort Sumter, and Fort Moultrie near Charleston, S.C. The booklet, entitled "Taylor, His Sketch Book, 1885," contains reprinted drawings of men and women (often with captions which are occasionally humorous), and of buildings in Saint Augustine, Florida. Some of the drawings depict African Americans. The card mounted photographs are bound in a red leather wrapper with the title "136 March 13-28 1885" in gold on the cover.

Collection

Southwest automobile camping photograph album, 1928

1 volume

The Southwest automobile camping photograph album contains 46 photographs of an auto camping trip to Arizona and New Mexico in 1928.

The Southwest automobile camping photograph album contains 46 photographs of an auto camping trip to Arizona and New Mexico in 1928. Each photograph includes notation naming location, individuals, and some dates. Multiple photographs are missing. The first portion of the album shows various locations in Arizona including the Sentinel (Arizona), Gillespie Dam, San Xavier Mission and Grotto, Casa Grande Ruins, Wickenburg Mountains, Granite Dells, Hopi Point and Powell Memorial at the Grand Canyon, Painted Desert, and Canyon Lake. Locations in New Mexico include Elephant Butte Dam, Hot Springs, and Raton Pass. Auto camps shown include "Stumble Inn," (Tucson, Arizona), Rowe's Well Camp (near the Grand Canyon), and Texas Home Camp (Hot Springs, New Mexico). The last image is of the Oklahoma State Capitol.

Many captions name William and Mattie Mulholland in the photographs. Also included is one loose photograph of poodles from "Baby Doll Kennels," in Erie, Pennsylvania.

The album is 20.5 x 13.5 cm with black artificial leather covers.

Collection

Southwestern automobile travel photograph album, ca. 1909

1 volume

The Southwestern automobile travel photograph album (14.5 x 20.25 cm) contains 102 snapshots, most of which document an automobile trip in the United States and Mexico. The images feature bullfighting, camping, fishing and picnicking.

The Southwestern automobile travel photograph album (14.5 x 20.25 cm) contains 102 snapshots, most of which document an automobile trip in the United States and Mexico. The images feature bullfighting, camping, fishing and picnicking. Also included are images of hot springs and a fence made entirely of antlers.