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Collection

Carlisle Family papers, 1860-1972

1.5 linear feet

Daniel Carlisle family of Buchanan, Michigan; family correspondence, diaries, and photographs.

The Carlisle family collection consists of two feet of material dating from 1860 to 1972. The papers relate to various members of the Daniel Carlisle family of Buchanan, Michigan. The collection contains correspondence between Hannah L. Carlisle and her husband, Daniel Carlisle. Include as well are letters and eight of Hannah Carlisle's diaries, written between 1885 and 1900 and largely concerning her life in Dead wood, South Dakota.

Other family members represented in the collection are William and Phyllis Carlisle and Vivian Carlisle. The letters of William D. Carlisle concern his service in the US Navy during World War II. The letters of Phyllis Carlisle relate both to her student life at the University of Michigan during the early 1940s and to her service in the Waves during the war. The letters of Vivian Carlisle were written while a student at the University of Michigan and Michigan State University during the 1940s.

Other items of interest is a folder of genealogical material and a letter written by Francis A. Carlisle while serving in Cuba during the Spanish-American War, describing his experiences.

Collection

Newton H. Kingman collection, 1928-1935

20 items

The Newton H. Klingman collection contains letters and postcards that Kingman, a nonagenarian and Civil War veteran, wrote to Judge Edward D. Shurtleff of Marengo, Illinois, about politics, his genealogy, and other topics. The collection also includes a biography of Kingman and a newspaper clipping.

The Newton H. Kingman collection (20 items) contains 16 letters and postcards that Kingman sent to Judge Edward D. Shurtleff of Marengo, Illinois, between September 11, 1928, and November 9, 1933; a biography of Kingman published on his 91st birthday (May 20, 1928); an additional letter and postcard to Shurtleff (March 23, 1929, and May 30, 1935); and a newspaper clipping (October 19, 1933). A few of Kingman's early letters are copied on stationery belonging to Shurtleff.

Kingman's correspondence with Shurtleff pertains to his genealogy, his health, his involvement in local South Dakota politics in the mid-1880s, and contemporary party politics; he supported Herbert Hoover, the Republican Party, and temperance. Kingman commented on the commemorative biography first printed on his 90th birthday and responded to Shurtleff's attempts to locate Kingman family grave markers. One postcard with a holly border contains printed Christmas greetings (December 25, 1931). Shurtleff also received a letter from Lew Siebrecht and Mrs. F. McCormick regarding the death of their father, August Siebrecht, and a postcard from Mrs. E[dmund] B[ogardus] Kingman about Newton H. Kingman's inability to write.

The remaining items are a newspaper clipping with images of the South Dakota prairie (October 19, 1933) and the second edition of Life Story of Captain Newton H. Kingman, issued on his 91st birthday (May 20, 1928). The 39-page booklet includes a description of his Civil War services and pictures of Kingman in and out of uniform.