William Henry Lyttelton papers, 1730-1806 1755-1761
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- William L. Clements Library
- Abstract:
- The William Henry Lyttelton papers document Lyttelton's career as governor of South Carolina and governor of Jamaica. These items primarily relate to colonial administration of South Carolina and Jamaica, and military engagements with Native Americans on the South Carolina frontier and against the French in the West Indies.
- Extent:
- 5 linear feet.
- Language:
-
English
French - Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Diana Sykes, January 2010, and Philip Heslip, March 2011
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The William Henry Lyttelton papers (1217 items) document Lyttelton's service as governor of South Carolina and governor of Jamaica. The collection consists of 864 letters (including 26 letters from Lyttelton), 316 documents, 37 financial records, four letter books, and one personal account book. These items primarily relate to colonial administration of South Carolina and Jamaica, and military engagements with Native Americans on the frontier and against the French in the West Indies. Document types include intelligence reports, orders, treaties, drafts of acts, pardons, and speeches; financial documents consist of disbursements, payment and supply receipts, and government and military expenses.
The bulk of the collection documents Lyttelton's governorship in South Carolina. Lyttelton received communications and reports from officials in London, southern governors, the Superintendent for Indian Affairs in the Southern Colonies John Stuart, Indian Agent Edmond Atkin, military commanders, and members of the South Carolina Commons House of Assembly, the Council, and courts. Some of the most important items are 37 letters, reports, and enclosures from Agent Edmond Atkin on Indian relations, and 21 letters from Jeffery Amherst that describe his activities against the French at Fort Carillon (Ticonderoga) and Crown Point.
Topics of note include:- Construction of new forts and reports on the condition of forts and other defense efforts
- Taxes, trade, tariffs, and embargoes concerning South Carolina
- Relations and conflicts with various tribes, including the Catawba, Chautauqua, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Coweta, Creek, Shawnee, and Savannah tribes
- The escalating Anglo-Cherokee war (Cherokee Rebellion) and French efforts to ally with the Cherokee during the French and Indian War
- The postage system connecting the southern provinces
- Smallpox and diseases among settlers, troops, and Native American populations
- Intelligence on French military activities, including many intercepted French letters
In addition to communications between colonial officials regarding trade policies, peace treaties, boundary agreements, and military conflicts, the collection also contains letters and speeches from various Native American leaders including: Attakullakulla (Little Carpenter), Black Dog, King Hagler, Long Dog, Ohatchie [Wohatchee], Oconostota [Ouconnostotah], Old Hop, Standing Turkey, Tistoe of Keowee, Usteneka (Judge's friend), Willinawa, The Wolf, and Young Warrior of Estatoe. (See Additional Descriptive Data for a list of items written by Native Americans.)
Highlights of the South Carolina material include:- September 7, 1730: Copy of "Articles of Friendship & Commerce proposed by the Lords Commissioners for trade and plantations to the Deputies of the Cherokee Nation in South Carolina"
- July 18, 1755-April 23, 1756: Jerome Courtonne's journal of his time with the Chickasaw Nation in Georgia
- August 3-September 1755: Lyttelton's account of his capture by the French on his way to South Carolina, his imprisonment in France, and his return to England
- July 5, 1756: Instructions to end communications with the French in South Carolina and to stop supplying them with provisions or arms
- September 15, 1756: Conflicts between the Upper Creek and the colonial settlements at Ogeechee
- November 8 and 12, 1756: Directions from William De Brahm to Raymond Demere concerning the operations of Fort Septentrional on the Tennessee River
- [1756]: Daniel Pepper to Lyttelton with remarks on the Creek Nation
- [1756]: "Short observations upon several points relative to the present constitution of the province of South Carolina"
- March 4, 1757: Proposal to improve fortifications at Charleston and Fort Johnson
- April 24, 1757: Minutes of a meeting of governors from Maryland, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Virginia concerning southern defenses
- May 1757: Proposed Asylum Act for the settlement of Georgia
- September 12, 1757: Letter from Thomas Wigg to Lyttelton concerning the construction of Fort Lyttelton
- [1757]: Catawba leader King Hagler to Cherokee leader Old Hop concerning the Catawba joining the British against the French and their Indian allies
- June 24, 1758: Intelligence from three French deserters from forts in French Louisiana
- July 27, 1758: Copy of article of capitulation between Generals Amherst, Admiral Boscowen, and Drucour at Louisbourg
- September 8, 1758: Joseph Wright’s journal of negotiations with the Lower Creeks (July 20-August 7, 1758)
- December 23, 1758: Letter from John Murray to Lyttelton which includes a list of acts to be reviewed by the South Carolina Assembly
- May 5, 1759: Intelligence from Samuel Wyly on a Cherokee attack on colonial settlers
- May 17, 1759: Advertisement warning against illegal trading with Native Americans
- July 27, 1759: Letter from Jeffrey Amherst to Lyttelton describing the taking Ticonderoga and Crown Point from the French
- August 1, 1759: Intelligence from Cherokee Indian Buffalo Skin to Paul Demere (enclosed in Demere to Lyttelton, 28 August 1759)
- August 18, 1759: Copy of a treaty between Great Britain and the Choctaw Nation with a list of Choctaw towns and prices for trade goods
- September 4, 1759: Letter from James Wright to Lyttelton enclosing copies of two letters from Benjamin Franklin concerning the postal system
- October 12, 1759: South Carolina Assembly to Lyttelton regarding resolutions on the Cherokee Expedition
- October 19, 1759: List of Cherokee living in Charleston
- [October 1759]: A letter from King Hagler and other Catawba leaders voicing their friendship with the colonists and describing an outbreak of smallpox in their community (with signatures from chiefs)
- November 30, 1759: Edmond Atkin letter with enclosures regarding negotiations with Creek, Choctaw, and Cherokee tribes, as well as intelligence
- [1759]: Lyttelton's declaration of war against the Cherokee
- January 29, February 12, 1760: Extracts of letters concerning murders and outrages committed by Cherokees
- February 7, 1760: Journal kept at Fort Prince George during an attack by the Cherokee signed by R. Coytmer, Alexander Miln, and John Bell (January 13-February 7, 1760)
The collection contains 162 items that document Lyttelton's service in Jamaica (1761-1766). These consist primarily of letters from various naval officers, army officers, and British agents serving in the West Indies. Lyttelton also received letters from the Jamaica Committee of Correspondence, and local planters. Of note is material on the Coromantee slave rebellion (Tacky's Rebellion), a violent slave insurrection at St. Mary Parish in Jamaica in 1765.
Other topics include:- Relations with other European properties in the West Indies and conflicts with Spain and France
- The British capture of the Morro Fortress in Havana
- The losses suffered by the Boston merchant ship John Gally after the French capture of Turks Islands
- Slave labor in Jamaica and the practice of raising regiments of slaves and black men to fight for Britain
- Sickness among the British troops and African slaves
- Danger of wide scale slave disturbances and escapes in November-December 1765
- Disagreements between Sir James Douglas and Lyttelton after Douglas was not saluted when he arrived on the island
- News that Charles Wyndham, 2nd Earl of Egremont, the secretary of state of the Southern Department, had died
- British Acts of Navigation and laws passed in Jamaica
- Differences of opinion on taxes between continental proprietors and island proprietors and on the implementation and repeal of the Stamp Act
- Issues surrounding smuggling brandy and levying duties on spirits
- Inspections of the fortifications in Jamaica in preparation for war
- The Jamaica assembly's efforts to remove Lyttelton from office for alleged misconduct
Also of note is a letter from Mary Fearon regarding Lyttelton's purchase of a slave for his children in England (March 21, 1766). The collection contains one letter from Lyttelton's retirement in England, a June 8, 1796, item addressed to Mortimer Street concerning poetry.
Volume 1 (446 pages) and Volume 2 (76 pages) are a copy books containing letters from Lyttelton to British government and military officials, covering August 1757 to March 1760, while Lyttelton was governor of South Carolina. These provide answers to many of the incoming letters from the Correspondence and Documents series. Both volumes have alphabetical indices of letter recipients.
Volume 3 (125 pages) is a copybook containing two sets of letters. In the first group (pages 1-99) are secret and private dispatches between Lyttelton and British military leadership related to coordinating attacks on French forts in Alabama, Mobile, and Florida (1758-1759). The second group (pages 1a-26a) consists of miscellaneous letters labeled "Omitted in the Former Books," (1756-1759).
Volume 4 (30 pages) is Lyttelton's personal copybook covering his outgoing letters from April 15, 1762 to September 11, 1765, while stationed in Jamaica. Recipients include Governor General Philippe-François of Saint-Domingue, Marquis de Lambertye, Governor de St. Louis, Comte de Choiseul, Colonel John Irwin, Captain Kafflin, Monieur de Chambette de St. Louis a Paris, Captain Geofry, Comte do Ricla, and Comte d'Elva. Several of the letters concern prisoners of war. All letters are in French.
Volume 5 (167 pages) is Lyttelton's accounts book covering 1755 to 1806. The accounts detail Lyttelton's income, expenditures, and investments throughout his career, including his posts in South Carolina, Jamaica, Portugal, and England. Entries occasionally include brief mentions of his and his family's whereabouts.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
British politician, colonial governor, and diplomat William Henry Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton and 1st Baron Westcote (1724-1808), was the sixth son of Sir Thomas Lyttelton and Christian Temple. Lyttelton attended Eton and St. Mary Hall, Oxford, where he studied law. Eschewing a career as a lawyer, Lyttelton entered politics in 1748 as a member of Parliament representing Bewdley. Through the influence of friend William Pitt, Lyttelton was appointed governor of South Carolina in 1755. Though he departed for the colony later that year, French privateers captured his ship and held him prisoner in Brest. He finally arrived in South Carolina in June of 1756. As governor, Lyttelton's focused his attention on improving defense against attacks from the French and various Native American tribes. After decades of growing tension between settlers and the Cherokee, Lyttelton lead a colonial force against them. The result was the Anglo-Cherokee war, a bloody conflict between the British and Native Americans in the South Carolina frontier that lasted from 1758 through 1761.
In 1760, the British government appointed Lyttelton to serve as governor and chief executive of Jamaica. He briefly returned to England that year to marry Mary Macartney of Longford, Ireland, and traveled to Jamaica in 1761. He clashed with the local assembly over their alleged rights of judicial immunity, and resigned in 1766. His next appointment was as British ambassador to Portugal from 1766-1770, after which he returned to England.
Lyttelton served as a member of Parliament for Bewdley from 1774 to 1790, and was Lord North's commissioner of the treasury from 1777 to 1782. He married his second wife, Caroline Bristow of Quidenham, Norfolk, in 1776. The king gave Lyttelton the title of Baron Westcote of Ballymore, Ireland, in 1776, and the British title of Baron Lyttelton of Frankley in 1794. Lyttelton died at Hagley in 1808.
- Acquisition Information:
- 1954, 1963, 1965, 1981, 1996. M-960, M-966, M-1252, M-1359, M-1957, M-3042 .
- Processing information:
-
Cataloging funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the "We the People" project.
- Arrangement:
-
This collection is organized into two series:
- Series I: Correspondence and Documents
- Series II: Letter Books and Account Book
Series I is ordered chronologically with undated items in the end.
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Alternate Locations
The following broadside is housed in the Clements Library Book Division:
Sheed, George. Births and Burials, In the Parish of St. Philip. Charles-Town, From Dec. 25th, 1755, to Dec. 25th, 1756. 1757.
Related Materials
The following Clements Library collections contain letters written by William Henry Lyttelton:- The Thomas Gage papers
- The William Knox papers
- The William Petty, 1st Marquis of Lansdowne, 2nd Earl of Shelburne papers
- The Admiral Thomas Smith papers
- The Charles Townshend papers
Below is a list of other institutions that have William Lyttelton collections:- British Library, Manuscript Collections: Letters and papers, 1760-1769
- Duke University, William R Perkins Library: A letter book, 1763-1766
- Hagley Hall, England: Letters and papers from his time as governor of Jamaica, and misc papers, 1747-1770
- National Archives of the United Kingdom, Public Record Office, London
- Worcestershire Record Office, County Hall Branch: Letter books and accounts from his time as governor or Jamaica and governor of South Carolina, 1757-1770
Bibliography
Marshall, P. J. "Lyttelton, William Henry, first Baron Lyttelton and first Baron Westcote (1724--1808)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
Sotheby Parke Bernet & Co. Catalogue of the Lyttelton Papers, the Property of Viscount Cobham, Which Will Be Sold by Auction ..: Tuesday, 12th, December, 1978. London, 1978.
The following four maps and four printed items are located in the Lyttelton papers:- Guyon, Jean. Déclaration Faite au Greffe du Conseil Supérieur de la Province De la Louisianne par la Dame le Veuf, Veuve de Mr. Dénoyer, Du 12 Octobre, 1765. Nouvelle-Orléans?: s.n., 1765.
- To His Excellency Arthur Dobbs, Esq; Captain-general, Governor And Commander in Chief, in and over the Province of North-Carolina: The Humble Address of the Council.... 1759.
- To His Excellency Arthur Dobbs, Esq; Captain-general, Governor And Commander In Chief, In And Over the Province of North-Carolina: The Humble Address of the Assembly.... 1759.
- The Speech of His Excellency Arthur Dobbs, Esq; Captain-general, Governor And Commander In Chief, In And Over the Province of North-Carolina, to the General Assembly of the Said Province, At a Session Held At Newbern the 8th Day of May, 1759.... 1759.
- Map of the Area Between Fort Loudon, Tennessee, And Kaskaskia, Illinois. 1757.
- Proposed Tower for Fort Loudon. 1759.
- Oglethorpe, John W. The Form of the Fort &c. January 27th, 1759. Enclosed in Wyly to William H. Lyttelton, Feb. 9, 1759.
- Tobler, Ulrich. [Lands Along Butler Creek And the Savannah River]. New Windsor, Ga. 1758. enclosed in Atkin to William Lyttelton, Nov. 24, 1758.
Biographical Timeline Date Event 1724 Lyttelton born 1742 Entered St. Mary Hall, Oxford 1748 Elected to represent Bewdley, Worcestershire, in Parliament 1755 Appointed governor of South Carolina 1756 Arrived in South Carolina after being held captive by the French in Brest 1761 Married to Mary Macartney 1762 Transferred to Jamaica as governor 1766 Appointed ambassador to Portugal 1771 Returned to England 1774 Again represented Bewdley, Worcestershire, as a member of Parliament 1774 Married Caroline Bristow 1776 Raised to peerage in Ireland as Baron Westcote of Balamare 1777 Appointed commissioner of the treasury 1781 Received the honorary degree of D.C.L. from Oxford 1782 Resigned as treasury commissioner 1794 Raised to the peerage in Great Britain as Lord Lyttelton, baron of Frankley 1808 Lyttelton died List of Items Written by Native Americans- Cherokee leadership
- September 18, 1756
- August 31, 1757
- October 11, 1757
- May 12, 1758
- July 21, 1758
- August 1, 1758
- September 18, 1758
- October 15, 1758
- October 21, 1758
- October 22, 1758
- [1758]
- March 2, 1759
- March 5, 1759
- March 21, 1759
- May 17, 1759
- May 23, 1759
- August 28, 1759
- November 2, 1759
- December 18, 1759
- Undated
- Catawba leadership
- May 27, 1757
- June 16, 1757
- July 4, 1757
- October 24, 1757
- [1757]
- June 11, 1759
- August 23, 1759
- [October] 1759
- Chickasaw leadership
- April 5, 1756
- April 16, 1757
- June 8, 1759
- [1759]
- Choctaw leadership
- November 30, 1759
- Upper Creek leadership
- October 6, 1756
- [Pre October 28, 1757]
- November 3, 1757
- September 11, 1759
- November 30, 1759
- February 5, 1760
Contributors- Abercromby, James, 1706-1781.
- Adamson, James.
- Albemarle, George Keppel, 3rd earl of, 1724-1772.
- Alexander, Nathaniel, d.1808.
- Amherst, Jeffery, 1717-1797.
- Appy, John, 1725-1761.
- Atkin, Edmond, d.1761.
- Attakullakulla, c.1708--c.1777.
- Barrington, William Wildman, 1717-1793.
- Bayly, Zachary.
- Beamer, James.
- Belcher, Jonathan, 1681-1757.
- Bernard, Francis, bart, 1712-1779.
- Blair, John, 1687-1771.
- Boddington, John.
- Bogges, John.
- Bory, Gabriel de, 1720-1801.
- Boscawen, Edward, 1711-1761.
- Boughman, Ulrigh.
- Bouquet, Henry, 1719-1765.
- Brown, Francis.
- Browne, William Patrick.
- Bull, William, 1710-1791.
- Burnaby, William Chaloner.
- Byrd, William, 1728-1777.
- Calhoun, Patrick.
- Campbell, James.
- Charleston Library Society.
- Charleston merchants.
- Chevillette, John.
- Cleland, John, d.1763.
- Coigny, Francois de Franquetot.
- Colvill, Alexander Colvill, 7th lord, d. 1770.
- Conway, Henry Seymour, 1721-1795.
- Cook, Cornelius.
- Courtonne, Jerome.
- Coytmore, Richard.
- Crim, Peter.
- Davies, Samuel, 1723-1761.
- De Brahm, William Gerard, 1717-1799.
- DeLancey, James, 1703-1760.
- Demere, Paul.
- Demere, Raymond.
- Denny, William.
- DeWindt, Jan.
- Dinwiddie, Robert, 1693-1770.
- Dobbs, Arthur, 1689-1765.
- Douglas, Sir James, 1703-1787.
- Douglas, Stair.
- Douglass, David.
- Doyley, Daniel.
- Du Guay, M.
- Durell, Philip, d.1766.
- Ellis, Henry, 1721-1806.
- Ellis, Welbore, 1st baron Mendip, 1713-1802.
- Estaing, Charles-Hector-Theodat, 1729-1794.
- Evans, John.
- Fairchild, John.
- Fauquier, Francis, 1704-1768.
- Fearon, Mary.
- Forbes, John, 1710-1759.
- Ford, G.
- Forrest, Arthur, d. 1770.
- Francis, James.
- Francis, Samuel.
- Fuller, Stephen.
- Furnell, Peter.
- Gadsden, Christopher, 1723-1805.
- Gallman, Henry.
- Galphin, George.
- Gambier, John.
- George II, 1727-1760.
- Glen, James, 1701-1777.
- Grinnan, John.
- Grymes, Philip.
- Guin, Christopher.
- Haldane, George.
- Hale, J.
- Halifax, George Montagu Dunk, 1716-1771.
- Hardy, Sir Charles, 1716-1780.
- Hocquart, M.
- Holburne, Francis, 1704-1771.
- Holderness, Robert D'Arcy, 1718-1778.
- Holland, Henry Fox, 1705-1774.
- Holmes, Charles, 1711-1761.
- Howarth, Probart.
- Humpton, Richard.
- Hunt, Joseph.
- Innes, James.
- Iredell, Thomas.
- Knox, William, 1732-1810.
- Lawrence, Charles, d.1760.
- Lebret, M.
- Lempriere, Thomas.
- Levine, W.
- Lewis, William.
- Lloyd, John.
- Loudoun, John Campbell, 1705-1782.
- Lyttelton, Charles Bishop of Carlisle, 1714-1768.
- Lyttelton, William Henry Lyttelton, Baron, 1724-1808.
- Macartan, Francis.
- Macdonald, John.
- Martin, John.
- McGillivray, Lachlan.
- McIntosh, Lachlan, 1725-1806.
- Miln, Alexander.
- Mitchell, David.
- Moore, Henry, 1713-1769.
- Motte, Jacob.
- Murray, John.
- Musgrave, Edward.
- Musgrave, Hans.
- Musgrave, Philip.
- O'Bryan, James.
- Oconostota, c.1710-1783.
- Outerbridge, White.
- Pawley, George.
- Pearson, John.
- Pepper, Daniel.
- Pickens, John.
- Pitt, William, Earl of Chatham, 1708-1778.
- Pocock, George, 1706-1796.
- Popple, William, 1701-1764.
- Postell, John.
- Powell, G.G.
- Pownall, John, 1725-1795.
- Pownall, Thomas, 1722-1805.
- Reynolds, John, 1713-1788.
- Richardson, William.
- Ricla, Le Comte de.
- Rodney, George Brydges, 1719-1792.
- Rowe, Christopher.
- Saunders, Charles, 1713-1775.
- Savage, John.
- Sharpe, Horatio, 1718-1790.
- Shaw, Lachlan.
- Shirley, William, 1694-1771.
- Shubrick, Richard, d. 1777.
- Shubrick, Thomas.
- Singellton, Benjamin.
- Smith, Richard.
- Stanhope, Lovel.
- Stanwix, John, 1690-1766.
- Stott, John.
- Stuart, John, 1718-1779.
- Sustrunck, Henry.
- Timothy, Peter.
- Tinker, John.
- Tobler, Ulrich.
- Townshend, Charles, 1725-1767.
- Turner, George.
- Waddell, Hugh, 1734-1773.
- Waring, Benjamin.
- Wigg, Thomas.
- Wood, Robert, 1717-1771.
- Wright, James, 1716-1785.
- Wyly, Sam.
See the Clements Library card catalog for more information.
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Amherst's Expedition against Ticonderoga and Crown Point, 1759.
Catawba Indians.
Chickasaw Indians--History.
Choctaw Indians--History--18th century.
Choctaw Indians--Treaties.
Choctaw Indians--Wars.
Cherokee Indians--History.
Cherokee Indians--Treaties.
Creek Indians--History.
Military deserters.
Postal service--United States--History--Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775.
Scalping.
Seneca Indians.
Shawnee Indians.
Slave insurrections--Jamaica.
Smallpox.
Yuchi Indians. - Formats:
-
Account books.
Letter books.
Letters (correspondence)
Maps.
Treaties. - Names:
-
Blandford (Ship)
John Gally (Ship)
Great Britain. Stamp Act (1765)
Jamaica (Ship)
Revanche (Ship)
Abercromby, James, 1706-1781.
Amherst, Jeffery Amherst, Baron, 1717-1797.
Atkin, Edmond.
Barrington, William Wildman Barrington, Viscount, 1717-1793.
Bernard, Francis, Sir, 1712-1779.
Blair, John, 1687-1771.
Boscawen, Edward, 1711-1761.
Bouquet, Henry, 1719-1765.
Bull, William, 1710-1791.
De Brahm, John Gerar William, 1717-ca. 1799.
Dinwiddie, Robert, 1693-1770.
Dobbs, Arthur, 1689-1765.
Ellis, Henry, 1721-1806.
Fauquier, Francis, 1704?-1768.
Gambier, James, 1723-1789.
Glen, James, 1701-1777.
Halifax, George Montagu-Dunk, Earl of, 1716-1771.
Holland, Henry Fox, Baron, 1705-1774.
Loudoun, John Campbell, Earl of, 1705-1782.
Lyttelton, William Henry Lyttelton, Baron, 1724-1808.
McGillivray, Lachlan.
McIntosh, Lachlan, 1725-1806.
Miln, Alexander.
Moore, Henry, Sir, 1713-1769.
Pitt, William, Earl of Chatham, 1708-1778.
Pownall, John, 1720-1795.
Pownall, Thomas, 1722-1805.
Shaw, Lachlan, 1692-1777.
Stuart, John, 1718-1779.
Tinker, John.
Waddell, Hugh, 1734?-1773.
Wood, Robert, 1717?-1771.
Wright, James, Sir, 1716-1785.
Wyly, Sam. - Places:
-
Cumberland (Md.)
Fort Duquesne (Pa.)
Fort Frederica (Ga.)
Fort Johnson (S.C.)
Fort Loudoun (Winchester, Va.)
Fort Ninety-six (S.C.)
Fort Septentrional (La.)
Fort Ticonderoga (N.Y.)
Guadeloupe.
Havana (Cuba)--History--Siege, 1762.
Jamaica--History.
Ogeechee River Valley (Ga.)
Saint Augustine (Fla.)
South Carolina--History--Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775.
Spanish Town (Jamaica)
United States--History--French and Indian War, 1755-1763.
West Indies, British--Politics and government.
West Indies--History--1756-1763.
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
William Henry Lyttelton Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan