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1847 January . W[illia]m Davis and Emeline Davis ALS to Margaret T. Davis; Philad[elphi]a, [Pennsylvania].

2 pages

Box 4
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Mentions a concert of the Hutchinson family at the Musical Hall, which was shut down by the mayor of Philadelphia [John Swift] "on account of their admitting Gentleman of Couler, wich has made quite a stir amongst the abolitionist here--"
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1847 October 8 . J. B. Hayden, Jr. ALS to James D. Perkins; Portland, [Maine].

4 pages

Box 4
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Working in Charles H. Hayden's store in downtown Portland. Describes Portland and his daily routine of working, smoking, and drinking. Notes a friend who "has got a license to sell I need not say what." Comments on the local theatre, describing its interior and discussing plays he has attended by ministrel performers, possibly Dan Rice. "Jim Crow Rice is playing here. I went to see him the other night he played Otello and African Prince . . . the theatre is nothing but an old Barn with ruf Board seats in it the actors are misirable."
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1847 December 10 . Ann Person, W[illia]m A. Person, and Tho[ma]s J. Person Document to George G. Person, James P. Person, and Samuel B. Person; Jackson, Tennessee.

1 page

Box 4
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Applying to the December term of the circuit court Madison County and meeting at the courthouse in Jackson to receive an Order of Partition and Division for jointly owned slaves Polk and Dalles.
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1848 January 1 . Jeremiah Toole and C. Kennedy Partially printed DS to Eliza Nalle; [Virginia].

1 page

Box 4
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Agreement to pay $40 for the "hire of a male slave, called Henry Bonner until Christmas next, who is to be provided with, at the usual times, a summer and winter suit of clothes, a Hat, Blanket, two shirts, a pair of stockings and shoes, all of good serviceable stuff; said slave not to be carried out of the State of Virginia." Docketed on verso: "Caps to May Court. Dam $20."
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1848 January 4 . Isaac J. Rice ALS to Ohio Female Antislavery Society; Amherstburg, Ontario.

3 pages

Box 4
Ohio Presbyterian minister hoping to receive funding to support his school buildings for formerly enslaved families fleeing to the North. Notes physical exhaustion and “lung fever” among the missionaries and many of the formerly enslaved individuals. Preparations for a new building, with a need for separate spaces for school and storing donated clothing. States that 300 people have come within the past year, 13 the past Spring, and 9 within a week. "This now is found to be the great Fugitive Stations... this is the great landing point being nearest the south & most convenient to reach." Discusses efforts at religious conversion. “... these Colored slaves kiss the dark Bible not for what they could read but had heard was locked up in its mysterious pages.” Hoping to receive 25-50 cent donations to assist in his religious efforts.
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1848 February 12 . Alanson St. Clair ALS to Catherine [M. Morse]; Chicago, Ill[inois].

4 pages

Box 4
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He has been lecturing in the service of abolitionists in Iowa. Describes the geography and settlers of Iowa, listing Burlington and Madison as its two prominent communities. Iowa also has "very many--negro haters, willing & ready to trample on any human being, 'guilty of a skin not colored like their own." He has been mobbed three times and had his "liberty of speech cloven down."