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1819 April 24 . Sarah ALS to Ellen Welles; Wilkes-Barre, [Pennsylvania].

3 pages

Box 1
Written the day of an eclipse which she witnessed with the children. “We have all been busily engaged looking thro’ a bit of smoked glass, the eclipse is now on, but as I have got tired of looking, I resume my pen.” Describes the children’s reactions to the eclipse, with one guessing that a big cow ate a piece of the sun. Mentions one of the children being African American. Requesting updates on her family and when she plans to visit. Reports on a collapsed bridge and Mrs. Duncan and Mr. Evans getting married – “don’t it beat the dogs, everybody is surprised.” Describes her daughters’ excitement about having a male cousin. Postscript indicates trouble with getting the letter sent. Signature of the letter is in quotation marks.
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1819 August 16 . Ja[me]s Prince ALS to John Davis; Nahant, [Massachusetts].

3 pages

Box 1
Has sighted the sea serpent off the Nahant shore, but having seen himself mentioned in newspaper reports wants to provide a more accurate account. Notes rumors of sightings, crowds gathering at the beach, and that he had brought his "famous Mast Head Spy Glass." Describes the 50- to 60-foot sea serpent and includes a pen-and-ink sketch of it. Recalls the crowd following the sea serpent and considers how it propels itself, breathes, and comparisons to snakes, eels, whales, and sharks. Caught another sighting in a different bay, presuming the sea serpent moved due to the number of boats pursuing it. Third page is mutilated, and some text is missing. Features many textual revisions and cross-outs in the hand of Prince and Davis, suggesting it may have been revised for publication.