Compare Constellations
Information: The first column shows data points from Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844 in red. The third column shows data points from Duponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Shared
Duponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "WorldCat",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
},
{
"contributor": "LC",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "aps",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "NLA",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "harvard",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "ude",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "lc",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Duponceau, Peter Stephen
Name Components
Name :
Duponceau, Peter Stephen
Dates
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter Stephen
Citation
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter Stephen
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844.
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844.
[
{
"contributor": "WorldCat",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan, 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan, 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan, 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan, 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephan
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen,
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen,
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen,
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen,
[
{
"contributor": "WorldCat",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Ponceau, Peter S. du 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Ponceau, Peter S. du 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Ponceau, Peter S. du 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Ponceau, Peter S. du 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, ... 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, ... 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, ... 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, ... 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Duponceau. Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Duponceau. Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Duponceau. Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Duponceau. Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
DuPonceau, Peter 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
DuPonceau, Peter 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Peter 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Peter 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne, 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne, 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne, 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre Étienne, 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, P.-Ét. 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, P.-Ét. 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, P.-Ét. 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, P.-Ét. 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
Name Components
Name :
Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
Dates
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
Citation
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844 (Peter Stephen),
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
DuPonceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
DuPonceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre-Etienne 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Ponceau, Peter Stephen Du 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Ponceau, Peter Stephen Du 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Ponceau, Peter Stephen Du 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Ponceau, Peter Stephen Du 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Peter S.
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Peter S.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Peter S.
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Ponceau, Pierre E. du 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Ponceau, Pierre E. du 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Ponceau, Pierre E. du 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Ponceau, Pierre E. du 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Du Ponceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
Du Ponceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- Du Ponceau, Pierre Étienne 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
DuPonceau, Peter Stephan 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
DuPonceau, Peter Stephan 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Peter Stephan 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Peter Stephan 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
DuPonceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
Name Components
Name :
DuPonceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
Dates
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
Citation
- Name Entry
- DuPonceau, Pierre E. 1760-1844
[
{
"contributor": "VIAF",
"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Duponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.
Name Components
Name :
Duponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Duponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.
[
{
"contributor": "WorldCat",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "harvard",
"form": "authorizedForm"
},
{
"contributor": "umi",
"form": "authorizedForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Du Ponceau was a Philadelphia lawyer who arrived in Portsmouth, N.H., from France in 1777, achieved early prominence as an aide to von Steuben, and as secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary of Foreign Affairs for the Congress in 1781. Du Ponceau was admitted to the Philadelphia Bar in 1785 where his familiarity with both American and European law brought him an important practice. His intellectual interests included both history and linguistics and he published extensively in both fields. He was a member and officer of both the American Philosophical Society and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
A noted linguist, Peter Stephen Du Ponceau was born in St Martin de Ré, France, on June 3, 1760. In 1777 he came to the American colonies as secretary to Prussian military officer Friedrich Wilhelm Augustus, Baron von Steuben, during the American Revolution. Du Ponceau served as a captain in the American army until 1781 when illness forced him to resign; afterward, he remained in America, eventually settling in Philadelphia and becoming a lawyer. He was an active member of Philadelphia's cultural organizations, serving as president of the American Philosophical Society (elected to membership in 1791), the Athenaeum of Philadelphia, and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. He was a founding member of the French Benevolent Society of Philadelphia and the Philadelphia Bar Association.
Lawyer and author.
Italian economist whose studies in value theory anticipated much later work.
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau worked as a lawyer, author, and philologist.
Born and raised in France; came to the U.S. with Baron von Steuben in late 1777 to serve with the Continental Army; became an officer Feb. 1778 and served as Steuben's aide-de-camp; resigned late 1779 because of ill health but served later again briefly. After the war Du Ponceau settled in Philadelphia and became a lawyer, specializing in international law and practicing before the U.S. Supreme Court; also interested in literature, linguistics, and history.
American lawyer and writer.
Joseph-Mathias Gérard de Rayneval was a French author.
Du Ponceau was a leading authority on international law and practice.
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau was a Philadelphia lawyer, author, and philologist.
Jared Sparks was a clergyman, editor, historian, and president of Harvard College; he became an American Philosophical Society member in 1837.
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau was a lawyer, author, and philologist.
Philadelphia lawyer and philologist.
Lawyer and author.
Coming to America in 1777 as personal secretary to Baron Steuben, Du Ponceau served in the Revolutionary War as the general's aide-de-camp. He settled in Philadelphia and entered the legal profession, becoming an expert in international law. Also a linguistic scholar and historian, Du Ponceau was particularly interested in the languages of the North American Indian.
Born at St-Martin de Ré, France, on June, 1760, Du Ponceau received his education at a Benedictine college, where he demonstrated a facility for languages. His uncommon knowledge of English led to ridicule by his schoolmates, who nicknamed him L'Anglois for his habit of carrying around an English Classic in his pocket. A bit of jealousy may have been at play as Du Ponceau, though he rarely studied, received all of the premiums at the end of each year. The disdain was mutual: Du Ponceau scorned his fellow students for their tendency to merely memorize and repeat their lessons.
Dissatisfied with the scholastic philosophy taught at the college, Du Ponceau left the school after eighteen months. Du Ponceau's mother wanted him to enter the priesthood. In an effort to persuade him, the priest reportedly evoked feelings of guilt and remorse by reminding DuPonceau of his failure to cry at his father's death. Under the combined pressure of his mother and the unnamed priest, Du Ponceau agreed to enter the seminary under the condition that they would not require him to enter the priesthood after he completed his studies. He completed his studies, but did not enter the priesthood. Instead, at the age of 17, he set out for America with Baron von Steuben and served as Steuben's secretary in the Revolutionary army, with rank of captain, until illness forced his resignation in 1781. He settled in Philadelphia, where he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and established a law practice.
Elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1791, he served as secretary for and primary force behind the Society's Historical and Literary Committee. One of the most active committees in the Society's history, the Historical and Literary Committee provided much of the impetus for the early growth of the Society's Native American Indian linguistic collections. During Du Ponceau's tenure as secretary, the Committee laid the foundation for the Society's development into one of the premier centers for the study of Native American Indian languages.
A member of the Society during the era in which Thomas Jefferson served as president of the American Philosophical Society as well as president of the United States, Du Ponceau collaborated with Albert Gallatin on a volume of Indian vocabularies commissioned by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson wished to demonstrate the relationships between Indian tribes based on the similarities or differences of their languages. Du Ponceau and Gallatin found that a correlation did exist between similarity of language and the length of time since the tribes had migrated to other regions.
His memoir on the grammatical system of the Indian languages (Mémoire sur le systeme grammatical des langues de quelques nations Indiennes de l'Amérique du Nord) won the Volney prize of the French Institute in 1835 and his writings continue to inspire scholars to this day. In addition to his works on Indian languages, Du Ponceau wrote on the Chinese system of writing, then largely a puzzle to most Europeans.
An active and influential scholar, Du Ponceau served, simultaneously at one point, as president of not only the American Philosophical Society, but also of the Athenaeum and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. During his years as president of the Society, from 1827 until his death in 1844, the Society expanded its linguistics collection to a degree not seen again until the 20th century.
Born at St-Martin de Ré, France, on June, 1760, Du Ponceau received his education at a Benedictine college, where he demonstrated a facility for languages. His uncommon knowledge of English led to ridicule by his schoolmates, who nicknamed him L'Anglois for his habit of carrying around an English Classic in his pocket. A bit of jealousy may have been at play as Du Ponceau, though he rarely studied, received all of the premiums at the end of each year. The disdain was mutual: Du Ponceau scorned his fellow students for their tendency to merely memorize and repeat their lessons.
Dissatisfied with the scholastic philosophy taught at the college, Du Ponceau left the school after eighteen months. Du Ponceau's mother wanted him to enter the priesthood. In an effort to persuade him, the priest reportedly evoked feelings of guilt and remorse by reminding Du Ponceau of his failure to cry at his father's death. Under the combined pressure of his mother and the unnamed priest, Du Ponceau agreed to enter the seminary under the condition that they would not require him to enter the priesthood after he completed his studies. He completed his studies, but did not enter the priesthood. Instead, at the age of 17, he set out for America with Baron von Steuben and served as Steuben's secretary in the Revolutionary army, with rank of captain, until illness forced his resignation in 1781. He settled in Philadelphia, where he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and established a law practice.
Elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1791, he served as secretary for and primary force behind the Society's Historical and Literary Committee. One of the most active committees in the Society's history, the Historical and Literary Committee provided much of the impetus for the early growth of the Society's Native American Indian linguistic collections. During Du Ponceau's tenure as secretary, the Committee laid the foundation for the Society's development into one of the premier centers for the study of Native American Indian languages.
A member of the Society during the era in which Thomas Jefferson served as president of the American Philosophical Society as well as president of the United States, Du Ponceau collaborated with Albert Gallatin on a volume of Indian vocabularies commissioned by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson wished to demonstrate the relationships between Indian tribes based on the similarities or differences of their languages. Du Ponceau and Gallatin found that a correlation did exist between similarity of language and the length of time since the tribes had migrated to other regions.
His memoir on the grammatical system of the Indian languages (Mémoire sur le systeme grammatical des langues de quelques nations Indiennes de l'Amérique du Nord) won the Volney prize of the French Institute in 1835 and his writings continue to inspire scholars to this day. In addition to his works on Indian languages, Du Ponceau wrote on the Chinese system of writing, then largely a puzzle to most Europeans.
An active and influential scholar, Du Ponceau served, simultaneously at one point, as president of not only the American Philosophical Society, but also of the Athenaeum and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. During his years as president of the Society, from 1827 until his death in 1844, the Society expanded its linguistics collection to a degree not seen again until the 20th century.
José Francisco Correia da Serra (1750–1823, APS 1812) was an abbot, diplomat, scholar and botanist. In his work as a botanist he was particularly concerned with the systematic classification of vegetable species. Thomas Jefferson described him as “profoundly learned in several branches of science he was so above all others in that of Botany; in which he preferred an amalgamation of the methods of Linnaeus [1707-1778, APS 1769] and of Jussieu [1686-1758] to either of them exclusively.” Correia spent many years of his life in France, England and the United States where he made the acquaintance of leading European and American intellectual leaders of the time.
Correia was born in Serpa, Portugal, to the physician and lawyer Luis Dias Correia and Francisca Luisa da Serra. In 1756 the family was forced to leave Portugal because the elder Correia’s scientific work had incurred the displeasure of the Holy Office. They settled in Naples, Italy, where the boy came under the tutelage of the abbé and university professor of “Commerce and mechanics” Antonio Genovesi (1712-1769), a major force in the Neapolitan Enlightenment. During this time Correia was also taught in natural history by the botanist Luis Antonio Verney (1713-1792). In 1772 Correia moved to Rome where he studied at the University and other institutions. By that time he was already corresponding with Carl Linnaeus, in Latin. He also made the acquaintance of Don John Carlos of Braganza, second Duke of Lafoens, a member of the Portuguese royal family. The Duke became Correia’s friend and patron.
In 1775 Correia was ordained a Presbyterian abbot; two years later he received the degree of Doctor of Laws. However, it was clear that Correia’s real interest was natural history, especially botany, and that he did not plan to pursue a life in the church. In fact, some of his biographers have suggested that he focused on ecclesiastical studies mainly in order to protect himself in his scientific work from potential suspicions by the Inquisition. Whatever the case, in early 1778 the young abbé, with encouragement from the duke, who hoped to encourage scientific research in Portugal, moved to Lisbon. There he turned his attention to scholarly pursuits and diplomacy.
Correia and the duke set out right away to organize the Royal Academy of Sciences of Lisbon, a learned institution that was dedicated to the advancement of science. Correia also conducted botanical research. He spent the period from 1786 to about 1788 outside of Portugal, and while his activities during this period remain unclear, there is evidence that he visited Rome. In the mid-1790s, after his return to his native country, he began the task of editing what would be the first three of five volumes of Colleccao de livros ineditos da historia Portugueza, an extensive collection of documents.
In 1795 political difficulties compelled Correia to leave Portugal. The Royal Academy and many of its members were viewed with suspicion by certain ecclesiastical groups, especially after Correia befriended the French naturalist and Girondist Peter Marie Auguste Broussonet (1761-1807), who had taken refuge in Portugal. Armed with letters of introduction to several British scientists, Correia traveled to London. He soon became the protégé of Sir Joseph Banks (1743-1820, APS 1787), president of the Royal Society, who facilitated Correia’s election to the Society. He also was welcomed by James Edward Smith (1759-1828, APS 1796), president of the Linnean Society. By then, Correia was already publishing on various natural science topics, especially botany, which contributed to his growing reputation as a naturalist.
For about one year during his residence in London, Correia also served as Secretary to the Portuguese embassy. However, tensions with the conservative Minister compelled him to depart from England in 1802. In the summer of that year, Correia moved to Paris. There he made the acquaintance of leading scientists and other public figures. The list includes Pierre Samuel Du Pont de Nemours (1739–1817, APS 1800), the Marquis de Lafayette (1757-1834, APS 1781), Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859, APS 1804), the French naturalist Georges Cuvier (1769-1832), Augustin Pyrame de Candolle (1778-1841, APS 1841), and André Thouin (1746-1824), superintendent of the Jardin du Roi, now known as Jardin des Plantes, in Paris. Correia also met Esther Delavigne, who eventually became his lover.
Of particular importance to Correia was his extensive correspondence with friends in Portugal that he maintained throughout his time in London, Paris and then the United States. Through his contact with them he hoped to bring the latest scientific ideas and discoveries to his mother country. His letters are filled with news of new vaccines, maritime maps, instruments, and anything else that he thought might serve to aid the progress of Portugal. Correia’s wide-ranging contacts with fellow botanists made him an important intermediary in the exchanges between naturalists in different parts of the world. In 1807 his own government recognized his contributions by making him a Knight of the Order of Christ.
Overall, Correia’s time in Paris was happy and fruitful. However, life as a liberal under Napoleon was not easy, and Correia soon began to explore the possibility of relocating once again, this time to the United States. Finally, in the winter of 1811, the abbé was aboard the U.S.S. Constitution, on his way to what would become a particularly interesting period in his life.
Correia arrived in Washington, D. C., in early 1812, and he did not lose time in making the acquaintance of leading Americans, including President James Madison. He was anxious to visit Thomas Jefferson but owing to the fact that Philadelphia was the intellectual center of the new nation, he decided to establish himself there first. His European friends had already announced Correia’s imminent arrival to several prominent Philadelphians, including the physicians Benjamin Rush (1745-1813, APS 1768) and Caspar Wistar (1761-1818, APS 1787), and John Vaughan (1756–1841, APS 1784), the treasurer and librarian of the American Philosophical Society. The abbé was elected a member of the Society in January of 1812, before his arrival in the city. He became close friends with Vaughan who soon handled his business affairs and advised him in all kinds of matters. Correia also got to know the botanist Henry Muhlenberg (1753-1815, APS 1785), who introduced him to the physician and botanist Jacob Bigelow (1787-1879, APS 1818). And he reconnected with several Philadelphians he knew from his time in Paris, including the lawyer and financier Nicholas Biddle (1786-1844, APS 1813), and William Short (1759-1849, APS 1804), Jefferson’s private secretary in Paris. Life in Philadelphia was clearly enjoyable for the Portuguese exile but he remained anxious to visit “the great the truly great Mr. Jefferson.” In July of 1813 he left for Virginia for the first of what would eventually be seven visits over a period of about eight years.
Jefferson had been introduced to Correia in glowing letters from Lafayette, Du Pont, Thouin, and Humboldt. It is not surprising, then, that Jefferson received the visitor with warmth and great expectations. They were not disappointed. Jefferson described his guest as “the best digest of science in books, men, and things that I have ever met with; and with these the most amiable and engaging character.” The room in which Correia stayed during his visits to Monticello, the North Square Room, is still known as the Abbé’s room. Correia spent much of his time in Virginia on rambles through the country, often in the company of Thomas Mann Randolph (1768-1828, APS 1794). His interest in natural history eventually also took him to Kentucky, Georgia and north to the Canadian border.
Through Jefferson, Correia made the acquaintance of Francis Walker Gilmer (1790-1826), a promising young man who readily accepted the abbé’s invitation to accompany him on his excursions. In 1816 President Madison asked the two men to deliver a letter from him to the agent of the Cherokee, in the southeastern United States. In the course of their journey through South Carolina and Georgia, they made extensive botanical notations, and Gilmer also recorded several pages of Cherokee vocabulary.
In 1816 Correia received news of his appointment as Portuguese minister-plenipotentiary at Washington, D. C. His expectation that this post would not interfere with his scientific pursuits turned out to be mistaken, even though he never spent more than half a year in the nation’s capital. From the start he was forced to deal with complaints about privateers flying foreign flags who were threatening the Portuguese colonies in South America. The fear was that these privateers, many of whom were American, could encourage and aid a rebellion in Brazil. Correia successfully lobbied the U. S. government for a Neutrality Act that was designed to curb these actions.
In the late 1810s, increasing worries about the turn of Portuguese-American affairs and serious health problems gradually made the abbé’s temper shorter and his spirits lower. He also ultimately became a severe critic of America and Americans, an attitude that contributed to his estrangement from some of his older American friends. However, he also found comfort in new relationships with, for example, the English-born chemist and lawyer Thomas Cooper (1759-1839, APS 1802). Most significantly, Edward Joseph, his fifteen-year old son with his lover Esther Delavigne arrived in the United States from Paris in 1818. Edward, who stayed with his father until their return to Europe, got to know many of his Philadelphia friends quite well. In 1820 father and son sailed from the United States for Portugal via London, a year after Correia had learned of his appointment as Counselor of State for Brazil. Correia spent the last three years of his life in Lisbon, “covered with honors,” as his son Edward wrote in a letter to John Vaughan. He died in Lisbon in 1823.
Correia published many essays and reports on botany in the leading European and American scientific journals of his time. His research centered on the systematic classification of vegetable species. In his work he attempted to apply the methods of compared anatomy of zoology to botany; he sought to group plants into families based on their similarities. His concept of symmetry was later adopted and developed by Candolle. While Correia was not “a member of every philosophical society in the world,” as his young protégé Gilmer wrote enthusiastically in a letter to his brother, he did belong to numerous learned societies. They included the Royal Society, the Linnean Society, the Academy of Science of Paris, and the Société Philomatique. He also offered several courses in botany at the American Philosophical Society.
Born at St-Martin de Ré, France, on June, 1760, Du Ponceau received his education at a Benedictine college, where he demonstrated a facility for languages. His uncommon knowledge of English led to ridicule by his schoolmates, who nicknamed him L'Anglois for his habit of carrying around an English Classic in his pocket. A bit of jealousy may have been at play as Du Ponceau, though he rarely studied, received all of the premiums at the end of each year. The disdain was mutual: Du Ponceau scorned his fellow students for their tendency to merely memorize and repeat their lessons.
Dissatisfied with the scholastic philosophy taught at the college, Du Ponceau left the school after eighteen months. Du Ponceau's mother wanted him to enter the priesthood. In an effort to persuade him, the priest reportedly evoked feelings of guilt and remorse by reminding Du Ponceau of his failure to cry at his father's death. Under the combined pressure of his mother and the unnamed priest, Du Ponceau agreed to enter the seminary under the condition that they would not require him to enter the priesthood after he completed his studies. He completed his studies, but did not enter the priesthood. Instead, at the age of 17, he set out for America with Baron von Steuben and served as Steuben's secretary in the Revolutionary army, with rank of captain, until illness forced his resignation in 1781. He settled in Philadelphia, where he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and established a law practice.
Elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1791, he served as secretary for and primary force behind the Society's Historical and Literary Committee. One of the most active committees in the Society's history, the Historical and Literary Committee provided much of the impetus for the early growth of the Society's Native American Indian linguistic collections. During Du Ponceau's tenure as secretary, the Committee laid the foundation for the Society's development into one of the premier centers for the study of Native American Indian languages.
A member of the Society during the era in which Thomas Jefferson served as president of the American Philosophical Society as well as president of the United States, Du Ponceau collaborated with Albert Gallatin on a volume of Indian vocabularies commissioned by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson wished to demonstrate the relationships between Indian tribes based on the similarities or differences of their languages. DuPonceau and Gallatin found that a correlation did exist between similarity of language and the length of time since the tribes had migrated to other regions.
His memoir on the grammatical system of the Indian languages (Mémoire sur le systeme grammatical des langues de quelques nations Indiennes de l'Amérique du Nord) won the Volney prize of the French Institute in 1835 and his writings continue to inspire scholars to this day. In addition to his works on Indian languages, Du Ponceau wrote on the Chinese system of writing, then largely a puzzle to most Europeans.
An active and influential scholar, Du Ponceau served, simultaneously at one point, as president of not only the American Philosophical Society, but also of the Athenaeum and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. During his years as president of the Society, from 1827 until his death in 1844, the Society expanded its linguistics collection to a degree not seen again until the 20th century.
Born at St-Martin de Ré, France, on June, 1760, Du Ponceau received his education at a Benedictine college, where he demonstrated a facility for languages. His uncommon knowledge of English led to ridicule by his schoolmates, who nicknamed him L'Anglois for his habit of carrying around an English Classic in his pocket. A bit of jealousy may have been at play as Du Ponceau, though he rarely studied, received all of the premiums at the end of each year. The disdain was mutual: Du Ponceau scorned his fellow students for their tendency to merely memorize and repeat their lessons.
Dissatisfied with the scholastic philosophy taught at the college, Du Ponceau left the school after eighteen months. Du Ponceau's mother wanted him to enter the priesthood. In an effort to persuade him, the priest reportedly evoked feelings of guilt and remorse by reminding Du Ponceau of his failure to cry at his father's death. Under the combined pressure of his mother and the unnamed priest, DuPonceau agreed to enter the seminary under the condition that they would not require him to enter the priesthood after he completed his studies. He completed his studies, but did not enter the priesthood. Instead, at the age of 17, he set out for America with Baron von Steuben and served as Steuben's secretary in the Revolutionary army, with rank of captain, until illness forced his resignation in 1781. He settled in Philadelphia, where he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and established a law practice.
Elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1791, he served as secretary for and primary force behind the Society's Historical and Literary Committee. One of the most active committees in the Society's history, the Historical and Literary Committee provided much of the impetus for the early growth of the Society's Native American Indian linguistic collections. During DuPonceau's tenure as secretary, the Committee laid the foundation for the Society's development into one of the premier centers for the study of Native American Indian languages.
A member of the Society during the era in which Thomas Jefferson served as president of the American Philosophical Society as well as president of the United States, Du Ponceau collaborated with Albert Gallatin on a volume of Indian vocabularies commissioned by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson wished to demonstrate the relationships between Indian tribes based on the similarities or differences of their languages. DuPonceau and Gallatin found that a correlation did exist between similarity of language and the length of time since the tribes had migrated to other regions.
His memoir on the grammatical system of the Indian languages (Mémoire sur le systeme grammatical des langues de quelques nations Indiennes de l'Amérique du Nord) won the Volney prize of the French Institute in 1835 and his writings continue to inspire scholars to this day. In addition to his works on Indian languages, DuPonceau wrote on the Chinese system of writing, then largely a puzzle to most Europeans.
An active and influential scholar, Du Ponceau served, simultaneously at one point, as president of not only the American Philosophical Society, but also of the Athenaeum and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. During his years as president of the Society, from 1827 until his death in 1844, the Society expanded its linguistics collection to a degree not seen again until the 20th century.
Born at St-Martin de Ré, France, on June, 1760, Du Ponceau received his education at a Benedictine college, where he demonstrated a facility for languages. His uncommon knowledge of English led to ridicule by his schoolmates, who nicknamed him L'Anglois for his habit of carrying around an English Classic in his pocket. A bit of jealousy may have been at play as Du Ponceau, though he rarely studied, received all of the premiums at the end of each year. The disdain was mutual: Du Ponceau scorned his fellow students for their tendency to merely memorize and repeat their lessons.
Dissatisfied with the scholastic philosophy taught at the college, Du Ponceau left the school after eighteen months. Du Ponceau's mother wanted him to enter the priesthood. In an effort to persuade him, the priest reportedly evoked feelings of guilt and remorse by reminding Du Ponceau of his failure to cry at his father's death. Under the combined pressure of his mother and the unnamed priest, Du Ponceau agreed to enter the seminary under the condition that they would not require him to enter the priesthood after he completed his studies. He completed his studies, but did not enter the priesthood. Instead, at the age of 17, he set out for America with Baron von Steuben and served as Steuben's secretary in the Revolutionary army, with rank of captain, until illness forced his resignation in 1781. He settled in Philadelphia, where he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and established a law practice.
Elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1791, he served as secretary for and primary force behind the Society's Historical and Literary Committee. One of the most active committees in the Society's history, the Historical and Literary Committee provided much of the impetus for the early growth of the Society's Native American Indian linguistic collections. During Du Ponceau's tenure as secretary, the Committee laid the foundation for the Society's development into one of the premier centers for the study of Native American Indian languages.
A member of the Society during the era in which Thomas Jefferson served as president of the American Philosophical Society as well as president of the United States, Du Ponceau collaborated with Albert Gallatin on a volume of Indian vocabularies commissioned by Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson wished to demonstrate the relationships between Indian tribes based on the similarities or differences of their languages. DuPonceau and Gallatin found that a correlation did exist between similarity of language and the length of time since the tribes had migrated to other regions.
His memoir on the grammatical system of the Indian languages (Mémoire sur le systeme grammatical des langues de quelques nations Indiennes de l'Amérique du Nord) won the Volney prize of the French Institute in 1835 and his writings continue to inspire scholars to this day. In addition to his works on Indian languages, DuPonceau wrote on the Chinese system of writing, then largely a puzzle to most Europeans.
An active and influential scholar, Du Ponceau served, simultaneously at one point, as president of not only the American Philosophical Society, but also of the Athenaeum and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. During his years as president of the Society, from 1827 until his death in 1844, the Society expanded its linguistics collection to a degree not seen again until the 20th century.
eng
Latn
Citation
- BiogHist
- BiogHist
https://viaf.org/viaf/22208143
https://viaf.org/viaf/22208143
https://viaf.org/viaf/22208143
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://viaf.org/viaf/22208143
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86013616
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86013616
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86013616
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86013616
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n86013616
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n86013616
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n86013616
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n86013616
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q3383609
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q3383609
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q3383609
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q3383609
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.M843-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.M843-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.M843-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/151370738
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/151370738
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744353
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744353
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122624239
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122624239
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/ude/full_ead/mss0573.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://library.udel.edu/static/purl.php?mss0573
Citation
- Source
- http://library.udel.edu/static/purl.php?mss0573
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270598705
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270598705
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540867
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540867
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.Film.541-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.541-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.541-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/APS.Archives-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55823238
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55823238
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.C81.1-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Correspondent (crp)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C81.1-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C81.1-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.974.8.Sw2-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.974.8.Sw2-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.974.8.Sw2-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22722093
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22722093
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/APS.Archives.IIc-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIc-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIc-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489505
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489505
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.Ms.Coll.20-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Ms.Coll.20-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Ms.Coll.20-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3252852
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3252852
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489787
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489787
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122473839
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122473839
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/APS.Archives.IIa-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIa-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIa-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122397107
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122397107
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.289.6.So1-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.289.6.So1-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.289.6.So1-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86102563
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86102563
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.3.H35o-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.H35o-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.H35o-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.B28-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.B28-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.B28-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744840
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744840
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27346119
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27346119
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/APS.Archives.IIb-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIb-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIb-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.R895.o-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.R895.o-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.R895.o-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/472671075
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/472671075
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86138600
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86138600
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122617125
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122617125
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122616161
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122616161
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154820114
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154820114
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270465903
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270465903
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.511.R19a-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.511.R19a-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.511.R19a-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647886084
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647886084
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.341.3.R21o-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Translator (trl)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.341.3.R21o-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.341.3.R21o-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647972741
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647972741
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52247351
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52247351
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523582
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523582
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/harvard/hou01427.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01427/catalog
Citation
- Source
- http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01427/catalog
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.In2-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.In2-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.In2-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122555353
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122555353
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122539947
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122539947
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589417
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589417
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122439918
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122439918
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.359.03.D92-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.359.03.D92-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.359.03.D92-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.572.97.V45d-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.572.97.V45d-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.572.97.V45d-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270598452
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270598452
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122381810
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122381810
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.3.H35n-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.H35n-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.H35n-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145787185
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145787185
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.P31.3-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.P31.3-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.P31.3-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540879
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540879
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.3.V852c-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.V852c-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.V852c-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.V85-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.V85-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.V85-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122464822
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122464822
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17937687
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17937687
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86165793
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86165793
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/63644794
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/63644794
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3252858
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3252858
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.Film.570-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Correspondent (crp)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.570-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.570-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.496.R27-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.496.R27-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.496.R27-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.410.D92.1-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.410.D92.1-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.410.D92.1-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17937697
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17937697
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/APS.Archives.IId-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IId-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IId-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22722670
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22722670
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25166298
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25166298
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122576780
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122576780
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86165470
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86165470
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298303
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298303
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/262293050
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/262293050
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122584302
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122584302
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122488728
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122488728
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523514
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523514
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.F31-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.F31-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.F31-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/83700954
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/83700954
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70982831
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70982831
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122347514
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122347514
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.P31-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.P31-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.P31-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.J23-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.J23-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.J23-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.Film.1162-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.1162-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.1162-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122580969
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122580969
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540362
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540362
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/235086015
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/235086015
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523723
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523723
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270619331
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270619331
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.410.D92-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.410.D92-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.410.D92-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.J35-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.J35-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.J35-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.332.4946.Az1m-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.332.4946.Az1m-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.332.4946.Az1m-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/668247018
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/668247018
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/36966220
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/36966220
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.H88-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.H88-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.H88-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/269526612
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/269526612
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17656772
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17656772
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.Or2-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.Or2-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.Or2-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.H78-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.H78-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.H78-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26380303
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26380303
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34689903
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34689903
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.341.3.G13-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Translator (trl)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.341.3.G13-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.341.3.G13-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.Film.628-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Correspondent (crp)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844 -- Correspondence</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.628-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.628-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/476928953
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/476928953
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298212
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298212
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.F826-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.F826-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.F826-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540040
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540040
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.V462-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.V462-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.V462-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122578752
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122578752
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30401426
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30401426
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589320
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589320
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/469692963
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/469692963
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17270600
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17270600
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122488795
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122488795
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122380254
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122380254
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122316448
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122316448
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122541874
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122541874
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/APS.Archives.IIj-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIj-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIj-ead.xml
http://viaf.org/viaf/22208143
Citation
- Source
- http://viaf.org/viaf/22208143
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489495
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489495
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744862
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744862
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71009873
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71009873
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.C632.1d-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C632.1d-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C632.1d-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55230424
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55230424
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270882948
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270882948
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122441160
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122441160
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.D92c-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D92c-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D92c-ead.xml
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.497.3.Z3g-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.Z3g-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.Z3g-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122365139
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122365139
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71066653
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71066653
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489481
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489481
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30820304
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30820304
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589207
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589207
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.D92p-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" role="Author (aut)" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D92p-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D92p-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/124558471
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/124558471
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/84052719
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/84052719
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298031
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298031
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122609448
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122609448
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/190791286
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/190791286
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/lc/ms010076.xml</filename> <ead_entity altrender=":::PWEBRECON=^Du+Ponceau%2C+Peter+Stephen%2C+1760-1844.^" en_type="persname" encodinganalog="600" role="subject" source="lcnaf">Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010076
Citation
- Source
- http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010076
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.B.Sp25-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.Sp25-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.Sp25-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/191259578
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/191259578
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/758450183
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/758450183
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71014818
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71014818
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/aps/Mss.340.7.L41-ead.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" source="ingest">Du Ponceau , Peter Stephen, 1760-1844</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.340.7.L41-ead.xml
Citation
- Source
- http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.340.7.L41-ead.xml
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28985657
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28985657
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/harvard/hou00355.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname">DuPonceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00355/catalog
Citation
- Source
- http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00355/catalog
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/umi/clementsmss/cassl_final.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf">DuPonceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsmss/umich-wcl-M-372cas?rgn=main;view=text
Citation
- Source
- http://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsmss/umich-wcl-M-372cas?rgn=main;view=text
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/harvard/hou01427.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="persname">DuPonceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01427/catalog
Citation
- Source
- http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01427/catalog
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau commonplace book, 1820, 1820
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau commonplace book, 1820 1820
There are notes on the colonial history of Pennsylvania, with emphasis on William Penn and his family, the Society of Friends, James Logan, and the charters granted by Penn, with some notes on the study of languages and definition of words.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 150 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D92c-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peter Stephen Du Ponceau commonplace book, 1820, 1820
Coates, Samuel, 1748-1830. Account and memoranda books, 1785-1830.
Title:
Account and memoranda books, 1785-1830.
ArchivalResource: 5 v.; 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122347514 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Coates, Samuel, 1748-1830. Account and memoranda books, 1785-1830.
Vaughan, John, 1755-1841. Papers, 1768 - ca. 1936
Title:
John Vaughan papers, 1768 - Circa 1936
The collection of about 850 items covers the period from 1782 to c. 1936, with the bulk dating to the 1780s to 1840s. The collection is divided into four series. Series I contains correspondence relating to a wide variety of topics, including French and English politics, business, trade, religious matters, and personal affairs. Many of the items are letters of introduction. There is also information on John Vaughan’s immigration to America, Joseph Priestley, vaccines and inoculation (with Jefferson's comments on the same), Vaughan's business in Philadelphia, and the American Philosophical Society. Also included in this series are 2 boxes with copies of Vaughan correspondence as well as miscellaneous notes by E. W. Madeira, gathered in the course of his research on Vaughan in the 1930s. Series II consists of three volumes. Included are two of Vaughan's commonplace books. One, entitled, "J. Vaughan's book," May 17, 1779 (47 pp., in Latin; 870/L34), includes mostly Latin notations. The other commonplace book, dated 1783 (ca. 66 pp.; B V 462.c), includes comments on several prominent Americans, such as Benjamin Rush and David Rittenhouse, as well as American society generally. The third volume is a copybook with thirty letters spanning the period 1784 to 1801 (B V462.1). Series III includes material relating to Vaughan's administration of the estate of the Philadelphia merchant Samuel Merrick, 1796-1822 (Vaughan-Merrick Papers, B V462.m; 2 boxes). Series IV consists of correspondence between Vaughan and the DuPont Co. for which he served as agent (B V462.4; photocopies of 73 letters).
ArchivalResource: 5.0 Linear feet, Ca. 850 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.V462-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- John Vaughan papers, 1768 - Circa 1936, 1768 - Circa 1936
Monroe, James, 1758-1831. Letter, 1822 September 30, to John Mason, Georgetown, D.C.
Title:
Letter, 1822 September 30, to John Mason, Georgetown, D.C.
Asks him to confer further with him on the subject of the letter Mason received from Peter Du Ponceau.
ArchivalResource: 1 p. ; 20 x 12 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27346119 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Monroe, James, 1758-1831. Letter, 1822 September 30, to John Mason, Georgetown, D.C.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Dolley Madison, 1836 July 16.
Title:
ALS : Philadelphia, to Dolley Madison, 1836 July 16.
On behalf of the American Philosophical Society, Du Ponceau sends condolences to Dolley Madison upon the death of her husband.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122541874 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Dolley Madison, 1836 July 16.
Jared Sparks selected papers, 1819-1863
Title:
Jared Sparks selected papers, 1819-1863
Letters and papers relating to Sparks's research on Benjamin Franklin and the publication of an edition of the latter's writings. There are also extracts from Sparks's journal, 1831-1841, relating to his Franklin researches.
ArchivalResource: 2.0 Microfilm reels
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.570-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Jared Sparks selected papers, 1819-1863 Franklin Bache S. D. Bradford William Duane Peter S. Du Ponceau J. Francis Fisher George Gibbs Henry D. Gilpin Edward D. Ingraham James Mease William B. Reed Henry Stevens, Sr. Henry Stevens, Jr. Benjamin Vaughan Petty Vaughan William Vaughan There are also extracts from Sparks's journal, 1831-1841, relating to his Franklin researches. Table of contents (11 pp.). (Film 570), 1819-1863
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Indian vocabularies, 1820-1844.
Title:
Indian vocabularies, 1820-1844.
This volume contains copies of 82 vocabularies representing 73 languages with notes and additions made by Du Ponceau and Albert Gallatin. Vocabularies for South American languages are copied from rare printed sources, while North American vocabularies are from both printed and manuscript sources.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (253 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540867 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Indian vocabularies, 1820-1844.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844,. James Monroe and John Randolph of Roanoke collection [manuscript], 1811-1831.
Title:
James Monroe and John Randolph of Roanoke collection [manuscript], 1811-1831.
The collection contains a note from Monroe to Randolph, 1811 November, informing him that he will be leaving home to call on the President at 5:30 and will be happy to recieve Randolph in the interval. A letter from Monroe to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1830 February 8, assures him that he has forwarded his letter to General [John Hartwell] Cocke, and that he is always ready to assist "old revolutionary friends"; notes that he is recovering from a bad cold and fever, and asks him to call as he wishes to confer with him. A note from John Randolph to Ralph Randolph Wormeley, 1831 April 16, declines an invitation. The collection also contains a pen-and-ink caricature of Randolph, [circa 1831?]
ArchivalResource: 4 itmes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/469692963 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844,. James Monroe and John Randolph of Roanoke collection [manuscript], 1811-1831.
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIc, 1826-1836
Title:
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIc 1826-1836
This is part of the large inventory for the American Philosophical Society Archives. For complete information concerning this collection, please view the . Collection Description
ArchivalResource: 1.0 section
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIc-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIc, 1826-1836
Dutilh family. Dutilh family business records, 1770-1861, bulk 1780-1810.
Title:
Dutilh family business records, 1770-1861, bulk 1780-1810.
The Dutilh Family Business Records at the University of Delaware Library, spanning the dates 1770-1861, represent only a small portion of Dutilh family papers available in several archival repositories across the country. The records demonstrate the everyday business of a late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth century Philadelphia mercantile house. The majority of the items housed in the collection are bills of exchange, promissory notes from the company, and "sight drafts" for pay to ships' workers. Sight drafts are documents commonly used in international trade that allow the bearer of the sight draft to receive a specified payment from a bank or importer upon "sight." Approximately one third of the collection is in French, with French being employed more often in the earlier years of the company and for business correspondence between Dutilh family members. Though Dutilh & Wachsmuth only formally existed as an enterprise for less than a decade, the papers in this collection span a much greater period of time, from 1770 to 1861, with the majority of the material hailing from the period between 1780 and 1810. The collection provides many items of use to the researcher, including manifests illustrating the types of material being imported into Philadelphia at the turn of the century, bills of exchange and promissory notes that were utilized as payment for both the import of goods as well as for the wages of workers, and several well-preserved examples of cargo insurance policies. These policies are fine early-American printing specimens of the Philadelphia printer James Humphreys.
ArchivalResource: 1 linear foot (2 upright manuscript boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/472671075 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Dutilh family. Dutilh family business records, 1770-1861, bulk 1780-1810.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 May 30.
Title:
ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 May 30.
Du Ponceau thanks Dallas for some correspondence, and praises his achievements in improving both the army and the Department of Finance. He also discusses the system of prize courts as it exists in Great Britain, and notes that he has received word that the Manifesto of the allies has been received in Paris.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (4 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122617125 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 May 30.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Papers, 1663-1844 (bulk 1781-1844)
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau papers 1663-1844
A group of incoming letters relate to law, linguistics, and, less importantly, history, 1781-1827. Among the correspondents are James Fenimore Cooper and John Sergeant on law, George W. Featherstonhaugh, Albert Gallatin, and John Pickering on linguistics, and Jared Sparks on history. The second group consists of Du Ponceau's correspondence and notes, including notes on silk culture, 1820s, copies of the legal opinions of Bushrod Washington, and papers dealing with constitutional questions in Alabama, 1831-1833. Also present in this group are autobiographical letters, 1836-1844, addressed to Robert Walsh and others. The third group contains Du Ponceau's letter books, 1792-1801, 1803-1814, 1820-1842; legal precedents, 1784-1798, 1801-1830; letters, 1818-1843, from John Pickering, the Boston lawyer and judge who shared Du Ponceau's interest in linguistics. Du Ponceau's notes and abstracts concerning the origin of the American Philosophical Society, taken from the minutes of the Junto, the American Society for Promoting Useful Knowledge, the American Philosophical Society, and from the Jared Sparks edition of the Works of Benjamin Franklin. The transcriptions of letters sent to Du Ponceau, prepared by Job R. Tyson, a Vice-President of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, were to be used for a memorial biography of Du Ponceau, prepared after his death in 1844. Tyson's selection reflects a strong bias toward military and political figures including DeWitt Clinton, James Kent, John Marshall, James Madison, and James Monroe.
ArchivalResource: 4.5 Linear feet 9 boxes, 14 volumes
https://discover.hsp.org/Record/ead-0181 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Papers, 1663-1844 (inclusive), 1781-1844 (bulk).
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Notebooks on philology [microform] / Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
Title:
Notebooks on philology [microform] / Peter Stephen Du Ponceau. 1815-1834.
ArchivalResource: 8 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17937687 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Notebooks on philology [microform] / Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 Jan. 24.
Title:
ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 Jan. 24.
Du Ponceau congratulates Dallas on the passage of the law incorporating the Bank of the United States.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122365139 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 Jan. 24.
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau letters, 1801-1843, to Albert Gallatin., 1801-1843
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau letters, 1801-1843, to Albert Gallatin. 1801-1843
These forty-five letters concern legal and political matters, Indian languages and linguistics, philological matters, and the American Philosophical Society.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Reel(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.541-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peter Stephen Du Ponceau letters, 1801-1843, to Albert Gallatin., 1801-1843
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter, 1804.
Title:
Letter, 1804.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 leaf).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/63644794 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter, 1804.
Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815. A comparative vocabulary of Indian languages, [n.d.].
Title:
A comparative vocabulary of Indian languages, [n.d.].
This volume contains extracts of Barton's "New Views of the Origin of the Tribes and Nations of America" (Philadelphia, 1797), with additions by Peter S. Du Ponceau, including a review of Barton's book in "Göttingische Anzeigen von gelehrten Sachen," June 17, 1799.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (219 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523582 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815. A comparative vocabulary of Indian languages, [n.d.].
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 Feb. 17.
Title:
ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 Feb. 17.
Du Ponceau thanks Dallas for sending him details on the new treaty between Great Britain and the United States, and comments upon it at length.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (4 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86165793 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. ALS : Philadelphia, to Alexander James Dallas, 1815 Feb. 17.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter : Philadelphia, [Pa.], to Lewis [i.e. Louis] Le Couteulx, 1803 Feb. 27.
Title:
Letter : Philadelphia, [Pa.], to Lewis [i.e. Louis] Le Couteulx, 1803 Feb. 27.
February 27, 1803, letter from Du Ponceau to Louis Le Couteulx, who had been arrested by the British at Fort George, N.Y., in 1800 and imprisoned for two years on suspicion of being a French spy.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; 26 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/36966220 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter : Philadelphia, [Pa.], to Lewis [i.e. Louis] Le Couteulx, 1803 Feb. 27.
Sergeant, John, 1779-1852. ALS : Washington, D.C., to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1815 Dec. 21.
Title:
ALS : Washington, D.C., to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1815 Dec. 21.
Sergeant informs Du Ponceau of the process by which the Philosophical Society may obtain some documents from the Secretary of State.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122580969 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Sergeant, John, 1779-1852. ALS : Washington, D.C., to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1815 Dec. 21.
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIb, 1807-1825
Title:
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIb 1807-1825
This is part of the large inventory for the American Philosophical Society Archives. For complete information concerning this collection, please view the . Collection Description
ArchivalResource: 1.0 section
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIb-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIb, 1807-1825
Book of Discipline, 1719 (1820)
Title:
Book of Discipline 1719 (1820)
In October 1719, the Yearly Meeting of the Society of Friends for Philadelphia and the Jersies reached consensus on a "book of discipline" governing the "establishment and order of meetings." The regulations covered both the conduct of the Quarterly and Monthly Meetings and the personal comportment of individual members, refining the bureaucratic structure of the meetings and laying out the powers of Overseers and other officials. It touches upon marriage (mandating endogamy), burial, and attendance at meetings, and cautions Friends to plainness of speech and dress, drinking, smoking, backbiting, and gaming. This version of the Book of Discipline is a manuscript copy made for the American Philosophical Society in 1820 "from and antient Copy in the possession of Timothy Matlack, Esqr."
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 25 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.289.6.So1-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Book of Discipline, 1719 (1820)
Correia da Serra, José Francisco, 1750-1823. Papers, 1772-1827
Title:
José Francisco Correia da Serra papers, 1772-1827
The collection consists primarily of letters and essays on matters related to botany as well as Correia's role as Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States. They were written between 1772 and 1827. Also included are several letters and notes by Richard Beale and other persons about Davis's research on Correia, dated 1949 to 1957. The collection includes a typed table of contents (1958). The largest single group of letters (25) was written by Correa to John Quincy Adams between 1817 and 1820, when Correia served as Minister Plenipotentiary. They concern official business, including the appointment of various officials and, most prominently, the persistent troubles with American privateers and Correia's efforts to get the American government to do something about it. Other noteworthy items dealing with official business include a letter by Correia to James Monroe in which he protests a number of assaults by American privateers on Portuguese vessels (1816), and several letters to Secretary of State Richard Rush in which Correia expresses his displeasure about the support given by American citizens to "rebels" in the Portuguese colony of Pernambuco (1817). A letter by Rush to Madison testifies to Correia's persistence; Rush writes that among the foreign ministers, "the Abbe Correa was the one with whom my official relations were the least smooth" (1817). Correa, in turn, complained to John Quincy Adams in 1819 that "during more than two years, I have been obliged by my duty to oppose the systematic and organized depredations daily committed on the property of Portuguese subjects." Of interest is also a letter to the Count of Palmela in which Correia assesses the policies of various colonial governments in the West Indies (1820). Another significant body of letters is addressed to James Edward Smith, a botanist and founder of the Linnean Society in London. The letters, which are dated between 1795 and 1821, deal primarily with botanical matters, including news about fellow botanists, such as Antoine Laurent de Jussieu (1800). The letters are friendly and frequently also include personal news. The letter of September 1801 deals with Correia's troubles in Portugal. The collection includes several letters by Correia to Thomas Jefferson. They are friendly letters that reflect their shared interests in the natural sciences. In one letter, for example, Correia writes about his pleasure of sending notes on Captain Lewis's papers to Jefferson (1816), and another one describes Correia's intention of visiting Monticello (1818). There is also an undated list of books forwarded to Jefferson. Items that reflect Correia's interest in the natural sciences generally, and botany specifically, include three letters by Correia to Carl Linnaeus when Correia was still a student in Rome (1772, 1773, 1774). Written in Latin, the letters deal with botanical topics. A letter to Joseph Banks, written while Correia resided in Philadelphia, refers to seeds and papers that Correia had sent to London (1803), and an undated note in French confirms Correia's dinner appointment with Alexander von Humboldt. Several letters shed light on Correia's interest in and affection for the United States. A letter to Fulwar Skipwith refers to Correia's idea of living in America as "the utmost of my wishes" and his belief that only an official invitation by the government would make this possible (1808). There is also a letter of introduction for Correia by J. Dauxion Lavaysse, addressed to Benjamin Rush (1811), and a letter of introduction for Robert M. Patterson by Correia, addressed to Smith (1811). A letter written in 1814 refers to Correia's difficulty of sending money to Paris during Jefferson's embargo. Also of note is a letter to President Madison in which Correia offers suggestions on how the United States could take advantage of its mineral resources as well as lands as sources of revenue (1814). Correia comments extensively on the "new faculty" of the University of Pennsylvania in a letter to William Rawle (1816). A letter of condolence to Elizabeth Mifflin Wistar speaks to his friendship with the Philadelphia physician Caspar Wistar (1818). The collection also includes an obituary of C. Wistar written by Correia (1818). Letters written by individuals other then Correia include one by Joseph Banks (1810, in French), and a letter by Joseph Rademaker, Consul general of Portugal, to Secretary of State James Monroe (1816?). There is a group of letters exchanged between Thomas Cooper and Thomas Jefferson which deal with the University of Virginia, including matters relating to the faculty and Cooper's efforts to secure minerals and works of art (1817-1819). One letter from John Vaughan to Jefferson suggests Landeren Vanapan, who had been recommended by Correia, for a position at the university (1821), and another one by Jefferson to Robert Walsh declines Walsh's request for material on Jefferson's life, due primarily to Jefferson's advanced age and poor health (1823). A friendly letter by Jefferson to Walsh mentions Correia as well as a book on skepticism that Jefferson had recently read (1818). There are also five letters by Henry Muhlenberg to Stephen Elliott, dealing with botanical matters (1812, 1813, 1814). Finally, a particularly heartfelt letter by Francis W. Gilmer informs Dabney Carr of Correia's departure from the United States in 1820. Also included in the collection are essays by Correia on several topics, including the "Natural Family of the Aurantia" (1799), the Doryantes (1800), botany (in Latin, undated), "The case of the Brazilian Indian," and "A description of great English houses and gardens." There are also reports that Correia prepared for the APS, and there is a dedication to several individuals, including Correia, that was included in Thomas Nuttall's Journal of the Travels (1821).
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear Feet, 200 items
https://search.amphilsoc.org/collections/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C81.1-ead.xml;brand=default View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Correia da Serra, José Francisco, 1750-1823. Papers, 1772-1823 (bulk).
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Notebooks on philology, [n.d.].
Title:
Notebooks on philology, [n.d.].
These notebooks are principally on American Indian languages, with some notes on the languages of the Tartars, Arabs, Greeks, Polynesians, and others.
ArchivalResource: 9 v. (ca. 654 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122624239 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Notebooks on philology, [n.d.].
Duponceau papers, 1781-1845.
Title:
Duponceau papers, 1781-1845.
Paper (including letter, 1781 August 29, of Baron von Steuben) concerning Pierre Etienne [Peter Stephen] Duponceau.
ArchivalResource: 5 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22722093 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Duponceau papers, 1781-1845.
Hopkinson, Joseph, 1770-1842. Letter to Peter S. DuPonceau. Washington, DC. 1818 Dec. 7.
Title:
Letter to Peter S. DuPonceau. Washington, DC. 1818 Dec. 7.
Concerning some documents that he will send.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122576780 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Hopkinson, Joseph, 1770-1842. Letter to Peter S. DuPonceau. Washington, DC. 1818 Dec. 7.
Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Letter : Paris, to [Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, Philadelphia], 1831 Mar. 14.
Title:
Letter : Paris, to [Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, Philadelphia], 1831 Mar. 14.
Letter signed.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/83700954 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Letter : Paris, to [Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, Philadelphia], 1831 Mar. 14.
Torrey, John,. Autograph letters, 1744-1894, of naturalists.
Title:
Autograph letters, 1744-1894, of naturalists.
This is a collection of 283 letters.
ArchivalResource: 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298303 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Torrey, John,. Autograph letters, 1744-1894, of naturalists.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Essai de solution du problème philologique proposé en l'année 1823 par la commission de l'Institut de France, 1823.
Title:
Essai de solution du problème philologique proposé en l'année 1823 par la commission de l'Institut de France, 1823.
The commission of the Institut de France was charged with offering a prize on linguistics, under the will of Count Volney. Formerly, this essay was thought to have been by Baron Nicolas Massias (1764-1848), who won the Volney prize in 1828.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (70 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122439918 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Essai de solution du problème philologique proposé en l'année 1823 par la commission de l'Institut de France, 1823.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Collection, 1781-1844
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Collection 1781-1844
A pioneer in ethnographic and linguistic studies of the American Indian and one of the most active members of the American Philosophical Society, Peter Stephen Du Ponceau helped to establish the American Philosophical Society's reputation as one of the world's foremost centers for the study of American Indians and their languages. The Peter Stephen Du Ponceau collection consists of correspondence on legal matters, Indian linguistics, silk culture, maritime law, the American Philosophical Society, and various publications of the early nineteenth century. The collection also includes several essays by Du Ponceau, most of which deal with maritime law.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.D92p-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Collection, 1781-1844
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters, 1801-1843, to Albert Gallatin.
Title:
Letters, 1801-1843, to Albert Gallatin.
These forty-five letters concern legal and political matters, Indian languages, and the American Philosophical Society.
ArchivalResource: 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540879 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters, 1801-1843, to Albert Gallatin.
Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866. Selected papers relating to Benjamin Franklin, ca. 1819-1863
Title:
relating to Benjamin Franklin. Selected papers, [ca. 1819-1863]
These selected papers include correspondence concerning Franklin, Franklin's descendants, and Franklin's papers, extracts from Philadelphia newspapers on Franklin, papers used in Sparks' biography, miscellaneous entries in his diary (1830-1854) relating to his search for Franklin manuscripts, and his preparation of an edition of Franklin's writings.
ArchivalResource: 9 notebooks : photostats.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122464822 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866. Selected papers, [ca. 1819-1863], relating to Benjamin Franklin.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Papers, 1786-1842.
Title:
Papers, 1786-1842.
These are letters on law, business, Indian languages, and the American Philosophical Society. The correspondents are Edward S. Burd, Samuel Coates, Albert Gallatin, and William Tilghman.
ArchivalResource: 9 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86165470 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Papers, 1786-1842.
Law Academy of Philadelphia. Opinion book A: opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost, 1820-1822.
Title:
Opinion book A: opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost, 1820-1822.
The opinions are signed by Peter S. Du Ponceau as provost.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (174 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86102563 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Law Academy of Philadelphia. Opinion book A: opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost, 1820-1822.
Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Letter : Paris, to [Peter Stephen Duponceau, Philadelphia], 1831 Mar. 14.
Title:
Letter : Paris, to [Peter Stephen Duponceau, Philadelphia], 1831 Mar. 14.
Letter signed. Refers to the membership of King Louis Philippe in the Philosophical Society and the fighting in Poland.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; 23 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/52247351 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Letter : Paris, to [Peter Stephen Duponceau, Philadelphia], 1831 Mar. 14.
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIa, 1743-1806
Title:
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIa 1743-1806
This is part of the large inventory for the American Philosophical Society Archives. For complete information concerning this collection, please view the . Collection Description
ArchivalResource: 1.0 section
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIa-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIa, 1743-1806
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau notebooks on philology, [1815-1834], Circa 1815-1834
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau notebooks on philology, [1815-1834] Circa 1815-1834
Consists of extracts from rare published works on American Indian, African, and Asian languages, together with the notes and comments of Du Ponceau; linguistic essays, vocabulary lists (mostly of numerals) for North, Middle, and South American languages; materials on Chinese, Pacific, Asian, and African languages; notes on the languages of the Tartars, Arabs, Greeks, Polynesians, and others. Included are copies of several manuscripts as well as copies of two letters of Wilhelm von Humboldt. One of them is dated Berlin, April 9, 1822; L. 6p. In French. Exchange of publications [with the APS?]. Indian languages. Languages. Refers to A.von Humboldt, Heckewelder, Zeisberger, Eliot and Vater. See vol.5, 19-24. Important for references to the Historical and Literary Committee of the APS; to Du Ponceau's publications on Delaware, Chippewa, and Chinese; and to his correspondence with philologists Adelung, Heckewelder, Humboldt, Gallatin, and Vater.
ArchivalResource: 9.0 Volume(s), 9 volumes, ca. 654 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.410.D92-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peter Stephen Du Ponceau notebooks on philology, [1815-1834], Circa 1815-1834
William Sampson Papers, 1806-1849, (bulk 1816-1849)
Title:
William Sampson Papers 1806-1849 (bulk 1816-1849)
Irish patriot, lawyer, and author. Microfilm of letters from Sampson to his wife, Grace Clarke Sampson, relating to his political exile from Ireland to the United States.
ArchivalResource: 2 microfilm reels
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010076 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- William Sampson Papers, 1806-1849, (bulk 1816-1849)
Foulke, William Parker, 1816-1865. Papers, ca. 1840-1865.
Title:
Papers, ca. 1840-1865.
This collection contains the correspondence and personal papers of Foulke, including many copies of letters by him and numerous lectures he delivered. He was much concerned with prison reform, and there is material on the Lancaster County Prison, the New York Prison Association, the Philadelphia Prison Society, and the Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons. There are notebooks concerning prisons and prisoners, including a 1846-1852 diary, and a listing of prisoners, their race, age, crime, sentence, and observations.
ArchivalResource: ca. 3000 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122616161 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Foulke, William Parker, 1816-1865. Papers, ca. 1840-1865.
Laws of neutrality, 1775
Title:
Laws of neutrality 1775
ArchivalResource: 2.0 Volume(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.341.3.G13-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Laws of neutrality, 1775
Gibson, James. Papers, 1712-1846.
Title:
Papers, 1712-1846.
The collection relates to the colonial and early national periods: it contains land claims and deeds of Maryland, 1712-16; French and Spanish passports for trade and shipping; agreements of Philadelphia merchants to decline acceptances of notes of credit in lieu of specie, 1766; correspondence on local affairs and general politics. Included are accounts of money paid out on warrants by the auditor general, 1777; minutes of proceedings in charges brought against the Board of the Treasury by Francis Hopkinson, treasurer of loans, 1780; a statement of Treasury accounts of Francis Hopkinson, 1780; contract between Robert Morris and Daniel Parker to supply rations to the Revolutionary Army; register of accounts and claims against the United States, and a review of the business transacted by the Chamber of Accounts, 1779-1780; legal papers and subpoenas issued by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania against Robert Morris and John Nicholson relate to unsatisfied judgments. The formation of land companies in Pennsylvania in which Robert Morris, John Nicholson, and James Gibson were interested, is shown in the papers of the Pennsylvania Population Company, Asylum Company, Erie Lands, and Donation Lands, 1792-1828: the correspondence of their agents, Judah Colt and James Gibson, mortgages, agreements of sales, surveys, deeds, powers of attorney, claims, court proceedings, minutes of the board of managers, and plats. There is also a copy of the map and exemplification of the grant of the Erie triangle from the United States to Pennsylvania, 1792. In addition there is a group of letters, 1824-1846, addressed to Carey? Carey, Lea,? Lea & Blanchard, booksellers and publishers. Among the names of the correspondents are: William Bainbridge, John C. Breckinridge, Horace Binney, C.C. Bonaparte, Thomas Cooper, Joseph Drayton, Millard Fillmore, C.J. Ingersoll, John Marshall, Joel R. Poinsett, Peter Du Ponceau, Joseph Quincy, R. Randolph, J. Reed, Thomas Riché, Richard Rush, Andrew Stevenson, Bushrod Washington, Hamilton Washington, and Noah Webster.
ArchivalResource: 2.5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489787 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Gibson, James. Papers, 1712-1846.
A grammar of the language of the Lenni Lennape, or Delaware Indians, [1816], Circa 1816
Title:
A grammar of the language of the Lenni Lennape, or Delaware Indians, [1816] Circa 1816
A grammar, based on a Latin model. Prepared from original then in Library of United Brethren, Bethlehem. It is a description of the Delaware language and lists words and their corresponding meanings.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 210 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.Z3g-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- A grammar of the language of the Lenni Lennape, or Delaware Indians, [1816], Circa 1816
Thomas Jefferson papers, 1775-1825, 1775-1825
Title:
Thomas Jefferson papers, 1775-1825 1775-1825
The Thomas Jefferson papers contain a large number of correspondence both to and from Jefferson, as well as various other material related to American Revolutionary War and Early Republic. Includes correspondence with Patrick Henry, Charles Willson Peale, Richard Henry Lee, Horatio Gates, David Rittenhouse, Robert Patterson
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet, Ca. 250 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.J35-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Thomas Jefferson papers, 1775-1825, 1775-1825
Peale, Charles Willson, 1741-1827. Letterbooks, 1767-1827.
Title:
Letterbooks, 1767-1827.
This collection contains copies of outgoing business and personal correspondence on a wide variety of topics with a great many persons. Subjects include events in Philadelphia, his museum and its exhibits, Peale's hopes for the museum's acquisition by the city or state, the exhumation and exhibition of the mastodon, construction and promotion of the polygraph, agricultural concerns (including the operation of his farm Belfield), natural history, and false teeth.
ArchivalResource: 18 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122488728 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peale, Charles Willson, 1741-1827. Letterbooks, 1767-1827.
Kirby, Thomas Austin. Thomas Austin Kirby papers, 1932-1988.
Title:
Thomas Austin Kirby papers, 1932-1988.
Research notes, correspondence, articles, exams, criticism, and phonograph records covering the period 1932 to 1988 document the professional life of Thomas Austin Kirby. The bulk of the collection is comprised of his research in Medieval and Victorian literature and its writers. Geoffrey Chaucer's work is paid particular attention, notably his CANTERBURY TALES. Many CHAUCER RESEARCH REPORTS are contained in these papers as a result of Kirby's membership in the Committee on Research and Bibliography of the Chaucer Group of the Modern Language Association of America. Also included are typescripts of letters from Peter S. Du Ponceau (1760-1844) and John Pickering (1777-1846), papers from the WELL'S MANUAL, class materials, and phonographic albums about Chaucer and his work.
ArchivalResource: 9 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/262293050 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Kirby, Thomas Austin. Thomas Austin Kirby papers, 1932-1988.
Rauschardt, Felix Hannibal. Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649.
Title:
Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649.
This volume contains two selections: the first are problems in geometry and trigonometry, and the second concerning fortifications and their layout.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (ca. 202 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298212 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Rauschardt, Felix Hannibal. Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649.
Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1743-1823. Names which the Lenni Lenape...had given to rivers, streams, places, &c., 1822.
Title:
Names which the Lenni Lenape...had given to rivers, streams, places, &c., 1822.
This item was prepared for publication by Peter S. Du Ponceau and printed in American Philosophical Society "Transactions", n.s., 4(1834):351-396.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (58 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122473839 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1743-1823. Names which the Lenni Lenape...had given to rivers, streams, places, &c., 1822.
Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Autograph signature to letter : to Peter DuPonceau, 1834 Apr. 23.
Title:
Autograph signature to letter : to Peter DuPonceau, 1834 Apr. 23.
Recommending a lithographer.
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270598705 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Autograph signature to letter : to Peter DuPonceau, 1834 Apr. 23.
Conjugation of the verb "to hear" in its various forms in the Chippeway language, [ca. 1833], Circa 1833
Title:
Conjugation of the verb "to hear" in its various forms in the Chippeway language, [ca. 1833] Circa 1833
This item contains printed sheets pasted into a volume, with manuscript notes by Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 21 leaves
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.J23-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Conjugation of the verb "to hear" in its various forms in the Chippeway language, [ca. 1833], Circa 1833
Monroe, James, 1758-1831. Financial records : of James Monroe, 1809-1831, n.d.
Title:
Financial records : of James Monroe, 1809-1831, n.d.
The collection contains letters from Monroe concerning financial matters, including paying his debts, getting his personal and financial affairs in order after long absence in Europe, enclosing a check to Humphrey Peake, thanking correspondent for a loan but he still has to sell his land to pay off debts, asking for a $600-800 loan, and telling Thomas Jefferson that public service put him in debt. Correspondents include John Watson, Richard Smith, Charles Fenton Mercer, Ninian Edwards, John Kirkland, Richard Peters, John Purviance, Peter Du Ponceau, Silas Burrows, and Thomas Swann. Also, includes an account of legal fees owed to C. Burns for settling the estate of Joseph Jones, an offer of assistance and loans, promissory notes to John Taliaferro and others, checks, and an account book with the Bank of Columbia, 1811-1812. Also, includes an 1826 U.S. Congress act for the relief of James Monroe awarding compensation of $29,513, and correspondence between Monroe and Charles Fenton Mercer expressing his dissatisfaction with the compensation. Mercer advises him on the claim. Monroe defends his claims. Other correspondents, including John Clarke, sympathize with his claim. Also, includes the 1831 U.S. Congress act to provide for the final settlement of claims in which Monroe is awarded $30,000, and U.S. Treasury Dept. settlement papers.
ArchivalResource: 79 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30820304 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Monroe, James, 1758-1831. Financial records : of James Monroe, 1809-1831, n.d.
Speculation Land Company. Speculation Land Company records, 1796-1909 [manuscript].
Title:
Speculation Land Company records, 1796-1909 [manuscript].
Records of a New York company which owned thousands of acres in Buncombe, Rutherford, and Mecklenburg counties, N.C. The lands were acquired by Tenche Coxe (1755-1824) in 1797, but soon were turned over to Pierre Etienne DuPonceau (1760-1844) and Abraham Kintzig of Philadelphia. About 1825 the properties came into possession of a group of New York owners and their agents' in North Carolina. There are legal papers, surveying records, agents account books of sales, and other items, including scattered personal papers of some of the agents. Some correspondence and accounts of the 1850s relate to gold and other mining on the Mecklenburg County lands, and post-Civil War papers relate to the recovery of the properties which had been taken over by Confederate sequestration agents.
ArchivalResource: About 1300 items (2.0 linear feet).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25166298 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Speculation Land Company. Speculation Land Company records, 1796-1909 [manuscript].
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIj, 1898-1988
Title:
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIj 1898-1988
This is part of the large inventory for the American Philosophical Society Archives. For complete information concerning this collection, please view the . Collection Description
ArchivalResource: 1.0 section
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IIj-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IIj, 1898-1988
Samuel George Morton Papers, 1819-1850
Title:
Samuel George Morton Papers 1819-1850
Through his craniometic studies of human races, the Philadelphia physician Samuel George Morton (1799-1851) exerted a profound influence on the development of physical anthropology in antebellum America, and made substantial contributions to mineralogy, paleontology, and natural history. Relating primarily to Morton's scientific interests, the Morton Papers include insights into Morton's perspectives on education, medical practice, geology and mineralogy, craniology, paleontology, the Wilkes Exploring Expedition (also known as the United States Exploring Expedition 1838-1842), and his two major monographs, the and . Several of the letters were written by Morton in his capacity as corresponding secretary of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Also included in this collection are Morton's "Some Remarks on the Infrequency of Mixed Offspring Between the European and Australian Races" (1850), Joseph Barclay Pentland's notes on the aborigines of Peru (ca. 1840?), and newspaper clippings on Morton's death; a diary of Morton's trip to the West Indies, 1834, a set of craniological sketches for use in Crania Americana, and a microfilm of letters in private hands, written to Morton, 1838-1844 Crania Americana Crania Aegyptiaca
ArchivalResource: 2.25 Linear feet; 5 boxes, bound volumes, microfilm
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.M843-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Samuel George Morton Papers, 1819-1850
Paine, Robert Treat, 1866-. Family papers, 1754-1901.
Title:
Family papers, 1754-1901.
Collection includes: folder 1 - Robert Treat Paine (1731-1814) letter to Richard Cranch, 1754 Oct. 13, philosophical reflections and mentioning George Whitefield's sermons; folder 2 - Robert Treat Paine (1773-1811), elegies for his brother Robert Treat Paine (1770-1798) by Paine (with additional lines of poetry) and John Lathrop ("written at Calcutta"); folder 3 - petition of Thomas Paine to change name to Robert Treat Paine, 1803 March; folder 4 - bibliography of the prose and poetry of Robert Treat Paine, 1812 Feb. 21; folder 5 - estate of R.T.P., dividends to his children, 1817; folder 6 - legal and financial documents, inc. J. William Sturgis, deed to land in Winthrop Street to Elisha Clapp (1823 Jan. 14), receipt, estate of Judge Paine to William Prescott (1824 Sept. 20), will of Elisha Clapp (1830 Dec. 13), will of Mary (Paine) Clapp (1832 Aug. 10), power of attorney to R.T. Paine for Mary Clapp (1842 April 4), agreement with Samuel Greele concerning the estate of Mary Clapp (1842 April 13), deed of Samuel Greele to R.T. Paine (1842 May 5), receipt of Richard Clapp, estate of Mary Clapp (1842 May 9), receipt, estate of Mary Clapp (1843 April 18); folder 7 - S. S. Wilde, letter to Mary Clapp (1836 Feb. 6, regarding a copy of the portrait of David Cobb by Francis Alexander); folder 8 - genealogical notes on the Paine family of Barnstable Co.; folder 9 - letters to Robert Treat Paine (1803-1885) from Martin Van Buren (1842 Jan. 11), Edward Everett (1856 July 22), Charles Sprague (1863 June 20), William Joseph Adams (1866 Feb. 16, inviting Paine to view photograph of an ancient Aztec calendar at the Athenaeum), Edward Wigglesworth (1866 March 7, regarding the death of Adams, Assistant Librarian of the Boston Athenaeum, with copy of Mrs. Adams' letter to Wigglesworth), and Josiah Paine (1884 Aug. 22, regarding Paine family in Barnstable Co.; folder 10 - Robert Treat Paine (1835-1910), letter setting out distribution of estate (1901 March 9); Robert Treat Paine (1866-), report cards for 1876-7, 1877-8, 1882-3. With certificates (flat folder Mss. .F25): Robert Treat Paine (1803-1885), (1) membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1830 Nov. 10, signed by Nathaniel Bowditch, John Farrar, Jacob Bigelow and Nathan Hale (2) membership in the Accademia di Scienze e Lettere di Palermo, 1835 Feb. 4, signed by Niccolò Cacciatore, certificate drawn by Matteo Chilardi and engraved by Francesco Chilardi (3) membership in the American Philosophical Society, 1838 April 20, signed by Peter Stephen Du Ponceau (4) Robert Treat Paine (1835-1910), appointment as Justice of the Peace for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1879 Jan. 28, signed by Henry B. Peirce.
ArchivalResource: 10 folders in box ; 26 cm. + 1 flat folder.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/668247018 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Paine, Robert Treat, 1866-. Family papers, 1754-1901.
Rush, Samuel, 1795-1859. Occasional glimpses at the world, 1824.
Title:
Occasional glimpses at the world, 1824.
In this volume Rush comments on persons and events of the time, mentioning Robert Walsh, John Vaughan, Lafayette, James Rush, Peter S. Du Ponceau, and William Currie. Rush also comments on the Franklin Institute, and the American Philosophical Society.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (156 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489481 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Rush, Samuel, 1795-1859. Occasional glimpses at the world, 1824.
Robbins, Christine Chapman,. Materials for a biography, [ca. 1946-1962], of David Hosack.
Title:
Materials for a biography, [ca. 1946-1962], of David Hosack.
These materials include correspondence, notes, transcripts, and photostats of Hosack's correspondence compiled by Robbins for her biography, "David Hosack: Citizen of New York," APS Memoirs 62 (Philadelphia, 1964).
ArchivalResource: ca. 300 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122316448 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Robbins, Christine Chapman,. Materials for a biography, [ca. 1946-1962], of David Hosack.
Rush, Richard, 1780-1859. Autograph letters signed (2) : Washington, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, 1826 July 22 and 1827 Dec. 3.
Title:
Autograph letters signed (2) : Washington, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, 1826 July 22 and 1827 Dec. 3.
Thanking him for an "Eulogium" on Chief Justice Tilghman and other matters.
ArchivalResource: 2 items (2 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270619331 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Rush, Richard, 1780-1859. Autograph letters signed (2) : Washington, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, 1826 July 22 and 1827 Dec. 3.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Miscellaneous manuscripts, after 1770.
Title:
Miscellaneous manuscripts, after 1770.
Consists of one letter and a set of two photographs. The letter is undated and is in the third person to Dr. J.G. Nancrede of Philadelphia, in which Du Ponceau declines an invitation to visit Dr. Nancrede. The photographs, each measuring 3.5 x 2.25 in., are undated and were produced by the studios of J.W. Hurn in Philadelphia. One is a tinted, sepia-toned photograph of a portrait of Du Ponceau, painted when the subject was young. The second is a sepia-toned photograph of Fiorelli's portrait bust of Du Ponceau, made when the subject was older. They were mailed by F.R. Shaeffer of Philadelphia to A.D. Dickinson of the University Library in 1925.
ArchivalResource: 2 items (5 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/190791286 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Miscellaneous manuscripts, after 1770.
Autograph letters of naturalists, 1744-1894, 1744-1894
Title:
Autograph letters of naturalists, 1744-1894 1744-1894
Collection of 283 letters assembled and presented to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia by John Torrey. Correspondents include: Louis Agassiz, Zaccheus Collins, Peter S. Du Ponceau, Elie M. Durand, Asa Gray, William Hembel, Alexander von Humboldt, William H. Keating, James Mease, Samuel G. Morton, George Ord, Charles Pickering, Constantine S. Rafinesque, Benjamin Silliman, Sr., John Torrey, Charles Waterton, Alexander Wilson.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Microfilm reel(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.628-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Autograph letters of naturalists, 1744-1894, 1744-1894
Ingersoll, Charles Jared, 1782-1862. Autograph letter signed : Harrisburg, to Mr. Du Ponceau in Philadelphia, 1837 May 7.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Harrisburg, to Mr. Du Ponceau in Philadelphia, 1837 May 7.
Concerning the school system.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/269526612 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Ingersoll, Charles Jared, 1782-1862. Autograph letter signed : Harrisburg, to Mr. Du Ponceau in Philadelphia, 1837 May 7.
American Philosophical Society Historical and Literary Committee, American Indian Vocabulary Collection, 1784-1828
Title:
American Philosophical Society Historical and Literary Committee, American Indian Vocabulary Collection 1784-1828
Beginning in the 1790s, the American Philosophical Society began to accumulate vocabularies and texts written in Native American languages, guided by Thomas Jefferson's idea of using comparative linguistics to reconstruct the histories of Indian peoples and discern their origins. The American Indian Vocabularies Collection was initially assembled by the Historical and Literary Committee of the APS for publication in 1816. They include information on seventeen North American languages and one each from the Caribbean and Central America, collected between 1784 and 1828. A number of individuals were invovled in recording the vocabularies, including Benjamin Hawkins, William Thornton, David Campbell, Daniel Smith, Constantine Volney, Constantine Rafinesque, William Vans Murray, John Heckewelder, Martin Duralde, Campanius Holm, and Jefferson himself. Most followed the standardized word set established by Jefferson.
ArchivalResource: 0.25 Linear feet
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.V85-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Historical and Literary Committee, American Indian Vocabulary Collection, 1784-1828
Du Ponceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844. Peter S. DuPonceau diary, 1777-1778.
Title:
Peter S. DuPonceau diary, 1777-1778.
Diary reflecting Du Ponceau's experiences during the American Revolution and at Valley Forge.
ArchivalResource: 1 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71014818 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844. Peter S. DuPonceau diary, 1777-1778.
Alexander, J. H. (John Henry), 1812-1867. Delaware language dictionary, 1856.
Title:
Delaware language dictionary, 1856.
Manuscript glossary of Delaware/English and English/Delaware terms and pronunciation, compiled by Alexander from earlier works by David Zeisberger (1721-1808) and John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder (1743-1823), and from a work translated by Peter Stephen Du Ponceau (1760-1844).
ArchivalResource: 1 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30401426 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Alexander, J. H. (John Henry), 1812-1867. Delaware language dictionary, 1856.
Occasional glimpses at the world, 1824, 1824
Title:
Occasional glimpses at the world,1824 1824
In this volume Rush comments on persons and events of the time, mentioning Robert Walsh, John Vaughan, Lafayette, James Rush, Peter S. Du Ponceau, and William Currie. Rush also comments on the Franklin Institute, and the American Philosophical Society.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 156 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.R895.o-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Occasional glimpses at the world, 1824, 1824
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter, 1825 February 26, Philadelphia, to George Ticknor, Boston.
Title:
Letter, 1825 February 26, Philadelphia, to George Ticknor, Boston.
Comments on Ticknor's work about Lafayette. Recommends that copies be sent to the Consul in Paris.
ArchivalResource: 2 p. on 1 fold. leaf 26 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3252852 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter, 1825 February 26, Philadelphia, to George Ticknor, Boston.
American Philosophical Society selected records
Title:
American Philosophical Society selected records
The microfilmed American Philosophical Society selected records contain art related letters; committee reports; registrar's and curators' records; pamphlets; and exhibition catalogs from the archives of the American Philosophical Society. Many of the letters are to the Society's secretary and librarian John Vaughan; a few are to the Society's presidents Thomas Jefferson and Peter S. Du Ponceau, and officials John K. Kane and J. Peter Lesley. Among the correspondents are Benjamin Franklin, Benjamin West, Charles Willson Peale, Jacob Perkins, Philip Tidyman, Charles B. Lawrence, John Trumbull, Thomas Sully, Joseph Delaplaine, Robert Patterson, John Quincy Adams, Titian Ramsay Peale, Rembrandt Peale, Joel Roberts Poinsett, Victor G. Audubon, and Robert Fulton. Also included are copies of the registrar's cards for portraits and busts owned by the Society, arranged alphabetically by sitter; "Preliminary Notes, Biographical Sketches, and Memoranda chronologically arranged, for insertion in the <emph render="italic"> Curator's Catalog of Portraits, Busts, and Bas-Reliefs in the Collection of the American Philosophical Society</emph>. Illustrated by photographs taken from the originals by Mrs. Julius A. Sachese, member APS"; circa 25 exhibition catalogs and pamphlets (1811-1840) for exhibitions of the Society of Artists of the United States, Columbian Society of Artists, Artists' Fund Society, Artists' and Amateurs' Association, and for works by Thomas Sully, Gilbert Stuart, Benjamin Robert Haydon, Joseph Delaplaine, and others; and newspaper clippings (1917) about the controversy surrounding portraits by Albert Rosenthal hung in Independence Hall (reel P36, frames 372-401).
ArchivalResource:
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/mw9c176adef-5e2c-4a3e-b4b9-b86acb745b22 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society. American Philosophical Society selected records, 1784-1954.
Orderly books collection, 1758-1813.
Title:
Orderly books collection, 1758-1813.
This collection of orderly books encompasses the French and Indian War, the U.S. Revolution, and the War of 1812 with the majority of books dating from the Revolutionary period. Of special importance are those kept during the Siege of Boston (1775) and for the final years of the Revolution in the Highlands region of New York. Unless the cover or fly leaf cite the name of the owner, regiment, or brigade, it is often difficult to identify the volume positively, and general orders, are, for lack of more precise identification, occasionally described as "Headquarters Orderly Book" or "Brigade Orderly Book."
ArchivalResource: 34 v. ; octavo.5 v. ; folio.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/191259578 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Orderly books collection, 1758-1813.
Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Correspondence, 1814-1826
Title:
Correspondence of Thomas Jefferson, 1814-1826
Correspondence of Thomas Jefferson regarding the founding of the University of Virginia. The collection also contains the report of the Rockfish Gap Commission; balance sheets and estimates of University income and expenses; financial statement; a construction estimate; land plats; a bond; a petition to Congress regarding the removal of tariff on books; specifications; Board of Visitors resolutions; book lists; a plat by Achilles Broadhead; and a deed from the Proctor to the Board. In addition there are elevations for several buildings including Nichols # 374, 375, 376, and 377 as well as the Architrave fragment Nichols #378. Correspondents include John Q. Adams, Thomas Appleton, Franklin Bache, Peter Barlow, George Blaettermann, A. S. Brockenbrough, Francis T. Brooke, William S. Clarke, John Hartwell Cocke, P. F. B. Constant, Thomas Cooper, William H. Crawford, Claudius Crozet, Cummings, Hilliard, & Co., James Cutbush, Martin Dawson, Henry A. S. Dearborn, James Dinsmore, Peter DuPonceau, John P. Emmet, Alexander Garrett, Francis Walker Gilmer, Thomas Gimbrede, and John Griscom. Also George Hancock, Robert Hare, Randolph Harrison, F. R. Hassler, James E. Heath, William Hilliard, Chapman Johnson, John V. Kean, Rufus King, John T. Kirkland, William Lambert, William Lee, James Madison, James Monroe, Hugh Nelson, Wilson Cary Nicholas, Thomas J. O'Flaherty, Mann A. Page, Granville Sharp Pattison, James Pleasants, James Patton Preston, C. S. Rafinesque, Thomas Mann Randolph, William Cabell Rives, John Roane, Richard Rush, G. E. Stack, Archibald Stuart, John Vaughan, Benjamin Waterhouse, and John Wood. There are also contracts with George Blaetterman, Charles Bonnycastle, Robley Dunglison, Thomas H. Key, and George Long.
ArchivalResource: 245 items.
https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/archival/items/u3945147 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848,. Correspondence of Thomas Jefferson [manuscript], 1814-1826.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Sea terms in different languages, [n.d.].
Title:
Sea terms in different languages, [n.d.].
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (56 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122539947 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Sea terms in different languages, [n.d.].
Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Autograph letters signed (3) : to Peter DuPonceau, 1833 Mar. 29 to Aug. 19.
Title:
Autograph letters signed (3) : to Peter DuPonceau, 1833 Mar. 29 to Aug. 19.
Recommending various people.
ArchivalResource: 3 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270598452 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834. Autograph letters signed (3) : to Peter DuPonceau, 1833 Mar. 29 to Aug. 19.
Alexander von Humboldt papers, 1801-1859, 1793-1859
Title:
Alexander von Humboldt papers, 1801-1859 1793-1859
This collection contains miscellaneous letters and papers relating to explorations of South America, Cuba, and Mexico; scientific investigations; Latin American antiquities and linguistics; and publications. There are also copies of 26 letters from Humboldt to Pierre Hyacinth Azais and Jules Berger de Xivrey, from originals at the Duke University Medical Center Library.
ArchivalResource: 0.25 Linear feet; Ca. 250 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.H88-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Alexander von Humboldt papers, 1801-1859, 1793-1859
Morris, Lewis, 1671-1746. Morris and Popham families papers, 1669-1892 (bulk 1750-1850).
Title:
Morris and Popham families papers, 1669-1892 (bulk 1750-1850).
Correspondence, journals, notebooks, legal papers, and other papers including the papers of Lewis Morris (1671-1746), Lewis Morris (1698-1762), Richard Morris, and Robert Hunter Morris, and Major William Popham. Includes a record of the court martial of Col. Moses Hazen in 1780 and copies of George Washington's letters to Robert Hunter Morris. Other correspondents include Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, John Taylor of Caroline, and James Tilton. Most of the letters after 1849 are addressed to William S. Popham.
ArchivalResource: 770 items.4 containers.1.6 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/84052719 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Morris, Lewis, 1671-1746. Morris and Popham families papers, 1669-1892 (bulk 1750-1850).
Hoffman, David, 1784-1854. Autograph letter signed : Baltimore, to Peter Du Ponceau in Philadelphia, 1819 Jan. 19.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Baltimore, to Peter Du Ponceau in Philadelphia, 1819 Jan. 19.
Concerning a lawsuit.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270465903 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Hoffman, David, 1784-1854. Autograph letter signed : Baltimore, to Peter Du Ponceau in Philadelphia, 1819 Jan. 19.
Humboldt, Alexander von, 1769-1859. Papers, 1801-1859.
Title:
Papers, 1801-1859.
This collection contains miscellaneous letters and papers relating to his explorations in South America, Cuba, and Mexico, his scientific investigations, and his publications.
ArchivalResource: ca. 250 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589207 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Humboldt, Alexander von, 1769-1859. Papers, 1801-1859.
Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolph Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794. Letter, [1781] Aout [August] 29, Charlottesville [Va.] to [Pierre Etienne] Duponceau, Philadelphie [Philadelphia, Pa.]
Title:
Letter, [1781] Aout [August] 29, Charlottesville [Va.] to [Pierre Etienne] Duponceau, Philadelphie [Philadelphia, Pa.]
Letter, 29 August 1781, written in French in which Steuben inquires about Duponceau's health and discusses his own. Plans to join [Nathanael] Green[e] in Carolina. Part of his equipment has already departed. Askes about a packet sent to the French envoy. States he has not received an answer from the Secretary of Congress, nor from the President, nor has he received a reply from Chevalier de La Luzerne. Requests newspapers from [John] Dunlap for June, July and August, as well as the journals of Congress for those months.
ArchivalResource: 1 p. ; 32 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22722670 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolph Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794. Letter, [1781] Aout [August] 29, Charlottesville [Va.] to [Pierre Etienne] Duponceau, Philadelphie [Philadelphia, Pa.]
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Indian vocabularies, collected September 1820 [microform].
Title:
Indian vocabularies, collected September 1820 [microform]. 1820.
ArchivalResource: 23, 231 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17937697 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Indian vocabularies, collected September 1820 [microform].
Eliot, John, 1604-1690. Natick Indian grammar, 1666.
Title:
Natick Indian grammar, 1666.
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau's ms. copy of John Eliot's rules of grammar for the Natick (Massachuset) Indian language. Eliot addresses his work to Robert Boyle, Governor of the Society for Propagation of the Gospel in New England who commissioned Eliot's work to help facilitate the conversion of Native Americans to Christianity.
ArchivalResource: 1 vol.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17656772 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Eliot, John, 1604-1690. Natick Indian grammar, 1666.
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Miscellaneous letters, 1744-1894.
Title:
Miscellaneous letters, 1744-1894.
Collection of 283 letters assembled and presented to the Academy by John Torrey.
ArchivalResource: 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298031 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Miscellaneous letters, 1744-1894.
Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Letter to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1820 December 28.
Title:
Letter to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1820 December 28.
Jefferson requests information about John Sanderson who proposed to publish a multi-volume biograhy of the Signers. He explains that he has already sent information on George Wythe to Sanderson and received the first volume in return and found it "superiorly written; exhibiting mind, information & polisth, a little too florid perhaps for the sober style of history ..." Believing that Sanderson might apply to him again for information on other signers he asks Du Ponceau about Sanderson and his purpose "What is his character moral and political, does he write for money or fame, etc? Information as to these particulars must govern my confidences ..." He promises to burn Du Ponceau's reply as soon as he has received it.
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55230424 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Letter to Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1820 December 28.
Sea terms in different languages, [n.d.], n.d.
Title:
Sea terms in different languages, [n.d.] n.d.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 56 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.359.03.D92-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Sea terms in different languages, [n.d.], n.d.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter, 1836 May 23, Philadelphia, to R. Walsh [n.p.].
Title:
Letter, 1836 May 23, Philadelphia, to R. Walsh [n.p.].
The work on the biography will stop when Walsh goes to Europe. He is interested in the old times and the old names.
ArchivalResource: 1 p. 20 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3252858 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letter, 1836 May 23, Philadelphia, to R. Walsh [n.p.].
Hassler, F. R. (Ferdinand Rudolph), 1770-1843. Papers of c [manuscript], 1806-1847.
Title:
Papers of c [manuscript], 1806-1847.
Papers of Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler. They consist mostly of correspondence, with various persons, of F. R. Hassler, mathematician, geodetic surveyor, and first superintendent of the U. S. Coast and [Geodetic] Survey.
ArchivalResource: 164 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647886084 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Hassler, F. R. (Ferdinand Rudolph), 1770-1843. Papers of c [manuscript], 1806-1847.
Shackelford, George Green,. Papers collected by George Green Shackelford, 1714-1835.
Title:
Papers collected by George Green Shackelford, 1714-1835.
Include receipt, 1714 April 21, of Godfrey Kneller, for three months' annuity from the British Exchequer; letter, 1759 July 27, from Thomas Secker, Archbishop of Canterbury, Lambeth, Eng., regarding the right of presentation claimed by the clergy of the Church of England in Virginia; and letter, 1784 Aug. 4, from Mann Page to Oliver Towles, Spotsylvania County, Va., regarding the legal claim of a slave for freedom based on his descent from a free Indian woman. Also include letter, 1802 July 28, from Henry Dearborn to Joseph Perkins, regarding pensions for invalid veterans in Massachusetts; letter, 1802 Nov. 27, from Alexander James Dallas to Elias Boudinot, regarding an alleged theft at the U.S. Mint; and letter, 1835 Sept. 28, from Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, Philadelphia, Pa., to Nathaniel Fish Moore, New York, N.Y., regarding Greek linguistics.
ArchivalResource: 6 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34689903 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Shackelford, George Green,. Papers collected by George Green Shackelford, 1714-1835.
Eccles family. Eccles family papers, 1783-1968 [manuscript].
Title:
Eccles family papers, 1783-1968 [manuscript].
Correspondence and other papers of Edward Jones (1762-1841) of Wilmington and Fayetteville, N.C., native of Ireland, merchant, lawyer, and solicitor-general of North Carolina; and of his son-in-law, John Dick Eccles (d. 1856), also of Fayetteville. Included are a series of letters written from Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in 1843, describing medical treatment and the declining health of Edward J. Eccles (d. ca. 1843); and a letter, 18 November 1847, describing a visit to the Peale home in Philadelphia. Also included is correspondence of members of the McLaurin, Hooper, DeBerniere, Holmes, and other families of Cumberland, New Hanover, Chatham, and Sampson counties, N.C., Carroll County, Miss., New Orleans, La., and other places. Edward Jones's correspondence, beginning in the 1780s, includes letters from his friend Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, Philadelphia lawyer and author, and from several North Carolina Federalist leaders concerning state and national politics. Also included in the collection are two other series of letters, one from the Holmes family (copies only) of Fayetteville and Wilmington, N.C., and Carroll County, Miss., the majority of which were written by women during the antebellum period, discussing Holmes and Blankes family life, economic conditions, and the splintering of the family; and the other of the Parsley family of Wilmington. Also included are transcript copies and extensive notes on these letters and on family history by Catherine Holmes (Jones) Pierce of Durham, N.C.
ArchivalResource: About 3600 items (6.0 linear feet).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26380303 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Eccles family. Eccles family papers, 1783-1968 [manuscript].
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Peter S. Du Ponceau Papers. 1787-1844 (inclusive).
Title:
Peter S. Du Ponceau Papers. 1787-1844 (inclusive).
The Peter S. Du Ponceau Papers holds both incoming and outgoing correspondence with friends and business associates. Most of the letters in the collection, however, are in the second subseries: twenty-six letters written to Du Ponceau by the Marquis de Lafayette, and two by his secretary Auguste Levasseur. They range in date from January 1825, during their tour of America, until just prior to Lafayette's death in 1834. Lafayette's correspondence deals partly with personal and family topics, but also raises contemporary political issues.
ArchivalResource: 1 box .21 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/124558471 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Peter S. Du Ponceau Papers. 1787-1844 (inclusive).
Vocabulaire Chacta, 1820
Title:
Vocabulaire Chacta 1820
The anonymous compiler of the Vocabulaire Chacta, ca.1820, gathered 149 elementary words in the Choctaw language with French equivalents, the basic numerals, and six "useful" (if not always appropriate) phrases. Arranged alphabetically by French. The notebook was donated to the American Philosophical Society by Peter Stephen Du Ponceau in 1827.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s); 48 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.V852c-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Vocabulaire Chacta, 1820
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters, 1816-1822.
Title:
Letters, 1816-1822.
Letters of Du Ponceau, Philadelphia lawyer, author, and linguist, to the Rev. John Heckewelder, Bethlehem, Pa., an author of books on the language of the Delaware Indians, concerning Indian languages, particularly the Delawares'.
ArchivalResource: 0.1 c.f. (1 folder)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145787185 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters, 1816-1822.
James, Edwin, 1797-1861. Conjugation of the verb "to hear" in its various forms in the Chippeway language, [ca. 1833].
Title:
Conjugation of the verb "to hear" in its various forms in the Chippeway language, [ca. 1833].
This item contains printed sheets pasted into a volume, with manuscript notes by Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (21 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489505 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- James, Edwin, 1797-1861. Conjugation of the verb "to hear" in its various forms in the Chippeway language, [ca. 1833].
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to L.H. Girardin, 1821 Nov. 14.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to L.H. Girardin, 1821 Nov. 14.
Regretting his inability to lend him money as his outside activities -- Law Academy, Philosophical Society, etc. -- have cut down his professional income.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744862 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to L.H. Girardin, 1821 Nov. 14.
Rauschardt, Felix Hannibal. Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649.
Title:
Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649.
This volume contains two selections: the first are problems in geometry and trigonometry, and the second concerning fortifications and their layout.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (ca. 202 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154820114 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Rauschardt, Felix Hannibal. Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649.
Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794. Letters, 1777-1837 (inclusive), 1777-1791, 1835, 1837 (bulk).
Title:
Letters, 1777-1837 (inclusive), 1777-1791, 1835, 1837 (bulk).
Letters of Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben relating to his military service in the Revolutionary Army; 2 letters of P. S. Duponceau, 1835, 1837.
ArchivalResource: 15 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122441160 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794. Letters, 1777-1837 (inclusive), 1777-1791, 1835, 1837 (bulk).
Carey, Lea & Blanchard. Correspondence, 1823-1849.
Title:
Correspondence, 1823-1849.
Collection consists of mostly single letters from approximately 40 individuals addressed to Henry Charles Carey, Isaac Lea, or William A. Blanchard. Senders with more than one letter have the number of letters in parentheses following their names. The majority of the letters are from authors, including George Bancroft, Robert Montgomery Bird, Charles Lucian Bonaparte, William Cullen Bryant, Fleetwood Churchill, Willis Gaylord Clark (2), James Fenimore Cooper, George William Featherstonhaugh, Henry D. Gilpin, John D. Godman, Mary Griffith, John Griscom, Washington Irving (2), John Kennedy Pendleton (4), James Kent, William Francis Lynch (3), Grenville Mellen, Eliza Robbins, L.H. Sigourney, Nathaniel Parker Willis, and William B. Wood.
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122381810 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Carey, Lea & Blanchard. Correspondence, 1823-1849.
Vater, Johann Severin, 1771-1826. An enquiry into the origin of the population of America from the old continent, [ca. 1820].
Title:
An enquiry into the origin of the population of America from the old continent, [ca. 1820].
This work was translated by Peter S. Du Ponceau from Vater's "Untersuchungen über Amerikas Bevölkerung aus dem alten Kontinente" (Leipzig, 1810). It was Du Ponceau's opinion that Vater was moved to write this book by Benjamin Smith Barton's "New Views of the Origin of the Tribes and Nations of America," which Vater often quoted.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (184 p.) : translation.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523723 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Vater, Johann Severin, 1771-1826. An enquiry into the origin of the population of America from the old continent, [ca. 1820].
George William Featherstonhaugh papers, 1809-1840, 1809-1840
Title:
George William Featherstonhaugh papers, 1809-1840 1809-1840
These are copies of letters, chiefly relating to the American Philosophical Society, from Peter S. Du Ponceau, John Vaughan, and James Mease. There are a few original letters, one to Benjamin Franklin Peale.
ArchivalResource: 0.25 Linear feet, 17 items, 15 items are photocopies
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.F31-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- George William Featherstonhaugh papers, 1809-1840, 1809-1840
Dutilh family business records, 1770–1861, 1780–1810
Title:
Dutilh family business records 1770–1861 1780–1810
The late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth century business records of Philadelphia merchant Etienne Dutilh and his descendants. The records include ships’ payrolls, bills of lading, bills of exchange, shipping records, and cargo insurance policies.
ArchivalResource: 1 linear foot; (2 upright manuscript boxes)
http://library.udel.edu/static/purl.php?mss0573 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Dutilh family business records, 1770–1861, 1780–1810
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to I.K. Tefft, 1833 Dec. 16.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to I.K. Tefft, 1833 Dec. 16.
Concerning autographs for his collection.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744353 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to I.K. Tefft, 1833 Dec. 16.
Opinion book A: opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost, 1820-1822, 1820-1822
Title:
Opinion book A: opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost, 1820-1822 1820-1822
Opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost. The opinions are signed by Peter S. Du Ponceau as provost.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 174 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.340.7.L41-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Opinion book A: opinions delivered before the Law Academy of Philadelphia by the provost and vice provost, 1820-1822, 1820-1822
Gérard de Rayneval, J.-M. (Joseph-Mathias), 1736-1812. On the freedom of the seas, [n.d.].
Title:
On the freedom of the seas, [n.d.].
Peter S. Du Ponceau translated Gérard de Rayneval's "De la liberté des mers" (Paris, 1811) as an exercise, but not for publication.
ArchivalResource: 3 v. (ca. 800 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540040 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Gérard de Rayneval, J.-M. (Joseph-Mathias), 1736-1812. On the freedom of the seas, [n.d.].
Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1743-1823. Letters, 1816-1822, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
Title:
Letters, 1816-1822, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
These letters are mainly about Indian languages.
ArchivalResource: ca. 115 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122488795 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1743-1823. Letters, 1816-1822, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau.
On the freedom of the seas, [n.d.], n.d.
Title:
On the freedom of the seas, [n.d.] n.d.
Peter S. Du Ponceau translated Gérard de Rayneval's "De la liberté des mers" (Paris, 1811) as an exercise, but not for publication.
ArchivalResource: 3.0 Volume(s), 3 volumes, ca. 800 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.341.3.R21o-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- On the freedom of the seas, [n.d.], n.d.
Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866. Selected papers relating to Benjamin Franklin, ca. 1819-1863
Title:
Selected papers, [ca. 1819-1863], relating to Benjamin Franklin
These selected papers include correspondence concerning Franklin, Franklin's descendants, and Franklin's papers, extracts from Philadelphia newspapers on Franklin, papers used in Sparks' biography, miscellaneous entries in his diary (1830-1854) relating to his search for Franklin manuscripts, and his preparation of an edition of Franklin's writings. Correspondents include Henry Stevens, Jr.; Henry Stevens, Sr.; Benjamin Vaughan; Petty Vaughan; James Mease; H. D. Gilpin; J. Francis Fisher; Franklin Bache; and others.
ArchivalResource: 9 volumes, photostats.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.Sp25-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Selected papers, [ca. 1819-1863], relating to Benjamin Franklin, Circa 1819-1963
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Miscellaneous letters, 1744-1894.
Title:
Miscellaneous letters, 1744-1894.
Collection of 283 letters assembled and presented to the Academy by John Torrey.
ArchivalResource: 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/17270600 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Miscellaneous letters, 1744-1894.
Correia da Serra, José Francisco, 1750-1823. Papers, 1772-1827
Title:
José Francisco Correia da Serra papers, 1772-1827
Transcripts and photocopies of Correia de Serra correspondence, made by Richard B. Davis for "The Abbé Correa in America," APS 45, 2 (1955). Seven mss. letters are also included. The collection consists primarily of letters and essays on matters related to botany as well as Correia's role as Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States. They were written between 1772 and 1827. Also included are several letters and notes by Richard Beale and other persons about Davis's research on Correia, dated 1949 to 1957.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet, 200 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C81.1-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- José Francisco Correia da Serra papers, 1772-1827, 1772-1827
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Commonplace book, 1820.
Title:
Commonplace book, 1820.
There are notes on the colonial history of Pennsylvania, with emphasis on William Penn and his family, the Society of Friends, James Logan, and the charters granted by Penn, with some notes on the study of languages and definition of words.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (150 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122584302 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Commonplace book, 1820.
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IId, 1837-1844
Title:
American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IId 1837-1844
This is part of the large inventory for the American Philosophical Society Archives. For complete information concerning this collection, please view the . Collection Description
ArchivalResource: 1.0 section
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives.IId-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Archives. Record Group IId, 1837-1844
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters, 1816-1822, to John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder.
Title:
Letters, 1816-1822, to John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder.
These are eighteen letters that mostly concern Indian linguistics.
ArchivalResource: 1 microfilm reel.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589417 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters, 1816-1822, to John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder.
Essai de solution du problème philologique proposé en l'année 1823 par la commission de l'Institut de France, 1823, 1823
Title:
Essai de solution du problème philologique proposé en l'année 1823 par la commission de l'Institut de France, 1823 1823
The commission of the Institut de France was charged with offering a prize on linguistics, under the will of Count Volney. Formerly, this essay was thought to have been by Baron Nicolas Massias (1764-1848), who won the Volney prize in 1828. However, the note that the volume was shipped from New York precludes that.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 170 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.410.D92.1-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Essai de solution du problème philologique proposé en l'année 1823 par la commission de l'Institut de France, 1823, 1823
A comparative vocabulary of Indian languages, 1798-1821
Title:
A comparative vocabulary of Indian languages 1798-1821
This volume contains extracts of Barton's "New Views of the Origin of the Tribes and Nations of America" (Philadelphia, 1797), with additions by Peter S. Du Ponceau. 54 words have equivalents listed in columns of 50-70 languages. While Barton listed no authority, Du Ponceau cited sources. Includes sounds of the Othomi language; declension. Omaha, Kanzes, Otto; and symbol and sound. Also includes a review of Barton's book in "Göttingische Anzeigen von gelehrten Sachen," June 17, 1799.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 219 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.B28-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- A comparative vocabulary of Indian languages, 1798-1821
Ingersoll, Charles Jared, 1782-1862. Papers, 1803-1862.
Title:
Papers, 1803-1862.
There are letters to Ingersoll by many public men of the period, 1812-1847, on a wide range of national and foreign policy topics. Of these, some 300 are by Richard Rush, a close friend of Ingersoll. Almost one-half of the Rush letters were written while he was Comptroller of the U. S. Treasury, 1812-1814, and have to do especially with the War of 1812. The remainder were written while Rush was minister to Great Britain, 1817-1825, Secretary of the Treasury, 1825-1829, private citizen, 1829-1847, minister to France, 1848, and discuss domestic and international affairs, especially Anglo-American relations. Ingersoll correspondence also contains: letters, 1814-1837 by John Forsyth, a member of Congress, Minister to Spain, Governor of Georgia, and Secretary of State; letters, 1846-1848, from English author Sarah Mytton Maury concerning personal and political matters in the United States and England; and letters, 1814-1830, by James Monroe, principally pertaining to loans of money to Monroe. Several public figures are represented by five to ten letters each: John Quincy Adams, 1821, 1831-1832; John Binns, publisher of the Democratic Press, 1813, on the War of 1812 and the publication of political matters in newspapers; James Buchanan, 1838, 1839, 1843; James Burn, army officer, 1813, on military and naval action against the British forces; John C. Calhoun, 1816-1845; Thomas Abthorpe Cooper, actor, 1828-1833, on financial matters; William H. Crawford, while Secretary of the Treasury and private citizen, 1816-1831, on politics, American Indians, revenue, tariff, manufacturing, and banks; Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, authority on international law and practice, 1813-1814, on legal questions; Bolling Hall, Representative from Georgia, 1815-1830, on political matters; Edward Livingston, principally while he was Secretary of State, 1831-1833; James Kirke Paulding, naval officer and Secretary of the Navy, 1832-1841, on personal and naval matters; Joel R. Poinsett, Representative from South Carolina, Minister to Mexico, and Secretary of War, 1818-1840; and J. M. P. Serurier, French Minister to the United States, 1815-1834 on a wide range of personal and political topics. Other public figures, including five presidents, are represented by one to four letters. There are: letters, 1803-1846, by Ingersoll on politics, diplomacy, and economic and legal matters; Ingersoll's diary, February 1823; and manuscript notes by Ingersoll for projected work on "Slavery," "The Origins of the War with Mexico, 1846-1848," and a "History of the Territories of the United States." Also included are letters, 1814-1842, 1855, from Ingersoll's brother, Joseph Reed Ingersoll, Philadelphia lawyer and Congressman, mostly to Henry Dillworth Gilpin, U.S. Attorney General, on legal and political matters.
ArchivalResource: 675 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/151370738 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Ingersoll, Charles Jared, 1782-1862. Papers, 1803-1862.
Materials for a biography, [ca. 1946-1962], of David Hosack, Circa 1946-1962
Title:
Materials for a biography, [ca. 1946-1962], of David Hosack Circa 1946-1962
David Hosack (1769-1835, APS 1810) was a physician and botanist active in medical education, as well as cultural life of New York City. Hosack founded Elgin Botanic Gardens, the first botanical gardens in America, co-founded the New York Historical Society and the short-lived Rutgers Medical School in New York City.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet; Ca. 300 items.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.H78-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Materials for a biography, [ca. 1946-1962], of David Hosack, Circa 1946-1962
Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808. A grammar of the language of the Lenni Lennape, or Delaware Indians, [1816].
Title:
A grammar of the language of the Lenni Lennape, or Delaware Indians, [1816].
This volume was translated from the original German into English by Peter Stephen Du Ponceau in 1816. It is a description of the Delaware language and lists words and their corresponding meanings.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (199 p.) : translation.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86138600 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808. A grammar of the language of the Lenni Lennape, or Delaware Indians, [1816].
An enquiry into the origin of the population of America from the old continent, [ca. 1820], Circa 1820
Title:
An enquiry into the origin of the population of America from the old continent, [ca. 1820] Circa 1820
This work was translated by Peter S. Du Ponceau from Vater's "Untersuchungen über Amerikas Bevölkerung aus dem alten Kontinente" (Leipzig, 1810). It was Du Ponceau's opinion that Vater was moved to write this book by Benjamin Smith Barton's "New Views of the Origin of the Tribes and Nations of America," which Vater often quoted. Contains bibliographical notes.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 translation, 184 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.572.97.V45d-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- An enquiry into the origin of the population of America from the old continent, [ca. 1820], Circa 1820
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters and autograph, 1791-1844.
Title:
Letters and autograph, 1791-1844.
Autograph of Du Ponceau, dated 1791, and three letters: to a Monsieur d'Orbigny (1816) regarding the work of Pierre Antoine Sulpice de Bréard-Neuville and imprisonment for debt (written in French); to the Committee of the American Historical Society (1837) regarding an invitation to speak; and to Peleg W. Chandler of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1844) regarding Chandler's American criminal trials and a legal issue before the legislature.
ArchivalResource: 4 sheets (5 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/235086015 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Letters and autograph, 1791-1844.
Dutilh & Wachsmuth (Philadelphia, Pa.). Records, 1772-1875.
Title:
Records, 1772-1875.
The records of Dutilh & Wachsmuth are fragments acquired in fourteen dealer's lots. The records as a whole document the trade between Philadelphia and major European, West Indian, and American port cities. Commodities traded include: sugar, cigars, coffee, indigo, flour, drugs, wine, candles, gunpowder, cotton, silk, logwood, butter, lard and glass. The records include letters, accounts, invoices, bills of lading, drafts and marine insurance policies.
ArchivalResource: 5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122555353 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Dutilh & Wachsmuth (Philadelphia, Pa.). Records, 1772-1875.
American Philosophical Society Archives, 1743-1984
Title:
American Philosophical Society Archives 1743-1984
Founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin, the American Philosophical Society was the first learned society in the United States. For over 250 years, the Society has played an important role in American cultural and intellectual life. Until the mid-nineteenth century, the Society fulfilled the role of a national academy of science, national library and museum, and even patent office. Early members of the Society included Thomas Jefferson, David Rittenhouse, Benjamin Rush, Stephen Peter Du Ponceau, George Washington, and many other figures prominent in American history. The Archives of the American Philosophical Society consists of 192.25 linear feet of material, organized into thirteen record groups dating back to 1743. The Society's archives extensively documents not only the organization's historical development but also its role in American history and the history of science and technology.
ArchivalResource: 192.25 Linear feet
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/APS.Archives-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- American Philosophical Society Archives, 1743-1984
Poinsett, Joel Roberts, 1779-1851. Papers, 1785-1851.
Title:
Papers, 1785-1851.
The papers of Joel Roberts Poinsett, American agent to Latin America and Secretary of War in the Van Buren administration. The papers of Poinsett's education period, 1797-1809 include: data on his studies; journals of travel in American and Europe; letters of introduction to important persons, by J. Allen Smith, 1806; letters describing Poinsett's sojourn in Russia, friendship with Czar Alexander I, tour through the Caucasus, Caspian Sea region, Baku, and Persia; comments on European political affairs, and impending war between Russia and Sweden. Material on Poinsett's term as United States agent and consul general in Buenos Aires and other South American capitals, 1810-1815; data on the revolutionary movements against Spain and Portugal; letters from R. Smith, James Monroe, and James Madison, from José M. De Carrera, I.X. Elio, and other South American political and military leaders; also Spanish and Portuguese pamphlets, broadsides, proclamations, general orders, etc. Papers relating chiefly to political and economic conditions in South Carolina, 1815-1825: on factional party strife, public questions, tariff, transportation, territorial expansion, the Greek issue before Congress; letters of John C. Calhoun, Edward Everett, William Johnson, Peter S. Du Ponceau, Commodore David Porter, Richard Rush, Robert Walsh, etc. Letters and documents of the period during which Poinsett was minister plenipotentiary of the United States to Mexico; on Mexican politics and economic conditions, revolutionary movements, civil wars, the influence of free-masonry on national affairs, United States commercial and political interests in Mexico, and Poinsett's treaty negotiations; letters of John Forsyth, Rufus King, Commodore David Porter, Samuel L. Southard, General Guerrero, Antonio Lopez Santa Anna, and Juan de Canedo, and general orders, proclamations, pamphlets, etc.; also a memorandum by Joel R. Poinsett to John Quincy Adams, 1827. Letters reflecting American politics, the rise of the secession movement in South Carolina, and the organization of the Union Party, 1830-1836; letters of Andrew Jackson, 1830-1833, relate to his toast to the Union, opposition to nullification, and his plans for supressing that movement by armed force; papers on tariff, economic issues, Cherokees in Georgia; letters of Dr. Joseph Johnson, James Brown, A. Butler, William Drayton, Lewis Cass, Henry Rutledge, Louis McLane, and others; also memorials and pamphlets. Papers of Poinsett's war department administration, 1837-1841: include material on plans for the reorganization of the army, fortifications, introduction of new ordnance, and administration of West Point; letters of General Winfield Scott relate to the defense of the Northwestern boundary and the Canadian controversy; Nicholas Biddle papers on United States Bank affairs; Cherokee, Creek, Winnebago Indians; letters from Andrew Jackson on the Seminole War in Florida; miscellaneous letters on Texas boundary, state banks, claims against Mexico, requests for military and government positions, etc.; letters of Martin Van Buren, John C. Calhoun, Gouverneur Kemble, James Buchanan, Levi Woodbury, Dennis H. Mahan, Richard Rush, James Gadsden, Alfred Huger, James K. Polk, John C. Frémont, Stephen W. Kearny, Felix Huston, J.K. Paulding, William J. Worth, Silas Wright, Millard Fillmore, Amos Kendall, Edward Everett, George Bancroft, Francis Markoe, and others; also papers relating to the promotion of science, the National Institution, exploring expeditions, horticulture, and historical research. Letters and documents, mainly personal, 1841-1851: include comments on the Mexican War, secession movement, Union Party, agriculture, European political conditions, and other topics; Poinsett essays, drafts of speeches and letters, autobiographical notes; sketch of Poinsett's life by Dr. Joseph Johnson.
ArchivalResource: 8 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122540362 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Poinsett, Joel Roberts, 1779-1851. Papers, 1785-1851.
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau letters, 1816-1822, to John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder, 1816-1822
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau letters, 1816-1822, to John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder 1816-1822
These are eighteen letters that mostly concern Indian linguistics. Regarding Zeisberger's Onondaga grammar and dictionary; Heckewelder's writings on the Indians; publications; question of whether or not any of the Lenape can pronounce the letter "r."
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Microfilm reel(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Film.1162-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peter Stephen Du Ponceau letters, 1816-1822, to John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder, 1816-1822
Vocabularia variarum linguarum Americanarum, 1708 (1822)
Title:
Vocabularia variarum linguarum Americanarum 1708 (1822)
This manuscript copy contains dictionaries of nine Indian vocabularies, such as Aztec, Algonkin, and Huron, and was taken from Reland's "Dissertationum miscellanearum pars tertia" (Utrecht, 1708). [Vocabularies compiled from printed sources,of South and North American dialects: Brasilica (1590,1595,1648); Chilensis (1647); Peruana, Poconziae [or Poconomica, Guatemala and Honduras]; Caraibica [Antilles], 1658; Mexicana [Otomitica, Chontalica, Zoquina, Cascan, Niciecana, Chicemeca dialects mentioned]; Virginiana (1966 [Eliot] 1685 [Mather], Algonkina [1703 La Hontan] Huramica (German-Huron vocabulary not included; 1822.]
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 35 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.496.R27-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Vocabularia variarum linguarum Americanarum, 1708 (1822)
Charles Willson Peale letterbooks, 1767-1827, 1767-1827
Title:
Charles Willson Peale letterbooks, 1767-1827 1767-1827
This collection contains copies of outgoing business and personal correspondence on a wide variety of topics with a great many persons. Subjects include events in Philadelphia, his museum and its exhibits, Peale's hopes for the museum's acquisition by the city or state, the exhumation and exhibition of the mastodon, construction and promotion of the polygraph, agricultural concerns (including the operation of his farm Belfield), natural history, and false teeth.
ArchivalResource: 18.0 Volume(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.P31.3-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Charles Willson Peale letterbooks, 1767-1827, 1767-1827
Marquis de Lafayette Reception papers, 1824.
Title:
Marquis de Lafayette Reception papers, 1824.
Papers of the committee of arrangements relating to a Philadelphia reception for Lafayette; invitation lists; letters of Richard Peters, Joseph Lewis, Rembrandt Peale, and Peter S. Du Ponceau.
ArchivalResource: 300 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122609448 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Marquis de Lafayette Reception papers, 1824.
Memoria sobre o valor das moedas, 1833
Title:
Memoria sobre o valor das moedas 1833
Jacob Frederico Torlade Pereira de Azambuja was the Portuguese chargé d'affaires in the United States from 1829-1834. His essay on the monetary system of Portugal was presented to the American Philosophical Society in October 1833, and was read at the meeting of Oct. 18. Written in Portuguese, the essay deals with one of the burning issues of the Jacksonian era, the money system, by examining the history of coinage and the money system in Portgual from the earliest times.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s); 159p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.332.4946.Az1m-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Memoria sobre o valor das moedas, 1833
Peale-Sellers family collection, 1686-1963
Title:
Peale-Sellers Family Collection, 1686-1963
The collection, divided into seven series, represents the careers and interests of the members of the Peale-Sellers family from the 1670s to 1960s. More than half is correspondence among various members of the families. The Peale family is best known as a family of artists; however, family interests and activities were much more wide-ranging. The best known Peale is Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827, APS 1786), who produced more than one thousand paintings, including hundreds of portraits of leading Americans during the colonial and early national periods. Peale was married three times, to Rachel Brewster (1744-1790), Elizabeth de Peyster (1765-1804), and Hannah More (1755-1821). He had eighteen children, eleven of whom reached adulthood. Three of Charles Willson Peale’s sons became artists: Raphaelle Peale (1774-1825), Rembrandt Peale (1778-1860), and Rubens Peale (1784-1865). A fourth son, Titian Ramsay Peale (1799-1885, APS 1833), was a naturalist (who made drawings on the exploring expeditions he accompanied) and pioneer in photography, and another son, Benjamin Franklin Peale (1795-1870), became a naturalist and paleontologist. Peale’s daughter Sophonisba Angusciola was married to Coleman Sellers (1781-1834), an inventor and manufacturer of machinery, including locomotives. Two of their sons, George Escol Sellers (1808-1899) and Coleman Sellers (1827-1907, APS 1872), were inventors and engineers. The latter served as director of the construction of the hydro-electric power development at Niagara Falls. He was married to Cornelia Wells Sellers (1831-1909). One of their grandsons was Charles Coleman Sellers (1903-1980, APS 1979), a librarian and historian and the author of several studies of the Peale family, including a Charles Willson Peale biography.
ArchivalResource: 19.0 Linear feet; 38 Boxes; 147 Volumes
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.P31-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Peale-Sellers Family Collection, 1686-1963, 1686-1963
Townsend, John Kirk, 1809-1851. Vocabularies of some of the Indian tribes of N. Western America : manuscript notebooks, 1835 September.
Title:
Vocabularies of some of the Indian tribes of N. Western America : manuscript notebooks, 1835 September.
Two notebooks (57 pages and 24 pages) inscribed to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau relating to Indian tribes of the Pacific Northwest.
ArchivalResource: 2 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70982831 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Townsend, John Kirk, 1809-1851. Vocabularies of some of the Indian tribes of N. Western America : manuscript notebooks, 1835 September.
Featherstonhaugh, George William, 1780-1866. Papers, 1809-1840.
Title:
Papers, 1809-1840.
These are copies of letters, chiefly relating to the American Philosophical Society, from Peter S. Du Ponceau, John Vaughan, and James Mease. There are a few original letters, one to Benjamin Franklin Peale.
ArchivalResource: 17 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122589320 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Featherstonhaugh, George William, 1780-1866. Papers, 1809-1840.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to Virgil David, n.p., 1836 Mar. 25.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to Virgil David, n.p., 1836 Mar. 25.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 leaf) ; 25 x 20 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55823238 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to Virgil David, n.p., 1836 Mar. 25.
John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder letters, 1816-1822, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, 1816-1822
Title:
John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder letters, 1816-1822, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau 1816-1822
Letters relating to American Indian languages, Moravian missionaries, various Heckewelder publications. Some of the replies from Du Ponceau are copied in the letter books of the Historical and Literary Committee.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet, Ca. 115 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.H35o-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder letters, 1816-1822, to Peter Stephen Du Ponceau, 1816-1822
George Ord Collection, 1831-1864
Title:
George Ord Collection 1831-1864
George Ord made important contributions as an ornithologist and writer but is also famous for his contempt of fellow ornithologist John James Audubon. Throughout his life he published numerous scientific articles and assisted in completing Alexander Wilson's life's work, . Ord also left his mark as a member of the American Philosophical Society and as the president of the Academy of Natural Science of Philadelphia. The George Ord collection consists primarily of outgoing personal correspondence to Charles Waterton ranging from 1831 to 1866 that highlights Ord's professional as well as personal affairs, most notably his hostility toward Audubon. The collection is supplemented by correspondence of Ord's to and from various individuals regarding personal and business matters. American Ornithology; or, The Natural History of the Birds of the United States
ArchivalResource: 0.25 Linear feet
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.Or2-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- George Ord Collection, 1831-1864
Lewis Cass papers (1774-1924)
Title:
Lewis Cass papers (1774-1924)
The Lewis Cass papers contain the political and governmental letters and writings of Lewis Cass, American army officer in the War of 1812, governor and senator from Michigan, American diplomat to France, secretary of war in the Andrew Jackson administration, secretary of state under James Buchanan, and Democratic candidate for President. These papers span Cass' entire career and include letters, speeches, financial documents, memoranda, literary manuscripts, newspaper clippings, and a travel diary. In addition to documenting his political and governmental career, the collection contains material concerning relations between the United States and Native Americans, and Cass' role in presidential politics.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear feet
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsead/umich-wcl-M-372cas?rgn=main;view=text View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- William L. Clements Library. Lewis Cass papers, 1774-1924.
New Sweden Records, 1650-1655 (1820)
Title:
New Sweden Records 1650-1655 (1820)
The New Sweden Company was founded as a joint stock enterprise in 1637 including Swedish, Dutch, and German investors seeking to trade in American furs and tobacco. Centered at Fort Christina, near present day Wilmington, Delaware, the colony expanded up both sides of Delaware Bay and the Delaware Reiver to present day Philadelphia, but capitulated to the Dutch in 1655. This volume contains selected transcripts in Swedish and German of documents in Swedish archives relating to the settling and governance of the colony of New Sweden in Delaware and Pennsylvania, made at the expense of Jonathan Russel, United States minister to Sweden, 1820. The documents have all been translated into French, and were printed in , vol. 4 (1829), 177-8,200, 314-315, 373-374, 398-400; vol. 5, 14-15, 219-221. No. 27 was not printed. Bound in at the end of the volume is Ch. 5 of Per Lindeström, "Description de la nouvelle Suède et des Indes Occidentales, 1691." Hazard's Register of Pennsylvania
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.974.8.Sw2-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- New Sweden Records, 1650-1655 (1820)
Indian vocabularies, 1820-1844, 1820-1844
Title:
Indian vocabularies, 1820-1844 1820-1844
Copies of 82 vocabularies representing 73 languages with notes and additions made by Du Ponceau and Albert Gallatin. Vocabularies for South American languages are copied from rare printed sources, while North American vocabularies are from both printed and manuscript sources. The first 23 pages of the volume are the Continuance Docket of the Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County, 1783-1786. Cases noted are those involving Stephen Dutilh, Samuel Garrigues, John Girard, John Holker, Charles J. de Longchamps, and Claude P. Raguet.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 253 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.In2-ead.xml View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Indian vocabularies, 1820-1844, 1820-1844
William N. Fenton papers, 1933-2001
Title:
William N. Fenton papers, 1933-2001
A Yale-educated ethnographer, William Fenton devoted most of his career to study of the Iroquois Indians of New York State and Canada. Receiving his doctorate in 1937, Fenton worked with the Bureau of American Ethnology for a number of years before becoming Director of the New York State Museum and professor at SUNY Albany. The Fenton Papers covers all aspects of William Fenton's professional life, documenting his varied positions as community worker for the New York Agency of the U.S. Indian Service, 1935-1937 (accounts, reports, correspondence); associate anthropologist and senior ethnologist in the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1939-1951 (includes notebooks, letters from the field); Executive Secretary of Anthropology and Psychology, National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council, 1952-1954; and Assistant Commissioner, New York State Museum and Science Service, 1954-1968.
ArchivalResource: 60.5 linear feet
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Ms.Coll.20-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- William N. Fenton Papers, ca. 1933-2000
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Peter Stephen Du Ponceau correspondence, 1783-1804.
Title:
Peter Stephen Du Ponceau correspondence, 1783-1804.
ArchivalResource: 2 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71009873 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Peter Stephen Du Ponceau correspondence, 1783-1804.
Morton, Samuel George, 1799-1851. Papers, 1819-1850.
Title:
Papers, 1819-1850.
This collection includes correspondence, chiefly on scientific subjects, including education, medical practice, geology, mineralogy, craniology, paleontology, the Wilkes Exploring Expedition (also known as the United States Exploring Expedition 1838-1842), his publications ("Crania Americana" [1838] and "Crania Aegyptica"). In some of the letters, Morton writes as corresponding secretary of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.
ArchivalResource: ca. 600 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122489495 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Morton, Samuel George, 1799-1851. Papers, 1819-1850.
Names which the Lenni Lenape...had given to rivers, streams, places, etc., 1822, 1822
Title:
Names which the Lenni Lenape...had given to rivers, streams, places, etc., 1822 1822
Place names (taken from deeds of conveyance and maps, and narrated by Indians) for Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia, together with names and biographies of chiefs and famous men. Translations included.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 58 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.497.3.H35n-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Names which the Lenni Lenape...had given to rivers, streams, places, etc., 1822, 1822
Foulke, William Parker, 1816-1865. Papers, 1840-1865
Title:
William Parker Foulke Papers, 1840-1865
The Foulke Papers are the product of the diverse social and intellectual interests of the Philadelphia attorney and philanthropist William Parker Foulke. A product of the distinctive culture of reform in antebellum Philadelphia, Foulke was the scion of the old elite who put a conservative stamp on social change. The collection onsists primarily of correspondence, notes, and essays. It includes numerous lectures delivered by Foulke along with material on the Lancaster County Prison, New York Prison Association, and the Philadelphia Society For Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons; notebooks concerning prisons and prisoners, including a 1846-1852 diary, and a listing of prisoners, their race, age, crime, sentence, and observations; a diary concerning the American Colonization Society (1852); a copy of an arctic diary (1853-1854) by John Wall Wilson, in the hand of Isaac Israel Hayes, which recounts much of the journey aboard the brig Advance, commanded by Elisha Kent Kane. There is also a list of buildings (1820-1841) designed by John Haviland, and material on the American Academy of Music, Philadelphia.
ArchivalResource: 3.75 Linear feet, ca. 3,000 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.F826-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- William Parker Foulke Papers, 1840-1865, 1840-1865
Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Papers, 1775-1825.
Title:
Papers, 1775-1825.
This collection includes several hundred miscellaneous letters and writings, much on science and linguistics. All items appear individually in the in-house catalog at the American Philosophical Society.
ArchivalResource: ca. 250 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523514 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Papers, 1775-1825.
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to an unidentified correspondent, 1831 Apr. 7.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to an unidentified correspondent, 1831 Apr. 7.
Thanking him for information on "the late glorious war."
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270744840 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia, to an unidentified correspondent, 1831 Apr. 7.
Samuel Coates account and memoranda books, 1785-1830, 1785-1830
Title:
Samuel Coates account and memoranda books, 1785-1830 1785-1830
Memorandum book, 1785-1825 (1 reel, film from the Pennsylvania Hospital); account book of the estate of Deborah Morris, 1793-1817 (1 vol., ca 68 p.), contains a copy of her will, inventory, records of income and disbursements by the executors; day book, 1796-1816 (1 vol., 32 p.), containing notes of payments and sales, of wills written, mortgages arranged, rentals agreed to, notes signed, etc.. There is also a receipt book, 1803-1830 (1 vol., ca. 308 p., see B C632), containing signed receipts for purchase of hickory wood, ham, stores, oil, varnish, liquors, gravestones, "cyder," and for payment of taxes, wages, painting the house, etc.; vendors include Zaccheus Collins, John Syng Dorsey, Peter S. Du Ponceau, Christian Febiger, Rebecca Jones, and Ann Moore. In this volume, as well, are signatures and engravings (some by Samuel Sartain) of John Barry, Tench Coxe, Charles Chauncey, Isaac T. Hopper, and Zachariah Poulson (presented by Arthur Bloch, 1953); and bank books, 1788-1798 (2 vols., ca. 110 pp.), being a record of checks, bills of exchange, notes, gold, silver, and currency sent to Bank (of North America).
ArchivalResource: 5.0 Volume(s), 5 volumes, 1 microfilm reel
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.C632.1d-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Samuel Coates account and memoranda books, 1785-1830, 1785-1830
Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letters signed (5) : Philadelphia, to Henry Wheaton, 1816 June 3-1828 June 3.
Title:
Autograph letters signed (5) : Philadelphia, to Henry Wheaton, 1816 June 3-1828 June 3.
Concerning publication of Henry Wheaton's works, legal academies, the New York State law revision, the American literary scene.
ArchivalResource: 5 items (11 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270882948 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844. Autograph letters signed (5) : Philadelphia, to Henry Wheaton, 1816 June 3-1828 June 3.
Gallatin, Albert, 1761-1849. Papers, 1258-1947 (bulk 1780-1849).
Title:
Papers, 1258-1947 (bulk 1780-1849).
Personal and official correspondence, wills, deeds, pamphlets, notes, speeches, drafts, land papers, commissions, marriage certificates, wax bas-relief portraits, historical snuff boxes, medals, watercolor portraits, engravings, and other papers of Gallatin and his family (1258-1947). Reflected in the collection are his early years as a Swiss immigrant, his life on the Pennsylvania frontier, his service as a Senator and Congressman from that state from 1784 to 1801, his work as Secretary of the Treasury during 1801-1814, and his later career as a diplomat. There is also genealogical material on the Gallatin family, including source documents.
ArchivalResource: 44.3 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/476928953 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Gallatin, Albert, 1761-1849. Papers, 1258-1947 (bulk 1780-1849).
Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649, 1648-1649
Title:
Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649 1648-1649
This volume contains two selections: the first are problems in geometry and trigonometry, and the second concerning fortifications and their layout. Note on fly-leaf says this volume was found in the Bastile.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, ca. 202 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.511.R19a-ead.xml View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Arithmetica decimalis oder rechenkunst der geometrischen zehen theiligen ruthen, [and] Tractatus von der fortification, 1648-1649, 1648-1649
Autograph File, D, 1586-1975.
Title:
Autograph File, D, 1586-1975.
The Autograph File is an alphabetically arranged collection of single letters, manuscripts, and drawings received from various sources at various times. Additions continue to be made.
ArchivalResource: 9.5 boxes (4.7 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01427/catalog View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Autograph File, D, 1586-1975.
Letters to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1761-1904 (inclusive), 1820-1888 (bulk)
Title:
Letters to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1761-1904 (inclusive), 1820-1888 (bulk)
Letters to American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
ArchivalResource: 36 linear feet (73 boxes)
https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00355/catalog View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Letters to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1761-1904 (inclusive) 1820-1888 (bulk).
Lewis Cass papers (1774-1924)
Title:
Lewis Cass papers (1774-1924)
The Lewis Cass papers contain the political and governmental letters and writings of Lewis Cass, American army officer in the War of 1812, governor and senator from Michigan, American diplomat to France, secretary of war in the Andrew Jackson administration, secretary of state under James Buchanan, and Democratic candidate for President. These papers span Cass' entire career and include letters, speeches, financial documents, memoranda, literary manuscripts, newspaper clippings, and a travel diary. In addition to documenting his political and governmental career, the collection contains material concerning relations between the United States and Native Americans, and Cass' role in presidential politics.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear feet
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/c/clementsead/umich-wcl-M-372cas?rgn=main;view=text View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Lewis Cass papers, Cass, Lewis, papers, 1774-1924
Orsay, Alfred Guillaume Gabriel, comte d', 1801-1852. Letter : Paris, to Mr. Duponceau, Philadelphia, 1833 Nov. 15.
Title:
Letter : Paris, to Mr. Duponceau, Philadelphia, 1833 Nov. 15.
ALS.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p. on double sheet) ; 21 x 27 cm. folded to 21 x 14 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28985657 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Orsay, Alfred Guillaume Gabriel, comte d', 1801-1852. Letter : Paris, to Mr. Duponceau, Philadelphia, 1833 Nov. 15.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Adams, John, 1735-1826
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Alexander, J. H. (John Henry), 1812-1867.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Historical Society.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Philosophical Society.
American Philosophical Society. Historical & Literary Committee.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c320qf
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Philosophical Society. Historical & Literary Committee.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Anonymous
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Azambuja, Jacob Frederico Torlade Pereira de
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bache, Franklin, 1792-1864
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Banks, Joseph, 1743-1820
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Barnet, I. Cox (Isaac Cox), d. 1833,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Beaumont, Gustave de, 1802-1866.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bradford, Samuel Dexter
Bréard-Neuville, Pierre Antoine Sulpice de, 1748-1818.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w689310z
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bréard-Neuville, Pierre Antoine Sulpice de, 1748-1818.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Breck, Samuel, 1771-1862
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brose, William
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Burd, Edward Shippen, 1779-1848.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carey, Lea & Blanchard.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carr, Frank
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Chamberlain, Jason
Chandler, Peleg W. (Peleg Whitman), 1816-1889.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65d8w43
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Chandler, Peleg W. (Peleg Whitman), 1816-1889.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Clinton, DeWitt, 1769-1828.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coates, Samuel, 1748-1830.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Collins, Zaccheus, 1764-1831
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coodey, W. S.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cooper, James Fenimore, 1789-1851.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cooper, Thomas, 1759-1839
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Corrêa da Serra, Edward J.
Correia da Serra, José Francisco, 1750-1823.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6f47rx3
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Correia da Serra, José Francisco, 1750-1823.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coxe, Paul
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dallas, Alexander James, 1759-1817,
Dauxion Lavaysse, J. -J. (Jean-J.), ca. 1770-1826
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6z44ms5
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dauxion Lavaysse, J. -J. (Jean-J.), ca. 1770-1826
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Davesan, Auguste
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- David, Virgil.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Davis, Richard Beale
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dickinson, Asa Don, 1876-1960.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Duane, William, 1760-1835
DuPonceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62k90g0
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- DuPonceau, Peter S. (Peter Stephen), 1760-1844
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Du Pont de Nemours family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- DuPont de Nemours, Pierre Samuel
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Du Pont de Nemours, Pierre Samuel, 1739-1817
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Du Pont family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dutilh family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dutilh family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dutilh, Stephen
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dutilh, Stephen
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dutilh, Stephen.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dutilh & Wachsmuth (Philadelphia, Pa.)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Eccles family.
Edward E. Ayer Manuscript Collection (Newberry Library)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6m98k7q
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Edward E. Ayer Manuscript Collection (Newberry Library)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Eliot, John, 1604-1690.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Everett, Edward, 1794-1865
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Featherstonhaugh, George William, 1780-1866.
Fenton, William N., (William Nelson), 1908-2005
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6028w5j
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fenton, William N., (William Nelson), 1908-2005
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Findley, James
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fiorelli, Henry
Fisher, J. Francis, (Joshua Francis), 1807-1873
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6vq35nj
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fisher, J. Francis, (Joshua Francis), 1807-1873
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Follen, Charles, 1796-1840
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Foulke, William Parker, 1816-1865.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Galiani, Ferdinando, 1728-1787
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gallatin, Albert, 1761-1849.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Garrigues, Samuel.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Garrigues, Samuel.
Gérard de Rayneval, J.-M. (Joseph-Mathias), 1736-1812.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6cr663x
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gérard de Rayneval, J.-M. (Joseph-Mathias), 1736-1812.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gibbs, George
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gibson, James
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gibson, James.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gilmer, Francis Walker, 1790-1826
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gilpin, Henry D. (Henry Dilworth), 1801-1860
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Girardin, Louis Hue, 1771-1825,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Girard, John
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Girard, John.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gray, Asa, 1810-1888
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Harris, Levett
Hassler, F. R. (Ferdinand Rudolph), 1770-1843.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62z1j77
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hassler, F. R. (Ferdinand Rudolph), 1770-1843.
Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1743-1823.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69k4fjj
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1743-1823.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hembel, William
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hodgson, William B.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hoffman, David, 1784-1854.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Holker, John
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Holker, John.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hopkinson, Joseph, 1770-1842.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Humboldt, Alexander von, 1769-1859.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hunter, John Dunn, 1798? -1827
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ingersoll, Charles Jared, 1782-1862.
Ingraham, Edward D., (Edward Duncan), 1793-1854
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6v69nfr
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ingraham, Edward D., (Edward Duncan), 1793-1854
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Institut de France.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Institut de France. Bibliothèque
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- James, Edwin, 1797-1861.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Joseph Bonaparte, King of Spain, 1768-1844,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Jullien, Marc-Antoine, 1775-1848
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Keating, William Hypolitus, 1799-1840
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kent, James, 1763-1847.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kirby, Thomas Austin.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kraitsir, Charles V., 1804-1860
Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves, marquis de, 1757-1834
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6k774wg
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves, marquis de, 1757-1834
Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sb47kf
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier, marquis de, 1757-1834.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Law Academy of Philadelphia.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lawrenceville Lyceum.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Le Couteulx, Louis Stephen, 1756-1839
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Levasseur, Auguste,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Linnaeus, Carl
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Livingston, Edward, 1764-1836,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Livingston, Robert, 1746-1813.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Logan, Deborah Norris, 1761-1839
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Logan, George, 1753-1821
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Logan, James, 1674-1751.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Logan, Mrs. D eborah Norris .
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Longchamps, Charles Julian de.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Longchamps, Charles Julian de.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lovell, James, 1737-1814
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Madison, Dolley, 1768-1849,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Madison, James, 1751-1836.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Maltenberger, M. B.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Maltenberger, M. B, _____ and _____
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Marshall, John, 1755-1835.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Massachusetts Historical Society
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Massias, Nicolas, Baron, 1764-1848.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McKean, Thomas, 1734-1817
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mease, James, 1771-1846
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Meredith, William, 1772-1844
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Monroe, James, 1758-1831.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Morton, Samuel George, 1799-1851.
Muhlenberg, Gotthilf Henrich Ernst, 1753-1815
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hd8kcm
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Muhlenberg, Gotthilf Henrich Ernst, 1753-1815
Nancrede, Joseph G. (Joseph Guerard), 1793-1857.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61v5gw3
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Nancrede, Joseph G. (Joseph Guerard), 1793-1857.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Newberry Library.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- New Sweden Company.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Nuttall, Thomas, 1786-1859
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ogilby, Joseph
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ord, George, 1781-1866
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Paine, Robert Treat, 1866-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Peale, Charles Willson, 1741-1827.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Peale-Sellers families.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Penn, William, 1644-1718.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Peters, Richard, 1743-1828
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Peyre, Antoine Marie, 1770-1843,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Philadelphia. Select Council.
Pickering, Edward C., (Edward Charles), 1846-1919
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61837m0
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Pickering, Edward C., (Edward Charles), 1846-1919
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Pickering, John, 1777-1846.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Pikney, William
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Poinsett, Joel Roberts, 1779-1851.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Polk, William
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Prescott, William Hickling, 1796-1859
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rademaker, Joseph
Rafinesque, C. S., (Constantine Samuel ), 1783-1840
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6r211c2
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rafinesque, C. S., (Constantine Samuel ), 1783-1840
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Raguet, Claude P.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Raguet, Claude P.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rauschardt, Felix Hannibal.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rauschardt, Felix Hannibal.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rawle, William, 1759-1836
Reed, William B., (William Bradford), 1806-1876
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xp7bnd
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Reed, William B., (William Bradford), 1806-1876
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Reland, Adriaan, 1676-1718
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Robbins, Christine Chapman
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Robbins, Christine Chapman,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Roux de Rochelle, 1762-1849
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rush, Richard, 1780-1859.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rush, Samuel, 1795-1859.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sampson, William, 1764-1836.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Say, Benjamin, 1755-1813
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Seckendorff, Baron de
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sergeant, John, 1779-1852.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Shackelford, George Green,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Shaeffer, F. R.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Shaeffer, Frederick Christian
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Silliman, Benjamin, Sr., 1779-1864
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Skipwith, Fulwar, 1765-1839
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Smith, James Edward, Sir, 1759-1828
Society of Friends. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6pw0t8h
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Society of Friends. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Speculation Land Company.
Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6513xnj
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794.
Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolph Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68m6wgt
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Steuben, Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolph Gerhard Augustin, Baron von, 1730-1794.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stevens, Henry
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tefft, Isaac Keech, 1794-1862,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ticknor, George, 1791-1871.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tilghman, Edward, 1750-1815
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tilghman, William, 1756-1827.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tocqueville, Alexis de, 1805-1859.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Torrey, John,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Torrey, John, 1796-1873
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Townsend, John Kirk, 1809-1851.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tyson, Job R.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Continental Army
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- University of Chicago. Library.
University of Chicago. Library. Special Collections Research Center.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6d25pnx
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- University of Chicago. Library. Special Collections Research Center.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vasques, Joaquim Joze
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vater, Johann Severin, 1771-1826.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vaughan, Benjamin, 1751-1835
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vaughan, John, 1756-1841
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vaughan, Petty, 1788-1854
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vaughan, William
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vaux, Roberts, 1786-1836,
Volney, C.-F (Constantin-François), 1757-1820.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w63f4rfp
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Volney, C.-F (Constantin-François), 1757-1820.
Volney, C. -F., (Constantin François), 1757-1820
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6pq1sks
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Volney, C. -F., (Constantin François), 1757-1820
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wachsmuth, John Gottfried
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Walsh, Robert.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Walsh, Robert, 1784-1859.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Washington, Bushrod, 1762-1829.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Washington, George, 1732-1799
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Waterton, Charles, 1782-1865
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Watson, Ebenezer
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wheaton, Henry, 1785-1848,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- William L. Clements Library.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wilson, Alexander, 1766-1813
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wistar, Caspar, 1761-1818
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 1807-1882
Orsay, Alfred Guillaume Gabriel, comte d', 1801-1852.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6668gvs
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Orsay, Alfred Guillaume Gabriel, comte d', 1801-1852.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- William L. Clements Library
eng
Zyyy
Citation
- Language
- eng
rus
Zyyy
Citation
- Language
- rus
fre
Zyyy
Citation
- Language
- fre
Admiralty
Citation
- Subject
- Admiralty
Arabic language
Citation
- Subject
- Arabic language
Beyond Early America
Citation
- Subject
- Beyond Early America
Business
Citation
- Subject
- Business
Business and Skilled Trades
Citation
- Subject
- Business and Skilled Trades
Claims
Citation
- Subject
- Claims
Courts
Citation
- Subject
- Courts
Courts
Citation
- Subject
- Courts
Debt, Imprisonment for
Citation
- Subject
- Debt, Imprisonment for
Delaware language
Citation
- Subject
- Delaware language
Diplomatic History
Citation
- Subject
- Diplomatic History
Freedom of the seas
Citation
- Subject
- Freedom of the seas
Greek language
Citation
- Subject
- Greek language
Indemnity
Citation
- Subject
- Indemnity
Indians of North America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North America
Indians of North American
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of North American
Indians of South America
Citation
- Subject
- Indians of South America
International affairs
Citation
- Subject
- International affairs
International trade
Citation
- Subject
- International trade
Language and languages
Citation
- Subject
- Language and languages
Language and Linguistics
Citation
- Subject
- Language and Linguistics
Law
Citation
- Subject
- Law
Law
Citation
- Subject
- Law
Maritime law
Citation
- Subject
- Maritime law
Maritime law
Citation
- Subject
- Maritime law
Learned institutions and societies
Citation
- Subject
- Learned institutions and societies
Linguistics
Citation
- Subject
- Linguistics
Literature, Arts, and Culture
Citation
- Subject
- Literature, Arts, and Culture
Manuscripts, American
Citation
- Subject
- Manuscripts, American
Merchant mariners
Citation
- Subject
- Merchant mariners
Native America
Citation
- Subject
- Native America
Natural history
Citation
- Subject
- Natural history
Neutrality
Citation
- Subject
- Neutrality
Pennsylvania History
Citation
- Subject
- Pennsylvania History
Philology
Citation
- Subject
- Philology
Polynesian languages
Citation
- Subject
- Polynesian languages
Prisons
Citation
- Subject
- Prisons
Quakers
Citation
- Subject
- Quakers
Quakers
Citation
- Subject
- Quakers
Revolutions
Citation
- Subject
- Revolutions
Science
Citation
- Subject
- Science
Silk
Citation
- Subject
- Silk
Silk industry
Citation
- Subject
- Silk industry
Trade
Citation
- Subject
- Trade
Turkic languages
Citation
- Subject
- Turkic languages
War, Maritime (International law)
Citation
- Subject
- War, Maritime (International law)
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Authors
Citation
- Occupation
- Authors
Compilers
Citation
- Occupation
- Compilers
Lawyers
Citation
- Occupation
- Lawyers
Lawyers
Citation
- Occupation
- Lawyers
Citation
- Place
- Poland
Poland
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Philadelphia (Pa.)
Philadelphia (Pa.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Pennsylvania--Philadelphia
Pennsylvania--Philadelphia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- France
France
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Philadelphia (Pa.)
Philadelphia (Pa.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- France
France
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Philadelphia (Pa.). Select Council.
Philadelphia (Pa.). Select Council.
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- United States
United States
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Paris (France)
Paris (France)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- United States
United States
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Pennsylvania--Philadelphia County
Pennsylvania--Philadelphia County
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Philadelphia (Pa.)
Philadelphia (Pa.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Belgium
Belgium
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Pennsylvania--Philadelphia
Pennsylvania--Philadelphia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Alabama
Alabama
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- United States
United States
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- France
France
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Valley Forge (Pa.)
Valley Forge (Pa.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 618