Fragment of an autograph letter signed : place not specified, to an unidentified recipient, [18--?].

ArchivalResource

Fragment of an autograph letter signed : place not specified, to an unidentified recipient, [18--?].

The last five lines of a letter to an unknown person of great "talents" with "knowledge of local history and national customs."

1 item (1 p.) ; 8.5 x 18.7 cm.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 8052976

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

Sigourney, Lydia Howard, 1791-1865

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w63g5gbr (person)

Lydia Huntley Sigourney (born September 1, 1791, Norwich, Connecticut–died June 10, 1865, Hartford, Connecticut), poet, also known as the “Sweet Singer of Hartford", was the only daughter of a gardener. She attended private school with the assistance of her father’s employer, and founded a Hartford school for girls in 1814. At this school, without any specialized training, Sigourney taught a deaf student, Alice Cogswell, to read and write in English. Cogswell would later be the first student enr...

McCrindle, Joseph F.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6571jcq (person)

BIOGHIST REQUIRED Joseph McCrindle was a literary agent, art collector, and philanthropist. He founded the Transatlantic Review in 1959, and created the Henfield Foundation which awards grants to arts, music, and social justice organizations in 1977. McCrindle was born in 1923 to Odette Feder and J. Ronald McCrindle and raised primarily by his grandparents on the Upper East Side of New York. He attended St. Paul's School in Manhattan before attending Harvard University w...