[Autograph letter signed] to William Walsh (1663-1708), [early 1691] digitized at high resolution. Accompanying material digitized at medium resolution., Accompanied by: Butler's note (1833 Jan 12) presenting the letter to Sir Henry Dryden; an inaccurate printed version of the letter; ALS (ca. 1710) from Honor Dryden to her cousin Sir Erasmus Dryden (1669-1710); some 19th century notes on Dryden and Walsh., and Dryden criticises Walsh's "Dialogue concerning Women" (published in 1691) and an epigram that later appeared in Walsh's "Letters and Poems" (1692) with Dryden's suggested revisions.
Alternative Title:
[Autograph letter signed] to William Walsh (1663-1708), [early 1691].
Description:
Imperfect: mutilated with some loss of text. and The letter was presented to Sir Henry Dryden in 1833 by Samuel Butler (1774-1839), Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry.
An artistic response to industrial pollution in Bitterfeld, Germany., Autographs of [Oskar] Manigk, W[olfgang] Petrovsky, Klaus Staeck, Rolf Staeck, Hans Schimansky, Tina Bara, Ralf Herzig, Peter Oehlmann, [Ulrich] Wüst, Robert Rehfeldt, Manfred Butzmann, and V[olker] H[enze]. Stamps of [Bertram] Kober and Peter Thieme., and Consists of case containing [19] sheets, most 44 x 35 cm., and two stapled plastic sheets enclosing paper sheet with caption "Analyse fl̈uchtiger organischer Stoffe im Wasser der Mulde" and a soiled paper object. Includes prints and photographs signed by [Oskar] Manigk, W[olfgang] Petrovsky, Klaus Staeck, Rolf Staeck, Hans Schimansky, Tina Bara, Ralf Herzig, Peter Oehlmann, [Ulrich] Wüst, Robert Rehfeldt, Manfred Butzmann, V[olker] H[enze] or stamped by [Bertram] Kober or Peter Thieme.
6 ALS, one of them by James W. Brattle to his brother Charles dated July 5, 1844, providing an eyewitness account of the events leading to the death of Joseph Smith and the reaction of Mormons to the murder. Brattle describes Smith's crackdown on the Nauvoo Expositor, his incarceration in Carthage, and the attack and murder on June 27, 1844. Brattle records the shock of the Mormons who had believed that Smith could not be killed by bullets, and states that Governor Ford could have handled the crisis better. Four other letters by members of the Brattle family, based in Massachusetts and Connecticut, discuss family news, including occasional references to James and his interactions with Mormons in Illinois. One letter from James B. Burbank,James Brattle's nephew, is written from Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, dated April 12, 1866, and mentions a threat telegraphed by General Tecumseh Sherman to Brigham Young.
Alternative Title:
[Letters amongst the Brattle family, 1834-1844]
Description:
James Brattle was a member of the Illinois Grays Militia, which was ordered to protect Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormon Church, while Smith was awaiting trial in Carthage, and was present when Smith and his brother Hyrum were attacked and killed. Brattle then rode Smith's horse to the Mormon settlement at Nauvoo, to give them the news of Smith's death.
Subject (Geographic):
Nauvoo (Ill.)
Subject (Name):
Brattle family, Brattle, James W, Burbank, James W, Ford, Thomas,--1800-1850, Smith, Hyrum,--1800-1844--Assassination, Smith, Joseph,--1805-1844--Assassination, and Young, Brigham,--1801-1877