From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Page 5

Page 6

Page 7

Page 8
Search
results in pages
Metadata
Boston University
Booton University
Boston University
Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center
SECURITY
771 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02215
Tel: 617-353-3696
Fax: 617-353-2838
E-mail: archives@bu.edu
May 14, 2007
Mr. Ronald Epp
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
Dear Mr. Epp:
Enclosed, please find the photocopy you requested from the Franklin Benjamin Sanborn
Collection.
I hope I have been of service to you. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate in
contacting me. Our hours of operation are 9:00am- 4:45pm Monday to Friday. If you would like
to view a collection, we require at least two days notice prior to your arrival. If you cannot visit
the archive and would like to access the collections, a researcher may be hired at Quickie Jobs
Service:
(617) 353- 2890.
Sincerely,
Alex Rankin
Assistant Director for Acquisitions
E-mail: rankin@bu.edu
Original in the
Howard Gotlieb Archival
Research Center
Boston University
Publication permission must be
secured from HGARC
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
7, B. Sauborn Esg
Concide Mass.
wear Sir.
I write is acknow-
ledge and thank you for
the interesting letter which
I received at the meeting
called by One committee
at Mrs Bulland's house
last week I am Long
that you could not lu
present at the meeting;
you. would certainly have
been Interested, and please
with its high affeciation
of Emerson's due and
lunobley influence e express
by Pret Elest, Prof.
Palmer, r Major
all of when spoke Research
information
e
Howard Got
Archival
ter
that theme.
Boston U
sitv
Publication perr
n must be
secured fro
GARC
It is, as you Lay. aden
of striking growth and
Boston University
DEPARTMENT
BOSTON
Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center
771 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02215
Tel: 617-353-3696
Country
Fax: 617-353-2838
E-mail: archives@bu.edu
pt.
April 3, 2007
Mr. Ronald Epp
47 Pondview rive
Merrimack, NH 03054
ENGLAND
Dear Mr. Epp:
Enclosed, please find photocopied letter from George B. Dorr to F.B. Sanborn, February 18,
1902.
I hope I have been of service to you. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate in
contacting me. Our hours of operation are 9:00am- 4:45pm Monday to Friday. If you would like
to view a collection, we require at least two days notice prior to your arrival. If you cannot visit
the archive and would like to access the collections, a researcher may be hired at Quickie Jobs
Service:
(617) 353-2890.
Sincerely,
Right
Alex Rankin
Assistant Director for Acquisitions
E-mail: rankin@bu.edu
Verizon Yahoo! Mail l-eppster2@verizon.net
Page 1 of 2
Verizon Yahoo! Mail Verizon Central Yahoo!
Search:
Web Searchi
Welcome, eppster2@verizon
Mail Home Tutorials
YAHOO!
Help
verizon
[Sign Out, Member Center
MAIL
Mail
Addresses
Calendar
Notepad
Mail For Mobile - Options
Check Mail
Compose
Search Mail
Search the Web
Folders
[Add Edit]
Previous I Next I Back to Messages
Inbox (6)
Delete
Reply
Forward
Spam
Move
Draft
This message is not flagged. [ Flag Message - Mark as Unread
F
Sent
Date:
Wed, 28 Mar 2007 10:02:20 -0400
Bulk (1)
[Empty]
From:
"Alex Rankin"
Add to Address Book
Add Mobile Alert
Trash
[Empty]
Subject: Frederick Benjamin Sanborn Collection
My Folders
[Hide]
To:
eppster2@verizon.net
Eliz messages
Member
Information
Date:
March 28, 2007
Ron messages
Dear Mr. Ronald Epp:
Search Shortcuts
Thank you for your email of March 22 regarding a letter from
Bucknam Dorr, dated February 18, 1902. The letter is housed
My Photos
Frederick Benjamin Sanborn Collection.
My Attachments
I hope I have been of service to you. If you have any questio
do not hesitate in contacting me. Our hours of operation are
4:45pm Monday to Friday. If you would like to view a collecti
require at least two days notice prior to your arrival. If yo
visit the archive and would like to access the collections, a
researcher
may be hired at Quickie Jobs Service:
(617) 353- 2890.
Sincerely,
Alex Rankin
Assistant Director for Acquisitions
Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center
Boston University
771 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA. 02215
Phone: (617) 353-3696
Fax: (617) 353- 2838
E-mail: rankin@bu.edu
Delete
Reply
Forward
Spam
Move
Previous
Next Back to Messages
Save Message Text
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=2195_13317304_91974_1657_867.. 3/28/2007
The Historical Manuscript Collection
Page 1 of 3
The Historical Manuscript Collection
The
Collections
The Historical Manuscript Collection consists of literary and historical letters,
and Archives
documents and manuscripts with particular strengths in British literary manuscripts of
the nineteenth century and in letters and documents of American statesmen from the
The Abraham Lincoln
Revolutionary period through the twentieth century.
Collection
The Alice and Rollo G.
The British Romantic authors are represented by a sizeable group of materials, among
Silver Collection
which are eleven letters of the Scottish poet Joanna Baillie (1762-1851) and twenty-
seven letters, eight brief manuscripts, two printed proofs and related pieces of Thomas
The Anderson Poetry
Campbell (1777-1844), the Scottish editor and poet, dating from 1805 to 1844.
Collection
"Christabel" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) appears in a notebook in the
hand of Sarah Stoddart, the future wife of the essayist William Hazlitt. This manuscript
The Bortman Collection of
Americana
differs substantially from the printed text, which did not appear until more than a
decade later, in 1816. The notebook also contains, in a different hand, the text of
The Boston Symphony
"Dejection: An Ode" and Wordsworth's sonnet to Napoleon. In Coleridge's own hand
Orchestra Archive
are seven short poems, five in English and two in Latin, dated 1832, as well as a long
undated letter circa 1822 to his physician and biographer James Gillman. Thomas De
The Boston University
Quincey (1785-1859) manuscripts include the last leaf of his 1848 essay on Charles
Archives
Lamb with a large number of deletions and corrections, worksheets of material which
The Franz Liszt Collection
he edited for the Westmorland Gazette in 1818 and 1819, and a fragment from an essay
on political economy. Several letters include-two to his publisher J. A. Hessey and four
The Historical Manuscript
from 1833 to the agents of Lady Nairne. Walter Savage Landor's (1775-1864) poem
Collection
"To Alexandre" is present in a signed undated manuscript, and a Landor letter to John
Kenyon, dated 1854, incorporates another poem. There are ten letters and manuscripts
The History of Nursing
of several songs by the Irish poet Thomas Moore (1779-1852). Sir Walter Scott (1772-
Archives
1832) is represented by a manuscript of a three page verse epilogue to the play based on
his novel St. Ronan's Well, which differs from the printed version. Over thirty letters to
The Military History
Collections
the author and adventurer Edward John Trelawny (1792-1881) include correspondence
from Charles Armitage Brown, Richard Monckton Milnes and H. Buxton Forman.
The Mystery Writers of
There are seven illustrations by the artist John Leech (1817-1864) as well as a letter to
America Library
his friend and fellow caricaturist George Cruikshank (1792-1878), and Cruikshank's
own manuscript of. J. W. Howell's Bubble Burst (1856) and his humorous illustrations
The Paris Conservatoire
for The Tooth- Ache by Horace Mayhew (1849?).
De Musique Archive
The Pascal Collection
In addition to a Lincoln collection (described elsewhere), Edward C. Stone donated a
collection of letters and documents of the signers of the Declaration of Independence,
The Rare Book Collection
which includes a rare Button Gwinnett petition, in his hand, to Governor James Wright
of Georgia, dated 1769; a collection of letters and documents of the signers of the
The Richards Collection
Constitution; and two sets of letters and documents of the Presidents of the United
States, one set being of the first twenty-nine Presidents, Washington to Hoover, and the
The Robert Frost
other of Washington to Franklin D. Roosevelt. These collections have been augmented
Collection
by purchases and by various documents found in other collections within the
Department.
The Theodore Roosevelt
Collection
Among other American historical documents are an eleven-page letter of April 15,
The Archives
1815, from John Jay (1745-1829), first Chief Justice of the United States, to his friend
John Murray, Jr. (the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Byer in memory of Barbara Roberta
Horwitz); and a bound manuscript of Charles Sumner's speech "Issues of the
Presidential Election," which was delivered October 30, 1869, at the Cambridge City
Hall.
http://www.bu.edu/speccol/histman.htm
4/19/2002
The Historical Manuscript Collection
Page 2 of 3
The Irving P. and Helen Joy Fox Collection, given by Mrs. Archibald Crossley and her
brother Fred Joy Fox in memory of their parents (both graduates of Boston University,
Class of 1883) consists of letters and signatures of prominent American clergymen,
politicians and public figures, among them Henry Ward Beecher, Daniel Webster and
William H. Seward. Central to the collection is a group of letters to Silas Deane (1737-
1789), a member of the Continental Congress and a diplomat who was sent to France
by Congress with Benjamin Franklin and Arthur Lee in 1776 to strengthen connections
with France. The letters are from Benedict Arnold, 1775; George Washington, 1778;
the Count d'Estaing, 1778; General Philip Schuyler, 1779; John Jay, 1781; and
Benjamin Franklin, 1782. With these is the order of Congress written and signed by
John Hancock as president, authorizing the Commissioners' trip to France to secure by
purchase or loan "eight line of battle ships of 74 and 64 guns well manned and fitted in
every respect for service." Letters written between 1883 and 1886 from the future art
critic Bernard Berenson to Irving P. Fox (they knew each other as students at Boston
University) are also part of this collection.
Other facets of life in the United States during the nineteenth century are shown in the
records of the Mercantile Library Association of Boston founded in 1820. This was one
of the first organizations whose purpose was to improve the "intellectual and moral
condition of young men engaged as merchants' clerks" by means of a lending library,
lectures, debates and classes. Complementing these records, with a direct description of
working class experience in Boston in the 1840s, is a group of over fifty letters from
members of the Swallow family who came to Boston from rural New Hampshire and
worked for various merchants in the city. On deposit from Mrs. Charles C. Pineo is a
group of papers by and about her grandfather Phineas Parkhurst Quimby (1802- 1866),
a mental healer whose most noteworthy patient was Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the
Christian Science movement. Among a collection of twelve letters from the inventor
Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922) is one written to his parents in 1879 when he was
involved in litigation over the patent rights to the telephone.
The English-born American author Frances Hodgson Burnett (1849-1924) is
represented by a group of sixty-four letters written to her, many from English actors
and writers. They include a letter from Victoria Mary of Teck, later Queen Mary,
consort of King George V of England, and eleven letters from Israel Zangwill, the
novelist, playwright and critic. Over forty letters from Julia Marlowe (1866-1950), the
great Shakespearean actress, reflect American theatrical life from 1890 to 1917.
Other collectors have presented the University with varied items, such as the gifts of
Raymond Thornburg, consisting of: handsome signed documents of Napoleon I,
Emperor of France, 1808, George III, King of England, 1813, and Oscar, King of
Sweden, 1876; an appointment of 1776 signed by John Hancock; and over one hundred
American, English and French propaganda posters from the First World War, which
include work by the illustrators Howard Chandler Christy and James Montgomery
Flagg. The William E. Barton collection of Samaritan materials preserves manuscripts,
photographs of the sacred Samaritan Abisa Scroll, and Barton's personal papers and
articles from the period 1903 to 1926. The manuscripts include a fragment of a twelfth-
century Samaritan Pentateuch and unpublished texts in Arabic by the High Priest
Jacob.
http://www.bu.edu/speccol/histman.htm
4/19/2002
Viewer Controls
Toggle Page Navigator
P
Toggle Hotspots
H
Toggle Readerview
V
Toggle Search Bar
S
Toggle Viewer Info
I
Toggle Metadata
M
Zoom-In
+
Zoom-Out
-
Re-Center Document
Previous Page
←
Next Page
→
Boston University
Details
Series 5