Skip to content

OPEN TODAY: 10 A.M.–5 P.M.

Tickets

Manuscripts

William Hayes Hilton letter to "Friend Quackenbush,"

Image not available



You might also be interested in

  • Image not available

    William Hayes Hilton letter to "Quackenbush,"

    Manuscripts

    In this letter addressed to "Friend Quackenbush," William H. Hilton writes of mining details and mine operation in Silver Hill and Rock Springs District in California.

    mssHM 16693

  • Image not available

    William Hayes Hilton sketches

    Manuscripts

    Nine sketchbooks containing sketches done by William Hayes Hilton during his travel around California, Arizona, Nevada, and Mexico from 1850-1870. The most common subjects of his drawings are gold miners in California; San Francisco and Monterey, California; and Tepic and Mazatlan, Mexico. His sketches include people, churches, and landscapes, and in several of them he drew the indigenous people of California and Mexico as well as Chinese people in California. Several of the sketchbooks have loose sketches and are in fragile condition.

    mssHilton

  • Image not available

    William Hayes Chamberlin journal

    Manuscripts

    The first volume is No. 5 of several copies Alexander Rea Chamberlin made of his great-grandfather's journal. It includes a facsimile copy of the original journal as well as facsimile copies of the journal as it was printed in the Lewisburg, Pennsylvania newspaper, Chronicle. in 1849 and 1850. Chamberlin's journal covers his overland journey to California in 1849. The volume also contains later entries from a diary Chamberlin kept in 1853 to 1857 while living in California. These entries also include a trip Chamberlin took back East by ship. While in New Orleans he makes several specific comments on the slaves he sees.

    mssHM 82522 (a+b)

  • Image not available

    Rutherford B. Hayes, Columbus, Ohio, letter to unidentified addressee :

    Manuscripts

    Regarding the "silver question," an economic policy debate over the coinage of silver that began in the late 19th century.

    mssHM 24716

  • Image not available

    William Boyd Allison letter to "My dear Mr. Cole,"

    Manuscripts

    In this letter to the otherwise unidentified Mr. Cole, Allison writes that he may not be available as planned due to a scheduled dinner with friends.

    mssHM 29213

  • Image not available

    Daniel Miller letter to William Miller

    Manuscripts

    Letter written from Daniel Miller near Petaluma, California, to his brother William in Newburn, Virginia. Miller writes of the difficulties of driving cattle over the Oregon Trail and through the Salt Lake Valley to California, and of cattle that were "likely stolen" by Mormons in Utah. He writes of stopping with the remaining cattle in the valley outside of San Francisco and of the trouble in owning land since "nearly all the country is claimed by grants made by the Mexican Government." He writes of his trip to San Francisco and details the high cost of goods in the area, but notes that he is also selling cattle for good prices. Miller also writes of gold mining and that he plans to avoid the practice since "many thousand dollars worth of [gold] dust...disappears in a few hours at the gambling tables." Miller concludes that "I have as yet not regrets about the move [to California], except the loss of our children" (Miller's three young daughters died during the journey to California).

    mssHM 74319