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Manuscripts

Edwin Eells autobiography

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    Edwin Dickens letter to John Dickens

    Manuscripts

    Letter is written by "Edwin Dickens of California" to his uncle John Dickens in England. The letter is written from "Washington, South Yuba" which is in Nevada County. Dickens writes an account of his journey to California and comments on Salt Lake City and Mormons, and about how he went to "North West of California" to mine gold. Letter is sewn into and glued on other sheets of paper, which make covers.

    mssHM 83171

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    Edwin Thomas Woolley diaries

    Manuscripts

    Series of six diaries kept by Edwin Thomas Woolley from 1884 to 1906. The first four volumes recount Woolley's experiences as a missionary in England from 1884-1886, and also describe a trip he made to Paris during that time. Another family journal was kept in Ogden, Utah, from 1900 to 1903, and includes entries from Woolley, his wife Emma Rumel Woolley, and their children Heber R., Florence, and Orlindo (Orlie). The final volume was kept by Woolley in Ogden from 1903-1906.

    mssHM 31169-31173

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    Edwin B. Janes collection

    Manuscripts

    A collection of 238 items which consists of manuscripts and letters assembled by Edwin B. Janes. The first series of miscellaneous manuscripts contains individual letters by American political, military, and literary figures of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Included in this material is a leaf from the docket of the court in Painesville, Ohio, detailing the conviction of Joseph Smith, Jr., of assault and battery of his brother-in-law Calvin W. Stoddard (April 21, 1835), also documents relating to slavery and abolitionism, a small group of correspondence of John Stuart Skinner, and a group of letters and military records related to the Civil War in Ohio. The second series, arranged alphabetically by author, is the professional and political correspondence of Albert Gallatin Riddle, chiefly letters addressed to him from 1847 to 1870. The third series, arranged chronologically, contains personal, professional, and political correspondence of Andrew J. Williams (1852-1900).

    mssHM 25466-25675

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    Edwin Littlefield letter to Alvah Littlefield

    Manuscripts

    Edwin Littlefield writes that he has arrived safely in San Francisco. He has received the cargo, and thinks it will be suitable for the current market, despite his opinion that "the majority of people here have left their honor & principles at home."

    mssHM 4181

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    Autobiography of Edward Walker Clark [microform] :

    Manuscripts

    Microfilm of Edward Walker Clark's autobiography, kept through 1904. Clark begins with describing his young adulthood in England, including working as an attendant for a wealthy family and as an apprentice carpenter. He traveled to London in 1840 and describes his conversion to Mormonism in 1847. He mentions working at a furniture store in 1848 before he and his family sailed to the United States on the ship Ellen. Clark arrived in Council Bluffs in 1851 and worked as a coffin maker for emigrants to the gold fields until 1852, when the Clarks traveled to Utah with the Henry Miller company (Clark's eldest daughter was killed by a wagon wheel during the trip). The Clarks settled in Provo, and in 1858 Clark was posted at Echo Canyon during the Utah War. He describes his 1874 mission to England, followed by notes on his life in Utah through 1904.

    MSS MFilm 00094

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    Edwin F. Littlefield letter to Alvah Littlefield

    Manuscripts

    Edwin reports that he traveled to Sacramento and sold some of the herbs sent by Alvah. He hopes to sell the rest soon, though he describes business in general as dull. The rest of the letter is concerned with shipments of various goods.

    mssHM 4188