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         Sigourney Lydia Huntley:     more books (18)
  1. Sketches, By Mrs. Sigourney by Lydia Huntley Sigourney, 1834
  2. The Christian's gift by Rufus W. 1813-1886 Clark, Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney, et all 2010-08-01
  3. Savings of the little ones, and poems of their mothers
  4. The RELIGIOUS SOUVENIR for Christian & New-Years Presents. by Lydia Huntley, editor. SIGOURNEY, 1840
  5. LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY - Early 19th Century American Female Poet. (American Female Poets)
  6. "Lydia Huntley Sigourney": A Biographical Essay from Gale's "Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 239, American Women Prose Writers 1820-1870" (code 30)
  7. Letters to Mothers. By Mrs. L.H. Sigourney by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 2010
  8. Letters to Mothers. By Mrs. L.H. Sigourney by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 1854-01-01
  9. Poems for the sea
  10. [Pocahontas, and other poems.] by Lydia Howard Huntley Afterwards Sigourney, 2010-03-18
  11. Select poems;
  12. Letters to Mothers by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 2005-10-27
  13. Lucy Howard's Journal / By Mrs. L. H. Sigourney by Lydia Huntley Sigourney, 1858
  14. Lydia Huntley Sigourney in the Bacon Collection by Alice DeLana, 1986

41. What Is The History Of Sigourney, Iowa? | Answerbag.com
Dr. Stone had always been a great admirer of the writing of the poetess,lydia huntley sigourney. It was this lady in whose honor the capital of Keokuk
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What is Answerbag? Ask questions and share your knowledge with the world here on Answerbag. Get the best answers where there are no duplicate questions and questions are always open - our community of over 175,000 will find your answer! Join For Free! Similar Questions What is the geography of Sigourney, Iowa? Iowa Cities ... Iowa Cities Search for Answers Ask a Question Browse Members
The last question was answered in just minute Let our thousands of members help! Home Categories Places North America ... Cities
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Iowa Cities Question:
What is the history of Sigourney, Iowa?
By AB-Wikibot Asked Apr 19 2007 7:12PM Is this Conversational or Educational Pts Rate Question Answer Question Watch this question Email to a friend Flag this question Duplicate Nonsense Spam/Offensive Wrong Category First Answer by AB-Wikibot on Apr 19, 2007 at 7:12 pm

42. Iowa Department Of Economic Development
Opened for settlement in 1843, sigourney, Iowa, was named after the distinguished poetess lydia huntley sigourney. The town s Neoclassical courthouse,
http://www.iowalifechanging.com/community/mainstreetiowa/towns/sigourney.html
BUSINESS TRAVEL CAREERS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ... Questions?
Opened for settlement in 1843, Sigourney, Iowa, was named after the distinguished poetess Lydia Huntley Sigourney. The town's Neoclassical courthouse, built in 1909, with the historic Lewis Memorial Fountain gracing its picturesque lawn serves as the central focal point of the community. Known as "The Fountain of Opportunity," Sigourney is undergoing a metamorphosis of sorts, both physically and mentally. Since Main Street Sigourney was founded in 1990 to assist with the revitalization of downtown, a majority of this southeast Iowa community's commercial and public buildings surrounding the courthouse have undergone exterior renovation projects of varying degrees. Nearly $1.5 million has been invested in interior and exterior improvement projects and over 25,000 volunteer hours contributed for the betterment of downtown since 1990. As a result, in 1997, Sigourney was named a finalist for the National Main Street Center's Great American Main Street Award, and ,in 1995, Sigourney was the first community to ever receive Main Street Iowa's Spirit of Main Street award. Visit Sigourney! Main Street Sigourney
112 East Washington
Sigourney, Iowa 52591

43. Listen To Grammie: The Indian's Welcome To The Pilgrim Fathers
lydia huntley sigourney 17911865) As the first and most popular woman poet of the early nineteenth century, lydia huntley sigourney had, in her time,
http://listentogrammie.blogspot.com/2007/11/indians-welcome-to-pilgrim-fathers.h
skip to main skip to sidebar Listen to Your Grammie Words and Thoughts from My Heart to My Children and Grandchildren
Monday, November 19, 2007
The Indian's Welcome to the Pilgrim Fathers
Above them spread a stranger sky;
Around, the sterile plain;
The rock-bound coast rose frowning nigh;
Beyond, the wrathful main:
Chill remnants of a wintry snow
Still chok'd the encumbered soil,
Yet forth those Pilgrim Fathers go
To mark their future toil.
'Mid yonder vale their corn must rise
In Summer's ripening pride,
And there the church-spire woo the skies Its sister-school beside. Perchance 'mid England's velvet greet Some tender thought repos'd Though nought upon their stoic mien Such soft regret disclos'd Abandoned School House in the Palouse, Washington, USA When sudden from the forest wide A red-browed chieftain came, With towering form, and haughty stride, And eye like kindling flame: No wrath he breath'd, no conflict sought, To no dark ambush drew, But simply to the Old World brought The welcome of the New. Eyes of the Blackfoot That welcome was a blast and ban Upon thy race unborn.

44. Brief Biographies Of Jackson Era Characters (S)
sigourney, lydia Howard huntley 1791 1865. b.9/1,d.6/10 An immensely popular poet, sometimes calle the American Hemans .
http://www.jmisc.net/BIOG-S.htm
Brief Biographies from the Jackson/Van Buren Era (S):
Say, Thomas 1787 - 1834 :
Entomologist and conchologist. Traveled extensively through North America and published several important works. Came to Robert Owen 's New Harmony community, where he died in 1834.
Schuyler, Philip John 1733 - 1804:
Officer in the French and Indian War, and Maj. General under Washington in the Revolution; operated generally successfully in the country around Ticonderoga, but allowed Ticonderoga to be lost, and lost his command. He demanded a court-marshall, was reinstated, and then resigned. Senator from NY, 1789-91. Wealthy landowner. His daughter Elizabeth married Alexander Hamilton , and he was very helpful in Hamilton's career; daugter Margaret married Stephen Van Rensselaer
Scott, Sir Walter (1771 - 1832):
Produced an avalanche of romantic historical novels. Probably Jacksonian America's favorite novelist. Beloved by southern planters (horses named Rob Roy) were not uncommon, and New England transcendentalists ( Bronson Alcott kept a bust of Scott - the only modern so honored - in his experimental grade school that was run on transcendentalist principles).
Sebastian, Benjamin 1745 - 1834:

45. Book(s) By Author(s)
This series also includes personal correspondence and othte papers of Charles sigourney and his wife lydia huntley sigourney. ABSTRACT The Bridgen Family
http://www.rootsweb.com/~nysource/tuv/txxe02.htm
Book(s) by Authors
Each "table" has full bibliography of source(s) by an individual group or individual author.
  • TITLE: Papers, 1684-1947. bulk 1780-1947 by (Tibbits family) PREFERRED CITATION: Tibbits Family Papers, 1684-1947 AUTHORS: Tibbits Family PUBLISHED: SUBJECT:
    Atwood Family
    Bleecker Family
    Bridgen Family
    Dudley, Charles Edward, 1780-1841
    Knox Family
    Knox, Charles S., 1843-1920
    Knox, Elizabeth C.S., 1813-1885
    Knox, James Carler, 1849-1930
    Knox, John LeGrand, 1803-1879
    Sigourney, Charles, 1878-1854 Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley, 1791-1865 Tibbits, Charles Edward Dudley, 1834-1924 Tibbits, George, 1763-1849 Tibbits, George, 1825-1875 Tibbits, George Mortimer, 1796-1878 Tibbits, John Knox, 1870-? Tibbits, Sarah B., 1866-1947 Tibbits, William Badger, 1837-1880 Walter A. Wood Mowing and Reaping Company United States Army. New York Infantry Regiment, 2nd. (1861-1862) Company G. United States. Army. New York Cavalry Regiment, 21st. (1863-1865) Saint Paul's School (Concord, NH) Faculty Saint Paul's School (Concord, NH) Students Columbia College Students Columbia University Students Yale College Students Yale University Students Poughkeepsie Collegiate School Students Union College Students Auburn Prison Auburn Correctional Facility Sing Sing Prison Sing Sing Correctional Facility Ossining Correctional Facility Agricultural machinery industry Management Machinery industry Management Industrial management Farm equipment manufacturers Soldiers United States Veterans United States Church Schools Faculty Church Schools Students

46. What About That Street With The Funny Name? - HartfordInfo.org
sigourney Street is named for lydia huntley sigourney, known as the sweet singer of Hartford. She was among the first American women to succeed at a
http://www.hartfordinfo.org/issues/documents/History/htfd_courant_011007.asp
A program of the Hartford Public Library Community Data ... Web Sites, Documents and Articles Hartford Courant News Articles > Last Page Visited What About That Street With The Funny Name? January 10, 2007 By Courant Staff Who is Sigourney Street in Hartford named for? Sigourney Street is named for Lydia Huntley Sigourney, known as "the sweet singer of Hartford." She was among the first American women to succeed at a literary career and was an important force in feminine sentimental fiction in the second quarter of the 19th century. Her sentimentality endeared her to Hartford residents and thousands others who asked her to write poetic obituaries for loved ones and even pets. In her memoir, "Letters of Life," she estimated that she responded to 2,000 letters annually. The only child of Ezekial and Zerviah Wentworth Huntley, Sigourney was born in 1791 in Norwich, where she operated a private school for young ladies from 1811 to 1813. At the invitation of the Wadsworth family, she moved to Hartford in 1814 and opened a similar school. In 1815, she began writing for periodicals and published her first book, "Moral Pieces, in Prose and Verse." In 1819, she married merchant Charles Sigourney, a widower with three children. After their marriage she wrote anonymously; her husband opposed her using her name. Her writing proceeds went to charitable causes, from the temperance movement to missions at home and abroad. Sigourney wrote more than 50 books and contributed more than two thousand articles to nearly 300 periodicals. Many of her poems appeared in The Courant during the 1830s.

47. Poem Book Index Page
A Butterfly on a Child s Grave, by lydia huntley sigourney. Indian Names, by lydia huntley sigourney. The Cherokee Mother, by lydia huntley sigourney
http://poetrybook.freeservers.com/
Free Web Hosting Provider Web Hosting E-commerce High Speed Internet ... Free Web Page Search the Web
Discover forgotten poems of yesterday
A Butterfly on a Child's Grave by Lydia Huntley Sigourney Indian Names by Lydia Huntley Sigourney The Cherokee Mother by Lydia Huntley Sigourney The Thanksgiving Translated by Harriet Maxwell Converse The City by Richard Burton A Little Story by Anne Reeve Aldrich 'This But A Little Faded Flower by Ellen Clemintine Hawarth The Old Beau by Edgar Fawcett The Tea-Gown by Eugene Field "One, Two, Three!" by H. C. Bunner Speak Gently by David Bates Little Boy Blue by Eugene Field Solitude by Ella Wheeler Wilcox Acquainted With The Night by Robert Frost Resignation by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow The Tortoise Shell Comb by E. F. Ellet (1836) Not Lost by Thomas S. Collier Remember by Christina Rossetti Remembrance by Emily Jane Bronte A Reminiscence by Anne Bronte if(window.OAS_AD) OAS_AD('Bottom');

48. Chapter Chapter 3 Of Index By Simonds History Of American Literature
lydia huntley sigourney (17911865), born at Norwich, Connecticut, and for many years head of a famous select school for girls, which she established at
http://bibliomania.com/2/3/270/1820/21934/3.html
by his townspeople over his grave was dedicated to his memory the first honor of the kind bestowed upon an American poet.
Joseph R. Drake, 1795-1820
The association of Halleck and Drake in the most intimate of friendships is one of the pleasant incidents of our literary history. Joseph Rodman Drake was born in New York, became a student of medicine, wrote but a brief amount of verse, although that was of a high quality, and died at twenty-five. "There will be less sunshine for me hereafter," said Halleck, "now that Joe is gone." The two poets joined in contributing to the New York Evening Post a series of anonymous poems, under the general title of The Croakers . These appeared in 1819; they were light, satiric, often personal in aim, and capital examples of what is frequently called "society verse." They excited a great deal of comment at the time, and are said to have been a subject of conversation in drawing-rooms, book-stores, and coffee-houses on Broadway and throughout the city. One of the best poems in the series was Drake's The American Flag , of which the concluding lines "Forever float that standard sheet!

49. First Editions - Sumner & Stillman
sigourney, Mrs. lydia huntley. SKETCHES. Philadelphia Key Biddle, 1834. 18 pp undated ads. Original dark green diamondgrain cloth with gilt-decorated
http://www.sumnerandstillman.com/Catalog/sumner.cgi/catalog?mv_session_id=yD5tAi

50. Norwich Connecticut
Benedict Arnold apprenticed to the Lathrops, according to Mrs lydia huntley sigourney s Letters of Life, the Lathops looked kindly upon their apprectices,
http://home.sprynet.com/~rblathrop/genealogy/norwichtown/index.htm
Lo-Lathrop Family Heritage Site
Norwich Connecticut
The Dr. Joshua Lathrop House c
Norwichtown, Connecticut

By Suzanne Harle Built in 1763 by Dr. Joshua Lathrop, this home has been restored to its original condition which includes a nine foot cooking fireplace, a smoking chamber in the attic, and a cold storage chamber in the cellar.
One malignant epidemic occured in 1749, which spurred the Rev. Leavenworth of Waterbury to travel on horseback to the Lathrops to obtain some medicine for his suffering people. No drug store in his area towns existed, so the Rev. made the return journey to Norwich in 3 days. Benedict Arnold apprenticed to the Lathrops, according to Mrs Lydia Huntley Sigourney's Letters of Life, the Lathops looked kindly upon their apprectices, receiving them into their own family, and educating them to become useful members of society. Their efforts were wasted on young Benedict. He abused the cats, dogs and horses,dismembered the birds, and stole and crushed their eggs. When sent to the mill for some Indian corn, Arnold would frighten the miller by clinging to the spokes of the revolving wheel, at one time submerging, then again flying through the air, while the miller called him "an imp of the Evil One!" Mrs. Sigourney recalled of Dr. Joshua Lathrop, "his small, well-knit, perfectly erect form, his mild benevolent brow, surmounted by the large round white wig, with its depth of curls, the three-cornered smartly cocked hat, the nicely plaited stock, the rich silver buckles at knee and shoe, the long waistcoat, and fair ruffles over hand and bosom, which marked the gentleman of the old school."

51. Sigourney, Iowa IA, City Profile (Keokuk County) - Hotels, Festivals, Genealogy,
sigourney map pronunciation. sigourney is a city in Keokuk County. It is the county seat. The community was named after lydia huntley sigourney, author
http://www.epodunk.com/cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=7662

52. SIGOURNEY 1756
sigourney. 1756. SILESIA. sigourney (stg erni), lydia huntley,. an American writer, was born at Norwich, Conn., Sept. 1, 1791 Her first publication was
http://chestofbooks.com/reference/The-New-Student-s-Reference-Work-Vol4/pp0061.h
Free Books Reference The New Student's Reference Work Vol4
SIGOURNEY 1756
Titles
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Description
This page of the book is from " The New Student's Reference Work: Volume 4 " by Chandler B. Beach, Frank Morton McMurry and others. SIG O U R NEY SILESIA S i g o u r ney (stg'er-ni), Lyd i a Huntley an American writer, was born at Norwich, Conn., Sept. 1, 1791 Her first publication was Moral Pieces (1815). She compiled books for the young, contributed to magazines and was one of the earliest women in America to enter authorship. She has been called the American Hemans. Connectant, Pocahontas, Tales and Letters to Y^ung Ladies are some of her books. She died at Hartford, June 10, 1865. Consult her autobiographic Letters of Life. Sigs' b ee Cha r les Dwight Kearsarge, Dale, Constellation, Portsmouth and the Blake in the deep-sea explorations undertaken by the United States coast-survey. He was in command of the battleship Maine when it was destroyed in Havana harbor, Feb. 15, 1898. Durir the Spanish-American War he commanded the Uiited States auxiliary cruiser

53. Bud Bloom Poetry: Should The Poems Be The Poet's Legacy?
You might as well ask that question of Robert Carleton Brown, lydia huntley sigourney, William Watson, each of whose work, famous in its day,
http://budbloom.blogspot.com/2006/07/should-poems-be-poets-legacy.html
@import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=28898317"); var BL_backlinkURL = "http://www.blogger.com/dyn-js/backlink_count.js";var BL_blogId = "28898317";
Bud Bloom Poetry
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Should the Poems Be the Poet's Legacy?
In Christian Wiman's editorial, In the Flux That Abolishes Me , from the March 2006 Poetry Magazine (which I just got to yesterday), he talks about receiving manuscripts for submission, written by people who are now dead. The family or executors find poetry left behind, and send it in for hopeful publication, or to answer the question of whether the work is publishable. As we who write can imagine, the great majority will not make it into such a magazine.
Wiman notes that, although unpublished, these poems may get passed down generations. His article ends with this statement:
Perhaps one of these very bundles will makes its way into our offices again in a hundred years, when we shall all be changed.
In the middle of this article, Wiman discusses how most poets who were published in their lifetimes, have readerships that dwindle yearly following their deaths. While making this point, he makes the following statement that struck me:

54. Barry Cassidy Rare Books - Literature
sigourney, lydia huntley Engraved Portrait and Card with Her Autograph 1859. Engraved portrait by G. Parker from a painting by James Herring, image measures
http://www.barrycassidyrarebooks.com/cassidy/bookmain.asp?pg=14&subject=Literatu

55. Keokuk County
The town was named after the author and poet lydia huntley sigourney. She showed her appreciation by providing the trees which were planted on the
http://www.iowacounties.org/About Us/AboutCoGov/County Pages/Keokuk.htm
ISAC About Us Services News Corporate Opportunities ... Links Keokuk County
Date of Origin - 1844
Contact Information
Map

Website
Keokuk County is named for the famous Sac Indian chief. The name means "Watchful Fox," or "He Who Has Been Everywhere." In May 1843 the entire county was established and opened up for settlement. Before this time the county was attached to Washington County. Like most counties, Keokuk County had its share of problems with the location of the county seat. Some wanted to locate the county seat in the geographical center of the county; others wanted to located it in the population center of the county. This argument was finally settled with the location of the county seat at Sigourney, the geographical center of the county, in 1844. The town was named after the author and poet Lydia Huntley Sigourney. She showed her appreciation by providing the trees which were planted on the courthouse grounds, and presenting 50 volumes to the town library. Before the county seat was located at Sigourney, county business was completed at Western City (or Newton Village). County offices consisted of a log cabin and a log schoolhouse.

56. Project MUSE
In lydia huntley sigourney s Death of an Infant, one locates the childish mouth through which Dickinson s childvoiced poems are spoken.
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/emily_dickinson_journal/v012/12.1raymond.html
How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
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This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information. If you have password access to this journal, please login below. (Help with Login)
Login: Password: Raymond, Claire
Emily Dickinson as the Un-named, Buried Child
The Emily Dickinson Journal - Volume 12, Number 1, Spring 2003, pp. 107-122
The Johns Hopkins University Press
Search Journals About MUSE

57. Trinity College
1000 a.m. 100 Broadway, Norwich – Norwich City Hall, lydia huntley sigourney born in Norwich Scotland 1130 a.m. Intersection of Rtes 97 and 14 – Scotland
http://www.trincoll.edu/AboutTrinity/News_Events/trinity_news/071009_ASDbikeride
e-Quad Newsletter All News Releases Trinity in the News The Reporter Magazine ... Calendar of Public Events Office of Communications
300 Summit Street
Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: (860) 297-2140
Fax: (860) 297-2312
communications-office@trincoll.edu

home
about trinity news and events ... trinity news Press Release Historic Bike Tour To Travel Across Connecticut and Make Stop at Trinity American School for the Deaf Celebrates 190th Anniversary With Visits To Historic Sites, Including Trinity College West Hartford, CT, October 9, 2007– In celebration of the 190th Anniversary of the American School for the Deaf (ASD), its alumni, faculty, staff and friends are embarking on a 190-mile Historic Bike Tour. Bicyclists will travel across Connecticut, October 10-13, 2007, visiting sites of significance to the School. State Sen. Jonathan A. Harris will give the cyclists a special send off at the State Capitol on Wednesday, October 12, 2007 at 9:00 a.m. West Hartford Rep. David McCluskey will join the cyclists for Day 1 of the Tour. In each town, bicyclists will visit sites such as the home of ASD graduate and celebrated deaf portrait painter, John Brewster, Jr.; Barney House, where freed slaves from the ship Amistad were welcomed by the family and friends of ASD founders; Yale University, which educated ASD founder Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet; Trinity College, where Thomas Gallaudet II was educated, and where a beautifully carved pew in the Chapel honors Gallaudet’s work; Norwich, home of teacher and deaf education advocate Lydia Huntley Sigourney; and other important locations. The Tour concludes on Homecoming Day at ASD, Saturday, October 13, 2007.

58. WHMC-Columbia--Searing, Laura Redden (1839-1923), Papers, 1846-1963 (C2290)--INV
Emily Howland, Bayard Taylor, and lydia huntley sigourney. . Edward W. Searing, Laura C. Redden (18401923); sigourney, lydia huntley (1791-1865)
http://whmc.umsystem.edu/invent/2290.html
Searing, Laura Redden (1839-1923), Papers, 1846-1963 (C2290)
4 linear feet
Laura Redden, 1871. From collection
C2290 folder 128. For information
about obtaining copies of images contact whmc@umsystem.edu.
INTRODUCTION
The papers of Laura Redden Searing, a poet and author whose works appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, consist of correspondence, newspaper clippings, photographs, and Searing's writings. Also included are correspondence, publicity clippings, and photographs of Searing's daughter, Elsa Searing McGinn.
DONOR INFORMATION
The Laura Redden Searing Papers were donated to the State Historical Society of Missouri by Searing's great-grandson, Thomas McGinn Smith, on 5 January 1998 (Accession No. 5744). Additions to the collection were made on 14 April 1998, 28 July 1998, 12 January 1999, and 16 August 2000. The papers are part of the National Women and Media Collection.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Laura Catherine Redden was born on 9 February 1839 in Somerset County, Maryland. Her family moved to St. Louis, Missouri, when she was a child. At about the age of eleven or twelve, Redden lost her hearing as the result of a bout with spinal meningitis. She spent a brief time with a family in Pekin, Illinois, before enrolling at the Institute for the Deaf and Dumb in Fulton, Missouri, in 1855. In 1858 she returned to St. Louis and took a job as editor of the St. Louis Presbyterian and also wrote a number of poems and articles that appeared in the St. Louis Republican under the penname Howard Glyndon.

59. Blacks, Indians, Women: 1800-1899 (Primary Sources)
sigourney, lydia huntley. Pocahontas and Other Poems. 1841. Simms, William Gilmore. The Damsel of Darien. 1839. Snelling, William Joseph.
http://www.asle.umn.edu/archive/biblios/howarth1.html
Blacks, Indians, Women: 1800-1899 (Primary Sources)
William Howarth, Princeton Univ.
Blacks, Indians, Women: 1800-1850 (Primary Sources)
Allen, Paul. History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark. 1814. Beecher, Catharine Esther. The Evils Suffered By American Women and . . . Children. 1846. Campbell, Thomas. Gertrude of Wyoming. 1809. Catlin, George. The Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians. 1841. Child, Lydia Maria. Hobomok. 1824. Cooper, James Fenimore. The Last of the Mohicans: A Narrative of 1757. 1826. Cooper, James Fenimore. Wyandotte; or, The Hutted Knoll. 1843. Copway, George. The Ojibway Conquest. 1850. Darley, Felix Octavius Carr. Scenes in Indian Life. 1843. Doddridge, Joseph. Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars of Virginia and Pennsylvania from 1763 to 1783. 1824. Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. 1845. Du Ponceau, Pierre Etienne. Grammatical System of Some of the Languages of the Indian Nations of North America. 1838. Eastman, Mary H. Dacotah, or Life and Legends of the Sioux Around Fort Snelling. 1849.

60. BRGMORRI Guide To The George Pope Morris Collection Of Papers
1 leaf H. Manuscript box sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. 2 ALS to General George P. Morris 1853 Dec. 20; 1853 Dec. 24 in. corr. 1 p.; 2 p. Letter of Dec.
http://www.nypl.org/research/manuscripts/berg/brgmorri.xml
BRGMORRI Guide to the George Pope Morris collection of papers, Processed by Staff; Machine-readable finding aid created by Lynn Lobash and Nina Schneider. Machine readable finding aid created Description is in English Berg Coll MSS Morris Guide to the George Pope Morris collection of papers, The Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature. The New York Public Library New York, New York The Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature. New York Public Library. Room 320. Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street New York, NY 10018-2788 brgref@nypl.org http://nypl.org/research/chss/spe/brg/berg.html Processed by: Staff Date Completed: Encoded By: Lynn Lobash and Nina Schneider Processed and encoded with the generous support of the Gladys Kreible Delmas Foundation. Descriptive Summary George Pope Morris collection of papers, Morris, George Pope, 1802-1864. Berg Coll MSS Morris 33 items The New York Public Library. The Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature. New York, New York

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