Showing 9751 - 9760 of +10000 Records
Thomas Edes requesting information about his son's enlistment
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Maine Volunteer Militia (Post-Civil War)
H. N. Bolster sending a check for $120.00 to pay for rifle muskets sent to Paris
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Maine Volunteer Militia (Post-Civil War)
W. M. McAuthor requesting information about the war of 1812 and David Hardy from the Maine Militia
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Maine Volunteer Militia (Post-Civil War)
N. P. [Pauk] requesting the address of major. John M. Gould
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Maine Volunteer Militia (Post-Civil War)
O. P. S. Blacke, acting commissionor of the Department of the Interior, requesting rolls from 1878 be sent back to him
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Maine Volunteer Militia (Post-Civil War)
Calvin G. SR. Nowlton requesting informaition about state pension
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Maine Volunteer Militia (Post-Civil War)
Letter re Death of Rep Jonathan Cilley, 1838
- An undated letter discussing the death of United States Representative Jonathan Cilley from Thomaston. The author is unknown, but they may have been J.A. Chandler, the clerk of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court. Before his election to Congress, Cilley served as the Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives. He was the son-in-law of Hezekiah Prince, a merchant from Thomaston.Jonathan Cilley, an abolitionist, was challenged to a duel by James Watson Webb, a newspaper editor from New York, after Cilley accused him of corruption. William Graves, a legislator from Kentucky, served as Webb's stand-in and killed Cilley on February 24, 1838.
- Type: OBJECT
- Collection: Letter Regarding the Death of U.S. Representative Jonathan Cilley