Box 1
Contains 80 Results:
Correspondence of Dr. C.E. Godfrey, New Jersey Office of Adjutant General, to Lucy Lewis Funsten and Attaway M. Lewis about Captain George Lewis, 7 letters, 1902-1907
Godfrey requests any information about Captain George Lewis (1757-1821), an officer in the Commander-in-Chief’s Guard, and his family, or a likeness or image of Lewis, for his book “The Commander-in-Chief’s Guard, Revolutionary War” (1902); thanks her for allowing him to photograph the payroll of Captain Lewis’ troop, which is the only one in existence and warns her about the need for its care, also sharing the interest of Mr. Ford, Library of Congress, in its purchase (January 8, 1903).
James M. Goggin to George Washington Lewis, 1854 September 25
Encloses a letter (not present) from their mutual friend, Henry P. Irving of Richmond, Virginia, and expresses the hope of still meeting Lewis before leaving the county.
William T. Goggin to George Washington Lewis, 1859 June 16
Despite his loss in the recent political contest, Goggin is thankful for the formation of new friendships and the renewal of old friendships, none more than his with Lewis.
Horace Edwin Hayden (1837-1917), Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, to Miss Lewis, 1893 August 28
Writes a detailed letter about the Lewis genealogy in the United States and explains why he cannot use her Lewis data in his book.
Robert Mercer Taliaferro Hunter (1809-1887) to George Washington Lewis, 2 letters, 1846 April 6 and 1862 July 8
Thomas Jefferson to George Washington Lewis, Typescript copy, 1825 October 25
Provides a detailed list of historical authors to read and study for a good grasp of history, and an elementary work for law, written to Lewis as a student at the University of Virginia.
Amos Kindale, 4th Auditor, to Simon Snooks, “A Poetical Epistle”, undated
The George Washington Lewis papers consists chiefly of correspondence to and from George Washington Lewis and between other family members, but also includes a few photographs of the Lewis family and the homes of "Claymont", "Shellfield" and "Marmion"; a plat of "Claymont"; newsclippings; notes on Lewis family history and genealogy; and a few financial and legal documents.
George Washington Lewis and others to Secretary of the Navy, George E. Badger (1795-1866), 7 letters, 1841
George Washington Lewis to Richard Baylor, 1855 June 30
Since the harvest has been so good, he asks Baylor to send a contribution to help the ladies’ fund extricate the local neighborhood church from indebtedness.
George Washington Lewis to his daughter, Alice Maria Lewis Wallace, 1875-1877
George Washington Lewis to his son, Henry Bankhead Lewis, 9 letters, 1849-1850, 1861
The George Washington Lewis papers consists chiefly of correspondence to and from George Washington Lewis and between other family members, but also includes a few photographs of the Lewis family and the homes of "Claymont", "Shellfield" and "Marmion"; a plat of "Claymont"; newsclippings; notes on Lewis family history and genealogy; and a few financial and legal documents.
George Washington Lewis to his wife, Jane Brockenbrough Lewis, 1843 January 5
George Washington Lewis to his daughter, Louisa Lewis, 4 letters, 1843, 1849, 1863
George Washington Lewis to his wife, Lucy Anne Robb Lewis, 5 letters, 1857-1873
George Washington Lewis to his son, Dr. Thomas M. Lewis, 1877 June 20
Lewis writes to his son after a visit and says how much he misses him and Georgie, his only grandchild. Hopes that he will have a hand in his education when the time comes. States that his family is his chief comfort in old age.
George Washington Lewis to his grandmother, Sarah A. (“Sally”) Miller, Albany, Westmoreland County, Virginia, 3 letters, 1818-1835
Writes from "Clifton Hill," Morganfield, Kentucky, as a young boy of family news (March 20, 1818); from White Sulphur Springs (January 28, 1822) and from “Claymont” as a grown man writing of the safe arrival of his Aunt Harriet (October 29, 1835).
George Washington Lewis to Robert E. Scott, 1852 May 7
Discusses in detail the recent Whig Convention and the need for the Northern part of the Whig party to honor the Compromise and enforce the laws concerning fugitive enslaved persons laws or have a different organization altogether. But Lewis also does not want to coalesce with the Democratic party. He feels that Fillmore would come the nearest of getting the Virginia vote.
George Washington Lewis to Miss Julia Tayloe, Powhatan, 1854 January 12
Lewis thanks her for her beautiful New Year’s gift.
George Washington Lewis to “Dear Sir” , 1830 October 2
Lewis discusses in detail the possibility of increasing Henry Clay’s popularity in Virginia and other political details.