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Letter From George Sibley To Josiah Johnston, December 15, 1829, George Champlin Sibley
Letter From George Sibley To Josiah Johnston, December 15, 1829, George Champlin Sibley
George Champlin Sibley Papers
Transcript of Letter from George Sibley to brother-in-law, Josiah Johnston, December 15, 1829. Sibley discusses politics; his debt; paying his debt by selling his land; proposing that the land he owns near Fort Osage, be used as an army garrison.
Letter From Charles Carroll Of Carrollton Concerning Outstanding Debt Owed Him. 1829., Charles Carroll Iii, Of Carrollton
Letter From Charles Carroll Of Carrollton Concerning Outstanding Debt Owed Him. 1829., Charles Carroll Iii, Of Carrollton
Broadus R. Littlejohn, Jr. Manuscript and Ephemera Collection
Charles Carroll of Carrollton was a wealthy Maryland planter and the last signer of the Declaration of Independence to die. This letter, concerning an outstanding debt owed to him, was written 3 years before his death at age 95.
Letter From George Sibley To Josiah Johnston, February 6, 1829, George Champlin Sibley
Letter From George Sibley To Josiah Johnston, February 6, 1829, George Champlin Sibley
George Champlin Sibley Papers
Transcript of Letter from George Sibley to brother-in-law, Josiah Johnston, February 6, 1829. Sibley discusses that he is worried the government will not reimburse him for expenses he paid for while surveying the Santa Fe Trail.