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County Tax Receipt, John B. Cornell, December 13, 1884, John B. Cornell Dec 1884

County Tax Receipt, John B. Cornell, December 13, 1884, John B. Cornell

The Lucinda Lenore Merriss Cornell Collection: Ephemera

Printed personal property tax for John B. Cornell from the Franklin County Treasury, dated December 13, 1884. The total is twenty eight dollars and thirteen cents. Signed by Geo. Beck and C. S. Beale.


County Tax Receipt, Lucinda L. Cornell, December 13, 1884, Lucinda L. Cornell Dec 1884

County Tax Receipt, Lucinda L. Cornell, December 13, 1884, Lucinda L. Cornell

The Lucinda Lenore Merriss Cornell Collection: Ephemera

Printed personal property tax for Lucinda L. Cornell from the Franklin County Treasury, dated December 13, 1884. The total is eleven dollars and twenty cents. Signed by Geo. Beck and C. S. Becke


County Tax Receipt, John B. Cornell, July 8, 1884, John B. Cornell Jul 1884

County Tax Receipt, John B. Cornell, July 8, 1884, John B. Cornell

The Lucinda Lenore Merriss Cornell Collection: Ephemera

Printed personal property tax for John B. Cornell from the Franklin County Treasury, dated July 8, 1884. The total is twenty six dollars and fifty six cents. Signed by Geo. Beck and [unknown] Zuber.


County Tax Receipt, Lucinda L. Cornell, July 8, 1884, Lucinda L. Cornell Jul 1884

County Tax Receipt, Lucinda L. Cornell, July 8, 1884, Lucinda L. Cornell

The Lucinda Lenore Merriss Cornell Collection: Ephemera

Printed personal property tax for Lucinda L. Cornell from the Franklin County Treasury, dated July 8, 1884. The total is ten dollars and thirteen cents. Signed by Geo. Beck and [unknown] Zuber.


Ex-President Cleveland Profited By Woman’S Work, William Kennedy Brown Jan 1884

Ex-President Cleveland Profited By Woman’S Work, William Kennedy Brown

William Kennedy Brown Papers

William Kennedy Brown argues that former president Grover Cleveland should respect the work of women in political reform movements because he benefited from that work in the 1884 presidential election. In that election, Cleveland won New York, in part because the temperance candidate split off a small part of the Republican vote, elevating him to the Presidency. Martha McClellan Brown was deeply involved in the New York temperance movement in the years leading up to 1884. The essay was written ca. 1884.