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ANALYTIC

Title:  
Henry Drinker (1734-1809)
Parent:
American Philosophical Society. Memoirs, v.227
Creator:
Bell, Whitfield J. (Whitfield Jenks), 1914-
Publication:
Philadelphia, Pa, 1999.
Notes:  
Includes bibliographical references.
Call #:  
506.73 Am4me v.227
Extent:
p. 298-305. : port. ; 26 cm.



ANALYTIC

Title:  
The ordeal of Elizabeth Drinker
Parent:
Pennsylvania history, v.47, no.2
Creator:
Radbill, Kenneth Allan, 1939-
Publication:
Philadelphia], 1980.
Call #:  
974.8 P412 v.47, no.2
Extent:
p.147-172 : map ; 23 cm.



BOOK

Title:  
World of trouble: a Philadelphia Quaker family's journey through the American Revolution
Creator:
Godbeer, Richard
Publication:
Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn, [c2019]
Notes:  
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Call #:  
B D833g
Extent:
xiii, 460 pages : illustrations, facsimiles, portraits ; 25 cm.



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1790-1796
Abstract:  

These papers include letters, reports, minutes, memoranda, and addresses to Indian chiefs, selected from the Pickering papers from the Massachusetts Historical Society. Includes letters and documents pertaining to Pickering, Henry Knox, John Sergeant, Jasper Parrish and Samuel Kirkland; relates to New York and Western Indian affairs, principally Iroquois, but also Nanticoke, Shawano, Delaware, Wyandot, Miami, Seneca.
Call #:  
Mss.Film.638and645
Extent:
4 microfilm_reel(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1792-1813
Abstract:  

This item contains entries about prominent people (primarily accounts of their deaths); Philadelphia events and gossip; the Pennsylvania Hospital; questions for Meriwether Lewis on Indian physical history, medicine, morals, and religion; and his views on marriage, religion, physicians, etc. Also includes meeting with Captain Wells and Little Turtle; speculations on Indian skin color at the equator.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R89c
Extent:
1 volume(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1692 - Circa 1921
Abstract:  

An important 18th century radical republican theorist and political writer, Thomas Paine was a leading figure in the American Revolution. Despite his humble beginnings and lack of formal education, his reasoned and persuasive writings not only influenced nascent American republican ideology, but profoundly affected the perception of government in England and France as well. His three most influential works are Common Sense (1776), The Rights of Man (1791-1792), and The Age of Reason (1794, 1795, 1807). The Richard Gimbel Collection is a heterogeneous mix of items connected only by the fact that they were all collected by Gimbel (1898-1970) and that most were written by, to, or about the revolutionary Paine. Of primary importance are the approximately sixty-five letters or manuscripts in Paine's own hand, including Paine's 1776 manuscript notes for Common Sense, his letter of January 10, 1781, in which he takes leave of his former commanding officer, Nathanael Greene, and his January 6, 1789 letter to Kitty Nicholson Few, in which he writes of his view of matrimony and other personal matters. The collection includes a series of correspondence between Thomas Paine and Samuel Adams, which were originally marked "forgeries," these appear instead simply to be the letters of two men bearing famous names.
Call #:  
Mss.B.P165
Extent:
176 item(s)