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1.Title:  Rebecca Gratz and Sarah G. Moses Diaries (1807, 1832-1846)
 Dates:  1807 - 1846 
 Extent:  8 volumes  
 Locations:  Baltimore | Charleston | Cleveland | Detroit | Lexington | Nashville | New York | Niagara Falls | Philadelphia | Richmond | Rochester | Savannah | Washington D.C. | Wheeling | Wilmington, North Carolina 
 Abstract:  The Gratz Family Papers include at least two bound volumes and six travel diary fragments of Jewish women in the antebellum period (1807-1846). The first, dated 1807, recounts a trip taken by Rebecca Gratz from Louisville to Nashville in the early national period (6/3-12/8/1807). The second bound volume can be definitively attributed to Sarah G. Moses, although the handwriting in the other fragments bears some resemblance. Recorded between 8/9-11/2/1832, Moses' bound volume recounts Philadelphia local affairs, weather, her recreational activities (e.g. reading, sewing, and embroidery), education, and religious practices (Moses makes numerous mentions of going to "Synagogue"). Notably, she frets the cholera epidemic in an early entry, excerpted in Selected Quotations (8/9/1832). Two diary fragments recount travels from New York City upstate (7/27-8/6/1842) as well as a trip between Savannah and Richmond (commenced 4/30/1846). The remaining fragments were clearly recorded in the antebellum period, but are difficult to date: There's a fragment recounting a trip between Saint Louis and Lexington, another (possibly related) fragment that details a journey from Lexington through the Alleghenies and finally to Baltimore, and two distinct midwestern tours that take the diarist from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River and from Detroit to Cleveland. Notably, the latter journey must have been recorded sometime between the mid-1830s and mid-1840s, as it references an animated conversation with a Locofoco on a stagecoach (also excerpted in Selected Quotations). These fragments ought to interest scholars researching women's history, Jewish studies, and appalachia and the American South during the antebellum period. 
    
 
    
The Gratz Family Papers include at least two bound volumes and six travel diary fragments of Jewish women in the antebellum period (1807-1846). The first, dated 1807, recounts a trip taken by Rebecca Gratz from Louisville to Nashville in the early national period (6/3-12/8/1807). The second bound volume can be definitively attributed to Sarah G. Moses, although the handwriting in the other fragments bears some resemblance. Recorded between 8/9-11/2/1832, Moses' bound volume recounts Philadelphia local affairs, weather, her recreational activities (e.g. reading, sewing, and embroidery), education, and religious practices (Moses makes numerous mentions of going to "Synagogue"). Notably, she frets the cholera epidemic in an early entry, excerpted in Selected Quotations (8/9/1832). Two diary fragments recount travels from New York City upstate (7/27-8/6/1842) as well as a trip between Savannah and Richmond (commenced 4/30/1846). The remaining fragments were clearly recorded in the antebellum period, but are difficult to date: There's a fragment recounting a trip between Saint Louis and Lexington, another (possibly related) fragment that details a journey from Lexington through the Alleghenies and finally to Baltimore, and two distinct midwestern tours that take the diarist from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River and from Detroit to Cleveland. Notably, the latter journey must have been recorded sometime between the mid-1830s and mid-1840s, as it references an animated conversation with a Locofoco on a stagecoach (also excerpted in Selected Quotations). These fragments ought to interest scholars researching women's history, Jewish studies, and appalachia and the American South during the antebellum period.
 
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  Selected Quotations
  • Sarah G. Moses: "This day has been one of universal humiliation and prayer on account of the great increase of that dreadful pestilence 'The Choldera'" (8/9/1832)

  • Locofoco on stagecoach: "Slept in the stage [coach] on board of which was an odd Locofoco--who talked politics mostly basely & at the witching hour of night" (travel diary fragment beginning in Detroit)

  • Appalachian towns: "All the Western villages have a dingy look, so unlike the New England ones" (travel diary fragment beginning in 11/10)
 
 Subjects:  Diaries. | Cholera. | Philadelphia history | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. | United States--Politics and government--1783-1865. | Women--History. 
 Collection:  Gratz Family Papers  (Mss.Ms.Coll.72)  
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2.Title:  Robert Woodruff Journal (1785-1788)
 Dates:  1785 - 1788 
 Extent:  1 volume  
 Locations:  Annapolis | Baltimore | Bath | Boston | Cabin Point | Charleston | Elizabethtown | Exeter | Falmouth | Fredericksburg | Georgetown | Halifax | London | Middleton | Murrells Inlet | New Brunswick | New York | Newbern | Newport | Newtown | Norfolk | Petersburg | Philadelphia | Princeton | Providence | Richmond | Savannah | Tarboro | Trenton | Williamsburg | Wilmington | Wilmington, North Carolina 
 Abstract:  As secretary to John Anstey, Loyalists' Claims Commissioner, Robert Woodruff offers a detailed record of the U.S. in the early national period from the unique vantage of an English loyalist. His journal (1785-1788) documents his trip through the Northeastern, mid-Atlantic, and Southeastern states (as far south as Georgia). In his travels, Woodruff references many colonial leaders, including George Washington (10/27/1986), Samuel Vaughan (11/2/1786), and Benjamin Franklin (11/4/1786). Notably, Woodruff dines in house where "Lord Cornwallis in December 1776 held a council of war whether he should cross the Delaware to attack General Washington" (10/30/1786), witnesses Franklin's reelection as President of the Pennsylvania state house (11/4/1786), and mentions the American Philosophical Society (5/8/1787). 
    
 
    
As secretary to John Anstey, Loyalists' Claims Commissioner, Robert Woodruff offers a detailed record of the U.S. in the early national period from the unique vantage of an English loyalist. His journal (1785-1788) documents his trip through the Northeastern, mid-Atlantic, and Southeastern states (as far south as Georgia). In his travels, Woodruff references many colonial leaders, including George Washington (10/27/1986), Samuel Vaughan (11/2/1786), and Benjamin Franklin (11/4/1786). Notably, Woodruff dines in house where "Lord Cornwallis in December 1776 held a council of war whether he should cross the Delaware to attack General Washington" (10/30/1786), witnesses Franklin's reelection as President of the Pennsylvania state house (11/4/1786), and mentions the American Philosophical Society (5/8/1787).
 
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  Selected Quotations
  • "Went to the State house to see the Election of President, Vice President of the State—this is performed at a joint meeting of the two Branches of the Legislature—and the Mode of Election is by Ballot—At this time the president Dr. Franklin was unanimously re-elected, there being but one dissentient Ballot, which was put in by himself in Favor of a Mr. Biddle, who was candidate for the Office of Vice President, and elected by a small Majority—his competitions was a general Muhlenberg" (11/4/1786)

  • "[T]he College in this Town [Princeton] is a handsome stone Edifice regularly built with a large square in Front…There are about 100 Students in the College—it was Vacation time—the Constitution of the College is different from those of Eton or Westminster, or of the two universities—not being perfectly a school or perfectly a College" (10/27/1786)

  • "The State of Georgia is the most Southern of the United States…Georgia is increasing daily, owing to the prodigious Number of Emigrants since the Peace—I am credibly informed, that in Wilks County at the Commencement of the War there were not twelve Families, but that last year the Returns made to the General Assembly it appeared there were in that County—12537 Whites & 4723 Blacks" (2/6/1788)
 
 Subjects:  American Philosophical Society. | Constitutional conventions--United States. | Diaries. | Diplomacy. | Harvard University. | Indians of North America. | Native America | Travel. | Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790. | Muhlenberg, Henry, 1753-1815. | Loyalist | Philadelphia history | Princeton University. | Seafaring life. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. | United States--Politics and government--1783-1809. | Urban planning and environment | Washington, George, 1732-1799. | Weather. 
 Collection:  Robert Woodruff journal. December 17, 1785 - May 1, 1788  (Mss.917.4.W852)  
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