11From Thomas Jefferson to George Jefferson, 24 April 1807 (Jefferson Papers)
a keg. crackers.
12Bernard Peyton to Thomas Jefferson, 28 July 1819 (Jefferson Papers)
Crackers,
13John Hemmings to Thomas Jefferson, 2 November 1819 (Jefferson Papers)
crackers [index entry] food; crackers [index entry]
14To Thomas Jefferson from John Barnes, 10 February 1803 (Jefferson Papers)
Jamesons Crackersjamesons crackers
15To Thomas Jefferson from Albert Gallatin, 28 November 1801 (Jefferson Papers)
...27 Nov., listing “Stores” of beef and pork, port, wine, candles, “a Small quantity coffee Tea & Sugar,” muskets, pistols, and gunpowder, and a “Cargo” of tobacco, rum, flour, bread, crackers, oars, 937 feet of plank, 241 feet of scantling, 54 pairs of handcuffs, chains, bolts, long bars, glass beads, and 37 shaken hogsheads (
16To Thomas Jefferson from Albert Gallatin, 20 [i.e. 21] November 1801 (Jefferson Papers)
to go 30 miles up the Patuxent River, instead of to Norfolk, where the vessel was said to belong; left without papers, the schooner’s cargo includes tobacco, rum, flour, bread, crackers, and wine; an inspector and guard have been placed on board, but the cargo has not been landed “for want of a necessary warehouse”; in closing, Briscoe requests, “The man who delivers you this is...
17To Thomas Jefferson from Abigail Adams, 7 October 17[85] (Jefferson Papers)
...against the custom House, and hope they will meet your approbation. I think them finer than the pattern, but it is difficult judging by so small a Scrap. I have also bought you two pairs of Nut crackers for which I gave four Shillings. We [find them so?] convenient that I thought they would be equally so to you. The]re is the article of Irish linen which is much Superiour here to any...
18Abigail Adams to Thomas Jefferson, 7 October 1785 (Adams Papers)
I have also bought you two pair of Nut crackers for which I gave four shillings, we
19Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr., to Henry Knox, 9 October 1794 (Washington Papers)
...n.1), but omits the tents. Nineteen damask tablecloths and five breakfast tablecloths were sent, and the foodstuffs included 99 pounds of coffee and 24 pounds of hyson and souchong tea, 10 kegs of crackers, 22 pounds of pearl-barley, 25 pounds of “Superfine chocolate,” 2 barrels of sugar (loaf and muscovado), 10 gallons of vinegar, 8 pounds of ground pepper and 4 bottles of cayenne pepper...
20Nicholas P. Trist to James Madison, 20 May 1829 (Madison Papers)
...continued throughout the day & was so profuse in the afternoon as to require me to take to my bed.
The symptoms are not such, however, as to occasion much uneasiness: & I feel great confidence in the cracker
& dried fig regimen which I have already commenced. Please say nothing of this, to