1VI. Albert Gallatin’s Comments , 11 July 1803 (Jefferson Papers)
Hays Mars. W. Tenessee : for the Treasury secretary’s efforts to replace Robert Hays, marshal of Tennessee’s western district, see
, and shall give him seasonable notice to quit. Shall I sell your fresh and Salt hay soon or wait till Spring? The Spring chance for a price being fairest, but I am afraid of Cooks horse or some one’s else being in great straits for food before the Winter is over—There is but... a small quantity of fresh hay to steal or sell and the Salt hay is safe enough.
3Louisa Catherine Adams to John Quincy Adams, 18 October 1804 (Adams Papers)
...Gen. James Wilkinson, his wife, Ann Biddle Wilkinson (d. 1807), and their sons James Biddle (ca. 1783–1813) and Joseph Biddle (ca. 1786–1865) (Ann Biddle Wilkinson, N. Wilkinson, and Thomas Robson Hay, “Letters of Mrs. Ann Biddle Wilkinson from Kentucky, 1788–1789,”
.... John Lowell for the purchase of his two houses which he built some years since, opposite Mr: William Foster’s, just below the bottom of the Mall—I do not mean the houses where the old hay-market Theatre stood, but those somewhat lower down the Street—I believe you will recollect them—One of them will I think answer our purpose to reside in when we return to Boston; better than any other...
5Abigail Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams, 12 July 1801 (Adams Papers)
I shall look daily for you You will find your Father in his Feilds attending to his Hay makers, and your Mother buisily occupied in the domestic concerns of her Family. I regreet that a fortnight of sharp drought has Shorn of many of the Beauties we had in rich luxurence, the verdure of the Grass... ...we have a pure air, the crops of Hay have been abundant upon this Spot where 8 years...
6From James Madison to I. Hays and C. Amory, 22 April 1804 (Abstract) (Madison Papers)
§ To I. Hays and C. Amory
7From Thomas Jefferson to Edmund Bacon, 8 February 1807 (Jefferson Papers)
...ground with mr Craven for oat grounds, if the difficulty respecting the sowing it with clover can be got over. you know I meant the oat ground should be sowed with clover, that we may begin to raise hay, or at least summer forage for ourselves. I have engaged 2. bushels of seed for this purpose which will go by Davy. he must be here on the 7th. of March, & consequently he should leave...
8From Thomas Jefferson to Edmund Bacon, 24 January 1809 (Jefferson Papers)
tons of hay @ 3/6
9From Thomas Jefferson to John H. Craven, 3 May 1807 (Jefferson Papers)
by hay at 5/
10From Thomas Jefferson to John H. Craven, 12 January 1808 (Jefferson Papers)
...given mr Higginbotham an order, I could judge of it only from a general view of what we had had from you in the course of the year. that is to say, the ordinary supplies of butter, some hay or fodder probably, and 100. barrels of corn which mr Bacon told me he had agreed for. judging of these from last year’s account & including mr Dinsmore’s account, I had not supposed they passed 130...