Thomas Jefferson Papers
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To Thomas Jefferson from Francis Abraham, 17 September 1804

From Francis Abraham

Orange Springs 17th: Septr 1804

Honourd; Sir

At this time I am in very Great Distress and Now Sir Beg your assistance if you please I am oweing abought one hundred and Forty Dollars and have no way of Raising it without Borrowing it. and I thinke you to be the moste proper Gentleman of my acquaintances to aske a Favour of that Kinde of if you will be so Good as to Lende me one hundred and Fifty Dollars untill march next you Shall Surely have the money on the First Day of March; there is not as much money Due me in the General post office or I would not aske it of you, and I do not Like to aske them for money when they Do not owe me,

your compliance will much oblige your Moste obdt Servant

Francis Abraham

P.S. Sir you will please to answer me at the orange Springs

F. Abm.

RC (MHi); endorsed by TJ as received 18 Sep. and so recorded in SJL.

Francis Abraham was postmaster of Orange Springs, Virginia. Gideon Granger later hired him to carry the mail from Coweta in the Lower Creek country to New Orleans (Stets, Postmasters description begins Robert J. Stets, Postmasters & Postoffices of the United States 1782-1811, Lake Oswego, Ore., 1994 description ends , 18, 90; Terr. Papers description begins Clarence E. Carter and John Porter Bloom, eds., The Territorial Papers of the United States, Washington, D.C., 1934-75, 28 vols. description ends , 5:395; 9:418; Vol. 36:154-5n).

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