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    • Cabell, Joseph Carrington
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    • Jefferson, Thomas
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    • post-Madison Presidency

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Documents filtered by: Author="Cabell, Joseph Carrington" AND Recipient="Jefferson, Thomas" AND Period="post-Madison Presidency"
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I have received your letter of 31 st ult. and return you many thanks for the kind & friendly expressions it contains. It is not in my nature to resist such an appeal. I this day handed into the office of the Enquirer a notification that I should again be a candidate . We will pass on to matters of more importance. I have shewn your letter to Gen l Breckenridge & M r Johnson , who seemed (&...
I return you the enclosed paper calling a meeting of the Visitors of the University , having procured the signatures of M r Johnson & Gen l Taylor , and annexed my own, as requested in your favor of 30 ult . I have also shewn the paper to Governor Randolph , & the course pursued is satisfactory to him & the Executive . A Bill in favor of the University
The University Bill passed to a second reading in the House of Delegates by a majority of one vote only. It is now on its third reading & will be read to-morrow. Our friends, I think, are encreasing. Gen l Blackburn will support it. M r Garland came over & voted for it. If we lose the Bill in the lower House , we shall hang on upon the Poor school bill . I hope we shall work it thro’, in one...
I have the pleasing satisfaction to inform you that the University Bill passed yesterday, not exactly in the shape its friends preferred, yet in one not very exceptionable. The first intelligence of its passage in the lower House was conveyed to us in the Senate Chamber by a tumultuous noise below, like that which is usual on the adjournment of the House . This was the tumult of rejoicing...
I have not deemed it necessary to write you in reply to your letter relative to the charter of W m & Mary College , because the passage of the University Bill rendered it unnecessary. But altho’ I shall see you on the first monday in next month, yet it becomes necessary that I should say a few words to you at this time. The Bill concerning the appropriation of the Literary Fund , by which the...
I am much concerned not to be able to attend the meeting of the Visitors or the Albemarle election, in consequence of an indisposition contracted in travelling thro the late severe weather. I hope my friends will make known the cause of my absence from the election, and make my apology to the people. I shall endeavor to call on you on my way down the country. I profit of the opportunity by M r...
It was not untill the 25 th ins t that I found my health sufficiently restored to enable me to set out for the lower country. By travelling slowly & lying down some hours in the day I was enabled to get down from my Brother ’s in three days, but not without being compelled to go to bed with a high fever at Powhatan Court House , which continued half a day & one night. I arrived here much...
My servant comes down to M r Minor ’s on business relative to my farm, and I profit of the opportunity to drop you a line, and to assure you that I should have been at Monticello a month ago, but for a return of bad health. I arrived here on 2 d June : was employed four or five weeks in necessary attention to my affairs, when I had an attack of the prevailing dyssentery, from the effects of...
By the last mail I received the Circular of Gen l Cocke & yourself proposing to the Visitors to omit the regular autumnal meeting, and in lieu thereof to hold a special meeting on the wednesday preceding the meeting of the Assembly . The reasons stated in the circular in support of this proposition are entirely satisfactory to my mind. I shall accordingly decline carrying M rs Cabell with me...
I most heartily regret to be under the necessity of again apologizing for my absence from the meeting of the Visitors . The cause of my disappointment is an inflamed ulcer on one of my ears, the character & tendency of which Gen l Cocke will more particularly explain to you. I am pursuing a course recommended by two Physicians in Richmond , and thus far approved by Doct: Smith of this place....