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Results 4891-4920 of 184,431 sorted by date (descending)
I have the pleasure to own the reception of your Letters of the 20 May, 29 th . September, & 8 th Oct.—the first and the last of them with Enclosures for M r Tho s Appleton, the United States Consul at Leghorn, to whom they were duly forwarded.—That of the 29 th September contained, or rather was accompanied by a Bill of Exchange for £112..10.—the proceeds of which I immediately remitted to M...
I return the letters from Mr. Gilmer inclosed in yours of Novr. 30. His account of the engaged Professors is very encouraging. It is a happy circumstance that none of them are beyond the ages mentioned. They will be the less inflexible in their habits, the more improveable in their qualifications, and will last the lo⟨n⟩ger. It would seem that Gilmer’s mind leans now to the station he declined...
Inclosed I send, and ask your acceptance of, one right to use my New Patent Pump for raising water Or other Liquids by weight, which I have obtained from the Government of the United States under date of the 20th. Nov. 1824. It is made of iron and of course will be durable, usefull and of great convenience. It will be so arranged and fixed, as to draw water from a well, in a tube of an half...
The Honble. Thomas Jefferson of Albemarle in this State, is hereby authorized to use one right, for himself or his heirs, of my New Patent Pump for raising water or other liquids by Weight, for 14 years from the 20th Nov. 1824 free of any charge for the Patent fee. Given from under my hand and seal of the above Date. MHi .
J. A. G. Davis presents his compliments to M r Jefferson4 and having just procured from the lower country, some oysters which he knows to be sound, takes the liberty of sending him part of them. MHi .
During my illness, which still confines me to my room, I have sounded Torrey, as to the Professorship of Natural history. With very high expectations from the university, he for particular reasons, prefers West Point. The next best person I can hear of, and undoubtedly superior to any I saw in Gr. B is D r J. P. Emmet, son of the eminent Counsel of New York. He I find will accept it with...
I return the letters from M r Gilmer enclosed in yours of Nov r 30. His account of the engaged Professors is very encouraging. It is a happy circumstance that none of them are beyond the ages mentioned. They will be the less inflexible in their habits, the more improveable in their qualifications, and will last the longer. It would seem that Gilmer’s mind leans now to the station he declined...
I take infinite pleasure in presenting you with a copy of a small work, entitled Garnetts Lectures.—It is but a few days since I passed it through the press.—and I still waiting for a plate which I expect on from Philadelphia, designed as a frontispiece, before the work is in as complete a state as I wish to see it. If on perusing it, you should find its merits such as would draw from your...
Above you have the measurement of dome of the Rotunda above the steps—I also send you a Copy of the contracts for the Hotels that I propose making for your inspection and amendments. Measurement of the Dome from the top of the last step to the center of the Sky light 27 feet 5 inches. ViU : Thomas Jefferson Papers (Proctor’s Papers).
The Rev d Mr Patterson and the Rev d Mr Fullerton are on their Way to spend the Winter in the South— they are Desirous of Seeing the University, & of paying their respects to you—I have therefore taken the Liberty of giving them this letter of Introduction— CSmH : Jefferson File.
Permit me, to take the liberty, of introducing to you my nephew Richard Kidder Meade, son of my brother in law of that name. His father has a family of children and wishes to locate himself at or near to the University. He owns a large estate in lands and slaves in Brunswick county. He wishes to sell out his lands, and with the funds purchase other lands in Albemarle whereon to settle his...
In addition to former favours I have to Request the goodness of you to be so Verry oblidgeing to Solicite James Monroe Esq by Letter to be So Very good as to grant me the Appointment of Minister Plenip ty to Portugall or Mexieco as I Beleive myself Qualified for Business of any kind Having Served my Country faithfully in Peace and war I think myself Entitled to Enjoy its favours in any Degree...
In a work, on which I have been some years engaged, I propose to insert a note, that will involve an opinion, ascribed to you, in which I coincide, but knowing the delicacy with which such a subject, and such a name as yours should be treated, I beg your attention to the subjoined transcript. The matter, on which my comment is made, is in Govr. Winthrop’s History p. 148 of the errours of M rs...
I received per Brig Argus, from Mess rs Dodge & Oxnard, Marseilles, an Invoice & Bill of Lading of Eleven cases of Merchandise, on which have paid the Duties, Freight &c, and have forwarded the same to Richmond, V a as per bill of lading enclosed to Col. Bernard Peyton. I also enclose the Invoice & a Letter from Mess rs Dodge & Oxnard to you, & remain, Jonathan Thompson Coll r Amount of Duties...
Permit me to introduce to you Mr Ticknor & his Lady, this Gentleman is a Professor at our University in Cambridge and one of the most Conspicuous Literary Characters in this State, he has been for several years intimately acquainted with Mr Jefferson and is highly esteemed by him I believe he has been acquainted with Mr Madison, & he proposes to visit him Montpelier as well as well as...
The salaries of the Professors were to commence from the day of their embarcation at 1500. D. a year. Mess rs Dunglison, Key & Bonnycastle embarked at London on the 27 th of October each recieved £50. sterl. advance on account of salary which is 220. D. at par, as it should be settled without regard to the fluctuations of exchange. from Oct. 27. to Dec. 31. inclusive are 66. days, which @ 1500...
I detained the inclosed letters awhile to enable me to write my letter of informn. addnal. to our Report to the Governor, and then in expectation some of the Visitors might call on their way to the legislature and wish to read them. None have called however, and I now inclose them for your perusal. On the reciept of Gilmer’s letter of Sep. 15. from London which came to hand 3. days after those...
By your letter of the 21 st to Col o T M Randolph I learnt with sincere regret that you were still confined by your illness. I am quite impatient to see you here. we hear nothing yet of the arrival of our Professors, and not knowing at what port they will arrive, I am unable to apply to the Government for instructions to the Collector of the port not to require duty on their books. you said in...
I observe from the paper, that both the Trident, & the Columbia (Liverpool packet) have just arrived at this port, and no doubt our professors with them; but being too ill to be of any service to them, I may not perhaps see them. They could not at the time procure a passage to the Chesapeak. It may be of use to you in making fixtures for their reception, to know, that, Blaettermann has a wife...
I detained the inclosed letters awhile to enable me to write my letter of informn addnal to our Report to the Governor, and then in expectation some of the Visitors might call on their way to the legislature and wish to read them. none have called however, and I now inclose them for your perusal. on the reciept of Gilmer’s letter of Sep. 15. from London which came to hand 3. days after those...
You will herewith receive the first of four codes, which forms a system of Penal Law, prepared for the State of Louisiana. The manuscript copy, and draft of the whole work, having been destroyed by fire, I have, with unceasing labour, retored this part, while the subject was fresh in my recollection; but the haste with which it was done, renders a compliance with the request I am about to make...
Your letter, of the 21st. sprightly and entertaining like all the rest, has been recieved. I participate in all your apprehensions concerning the election. The odium, which has been conjured up against the family, is indeed a formidable motive of national action. Not a reason, not an argument even original; it is a prejudice! and it is a consolation to see that it does not prevail in...
My health is so bad that I am obliged to relinquish my correspondence almost in spite of myself for if the inclination to write seizes me my Letters can give no pleasure to those who receive them as they are tinged with the languor and weakness which pervades both my mind and my frame.—My friends here tell me that the great struggle which is now making in the political world is in great part...
I return my thanks for the copy of the Agricultural Almanack, obligingly sent me. You do not fail, I see, to dispense thro’ that medium, rays of instruction on a favorite subject. I hope your good constitution, good health, & good habits, may have their full effect, in keeping you above the Horizon, for that and other enlightening services. I should have acknowledged your favor some what...
M r Emmet’s letter which you were so kind as to inclose to me supported by your own would have had powerful claims on our University for the chemical professorship had it been vacant, but the difficulty of finding professors of the high grade of science which we wished among those of our own country who were unemployed had induced us to send an Agent to Europe to procure some from that side of...
D r Blaettermann will arrive in the Trident, bound from London, to new York; & I wonder he is not in. The other professors will arrive in the Liverpool Packet of the 16 th octr. at new York also, & that too, must be here in a few days. My health is still so low, & my future strength so precarious, after such a continued & dreadful shock, that I could not with propriety give a positive...
I was honoured last Spring, by a communication from you on the subject of anatomical Preparations for the University of Virginia...My object in addressing you at present, is, to ascertain the sum, the Trustees of your University might feel disposed to expend in the purchase of an extensive Anatomical Museum. The reasons which make me anxious to obtain this information, I shall state with...
I return with thanks, Mr Jarvis’s Letter, enclosed in your’s of the 6th.—The sense of the People, throughout New. England, as signified by their suffrages in the choice of Electors, has been very gratifying to me—If in other parts of the Union it has been less favourable, I have in almost every part of it been honoured with a support for which I ought to be grateful—The opposition in...
I am guardian to a youth that I wish to receive his education at the University of Virginia. He has read through latin—and in greek the New Testament & Græca Minora—.—Some progress in arithmetic—geography &C—.— He is a youth of good capacity & wishes (at this time) to be a Physician—So that, as I wish to indulge him in this respect, in giving him a general education that might be attended to...
I have received from Mr Curtis your valuable present of American Wine; whether it is made from original American Grapes or from plants imported from abroad is an equal proof that wine can be made in this country. Indeed Grapes are raised in the City of Boston and its neighbouring Towns in such quantities that wine might be made of them here. I have in my own garden a vine, of one of the finest...