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Results 7201-7230 of 184,264 sorted by date (ascending)
7201[Diary entry: 22 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
22. Returnd home in the afternoon.
7202[Diary entry: 22 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
22. Cool. Wind fresh from the No. Wt.
7203[Diary entry: 22 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
22. About this time Captn. Posey’s Bitch Countess was discoverd Lind to Dabster & was immediately shut up & none but Sterling sufferd to go to her. Musick was also in heat & servd promiscuously by all the Dogs, intending to drown her Puppy’s.
Printed in The London Chronicle , June 23–25, 25–28, 1768; autograph fragment in American Philosophical Society. The following essay poses a problem of authorship that cannot be conclusively solved. The essay itself is almost beyond doubt a hoax. Its ostensible purpose is to introduce the reader to a book which, insofar as negative evidence can be trusted, was never written. Its real purpose...
7205[Diary entry: 23 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
23. At Home all day.
7206[Diary entry: 23 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
23. Wind very fresh from the So. West, and in the Night it blew a mere Hurricane from the same point with a little, & but a little Rain.
ALS : Yale University Library Inclos’d I send, for the Ladies, a Piece of the Bark Cloth with which the new-discover’d People dress themselves. It was fast together, but I have split it, as you see; and it will still split farther into its original thin Pieces like Lace. You once express’d a little Partiality for Things of my Writing, which encourages me to send you two; one to which you have...
7208[Diary entry: 24 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
24. Rid to Muddy hole, Doeg Run, and the Mill before Dinner, & was sent for by express to come to Alexa. to settle and Arbitrate an Acct. between Mr. George West & Mr. Chs. Alexander wt. Mr. Thomson Mason & Mr. Ellzey. George West (d. 1786), son of Hugh and Sybil West and brother of John West, Jr., was a Fairfax County surveyor. He married Ann Alexander, who was a first cousin of Charles...
7209[Diary entry: 24 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
24. Wind fresh from the Westward.
7210[Diary entry: 25 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
25. Returnd Home & remained there all day. Doctr. Rumney came in the Afternoon & stayd all Night.
7211[Diary entry: 25 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
25. Calm and Still & yet Cool. In the forenoon Wind Eastwardly in the Afternoon & Cloudy.
7212[Diary entry: 25 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
25. The Carpenters finishd getting the Frame for the Barn at my Ho. House.
Your Letter of the 16th of July 1767 accompanied with 25 Bags of Salt came to my hands sometime in April last after I had given over all expectation of receiving this Supply from you and after I had laid in a Stock from a Liverpool Ship (in this River) abt a Month before. I think I have great cause to complain of this delay, but the most aggravating circumstances attending the disappointment...
our tobaco is all gon on bord of the ship Exepting the Eastern shore tobaco which is not Come over yet But I Expect it Every day I was told By Mr Bigges neigh bours he had three hhds of tobo and it was gon on bord of Eastin I desired Capt. outtrems people to in Quire ass ⟨ mutilated ⟩ by the Ship and they told me it was true and I Sent all the tobo on bord of outtrems ⟨Ex⟩cept Taylors 7 hhds...
7215[Diary entry: 26 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
26. At Home. Doctr. Rumney went away in the Afternoon.
7216[Diary entry: 26 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
26. Cloudy with appearances of Rain in the Afternoon.
7217[Diary entry: 27 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
27. At home. Colo. Fairfax & his Lady dined here & returnd in the Aftern.
7218[Diary entry: 27 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
27. Wind fresh from the So. West & Warm. In the Afternoon thundr., & Rain for half an hour or more.
7219[Diary entry: 28 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
28. Set of for, and Reachd Fredericksburg. GW was taking Jacky Custis to a boarding school in St. Mary’s Parish, Caroline County, which the parish rector, Rev. Jonathan Boucher, ran in his home on a small plantation about 11 miles from the parish church. Jacky had received no instruction since Christmas when Magowan had ceased tutoring him, and GW was now anxious to have the boy resume his...
7220[Diary entry: 28 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
28. Showery till 11 Oclock with very high Wind from the So. West & West all day, & cool.
7221[Diary entry: 28 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
28. Began to cut the upper part of my Timothy Meadow.
If the most solemn asseverations of a man are sufficient to give credit to his report—If the honor and veracity of a Gentleman are things sacred enough to extort the truth, we have all the reason imaginable to conclude that Doctr Savage is entirely ignorant of the part you act in respect to the bond given in Trust to Mr Fairfax & myself for your use; because these several assurances he has...
In compliance with the Bond given to Mr Fairfax and myself, as Trustees for the use of Mrs Savage, we think it incumbent on us to request payment of the sum therein stipulated, for the purposes therein expressed. This demand we are induced to make, on full conviction that it is not in our power to release the Bond (of which, possibly, you may hereafter be convinced) without forfeiting the...
ALS : American Philosophical Society [Dated June 29, 1768, this is virtually a duplicate of Parker’s letter of May 14.]
7225[Diary entry: 29 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
29. Rid round and examind the Wheat Fields there. Which were fine.
7226[Diary entry: 29 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
29. Warm with but little Wind till the Evening then Cool with the Wind fresh from the No. West.
7227[Diary entry: 30 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
30. Went to Mr. Bouchers. Dined there and left Jackey Custis. Returnd to Fredericksburg in the Afternn. Jonathan Boucher (1737/8–1804), son of a poor English schoolmaster, came to Port Royal in 1759 to earn his living by tutoring gentlemen’s sons. He soon began incurring heavy debts, a habit that would plague him for most of his life, but his fortune took a turn for the better in 1761 when he...
7228[Diary entry: 30 June 1768] (Washington Papers)
30. Cool with the Wind though not much of it Westwardly.
Mr. Adams . The grass was good till it was pastured and the bushes grew up; if the mill had not been built, his neglect would have filld up the natural Course and spoil’d the Meadow. Why did not he bring his action in the time of it? He has no damages for what he bought 5 years ago. The fall of water. I knew a meadow. Duke of Bridgwater’s Cannel. Paine Law Notes . The writ alleged the flooding...
7230[July 1768] (Washington Papers)
July 1st. Went over to Stafford Court House to a meeting of the Missisipi. Dined and lodged there. With another change of ministers in England, and because of the new Indian treaties in progress which opened large parts of trans-Appalachian land to white settlement, the Mississippi Company’s hopes were quickening. Dr. Arthur Lee, brother of the company’s treasurer, William Lee, was taken into...