Henry Wight Diman Papers


University Archives and Special Collections
15 Lippitt Road
Kingston, RI 02881-2011
Tel: 401-874-4632

email: archives@etal.uri.edu

Published in 2009

Collection Overview

Title: Henry Wight Diman Papers
Date range: 1842-1884
Creator: Diman, Henry Wight, 1835-1884
Extent: 7 linear feet
10 box(es)
Abstract: Contains journals, news clippings, correspondence, handbills and programs relating to Henry Wight Diman. The subjects range from his boyhood in Bristol, R.I., his time in the Civil War, and his service as U.S. Consul in Portugal.
Language of materials: English
Repository: University Archives and Special Collections
Collection number: Mss. Gr. 161

Scope & content

The Henry Wight Diman papers consist of news articles, official and personal correspondence and documents, agendas or journals, handbills and programs in both English and Portuguese. Beginning with his boyhood in Bristol, Diman’s confided his thoughts and summaries of noteworthy events to bound volumes labeled agendas or journals. These are the most interesting part of his papers, and span the period 1850-1884, with the exception of the years 1865-66, 1868, 1870-71, 1875-76, 1879, and 1881. The extant years provide a wide range of observations and opinions, marked by a particular attention to politics and his social life. The vignettes of Bristol are especially appealing, with numerous references to social activities, family and friends, ship launchings, politics, fires and railroad construction. Also of interest are the descriptions of Cuba and its people, climate, and politics, and the notes kept during his European sojourns. The account of his service on the gunboat Kineo, provides some interesting passages, especially those devoted to the ebb and flow of shipboard life. The journals dating from consular years are represented by numerous entries describing official business performances attended, dinners and parties, and excursions to visit friends and points of interest. Although postings to Oporto and Lisbon, Portugal were not first tier appointments, Diman nonetheless met figures of both enduring and ephemeral importance. Exemplary of these, he recounts meetings with Lady Franklin, the widow of the iconic arctic explorer Sir John Franklin, and Henry Morton Stanley, the noted reporter and African explorer. Another personality of note was the Finnish explorer Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld. Nordenskiöld visited Portugal in the spring of 1880 following the completion of his expedition in the ship Vega. The Vega was the first ship to traverse the entire Northeast Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific along the arctic coasts of Europe and Asia.

Of less fame, but an intriguing person was Daniel Sickles, American minister to Spain was arguably the most memorable. A controversial Union general during the American Civil War, Sickles lost a leg at Gettysburg while trying to extricate his troops from an exposed and tenuous position of his own making. His efforts were rewarded with the Congressional Medal of Honor. Prior to the war, he earned the distinction of being the first man acquitted of murder on the grounds of temporary insanity. His victim was Philip Barton Key, son of the composer of the Star Spangled Banner.

Other noteworthy items are found in the collection. Henry’s materials include a journal from the Marble Club, a group composed of Bristol natives, all boyhood friends, who used the club as a vehicle for maintaining their friendship even when separated by thousands of miles. Also noteworthy are two transit letters designating Diman as consul in Oporto and Lisbon and signed by Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant respectively, and a collection of posters and handbills proclaiming various theatrical and athletic events. Henry’s older brother, J. Lewis Diman (1831-1881) is represented by his European journals, obituaries, and selected speeches. J. Lewis was a graduate of Brown University, a respected clergyman, and long time professor of History and Political Economy at his alma mater.

The materials in this collection are generally in good condition. Some, including the diaries do exhibit the affects of embrittlement and iron gall ink.

Arrangement

After processing, the papers were organized as two series:

  • 1. Agendas and Journals
  • 2. Subject Files

Biographical note

Henry Wight Diman (HWD) was born in Bristol, Rhode Island on April 2, 1835. The Dimans were an old and respected family in Bristol, with antecedents stretching back to 1730 and the arrival of Jeremiah Diman from Easthampton, Long Island. (The Rhode Island Historical Society has a collection of correspondence and diaries from members of the Diman Family, including some papers related to Henry Wight Diman.) Henry’s father, Byron, a prominent member of the Whig party, served as a state senator, and as Rhode Island’s Lieutenant Governor between 1840 and 1842, and 1843 and 1846. In 1846 he successfully campaigned for the Rhode Island governorship, and served in that capacity until 1847. Given this environment, politics was an integral part of Henry’s life, and a fertile source of material for his journals. As the son of a loyal Whig, the Democrats were a frequent target of Henry’s fulminations. Especially repugnant to his sensibilities were the Locofocos, a radical wing of that party organized in New York City in 1835. The name Locofoco derives from the eponymous self - igniting friction matches. The term was coined following an incident in New York wherein the radicals used locofocos to light candles to thwart an attempt by Tammany Hall loyalists to end a nominating convention by turning off the gas lights. Despite Henry’s interest in politics he did not fully embrace elected office, and confined his office holding to brief service in the state legislature.

Diman attended Brown University from 1851 to 1854, leaving without taking a degree. By his own admission he was not a diligent student. He thoroughly enjoyed the social scene while in college, and recalled with special fondness the times spent at Switzer’s Beer Garden, drinking lager and smoking seegars, and sailing and socializing with classmates. This penchant for the social whirl and distraction was a marked contrast to the behavior of his older brother J. Lewis Diman (1831-1881). J. Lewis graduated from Brown in 1851. He established himself as a respected Congregational clergyman, and later became a professor of History and Political Economy at his alma mater. His lectures, orations and essays were collected in two books published posthumously. In addition, his intellectual and teaching acumen brought offers of professorships at Harvard and Princeton, and the presidencies of the Universities of Vermont and Wisconsin. The level of respect he achieved among his peers is reflected in a 363 page tome edited by Caroline Hazard entitled Memoirs of Rev. J. Lewis Diman, D.D. His Letters, Journals and Writings, and the Recollections of his Friends. Although he never sought ordination, J. Lewis’s son, John Byron, (1863-1949) also completed his studies for the ministry, albeit in the Episcopal Church. Like his father, John Byron found his true calling in education. He is credited with the founding of 3 schools. The first two were the St. George's School of Newport, Rhode Island (1901), and an experimental manual training center in Fall River, Massachusetts (1912). Following a long period of reflection he entered the Roman Catholic clergy, and was ordained on December 16, 1917. As a member of the Benedictine Order, Father Hugh- the name Diman assumed upon entering the order- later founded and served as administrative head of the Portsmouth Priory School (1926) now known as the Portsmouth Abbey School.

In contrast to his brother and nephew, Henry followed a desultory career path after leaving Brown. At his father’s urging, he served a brief apprenticeship at the Bank of Bristol, found that unappealing, voyaged to Cuba and Europe, and upon returning, entered an ambitious partnership in an oakum manufactory in Bristol. (Oakum consists of loose hemp treated with tar. Driven into the seams that separate a ship’s planking, oakum helped form an impermeable barrier that kept the vessel from leaking. In a shipping and shipbuilding community such as Bristol, thousands of yards of oakum were needed annually.) None of these endeavors save the Cuba and European voyages seemed to hold Diman’s attention.

In March 1861, shortly before the outbreak of the Civil War, Diman visited Washington, D.C. in hopes of obtaining a Foreign Service appointment, preferably in Cuba. Informed that no action could be taken until fall, he returned to Bristol. Following the shelling of Fort Sumter in April of that year he tried unsuccessfully to secure a commission in the Union army, but managed to obtain an appointment as assistant paymaster on the new gunboat U.S.S. Kineo. In that capacity he served with Admiral David Farragut’s expedition against New Orleans in 1862, and participated in the destruction of the “infernal" Confederate ironclad CSS Arkansas. While on duty news of his appointment as consul in Oporto, Portugal arrived. He had the option of resigning immediately, but chose to remain with the Kineo as that vessel provided artillery support for embattled Union forces during Confederate general (and former U.S. Vice President) John C. Breckenridge’s attack on Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

His fortunes were aided immeasurably by the patronage of Rhode Island Governor (1849-1851) and U.S. Senator (1859-1884) Henry Bowen Anthony. With Anthony’s help Diman first obtained the consular position in Oporto, and later that position at Lisbon.

Diman’s tenure in Portugal occurred in three phases. From 1862-1869, he served as American Consul in Oporto, Portugal’s second largest city and a major port and manufacturing center situated on the banks of the river Douro. In 1869, as the result of internecine Republican Party politics he was replaced as consul. In July 1870 following a brief interlude of unemployment and thanks to the intervention of his brother and Senator Anthony, Henry received the appointment as consul in Lisbon, Portugal’s capital. He filled that position until 1882. In retirement he chose to remain in Lisbon, and died there on September 23, 1884 at the age of 49. He was interred in a Lisbon cemetery.

Diman’s responsibilities as consul were multifaceted but far from taxing. Looking after the needs of the expatriate and business communities, loaning money to importunate Americans, welcoming visiting dignitaries and American naval personnel and periodically investigating legal actions and criminal acts involving Americans were among his official responsibilities. Much time was left for socializing, avocations and travel, and unofficial business. His journals or agendas as he later called them, provide copious examples of these activities. Dinner parties, theatre and musical performances, cricket matches, horse and boat races, and bullfights are frequently described in detail. As he observed shortly before leaving Oporto, it was a pleasant life.

Pleasant perhaps, but not highly remunerative, and his social obligations and style of living did not enhance his financial position. Although an exact salary figure is never mentioned, periodic references to expenses and income leave the distinct impression of a man who lived in frayed gentility. Exacerbating this financial malaise was a series of unfortunate and imprudent investments and business schemes. While designed to enhance his income, none proved more than modestly profitable. Included among these were arrangements to export Portuguese wines and gloves to the United States and investments in a coal mine and phosphate mine. At the time of his death some of the wine, now old and of questionable potability remained in his possession, while the coal stock was deemed worthless.

Even in retirement Diman attempted to maintain a life style beyond his means. As the new American consul reported, "his habits were [not] those of close economy." His estate consisted of stocks and bonds valued at about $1,200 and furniture and other items worth about $1,400.

Access & Use

Access to the collection: Open for research.
Use of the materials: Terms governing use and reproduction: Photocopying and scanning of materials is a fee based service available in the repository and is allowed at the discretion of the Archivist when in compliance to the Unit's policy on copyright and publication.
Preferred citation: Henry Wight Diman Papers, Mss. Gr. 161, University of Rhode Island, University Archives and Special Collections.
Contact information: University Archives and Special Collections
15 Lippitt Road
Kingston, RI 02881-2011
Tel: 401-874-4632

email: archives@etal.uri.edu

Administrative Information

ABOUT THE COLLECTION  
Acquisition: The collection was presented as a gift to Special Collections on October 15, 2002 by Alfred J. Shepherd.
ABOUT THE FINDING AID  
Author: Finding aid prepared by Robert R. Farwell.
Encoding: Finding aid encoded by Yuan Li, updated in 2009 by Hailie D. Posey 2009 July 29, updated by Mark Dionne on 2020 April 9
Descriptive rules: Finding aid based on Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)

Additional Information

Inventory


Inventory

Series 1. Agendas and Journals
Covering the period 1850 to 1884, the early volumes in this series contain nuggets of information on life and politics in Bristol, Rhode Island, and the nation. Those entries composed during his civil war service on the gunboat Kineo describe shipboard life and war time service in the Union navy, and incidents during Admiral David Farragut’s campaign against New Orleans and on the Mississippi. Those originating after his 1861 consular appointment to Portugal describe both Diman’s consular responsibilities and social activities. As noted in the scope and content note, gaps appear in 1865-66, 1868, 1870-71, 1875-76, and 1879, and 1881. Some volumes contain illustrations, many drawn on the occasion of Diman’s birthdays.

The journals and agendas are arranged chronologically.

Container Description Date
Box 1, Folder 1 Journal, Vol. 1
1850 Dec 1-1853 Nov 23
Box 1, Folder 2 Journal, Vol. 2
1853 Nov 24-1855 Dec 31
Box 1, Folder 3 Journal, Vol. 3
1856 Jan 1-1862 Oct 15
Box 1, Folder 4 Journal, Vol. 4
1862 Oct 16-1864 Oct 1
Box 2, Folder 5 Agenda
1864 Oct 1-1866 Dec 31
Box 2, Folder 6 Agenda
1867
Box 2, Folder 7 Agenda
1869
Box 2, Folder 8 Agenda
1872
Box 2, Folder 9 Agenda
1873
Box 3, Folder 1 Agenda
1874
Box 3, Folder 2 Agenda
1877
Box 3, Folder 3 Agenda
1878
Box 3, Folder 4 Agenda
1880
Box 3, Folder 5 Agenda
1882
Box 3, Folder 6 Agenda
1883
Box 3, Folder 7 Agendas, Scattered Entries
1880, 1882

Series 2. Subject File
The Subject File series consists of records from the settlement of Henry’s estate, personal letters, and official correspondence, receipts, newspaper clippings, and obituaries, written in both English and Portuguese. Also included are notes from grammar school classes in Spanish, French and English history. (Further correspondence, receipts, and Diman's commissions as justice of the peace and public notary are part of the Diman Family Papers at the Rhode Island Historical Society.)

Henry’s older brother, J. Lewis Diman (1831-1881) is represented in the Subject Series. J. Lewis was a graduate of Brown University , a respected clergyman, author, and long time professor of History and Political Economy at his alma mater. The subject series contains a journal composed by J. Lewis while studying the German states in 1854-1855. Related materials include obituaries written at the time of J. Lewis’s death and clippings of a speech delivered by him in observance of the centenary of the capture of British general Richard Prescott at Portsmouth, Rhode Island during the American Revolution. The executor of Henry's estate, John DeWolf, is also represented in the Subject Series.

Among other noteworthy items is a journal from the Marble Club, a group of boyhood friends, Henry among them, who used the club as a means of maintaining their friendship even when separated by thousands of miles. The subject series also contains two transit letters designating Diman as consul in Oporto and Lisbon, Portugal signed by Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant respectively, and a collection of posters and handbills proclaiming various theatrical and athletic events.

Folders in the series are arranged alphabetically by subject.

Container Description Date
Box 4, Folder 1 Accounts, Various and unlabeled
1881-1884, undated
Box 4, Folder 2 Alden, Georgia A.
1864 Feb 12, 1870 Nov 14, 1870 Nov 25
Box 4, Folder 3 Angell, Charles W.
1878-1879
Box 4, Folder 4 Anthony, Henry Bowen, Senator from RI
1881 Jan 17
Box 4, Folder 5 Arts and Athletic Events
1878, undated
Box 4, Folder 6 Bank Book, Henry W. Diman
1871 Jul-1883 Dec 7
Box 4, Folder 7 Bank Statements and Checks
1860 Jul 1, 1865 Aug 25, 1865 Aug 26
Box 4, Folder 8 Bills of Lading
1867-1880
Box 4, Folder 9 Bills and Receipts
1862-1863
Box 4, Folder 10 Bills and Receipts
1863 Dec-1864 Dec
Box 4, Folder 11 Bills and Receipts
1865 Jan 2-1865 Dec 26
Box 4, Folder 12 Bills and Receipts
1865-1866
Box 4, Folder 13 Bills and Receipts
1867 Jan 10-1870 Mar 9
Box 4, Folder 14 Bills and Receipts
1873
Box 4, Folder 15 Bills and Receipts
1874
Box 4, Folder 16 Bills and Receipts
1875
Box 4, Folder 17 Bills and Receipts
1876-1877
Box 4, Folder 18 Bills and Receipts
1878
Box 4, Folder 19 Bills and Receipts
1880-1884, undated
Box 4, Folder 20 Biography, Henry Wright Diman (in Portuguese)
undated
Box 4, Folder 21 Birth Certificate, Baptismal Information, Maria, daughter of Innocencio Augo da Palma and Maria da Boa Nova
1882 Dec 14
Box 4, Folder 22 Bond Purchases
1868 Jul 6, 1868 Oct 16
Box 4, Folder 23 Bristol Bicentennial Committee
, Expenses
1880 Sep-1880 Nov
Box 5, Folder 24
Bristol, R.I. Bicentennial (news clippings), includes speech by J. L. Diman
1880 Sep 24
Box 5, Folder 25 Burnside Memorial ( news clipping)
1883 Sep 26
Box 5, Folder 26 Burr, Col. Christopher Obituary
1884 Feb 7
Box 5, Folder 27 Calculations of Loss by Exchange on Drafts for Salary
1871 Dec 31-1882 Mar 31
Box 5, Folder 28 Carte Patente (See Oversize)
1862, 1874
Box 5, Folder 29 Certificate, Presented to (the Ship?) Charles Luling for Assistance Lent to the Nova Famaja
1867 Mar 13
Box 5, Folder 30 Class Notes, French and English History
1871 Nov 14-1872 Jan 2
Box 5, Folder 31 Class Notes, French, German, English and Renaissance
1872 Jan 9-1872 Mar 9
Box 5, Folder 32 Class Notes
1872 Dec 10-1873 Jan 21
Box 5, Folder 33 Class Notes, French History
1873 Jan 28-1873 Mar 4
Box 5, Folder 34 Class Notes
1874 Mar-1874 Apr 21
Box 5, Folder 35 Class Notes, French and German History, Spanish Art and History
1874 Dec 4-1875 Feb 9
Box 5, Folder 36 Class Notes, German History
1875 Feb 16-1875 Apr
Box 5, Folder 37 Class Notes, History and Literature of England
1875 Dec 7-1876 Feb 22
Box 5, Folder 38 Class Notes, French History
1873 Dec 7-1874 Feb 24
Box 5, Folder 39 Class Notes, French and English History
1876 Feb 29-1876 Apr 21
Box 5, Folder 40 Class Notes, English History
1876 Dec 5-1877 Feb 20
Box 5, Folder 41 Class Notes
1877 Feb 27-1877 Apr 17
Box 5, Folder 42 Class Notes, English History
1877 Dec 4-1878 Feb 12
Box 5, Folder 43 Class Notes, British History
1879 Jan 3-1879 Mar 23
Box 5, Folder 44 Class Notes, History
1880 Dec 7-1881 Jun 25
Box 5, Folder 45 Class Notes, History
? Mar 12-? Apr 23
Box 5, Folder 46 Class Notes, French History
? Mar 11-? Apr 18
Box 5, Folder 47 Cleveland, Horace Wilson Shaler to John DeWolf, re: Roger Williams Park
1879 Jan 17
Box 5, Folder 48 Cook, Josiah P.
1876 Aug 31-1880 Sep 16
Box 6, Folder 49 Common-Place Book, J. Lewis Diman, Vol 1
1848
Box 6, Folder 50 Common-Place Book, J. Lewis Diman, Vol 2
1849
Box 6, Folder 51 Companhia Carvao Portuense
1879
Box 6, Folder 52 Companhia de Carvao Portunense
1879-1883
Box 6, Folder 53 Consulate, Lisbon, H.W.D's Appointment as Deputy Consul
1870 Jul 1
Box 6, Folder 54 Consular Business
1873-1875, 1877, 1881, undated
Box 6, Folder 55 Correspondence
1862, 1863, 1864, 1869
Box 6, Folder 56 Correspondence
1870-1879
Box 6, Folder 57 Correspondence (Invitation to Meet President Arthur)
Sep 22, 1883
Box 6, Folder 58 Correspondence
1881 Apr 6, 1884 Jun
Box 6, Folder 59 Correspondence re: Gloves
1875-1876
Box 6, Folder 60 Court Case, Tompkins V. Llardo
1869, 1877, 1878
Box 6, Folder 61 Date Book
undated
Box 7, Folder 62 Death Notice, Henry Wight Diman
1884 Sep 24
Box 7, Folder 63 Death Notice, Henry Wight Diman
1884 Sep 23, 1884 Oct 13
Box 7, Folder 64 DeWolf, John and Canfield, Herman, Lease of General A. E. Burnside Property
1882 Apr 1
Box 7, Folder 65 DeWolf, John Letters, Re: Coast Survey, Burnside Estate
1877 Sep 15, 1880 Jan 8, 1881 Nov 18
Box 7, Folder 66 DeWolf, John Letters to Father, from Sch. Bache(?)
1871 Feb 12
Box 7, Folder 67 DeWolf, John, Receipt
1882 May 5
Box 7, Folder 68 DeWolf, John, Grammar School Report
1864 Apr 22
Box 7, Folder 69 Diaro Illustrado
1884 May 17
Box 7, Folder 70 Diman, J. Lewis, Cabinet of Curiosities and Diary
1842 Dec 26, 1843 Feb 22-1844 Jul 25
Box 7, Folder 71 Diman, J. Lewis, Journal of European Trip and Studies in Germany
1854 Aug 12-1855 Jun 5, 1874 Aug 12
Box 7, Folder 72 Diman, J. Lewis, Address, Re: Capture of General William Prescott
undated
Box 7, Folder 73 Diman, J. Lewis, Obituaries and memorials
1879, 1881, undated
Box 7, Folder 74 Estate Record, H.W.D's., Bounty Paid on Confederate Vessel
1876 Mar 1, 1884 Sep 11, 1885 Feb 2-1885 Mar 6
Box 7, Folder 75 Estate Record, John DeWolf's Appointment as Administrator
1884
Box 7, Folder 76 Estate Records, H.W.D., Legation of the US, Lisbon, to John DeWolf, ESQ
1884 Sep 23-1885 May 27, 1886 Jan 20
Box 7, Folder 77 Estate Records, H.W.D.
1884-1886, undated
Box 7, Folder 78 Estate Records, H.W.D., List of Books and Shipping Instructions
1884
Box 8, Folder 79 Documents, Divorce Papers, Commissions (in Portuguese)
Oct 1882, Dec 1882, undated
Box 8, Folder 80 Documents, Undated, (in Portuguese)
undated
Box 8, Folder 81 Estremadura Phosphate Company
1878-1880
Box 8, Folder 82 Fletcher, J.C., Consul, Letters Re: Abolition of the Lisbon, Portugal Consulate
1849 Nov
Box 8, Folder 83 Flowers, Essays on
undated
Box 8, Folder 84 Greene, S.D.
1879 Mar 22
Box 8, Folder 85 Insurance Policy, Royal Insurance Co.
, ( See Oversize )
1882
Box 8, Folder 86 Journal/Notes Regarding Correspondence and Communications
1866 Sep-1870 Oct
Box 8, Folder 87 Letter, Montezuma [Pedro],XV To H.W.D.
1876 Oct 14
Box 8, Folder 88 Letters of Appointment, Consul At Lisbon and Oporto (See Oversize)
1862, 1870 Jul 12
Box 8, Folder 89 Machado,Miguel A Bounty For Capture of C.S.S.Georgia

1865 Jun 3-1874 Sep 14
Box 8, Folder 90 Mcnamara, Edward Bills and Receipts
1875-1876
Box 8, Folder 91 Marble Society

1846 Aug 9-1883 Aug 9
Box 8, Folder 92 Masonic Membership Form (See Oversize)
undated
Box 8, Folder 93 Modern Cementary (Publication)
undated
Box 8, Folder 94 New London and Brazilian Bank,Ltd

1877 Jul 9
Box 8, Folder 95 News Clippings (in Portuguese)
1863-1883
Box 8, Folder 96 News Clippings Mentioning H.W.D.
1871, 1877, 1878
Box 8, Folder 97 News Clippings
1882, 1883, 1884, undated
Box 8, Folder 98 News Clippings
undated
Box 8, Folder 99 Obituaries
1881, 1883
Box 8, Folder 100 Passport, H.W.D.
1873 Jun 23
Box 8, Folder 101 Poem (in Portuguese)
undated
Box 9, Folder 102 Power of Attorney To Algernon Sydney DeWolf
1864 Oct 4
Box 9, Folder 103 Prize Money, Survivors of Farraguts Float
1883 Jan-1883 Apr
Box 9, Folder 104 Programs and Handbills (See Oversize)
undated
Box 9, Folder 105 Programs and Handbills (See Oversize) Bull Fights
undated, 1877, 1882
Box 9, Folder 106 Programs and Handbills, Festivities Honoring The Prince of Wales
1876 May 4
Box 9, Folder 107 Programs and Handbills, Gloucester Fair
1867 Sep 28
Box 9, Folder 108 Programs and Handbills, Horse Racing
1872-1876, 1883
Box 9, Folder 109 Programs and Handbills, Musical and Theatrical Performances (See Oversize)
1874-1884, undated
Box 9, Folder 110 Programs and Handbills, Sports and Amateur Athletics (See Oversize)
1873-1878, 1883
Box 9, Folder 111 Programs and Handbills, Yacht Races (See Oversize)
1881-1882
Box 9, Folder 112 Protest, Boat Race, Beta V. Jolly Miller
1868 Aug 28
Box 9, Folder 113 Receipts
1862, 1882, 1883
Box 9, Folder 114 Receipts, Furniture, Curtains
1869-1877
Box 9, Folder 115 Receipts
1872-1875
Box 9, Folder 116 Receipts
1876 Jan 15-1881 Jan
Box 9, Folder 117 Ready Reference File and Board
undated
Box 9, Folder 118 Receipts
1875 Jun 11-1879, 1881
Box 9, Folder 119 Rent Receipt, Freedom Funbar To Estate of A. Sydney DeWolf
1881 Nov 1
Box 9, Folder 120 Seabra, Malvina M. (Guimarates ?) Obituary, Transcribed
1877 Jul 10
Box 9, Folder 121 From The Oswego Scovil, William C (News Clippings)
1883
Box 9, Folder 122 Shepard, Rev. Thomas Obituaries
1879 Oct
Box 9, Folder 123 Smith, Right Rev. Benjamin Bosworth, D.D. Obituary.
1884 Jun 18
Box 9, Folder 124 Smith, William S., U.S. Navy Decreased
undated
Box 9, Folder 125 Stanley, Henry M. (News Clipping)
1877 Dec 5
Box 9, Folder 126 Taylor, Mrs. E. A.
1880 Nov 22, 1880 Dec 27
Box 9, Folder 127 Transit Letters, Oporto, Lisbon (See Oversize)
1862, 1871