Letter from Montgomery Throop
- Title:
- Letter from Montgomery Throop
- Collection:
- 19th Century Prison Reform Collection
- Date:
- 1807-1868
- ID Number:
- RMM01157_B01_F13_004_01
- Collection Number:
- 1157
- File Name:
- RMM01157_B01_F13_004_01.jpg
- Transcription:
- Start from home on Monday, and in truth, but for Charlotte's sickness, I would leave tomorrow morning. I don't feel any serious apprehensions about her but I would like to have her health improve before I go away so far from her. I have written you a long letter as I thought you would be interested in all this gossip and triviling. But I will not [?] an answer unless it is [?] truly convenient for you to write. But [?] Graham should be with you I would be pleased to hear from him at New York, especially as he owes me a letter. Please give him my regards and those of my wife to him and Mrs. Graham as well as the family at Willowbrook. Charlotte wishes to send you her warmest love. Very affectionately [?] Montgomery Throop.
- Work Type:
- documents
- Cite As:
- Enos Thompson Throop. Papers, #1157. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.
- Repository:
- Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library
- Archival Collection:
- Enos Thompson Throop Papers
- Box:
- 1
- Folder:
- 13
- Format:
- Image
- Rights:
- The content in the 19th Century Prison Reform Collection is believed to be in the public domain by virtue of its age, and is presented by Cornell University Library under the Guidelines for Using Text, Images, Audio, and Video from Cornell University Library Collections [http://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/CULCopyright]. This collection was digitized by Cornell University Library in 2017 from print materials held in the Rare and Manuscript Collections, with funding from a Digital Collections in Arts and Sciences Grant to Katherine Thorsteinson. For more information about these volumes, please contact the Rare and Manuscript Collections at rareref@cornell.edu. Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to use the item.