Note: Put the word between quotation marks (“example”) to perform an exact search.

Showing 1011 - 1020 of 2121 Records

Henry M. McFarland to Lillian Herrick Olzendam
Image nop
    • Date Created: 1919-10-10
    • Description: Response of a legislator from Hyde Park, Lamoille County who will vote for ratification of the federal suffrage amendment but doesn't care to petition the Governor.
    • Parent Collections: Women's Suffrage in Vermont Collection





    Cavalry horses wanted! : the subscriber will purchase horses suitable for cavalry uses ... 1862 ... Joseph Lance
    Image nop
      • Date Issued: 1862
      • Parent Collections: Civil War Broadsides and Ephemera


      Roswell Farnham Diary, 1848-1849
      Image nop
        • Creator: Farnham, Roswell, 1827-1903.
        • Date Created: 1848-1849
        • Description: Roswell Farnham was born in Boston, Massachusetts on July 23, 1827, the son of Roswell and Nancy Bixby Farnham. Farnham's family moved to Bradford, Vermont in 1840, and he received his education at Bradford Academy and the University of Vermont, from which he graduated in 1849. Married to Mary Elizabeth Johnson on December 25, 1849, Farnham taught school before gaining admittance to the Orange County bar in 1857. When the Civil War broke out, he entered the First Vermont Regiment with the Bradford Guards militia as a Second Lieutenant. Farnham served with distinction in both the First Vermont and the Twelfth Vermont, and left the Army in July of 1863 as a Lieutenant Colonel. Following the war, Farnham became general counsel for the Vermont Copper Company and continued to work as both lawyer and administrator of the VCC for the rest of his life. In addition, he held a number of local and state political offices culminating in his defeat of Democrat Edward J. Phelps for the governorship of Vermont in 1880. After completing a single popular term as governor, Farnham returned to his law practice. In 1889 he also became president of the newly-formed New England Company, a group of Northern investors interested in developing the coal and iron deposits of northwestern Georgia. The New England Company was never a success, and Farnham spent much of the last decade of the nineteenth century trying to save it and the VCC from bankruptcy. Badly injured in a fall in November 1898, Farnham recovered sufficiently to resume some of his work but never regained full health. Roswell Farnham died at his home in Bradford on January 5, 1903, at the age of seventy-five. Three of Farnham’s four children lived to adulthood: Charles Cyrus Farnham (1864–1937), Florence Mary Osgood (1866–1958), and William M. Farnham (1869–1927). His first child, Roswell Phelps Farnham Jr., died in infancy in 1861. Farnham was predeceased by a half-brother, Cyrus C. Farnham, in 1863. Topics in this diary include the curriculum, faculty, and student experience at UVM in the late 1840s; Burlington and neighboring towns in the late 1840s, UVM’s Lambda Iota fraternity, Zachary Taylor and the Whig Party, and teaching in Vermont and Canada in the mid-nineteenth century. Near the end of the diary are several essays written by Farnham during his senior year at UVM. Topics in these essays include religion, natural history, and King Lear.
        • Parent Collections: Diaries


        Out in the Mountains, January, 2002
        Image nop
          • Date Issued: 2002-01-01


          Out in the Mountains, May, 1992
          Image nop
            • Date Issued: 1992-05-01


            Out in the Mountains, May, 1993
            Image nop
              • Date Issued: 1993-05-01


              Out in the Mountains, April, 1993
              Image nop
                • Date Issued: 1993-04-01