Box 2
Contains 23 Results:
Mary Washington (sister), 1849-1855, 1857, undated
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
Richard Washington (brother), 1845, 1849-1855, undated
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
Sarah T. Washington (mother), 1847, 1849, 1850-1851, 1856, undated
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
Tayloe Washington (brother), 1849-1850, 1853, 1855-1856, undated
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
William Washington (brother), 1850, 1852, 1854, undated
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
William F. Watson, 1849-1850, 1853, 1856
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
George M. West, 1853, 1856-1858
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
A. P. White, 1851, 1853
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
James Woodhouse, 1854-1855
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
Thomas H. Wynne, 1854
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
Various Correspondents: A-B, 1848-1856
Organized by surname; a letter from Joshua Alvis (1849) refers to a legal case involving the purchase of an enslaved boy.
Various Correspondents: C, 1849-1854, undated
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: D-H, 1846-1855, undated
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: J-L, 1849-1854, undated
Organized by surname; a letter from Mrs. [?] Lomax (1854) refers to her son's suspension from the College of William and Mary.
Various Correspondents: M-N, 1849-1856, undated
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: O-Q, 1849-1855, undated
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: R, 1849-1853, 1855
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: S, 1849, 1852-1854, undated
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: T-V, 1852-1855, undated
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents: W-Y, 1845, 1849, 1853-1854, undated
Organized by surname.
Unidentified Correspondents, 1847, undated
Arranged alphabetically by writer/sender.
Letters to Various Individuals, 1847-1850, 1853-1857
Organized by surname.
Various Correspondents, 1848-1849, 1852-1853, undated
Of note include an 1849 letter to the President and Faculty of the College of William and Mary by Professor John Millington, and an 1852 letter to Professor Dennis H. Mahone of West Point by Benjamin Ewell, introducing H.A.W.