Box 1
Contains 52 Results:
James Monroe, Richmond, Virginia to John Francis Mercer, Governor of Maryland?, 1802 October 20
Council of Virginia, 1802 December 7
Council consisting of John Guerrant, Jr., Al McRae, W. Roushee, Alexander Stuart, and S. Tyler, Richmond, Virginia to James Monroe, Richmond, Virginia.
John Breckinridge, Fayette, Kentucky, to James Monroe, Paris, France, 1803 July 9
Lord David Montague Erskine, Hampstead, England, to James Monroe, 1806
William H. Cabell, Richmond, Virginia to James Monroe, Washington, D.C., 1807 December 23
Refers to a letter which will be sent to him by Alexander McRae, President of the Council of State, covering an address welcoming Monroe back from England on behalf of that body; expects he will be surprised at the division of the two branches of the executive department; encloses copy of the reasons he did not concur with the Council refusing to sign the Council's address; assures him of his friendship.
The Senate of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia to James Monroe, 1807 December 30
Resolution signed by Robert Taylor.
John Henry Purviance, Baltimore, Maryland, to James Monroe, Richmond, Virginia, 1809 May 12
George Hay, Richmond, Virginia to James Monroe, 1811 April 28
James Monroe, Washington, D.C., to his nephew, James Monroe, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, 1813 December 24
Letter, James Monroe, Washington, D.C. to the Secretary of the Legation to the Swedish Court, 1814 February 4
Thomas M. Bayly, Lieutenant Colonel, Commandant 2nd Regiment, Virginia Militia, Accomack Court House, Virginia to James Barbour, Governor of Virginia, 1814 April 14
James Monroe, Washington, D.C., to his nephew, James Monroe, 1814 May 9
James Monroe, Washington, D.C., to Charles Everett, Albemarle County, Virginia, 1814 July 27
Re: the sale of his property in Albemarle and Loudoun counties, Virginia to pay off his debts. See Preston's Monroe Calendar, I:407
Letter, James Monroe, Washington, D.C., to William Whann at the Bank of Columbia, 1814 August 5
This letter is an effort from James Monroe to secure his financial solvency in order to have it available on behalf of the war effort.
James Monroe, Department of War, Washington, D.C. to Andrew Jackson, 1815 February 4
Major Pierce Butler, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to James Monroe, 1816 March 30
Letter, James Monroe to [Charles Fenton Mercer?], 1816 July 15
Concerns sale of land, moving of Ralph and wife, and the death of ? McCoy of whom Monroe thought highly.
James Monroe, Washington, D.C., to Lieutenant James Monroe, United States Artillery, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1816 November 25
Spencer Roane, Richmond, Virginia to James Monroe, Washington, D.C., 1817 December 6
William Wirt to James Monroe, Washington, D.C., 1817
Richard Rush, London, England, to James Monroe, Washington, D.C., 1818 January 15
John C. Calhoun, Washington, D.C., to James Monroe, Albemarle County, Virginia, 1818 September 24
Elizabeth Douglas Monroe to Mme. Eliza (Brown) Jumel, 1819 June 2
Asking Mme. Jumel if she will permit an architect to see the interior of her house as "she has never seen a house she admires so much and wishes when Mr. Monroe builds a house to have it copied." Originally thought by Swem staff to have been a letter by Elizabeth (Kortright) Monroe, it is now believed to be from Elizabeth Douglas Monroe.