Skip to main content

Box 1

 Container

Contains 112 Results:

Mary Monro Peachy, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1804 January 16

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114178
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Encloses letter begun at several times; ingratitude not one of her faults but omission is; every idea engrossed by Cousin Andrews for whom she feels sympathy; Mr. Andrews is dying; will leave few to honor him for honor or integrity; discharged every trust with propriety "& never did the Widow or Orphan suffer by him"; her life for the past two years had few pleasures; fears her Father Peachy, who declines fast, will die; does not think there is anyone in Williamsburg...
Dates: 1804 January 16

[Benjamin Rush], Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to "Sir" (Dr. R.H. Little), "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1804 September 5

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114185
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Advises him to accomodate his remedies to the state of the system in his contest with "a powerful and insidious epidemic"; advises him to tru all modes of treatment; there is a right treatment and he hopes he will find it; true in their country that in rainy seasons low situations are healthy, and high ones sickly; former completely overflowed with water and the "coltes having no more upon" [missing] to favor "putrefaction"; tells him to tell his farmers who complain about...
Dates: 1804 September 5

Aunt Anne Banister, Williamsburg, Virginia to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1804 December 14

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114202
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Just "on the wing" for her winter quarters in Norfolk, Virginia from where she will write to her the particulars as soon as she writes two or three letters to Europe; thanks her for her last letter and says she wrote back but just found out she never got the letter; their friends and relatives are well except for a few colds w[hi]ch were to be expected at that season; Tho[ma]s Henderson and Polly Peachy's two youngest children have the whooping cough tho[ugh] it is not yet...
Dates: 1804 December 14

(Anne (Blair) Banister) to Mrs. Eliza (Braxton) Whiting, 1805 October 15

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114204
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Asks her to what she owes the long silence; having written a long letter after she returned from Norfolk she was surprised at not having a reply since she (EW) is such a punctual correspondent; fears autumn may have brought sickness to her family; cannot write with the facility she used to so she procrastinated writing this letter; Theo[doric]k [Banister] arrived in perfect health; as she (EW) is also a mother she is assured of her empathy with ther feelings on the arrival...
Dates: 1805 October 15

Aunt [Anne (Blair)] B[anister] to "Niece" [Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia], 1807 June 20

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114237
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Thro[ugh] Mr. Mason, a student at William and Mary College, she [AB] heard that George [Whiting] was married to an "amiable young lady" of whom she (EW) approved; heard it exhilarated her spirits so that she lost all sickness; hopes that loss may very long be hers; congratulates her; asks her to congratulate the wedding pair for her; "the Doctor [Robert H. Little], his sweet Rib [Mary (Whiting) Little], and Francis [Whiting]" all possess her best wishes; [addresses her...
Dates: 1807 June 20

Joseph Lewis, Junior, Washington, to "Sir" (Dr. Robert H. Little, near Goshen, Londoun County, Virginia), 1807 November 12

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114243
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Upon returning from Alexandria last Sunday found his letter of the proceeding evening; sorry that his absence prevented him from seeing him; "As Saturday is always a Holiday with us at the Commencement of Congress" he frequently visits his friends on that day in Alexadnria; affords him the pleasure to render him services there or elsewhere; asks him to let him know what the business he alluded to in his letter was and he would do it immediately; can do nothing more than...
Dates: 1807 November 12

[?] Nivision, Richmond, Virginia to C. William Sommervell, William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia, 1809 February 18

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114246
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Assures him he felt pride and pleasure with the way he acted with Myers; his conduct evinced sentiments of "honout" and humanity; his [Myers] behavior almost indicates "the moon must have some agency with his intellects"; discusses an incident in which Myers pulled out his "bane" and commanded him [Sommervell] "to swallow it"; shame added to the folly by the fact that no witnesses were present; discusses his involvement with a woman who is not named; Mr. Coleman has lately...
Dates: 1809 February 18

Anne Banister, Petersburg, Virginia to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1809 September 17

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114254
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Received her letter of August 26 with the four profiles and letter from John for which she is obliged; after returning from Mr. Tabbs at Goshen was attacked with the ague and fever right after two spells of another nature from which she was barely recovered; her "poor old shatter[e]d carcase" was so weakened she could not write; has gotten well by removing with Theodorick's [Banister] family to "a healthy little spot a few miles from Petersburg"; her "sweet Grand Daughter"...
Dates: 1809 September 17

Anne Banister, "Clayhill (Ms. Tabb's in Amelia County)", Virginia to [Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia], 1810 June 23

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114263
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Would have made an early reply to her last letter but was sick; asks for forgiveness for procrastinating in writing; is in this neighborhood because Theodorick's [Banister] wife, [Signora Tabb] was going to "increase her family" and did have a daughter; she [ST] "looks badly" which is not surpriding since a few days before her delivery she caught the measles; the infant was full of it and she is glad they both recovered as well as they have; as has her other granddaughter,...
Dates: 1810 June 23

James Henderson, Williamsburg, Virginia to [Mrs. Eliza Whtiing, Bull Run, Prince William County, Virginia], 1810 July 30

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114739
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Wonders if she will remember him since he has not written in so many years; has been chided by his conscience for his silence; having gotten more settled and systematic she will be hearing from him more regularly; will give him pleasure to hear how she is doing, after flirting with young girls and being jilted by a widow he decided to act with a little more generalship; offered his hand to an excellent widow, with a son just twelve months older than his own son; after a...
Dates: 1810 July 30

Anne Banister, Amelia [County, Virginia] to "Niece" [Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia], 1810 September 12

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114766
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Mr. Thomas Tabb, Theo[doric]k's wife's brother sets out tomorrow to visit his Aunt Whiting and other relatives in her (EW) neighborhood and will stop by if he can; sends best wishes for Mary's [Little] safe delivery; she and her daughter Signora [(Tabb)] B[anister] send love; [Theodorick] has gone to Petersburg or would join them in sending love; her other son and daughter [Monro Banister and Mary Banister] are at Sulphur Springs where Monro and his eldest son are in...
Dates: 1810 September 12

Anne Banister, "Bollingbrook", Dinwiddie County, Virginia to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1811 July 10

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114801
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Hopes Francis [Whiting] told her she could not send a letter to her by him because her old acquaintances and Monro's wife [Mary Banister] provided her with too much company to get the time to write; told him [FW]to give her love to them and tell them she would be writing by Post; arrived there on Saturday the 6th [July] with her grandson Monro [Banister] who was sick; he [MB, Jr.] is better but the "intense warm weather keeps him very funney"; tells her to take her time...
Dates: 1811 July 10

Anne Banister, "Clayhill", Amelia County, Virginia to Mrs. Whiting and Mrs. Andrews, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1811 September 13

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114848
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Takes the opportunity to write to both of her niees in one letter as Mrs. Tabb is making a mournful trip to Goshen tomorrow; asls to be excused for writing to them both in one letter but Monro [Banister] is on a short visit there and she cannot absent herself long; the bearer "is intelligent" so she makes no statement of the family there; takes pleasure in telling her little Monro [Banister] is recovered and Polly [Mary] and Siegnora [Banister] are "in the family way"; was...
Dates: 1811 September 13

Mary Andrews, Williamsburg, Virginia to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1812 January 20

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 5
Identifier: id114916
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Concerned to hear they have all suffered from sickness; thinks the accident Doctor Little met with must have been distressing in his weakened state; thanks God her (RL) and Mary are returned to good health and cheerfulness; tell Eliza the old mitts she sent her to Leesburg, Virginia were hardly worth thanks; supposes they were worn out long ago; will write Eliza when her eyes get better and the weather is milder; presently "can hardly get ink thaw[e]d enough to write" and...
Dates: 1812 January 20

Charlotte Balfour to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, circa 1813

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id114927
Scope and Contents ...[at]tempt to burn Norfolk; her fears were groundless; her good friend Mrs. Andrews wrote to [?] and offered him a part of her house to remove his [?]; he says they are going to continue where they are and depend on providence for their protection; their [?] has taken several prizes on board of whic[h] [?] and esteem[e]d friend Doct[o]r Miller his [?] are staying with them and she received a letter from him in [?] then at sea and had just taken a valuable [?] with the expectation tha[t]...
Dates: circa 1813

Mary Andrews, Richmond, Virginia to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, "Enfield", Prince William County, Virginia, 1813 August 2

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id114958
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Her letter to Charlotte Balfour reached them as they were leaving; hastens to relieve her "anxiety"; suffered in the general panic of Williamsburg when the British landed within four or five miles of them as there was only 50 militia in the place; the students [of the College of William and Mary] all went out and any boy that c[oul]d held a musquet [sic]; feared less for her own safety than for "the precious live that might be lost"; dear Thomas H[enderson] was not...
Dates: 1813 August 2

Francis B. Whiting, Alexandria, Virginia to Robert H. Little, 1815 April 4

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120288
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Promised to inform him when he received his orders what ship he was on; the secretary has atached [sic] him to the old Constellation, Captain Campbells; does not expect to sail in less than six weeks but shall be much obliged to him to send his bed cloaths [sic] down to the city [Washington] as soon as possible as he wishes to get on board and choose his birth [sic]; currently stationed in Alexandria on the Leamer where he repaired that morning; as he may conclude he is...
Dates: 1815 April 4

Frances A. B. Little, to "Brother" Mr. William H. Little, Charlestown, Jefferson County, Virginia, circa 1816-1837

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120292
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Although her pen has been siilent he has not been forgotten by his sister; frequently realizes the adage "delays are dangerous"; they are inadequate to the tasks assigned by God; if only they could think he "ordereth all things right, and for our own good"; he has advantages that others are deprived of; he has a church to go to and should take the opportunity while it is in his power; when she reflects on how often she has been afflicted "by the awful hand of God" in the...
Dates: circa 1816-1837

Sally Bretton, Milledgeville, Georgia to Mrs. Eliza Whiting, Goshen, Loudoun County, Virginia, 1817 February 2

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120304
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Wishes Mr. Francis B[everly] Whiting much happiness; hopes she and Mrs. [Mary (Whiting)] Little find a daughter and sister worthy of them; is now fixed at the new school and has been fatigued and worried about moving; is tired of moving from one place to another so that nothing short of returning to Virginia could tempt her to start again; Fenton is once more at school; Mary will end her schooling at the end of the year; her daughter Francis is to be a first rate scholar...
Dates: 1817 February 2

Robert Howe Little, Charlestown, Jefferson County, Virginia to Mary Little, Berry's Ferry, Frederick City, Virginia, 1824 March 25

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120310
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Is now in Charlestown; witnessed the last of "poor Clayhill"; his funeral was preached by Mr. Bryan; William is well; sets out in the morning for Washington; she will find in her cabinet a letter to Calhoun and one from Dr. Triplett to Colonel Beaufort; asks her to forward them on to Washington by the first mail; is not well owing to the late ride last night; will write from Washington and hopes to hear from her by every mail; hopes Francis B[everly] W[hiting] and Mr....
Dates: 1824 March 25

Robert H. Little to Mary Little, circa 1824-1854

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120313
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Arrived safe but fatigued last evening; his foot is still continuing to be very painful he believes owing to some cold he has contacted; in his late excurtian [sic] he is as well as one could expect for one of his age; he is "gratfull" for all things as he is sure she will conclude; found William better and all hands well; M[ar]y Castleman presented her husband with a "fair boy" the night before he (RL) got home and all is well; saw her today and she is anxious to see her,...
Dates: circa 1824-1854

Carlyle Fairfax Whiting, Morven Fairfax County, Virginia to Mary Little, Millwood, Frederick County, Virginia, 1831 June 27

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120320
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Received her nore concerning wool and sends her a part of what he has on hand having sold all but a few fleeces; kept but a few having much coarse cloth as will serve his people this winter; gald to find that wool is in increasing demand; hopes farmers will be induced to keep a good stock; was hoping to see her at Millwood this spring, but was compelled to go to Berkeley in the stage and the only way to get to her house was thro[ugh] Winchester; the Opickon [Opequon Creek]...
Dates: 1831 June 27

J.M. Banister, Huntsville, Alabama to Frederick Horner, Fauquier County, Virginia, 1890 February 18

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120325
Scope and Contents Sent him all the information he possessed in answer to his letter of alst November in ragard to the book he [FH] wanted to publish; as he is interested in the subject, would like to know if he received his letter and when he could expect his copy; Judge Windham Robertson published, not long before his death, a book giving the history of his ancestors on his mother's side who was a Bolling and a descendant of Robert Bolling who married Jane Rolfe, the granddaughter of Pocahontas; has the...
Dates: 1890 February 18

Frances Little, Mountain View to "Mother" (Mrs. Mary Little, Millwood, Frederick County, Virginia), 1831 September 30

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120327
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents They traveled on after leaving her pretty leisurely, the heavy roads not facilitating progress owing to the stage's being very wet and uncomfortable; "dear little Frederick" [Horner] had a chill before he got here and was quite ill and extremely cold for a long time; discovered it and began to rub him with hot spirit; wrapped him in hot flannels and his fever came on and was very high; he has had a return each day, a fever last night that went off with perspiration; that...
Dates: 1831 September 30

Thomas W. Little at Shelbyville, Kentucky to Robert H. Little, Millwood, Frederick County, Virginia, 1832 September 22

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 6
Identifier: id120332
Scope and Contents Scope and Contents Should have written him earlier but expecting his "face to get well every day" did not wish to write until he could advice him of the circumstance; can wait no longer; "tis so nearly well and yet not well"; has determined to say nothing about it; trusts that in a few days he will be in good health again; they arrived there from Orange Court House in seven days; they got there safely after a dangerous trip; travel[le]d every day from 3 a.m. to 11 p.m. with nine passengers...
Dates: 1832 September 22