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Office: About me. Secondary languages: Spanish Gender:. His interview notes reveal, however, that Shane—unlike Draper—was as interested in the domestic, business, religious, educational, and literary aspects of pioneer living as in the military. Most of the Shane volumes in Series CC Draper later annotated, underscored, and in some instances, indexed. One of Shane's notebooks, 37 CC, was not included in the microfilm of the Draper Collection done in the s, but the volume was copied for the microfilm edition.
Weaks, chief of the Society's division of maps and manuscripts, when she was preparing a calendar for this series. The calendar was fully indexed and published by the State Historical Society of Wisconsin as Kentucky Papers Madison, ; it is a prime finding aid for most volumes in this series.
Other John D. Richard Henderson papers, , accompanied by a few legal documents and newspaper clippings of later dates. Filling nearly two volumes 1 CC and 2 CC are original manuscripts of Henderson , justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court, promoter of the Transylvania colony in Kentucky, and founder of a land company which developed other later grants in Kentucky and Tennessee.
In this first volume Henderson's original manuscripts include: his notes on North Carolina legal cases; contemporary copies of deeds showing lands purchased from the Cherokee in March , and of agreements constituting the Louisa Company and the Transylvania Company ; a copy of Dunmore's proclamation to deter Henderson and his associates from settling the lands sold them by the Indians; and his original journal March-July, kept during his expedition to Kentucky, with a few miscellaneous financial accounts and weather notes There is also a certified copy of a petition to the Virginia General Assembly asking that the company's lands on the Ohio and Green rivers be exempt from taxation.
Copies of Henderson's journal and other documents about the Transylvania Company's Boonesborough settlement as published in by Mann Butler were clipped from the Louisville News-Letter. McAfee , and Draper correspondence with McAfee relatives and associates in the s and s. Manuscripts copied include the journals of Robert father of Robert B.
Transcribed from writings of Robert B. McAfee were an eye-witness account of Clark's campaign of written in , a biographical sketch of Anthony Crockett, a history of the settlements on the Salt River and establishment of New Providence Church of which another copy by John D.
Two receipts signed by John Cowan accompany the transcript of his journal. Within the correspondence is information on Edward Worthington and also autobiographical remininscences-with mention of Black Hawk and Jefferson Davis-by Charles Graham. A clipped newspaper article concerns John Poage b. Letters pertain particularly to the Shawnee capture of Mrs. Robert Renick and her children about ] and to one son Joshua, who remained with the Indians in Ohio and was the father of Captain Jim Logan, the Indian scout killed in American service in the War of One letter by Mark L.
A tiny photograph of Frank A. Renick is appended to one of his letters. There are also copies of three letters written by John at Fort Washington Cincinnati, Ohio to his wife Jane during his fatal trip.
James O'Fallon d. His papers include several business letters about tobacco transportation and deliveries which he wrote as agent for the South Carolina Yazoo Company, a proposal that he would serve as physician in Louisville if subscribers could raise a payment of not less than pounds, a list of his patients and accounts for medical services rendered to the United States garrison at Fort Steuben, and two pages of family genealogy. William W. Worsley Papers, , These three volumes primarily contain incoming correspondence of Worsley, a Lexington newspaper editor and publisher.
Worsley and Thomas Smith formed the firm of Worsley and Smith, which issued the Lexington Reporter from about through November, , and also printed books, handbills, and broadsides.
Some letters concern subscriptions and finance, but more were intended for publication or editorial use. More than one-third were written during the War of Among the most informative are a series by Smith while he was serving in William Henry Harrison's Northwestern Army in Numerous other pieces-including some filed with undated materials-deal with arrangements for supplies and for donations of clothing for Harrison's army.
Among letters of other dates by Smith are political comments on Andrew Jackson and on Henry Clay's campaigns in and and discussion of the firm's publishing business.
Several printed prospectuses and advertisements for publications by Worsley and Smith and by other contemporary publishers are scattered among the manuscripts. Files of the Lexington Reporter exist for the years and are available as a microfilm publication. Original manuscripts, , mingled with Draper correspondence, , and miscellany. Among the early original papers are a list of Kentucky stations with their locations; land surveys on the Licking River by William Thompson; a letter on the issue of United States and Spanish navigation rights on the Mississippi River signed by J.
Also found are extracts copied in Philadelphia from the autobiography of John Fitch describing his trip to Kentucky in , his capture by Indians on the Ohio River in , and his subsequent captivity among the Indians and British; biographical sketches of John Buchanan, of Nathaniel Gist, and of Matthias Denman, with a small photograph of an portrait of Denman; and James Taylor's manuscript biography of Charles Scott written in for Daniel Drake.
Symmes; Anthony Wayne's campaign ; and James Winchester. Volume VI contains interviews recorded by Shane in various Kentucky locations in Among the more than a dozen interviewees were eighteenth-century Kentucky settlers, a commentator on Thomas Jefferson and writer of political articles on Aaron Burr, and an early Lexington silversmith.
A description of Daniel Boone, discussion of the artist Matthew H. Jouett and his portraits of Isaac Shelby and others, and assorted poems and rhymes typify the variety of materials scattered through the interviews.
Acquisition of Todd family military records by Draper was mentioned by William O. Most interviews include genealogical references, but especially detailed are those for Alexander, Butler, Lyle, McDowell, and Sayre surnames.
Two pages contain Shane's memoranda on travel to and proceedings at a synod meeting in Lebanon, Kentucky, in Included are portions of Richard Henderson's journal in of which Draper later acquired the original in 1 CC. From notebook XII Draper copied Shane's historical notes, which pertained especially to the Barlow, Gallagher, and McAfee families, to Henry Bedinger and the courtship ruse employed by his second wife, to the younger John Cleves Symmes, and to the early history of Transylvania University.
As the other portions of this notebook were religious in content, Draper then sold the original volume to Samuel Agnew for the Presbyterian Historical Society. Two additional Shane notebooks of varied contents. Most descriptive is the diary he kept from July into September, , during his trip from Maysville, Kentucky, to Boston, Massachusetts, by way of Baltimore, Philadelphia, eastern New York, and southern New England urban centers; he participated in ceremonies welcoming Lafayette in New York and Boston, spent a day in historic Deerfield, Massachusetts, and made visits to Williams, Amherst, Harvard, Brown, and Yale colleges - in all, a journey which inspired many observations on American religion, medicine, history, literature, and academic life including student unrest and rebellion.
A few fragmentary pages contain Roche's diary entries on trips to Frankfort and Bardstown in and to Paris, Kentucky, in Brown, Lexington clergyman, relating to a religious controversy; then unpublished correspondence, , of John Floyd to William Preston, discussing Kentucky land settlement, trade, and prices; published letters, , by Floyd, Daniel Boone, and Nathaniel Hart Jr. Cunningham, b. Hart and Nathaniel Hart Jr. Three volumes of miscellaneous Draper correspondence, , mainly incoming letters concerning his many Kentucky research interests.
A few--less than half a dozen-early letters were addressed to persons other than Draper. His correspondents included officers and staff of the Kentucky Historical Society, the Filson Club, Kentucky University, and the Public Library of Kentucky in Louisville; and other historians, editors, congressmen, and descendants of Virginia and Kentucky families.
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