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Letter to Cromwell Anson Jones, 5 March 1875 (open access)

Letter to Cromwell Anson Jones, 5 March 1875

Letter from Mary Jones, wife of the last president of the Republic of Texas.
Date: March 5, 1875
Creator: Jones, Mary Smith McCrory
System: The Portal to Texas History
Letter to Cromwell Anson Jones, 13 March 1875 (open access)

Letter to Cromwell Anson Jones, 13 March 1875

Letter from Mary Jones, wife of the last president of the Republic of Texas.
Date: March 13, 1875
Creator: Jones, Mary Smith McCrory
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Letter from John Patterson Osterhout to Junia Roberts Osterhout, March 11, 1875] (open access)

[Letter from John Patterson Osterhout to Junia Roberts Osterhout, March 11, 1875]

Letter from John Patterson Osterhout to his wife, Junia Roberts Osterhout. He commented that he had not received letters from home recently and wished to receive news from his wife. John purchased a pony for their son, Jeremiah, and planned to have it sent back while he continued to travel for business.
Date: March 11, 1875
Creator: Osterhout, John Patterson
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Letter, March 1, 1875] (open access)

[Letter, March 1, 1875]

This document is a letter from the Charles B. Moore Collection. The letter is dated March 1, 1875 and is not addressed to a specific person. The letter details personal information and it includes: the weather in Moore's location; the type of woman that would suit him in life; his lineage, traits and personal views; his current line of work in agriculture; his feelings about getting to know this person he is writing to in the letter; the health of his family; and news of friends. Moore closes the letter by noting that the recipient of the letter should address their letter to his home in Melissa.
Date: March 1, 1875
Creator: Moore, Charles B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Letter, March 3, 1875] (open access)

[Letter, March 3, 1875]

This document is from the Charles B. Moore Collection. It is a letter to Moore from a woman named Helen Duncan. She details her love of writing letters to Moore. The conversation then moves to the topic of marriage and she mentions that she fears she will never find someone. She restates her promise to Moore, which was to find Moore a widow to marry, and notes that it would be a difficult task to find a woman to fit Moore's specifications of what he would want in a wife. She asks Moore if an old maid would do, if she wouldn't be able to match him with a widow. Moore promised to send a photograph to her to pass on to the Kansas widow. The topic of matchmaking moves on to Helen Duncan's home life. She states that she is happy at home and declares that she must have the "happiest home that ever was." She mentions that she shares her home with her family: six sisters, three brothers, and her parents. Helen notes that she has a strong relationship with her father and hardly does anything or write anything without telling him first. She states that her reasoning …
Date: March 3, 1875
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Letter from L. D. Bradley to Minnie Bradley - March 4, 1875] (open access)

[Letter from L. D. Bradley to Minnie Bradley - March 4, 1875]

Letter from L. D. Bradley to Minnie Bradley, dated March 4, 1875 and sent from Austin, in which he expresses concern because he hasn't heard from her at all, and states that he will be home on the 17th.
Date: March 4, 1875
Creator: Bradley, L. D.
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Letter from L. D. Bradley to Minnie Bradley - March 7, 1875] (open access)

[Letter from L. D. Bradley to Minnie Bradley - March 7, 1875]

Letter from L. D. Bradley to Minnie Bradley, dated March 7, 1875 and sent from Austin, in which he mentions a story he read in Bonners Ledger and asks her to take care of herself.
Date: March 7, 1875
Creator: Bradley, L. D.
System: The Portal to Texas History