City and Town Life
Found in 527 Collections and/or Records:
Pierre Chouteau promissory note
Handwritten and signed promissory note, dated 21 March 1825, and composed in St. Louis, Missouri. Chouteau agrees to pay Pierre Duchouquet the $1000 Duchouquet had loaned him.
Thomas Hempstead promissory notes
Handwritten and signed promissory notes, dated 15 Aug. 1820, and composed in St. Louis, Missouri. In the name of the Missouri Fur Company, Hempstead agrees to pay David Stone $17,940.66 and $8970.32 by 15 Aug. 1821.
Provisions dealt out to the poor at Pisgah
Handwritten list of food distributed to the poor at Mount Pisgah, Iowa, and the names of those who received it. The poor were Mormons, and they were mostly given flour, bacon, and coffee.
Provo Rotary Club records
This collection consists of Board of Directors Minutes, club plans and objectives, correspondence, rosters and committee membership lists, roll books and attendance records, membership terminations, financial records, historical scrapbooks (bound and indexed), newsletters, photographs, newspaper clippings, and materials relating to Rotary Parks and Rotary Scholars. The inclusive dates for the collection are 1919-2011.
Lavon Provost scrapbook relating to the Heber Tabernacle
The Lavon Provost scrapbook relating to the Heber Tabernacle comprises four folders of photocopied newspaper clippings, photographs, documents, and correspondence relating to the saving and renovation of Heber Tabernacle.
S. H. Putnam contract
Handwitten and signed contract to keep bees in Salt Lake City, Utah, dated September 11, 1871. The signature is that of an S. H. or an L. H. Putnam.
Alonzo Hazelton Raleigh diary "B"
Holograph diary which tells of his duties as a member of city council, justice of the peace and inspector of buildings in Salt Lake City, Utah and his various social religious and business dealings.
Ebenezer Rand history
H. H. Raymond letters
Gladys Clark Rea papers
Typewritten autobiography, photocopies of newspaper articles, and photographs. Rea, a farmer's wife, relates incidents occurring in the Australian "Bush" of rural Queensland where she raised her family. She discusses the impact of World War II in the area and the changes that have occurred since that time. Rea tells of her conversion to the Mormon faith and her activities within that church.