Correspondence
Found in 1102 Collections and/or Records:
Irene Hascall letter to Ophelia M. Andrews
Typescript of a letter which describes Salt Lake Valley in 1847-1848.
Letters to Haskell
Two ALS's addressed to Haskell, one from Rev. N. Eells dated Skokomish, Washington and the other from J.S. Griffin, dated Hillsboro, Oregon, which were written in response to Haskell's inquiries concerning a Roman Catholic mission's involvement in the Whitman Massacre (1847).
Ira Hatch letter
Typescript of a letter dated March 15, 1886 composed in Ramah Valencia County, New Mexico, and addressed to John Taylor, president of the Mormon Church. Hatch writes about the progress of missionary work among the Indians.
John Hay letters
Two letters written at Washington D.C. one handwritten and signed, the other typescript and signed. The handwritten item was written on Nov. 23, 1903. It is written to "Dear Uncle Grover" and gives particulars about Hay's biography of Abraham Lincoln. The typescript letter was written on Nov. 10, 1903. It is written to Charles Neumeyer, Esq. explaining that he does not know if Hay's "works" have been translated into German.
Myrtle Isabella Rathjen Haynes papers
Typewritten and handwritten autobiography, letters, and family snapshots. One letter is from the missionary who baptized the Haynes, while others contain Rathjen genealogy.
Seldon N. Heaps collection
Personal correspondence, music manuscript workbooks, notebooks, minor and major compositions, arrangements, and recordings. The materials document much of Heaps' music career and personal life.
Phoebe Apperson Hearst letter
Personal letter to Phoebe A. Hearst's friend, Mrs. Charles Henry Schlacko. An unidentified photo is included.
Heber family letters and miscellaneous items
Three handwritten letters by or about the Heber family. Also included are two fly-leaf's from Heber library books. The most prominent member of the family was Reginald Heber (1783-1826).
John F. Heidenreich papers
Scrapbooks, correspondence, meeting minutes, typescript of a master's thesis, newspaper clippings, sermons, poems, diaries, and an autobiography published as "An Acorn Became an Oak." The materials deal with Heidenrich's life, career as a Congregationalist minister, his angelic visitations, and his conversion to the Mormon Church.
Helen Foster Snow files on My China Papers, approximately 1984
Contains draft cuts, alternate titles, extract copies, original and copied drafts in sections, synopsis, edited drafts, companion book drafts, cut and miscellaneous chapters, preparatory stories and essays, autobiographical notes, annotated drafts, correspondence and reviews, loose chapters, and drafts of an alternate version ("East of the Sun West of the Moon").