Box 1
Contains 133 Results:
Linninger, Dora, 1889
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Lowell, A.B., 1879
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Marshall, J.Q., 1889
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Martin, Mary, 1888-1891
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Matthews, J., 1868
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Matthews, Gus, 1868
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
McCallister, undated
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
McClure, Clarence, 1906
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
McGarraugh, T.S., 1871
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.
McKnight, W.G., 1872
Correspondence of the family of William R. Smith (1822-1900) and his wife Ann Woodrow (Kirby) Smith (1825-1924) of Springfield and Hillsboro, Ohio. The Smiths were Presbyterians, but Ann Smith's mother, Rachel (Woodrow) Kirby (1804-1893), came from a Virginia Quaker family. The letters are rich in comments on antislavery, politics, and temperance from the 1830s to the 1880s.