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Box 27

 Container

Contains 29 Results:

Incoming - Various students, 1877

 unspecified — Box: 27, Folder: 420
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Edward G. Howe's correspondence is particularly voluminous, especially outgoing letters to sister Annie Lyon Howe, and his wife Mary Elizabeth Barnard Howe who was left to run the household and accounts while he was away teaching and lecturing. Howe was often in need financially, and much of the correspondence to the Barnard family involves debt and property that Howe occasionally managed for them. Other letters of note are from the members of the Dabney family, with whom he became close...
Dates: 1877

Incoming - Re: 60th birthday, 1929

 unspecified — Box: 27, Folder: 421
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Edward G. Howe's correspondence is particularly voluminous, especially outgoing letters to sister Annie Lyon Howe, and his wife Mary Elizabeth Barnard Howe who was left to run the household and accounts while he was away teaching and lecturing. Howe was often in need financially, and much of the correspondence to the Barnard family involves debt and property that Howe occasionally managed for them. Other letters of note are from the members of the Dabney family, with whom he became close...
Dates: 1929

Incoming - Re: Translation of articles, 1908-1909

 unspecified — Box: 27, Folder: 422
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Edward G. Howe's correspondence is particularly voluminous, especially outgoing letters to sister Annie Lyon Howe, and his wife Mary Elizabeth Barnard Howe who was left to run the household and accounts while he was away teaching and lecturing. Howe was often in need financially, and much of the correspondence to the Barnard family involves debt and property that Howe occasionally managed for them. Other letters of note are from the members of the Dabney family, with whom he became close...
Dates: 1908-1909

Incoming - Unidentified and fragments, 1889-1890

 unspecified — Box: 27, Folder: 423
Scope and Contents note From the Series: Edward G. Howe's correspondence is particularly voluminous, especially outgoing letters to sister Annie Lyon Howe, and his wife Mary Elizabeth Barnard Howe who was left to run the household and accounts while he was away teaching and lecturing. Howe was often in need financially, and much of the correspondence to the Barnard family involves debt and property that Howe occasionally managed for them. Other letters of note are from the members of the Dabney family, with whom he became close...
Dates: 1889-1890