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Box 1

 Container

Contains 7 Results:

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches stating how busy has been in the Senate. Rusk also notes the arrival of President Zachary Taylor in town, 2/28/1849

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 9, Item: 1
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 2/28/1849

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches about the death of John C. Calhoun, their enduring friendship and that Thomas was the last person to talk with Calhoun in the Senate chambers before his death. Rusk also writes about the Texas boundary negotiations and his role in the process, 4/2/1850

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 9, Item: 2
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 4/2/1850

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches about family, a fight in the Senate between Henry S. Foote and Thomas Hart (Compromise of 1850 debate), a bill Thomas proposed, and the continued absence of Sam Houston from the Senate, 4/18/1850

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 9, Item: 3
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 4/18/1850

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches telling his brother about battling for Texas’ interests in the Compromise of 1850’s Senate debate and that he should write to their sister Jane Rusk Thrift, 6/9/1850

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 9, Item: 4
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 6/9/1850

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches about a speech Thomas made in the Senate for Texas’ claim to the New Mexico Territory, Rusk’s optimism about the Compromise of 1850 and his report to lower postage rates and repeal the franking privilege, 6/17/1850

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 9, Item: 5
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 6/17/1850

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches about Thomas’ wrangling in the Senate and with President Taylor to advance a bill in the Compromise of 1850 favorable to Texas. Rusk also notes what Kaufman and Houston are doing and remarks that their brother-in-law Nathan Dodd is in Clarksville working a mill for Thomas Stanford, 9/1/1850

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 9, Item: 6
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 9/1/1850

Thomas J. Rusk, 1849-1850

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 9
Scope and Contents From the Collection: The majority of this collection consists of accounts, bills, advertising circulars, county records, correspondence, notes, postcards, promissory notes, and receipts addressed to David Rusk or his son John Rusk. This collection will have appeal for both the casual observer and the serious historian or researcher. Documents deserving special consideration in the collection include: • Letters (60) between Texas’ first U.S. Senator, Thomas J. Rusk, and his younger brother...
Dates: 1849-1850