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Box 1

 Container

Contains 106 Results:

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches commenting on the absence of Sam Houston from Congress, the “humbuggery” behind each Presidential campaign getting organized, Thomas’ support for Lewis Cass, and Rusk’s uncertainty about the outcome of forthcoming debates on whether California will be a slave or free state, 6/18/1848

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 8, 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: 6/18/1848

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 David to stop sending money to their mom in South Carolina because it is just lining the pockets of their brother-in-law McWhorter. Thomas says he will take care of their mother and funnel her money through a trusted neighbor. Rusk also worries that if the Democrats do not get their act together they will lose the next Presidential election, 2/10/1852

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 10, 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: 2/10/1852

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches conveying the results from the Democratic National Convention in Baltimore. Rusk was asked to accept nominations for President and Vice-President but refused. Rusk misdated this letter May 7th. The Convention was held between June 1st and 5th, 6/7/1852

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 11, 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: 6/7/1852

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Fort Belknap to David Rusk at Nacogdoches letting David know his travel plans. Thomas writes that he has hired several Caddo to help guide his party to Fort Phantom Hill and that he hopes to then travel even further west to find and spend some time with Indian Agent Robert Neighbors, 9/28/1853

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 12, 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: 9/28/1853

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches letting David know that the Texas debt bill was defeated in the House of Representatives but that there is still some home for the Senate. Rusk also complains that Sam Houston leaves all the work to him, doing nothing but continuously campaigning for President. Rusk also notes an increase in the number of abolitionist Senators, 2/10/1855

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 13, 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: 2/10/1855

Letter from Thomas J. Rusk at Washington, D. C. to David Rusk at Nacogdoches sending him another set of Chinese sugar cane seeds (seeds no longer enclosed). Thomas also mentions that Millard Fillmore has gotten the Know-Nothing’s Presidential nomination and that Sam Houston is disappointed, 2/29/1856

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 14, 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: 2/29/1856

Letter from Nathan and Nancy Rusk Dodd near Yonah Mountain, Georgia to David Rusk at Nacogdoches about the financial troubles of their mother Mary Rusk in Pickens District, South Carolina. The Dodd’s warn David that his sister Rachel, who lives with their mother, has just married a man named McWhorter of no means. When Nathan Dodd was last in South Carolina he observed that the money David and Thomas were sending to help Mary was actually being spent by Rachel and her husband. The Dodd’s recommend that David and Thomas either send their money to an agent in South Carolina that will buy things specifically for their mother or that they help her immigrate to Texas, leaving Rachel and her husband to fend for themselves, 2/8/1852

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 18, 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: 2/8/1852

Letter from Rachel McWhorter at Walhalla, South Carolina to her brother David Rusk letting him know that she has been sick and her husband injured. She asks David if he can send her some aid, as she’s been relying on the hospitality of her neighbors, 9/8/1861

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 19, 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: 9/8/1861

Letter from John Rusk at Melrose to his father David Rusk at Nacogdoches [recto]. Letter from Mary Jane Rusk to her father-in-law David Rusk [verso]. Both write about personal and local news, including that the schoolteacher has quit due to severe illness. Includes envelope, 3/9/1857

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 21, 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: 3/9/1857

Letter from Tom Rusk at to his uncle David Rusk asking to borrow money for his trip to San Antonio, 7/25/1869

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 22, 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: 7/25/1869

Letter from Miles M. Norton at Rusk to David Rusk at Nacogdoches. Norton is visiting Texas from Pickens District, South Carolina, which is also where Rusk’s mother and sister live. Norton called on them before he left and they asked him to request money for them from Rusk, 11/17/1851

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 23, 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: 11/17/1851

Scrap from H. W. Riddle to David Rusk stating that school starts on September 24th, 9/16/1860

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 25, 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: 9/16/1860

Receipt from Jno. H. Cox to David Rusk for 1872 school tuition, 8/13/1872

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 26, 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: 8/13/1872

Letter from Thomas J. Jennings at Galveston to David Rusk at Nacogdoches encouraging Rusk to run for U.S. marshal and informing Rusk that he has already written a letter of endorsement for Rusk to Texas’ Senators in Washington, D. C., 2/6/1853*

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 27, 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: 2/6/1853*

Letter from Madison F. Mitchell in Pickens District, South Carolina to David Rusk at Nacogdoches. Mitchell was a boyhood friend of Rusk and wants to see if Rusk has the Texas address for Mitchell’s uncle Lorenzo C. Pason. Mitchell also talks about the high price of land and slaves in South Carolina, 4/22/1853

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 28, 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: 4/22/1853

Postcard from M. D. McCall at Fort Worth to David Rusk at Nacogdoches asking him if he knows the whereabouts of the heirs of Clark A. Wiggins, July 6

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 29, 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: July 6

Letter from W. C. Wright to David Rusk thanking Rusk for taking up some of Wright’s strayed cattle, 10/6/1841

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 30, 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: 10/6/1841

Note from James H. Starr to David Rusk at Nacogdoches asking Rusk to stop by his office the next time he is town. Includes envelope, 5/22/1856

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 31, 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: 5/22/1856

Receipt from George W. Smyth, Commissioner of the General Land Office, to David Rusk for payment of dues on the Jesus Flores 8 ⅓ leagues and labors, 12/5/1849*

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 32, 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: 12/5/1849*