White familyOverview
Most widely held works about
White family
more
fewer
Most widely held works by
White family
A book of favorite recipes
(
Book
)
2 editions published in 1978 in English and held by 5 libraries worldwide
Papers, 1767-1917
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 2 libraries worldwide Deeds and probate and other papers of various family members; and diaries of Sarah White (1788-1875) reflecting daily events, social life, and births, deaths, and baptisms in the community. Family members represented include Sarah's grandfather, Jacob (d. 1797), and Elizabeth (1737-1803), Joseph (1766-1842), and Catherine (d. 1850) White.
White family papers/Dover, N.H., Library collection, 1727-1804
(
)
in English and held by 2 libraries worldwide Correspondence, sermons, deeds and land records, financial papers, inventories, and other materials, of Timothy White (1700-1765), clergyman, originally of Haverhill and later Nantucket, Mass., relating to his student days at Harvard, Nantucket Indian schools, whaling investments, shares in sloop Susannah, and family affairs; correspondence and other papers of his son Timothy, Jr. (b. 1733), teacher, of Dover, N.H., concerning his military service with a Massachusetts unit during the American Revolution, teaching activities, properties owned in Nantucket, Dover, and Haverhill, and other topics; and papers of other family members including Timothy, Jr.'s wife Lydia and their son, Amos White.
Papers, 1746-1916
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 2 libraries worldwide Records of Phineas White & Company (and its predecessor William White, Jr. & Company), cotton mill in Fairhaven, Mass., owned by William White (1757-1835) and his sons, Phineas (1785-1877), William, Jr. (b. 1787), and Benjamin (b. 1798); and correspondence, deeds, estate and guardianship papers, tax receipts, and other papers of family members including Hannah Brown (b. 1804), Henry C. (b. 1877), Joseph (b. 1755), and Marchant (d. 1880) White.
Business records, 1843-1914
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 2 libraries worldwide Chiefly records of Winchester & White, dry goods merchants, and their predecessors (prior to 1843, Church & Anthony; from 1843-1855 known as C.A. Church & Company; from 1855-1860, Church & Winchester; and from 1860-1864, Church, Winchester & White) including daybook, ledgers, and inventories; and business records of Holder White (1812-1895) and his son, George M. White (b. 1834), reflecting their wagon making, undertaking, peddling, and auctioneering businesses.
Papers, 1794-1921
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 2 libraries worldwide Family correspondence, including letters from Thomas Wilson White (b. ca. 1817) to William Young Conn White (1812-1882) concerning management of the family plantation near Huntsville, Ala., and relating to slavery, banking and finances, and cotton prices; business papers (1807-1838) of James White (1770-1838), leasor and operator of salt works in Saltville, Va., owned by William King (1769-1808), and papers (1838-1878) relating to White's estate, including slave and land inventories and records of property divisions; legal, business, and other papers of the family, including land grants, as well as papers relating to interests in Holston Salt and Plaster Company, Saltville, and several lead mines, including Austinville Lead Mining Company, Union Lead Mining Company, and Wythe Lead and Zinc Mine Company, all located in Wythe County, Va.; and papers relating to the law firm of White and Buchanan in Abingdon, Va.; together with papers of related Campbell and Robertson families, including essays (ca. 1815-1816) written by Powhatan Robertson (1798-1820) while a student at College of William and Mary, and travel diaries and letters (1818-1819) relating to a trip to Europe; and family correspondence describing the Civil War and Reconstruction.
Records, 1774-1917
by Conn.) White Brothers (New Haven
(
)
in English and held by 2 libraries worldwide Chiefly personal and business correspondence, genealogical materials, and other papers of Henry White's sons, Charles Atwood (1833-1909), George Edward (1845-1908), Oliver Sherman (1842-1917), and Thomas Howell (1840-1919) White; genealogical papers relating to the Sherman and White families and supplemental materials of the Bill (Bull/Byll), Bostwick, Thompson, Whitmore, Whittelsey, and Yonge families; and miscellaneous documents pertaining to the law firm.
White family papers, 1741-1861
by White family
(
Book
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Papers of the White family, which consist of: 1) Appointment of guardianship to Jerusha [Thrasher?], widow of Benjamin [Thrasher?] for the children of the late John White (20 Oct. 1741); 2) copy of John White, Sr.'s will (30 May 1794); 3) Warrant to John White, tax collector for Georgetown, Me., authorizing him to collect taxes (8 Oct. 1807). 4) Warrant for a town meeting (26 Dec. 1807) signed by John White, constable. 5) Warrant to sell real estate issued to White (1827). 6) Deed from J. Hawley Emerson to John White for land in Georgetown, Me. (24 Apr. 1840). 7) Various documents regarding John White's guardianship of Scott S. and Joseph Couillard.
White family papers, 1892-1914
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Recollections of Jonathan White, who arrived at Camillus in 1812 at age eighteen; Syracuse High School outing photograph; materials relating to Genesee Hospital.
Carter-White family papers, 1861-1924
by Carter family
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide These family papers contain correspondence of Carter and White family members, including letters from John Eaton White to his fiancee, Lucy Nichols, written while he was serving in the Civil War, as well as letters from Charles Morland Carter to the ornithologist, Ruthven Deane, describing a hunting trip in Nebraska. There is a sketch and photograph of John Eaton White, a tintype depicting William Brewster, Charles Morland Carter, and Daniel Chester French, and a pencil sketch of Charles Morland Carter done by Daniel Chester French. Finally, there are writings about the Nichols' family genealogy, among other items.
Papers, 1825-1890
by White family
(
Book
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Letters and miscellaneous papers of the White family, primarily from Deerfield, Ohio include Civil War letters of Addison D. White, 1st bugler in Battery D, 1st Regiment Ohio Volunteer Light Artillery and of Capt. Eben White of the 16th Regiment, Illinois Volunteer Infantry. Emma White Goodman collected Capt. White's newspaper obituary and letters written to her. Also included are notes on Bartlett family genealogy, poetry, Ebenezer White's 1825 Tuscarawas County, Ohio tax receipt, and a written "map of land belonging to Nevin Quisenberry" in [Orange County, Virginia?].
White family papers, 1817-1879
by White family
(
Book
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Collection consists of deeds, indentures and other legal documents relating to land transactions of White family.
White family papers, 1862-1961
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Papers include letters, clippings, and genealogical notes pertaining to the White family.
Record book, 1760-1863
by White family
(
Book
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Genealogical information on two generations of the White family; 2 p. of accounts for 1846.
Correspondence. 1828-1835
by White family
(
Book
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Family concerns; description of a journey to Trenton Falls in New York State; a journey to Boston on family business.
Edwin Gardner White and family papers, 1880-2009 (bulk 1936-1951)
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Papers of White family members: Edwin Gardner White and his wife Anne (Turney) White, and children Barabara White Bemis and William Gardner White. Includes biographical materials, correspondence, and photographs. Edwin Gardner White served in the U. S. Army in World War I and his son William Gardner White served in the U. S. Navy in World War II between 1943-1944 and was declared killed in action in 1945.
Laura Bryant papers, [ca. 1891]-1961
by Laura Bryant
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Papers include professional correspondence with colleagues, publishers, and others concerning the textbooks on which she collaborated with Hollis Dann and later Katherine Knapp (Let's Read Music: 1949), conferences of music educators, and her teaching career in general; personal letters from former students, friends, and family; and diaries (incomplete run) and notebooks. Also, scrapbooks of press notices concerning her own activities and other clippings relating to former students, Cornell personalities, and numerous other persons and subjects; Ithaca High School concert programs (2 vols., 1901-50), Cornell Dramatic Club programs (1925+), and Cornell music programs (1915+); Ithaca High School Choral Club correspondence and newspaper clippings (1923-40), miscellaneous concert and theater programs (1903+), and verse and lyrics. Also, unmounted programs and scores from Cornell Music Festivals (1907-20); albums of photographs and picture postcards, as well as substantial numbers of loose photographs, postcards, musical scores, and clippings; student grade books and roll books, reports, bulletins, music teachers' magazines, and other publications, and miscellaneous materials relating to her teaching in Ithaca schools and in summer sessions at Cornell, San Francisco State College, Utah State Agricultural College, Louisiana State University, and elsewhere; items pertaining to the Bryant family and to Miss Bryant's study and early work in Indiana, and other items.
Letter, subpoena and mortgage, 1833-1865
by White family
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Concerns property mortgaged by the White family in East Hamburgh, N.Y. from Benjamin Baker.
Papers, 1665-1895
by Webb family
(
)
in English and held by 1 library worldwide Papers of the Webb family of Weymouth, Mass. primarily containing deeds and other legal documents. The bulk of the deeds are for property in Weymouth exchanged between members of the Webb family, including several generations of Samuel Webbs. Other family members related by marriage involved in Weymouth land transactions include Abiah Whitman (1646-1728) and his son of the same name (1690-1770); Benjamin Dyer (often spelled Dyar); Joseph, Samuel, and Asa White; and other members of the Whitman, Dyer, and White families. The papers also include the wills of Abiah Whitman (1723) and Benjamin Dyer (1754), and a few estate papers. Additional Webb family papers include a list of persons who did labor on a Weymouth highway in exchange for taxes (1777), and deeds to and from Susan (White) Webb after the death of her husband Christopher in 1848. Also included are receipts, accounts, and a few legal agreements (1805-09) of Josiah Nash, a Boston bricklayer, and records of the administration of his estate (1809-18) by Christopher Webb, a Weymouth attorney and justice of the peace.
White, Wellford, Taliaferro, and Marshall family papers, 1743- 1927
(
)
1 edition published in 1743 in English and held by 1 library worldwide Letters, diaries, writings, and other papers of Susan (Taliaferro) Wellford of Gloucester County, Va.; her husband, Beverley Randolph Wellford (b. 1828) of Fredericksburg and Richmond, Va., lawyer, secessionist, chief clerk of the Confederate war department, and judge; her brother, Edwin Taliaferro (1835-1867), professor at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va., and Confederate Army officer serving in northern Virginia and in Macon, Ga.; and her son-in-law, Henry Alexander White (d. 1926), theologian at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., and Columbia Theological College, South Carolina. Volumes include minutes, 1777-1835, of the Saint David's Society of Society Hill, S.C., organized to maintain a school in Darlington District, S.C.; diary of Dr. Robert Wellford, 1794, as surgeon to Virginia troops supressing the Whiskey Rebellion, and his personal diary, 1800-1819; journal of Edwin Taliaferro while traveling in Europe, 1856-1857, and his Civil War journal, 1863, as an ordnance officer with McLaws's Division in Virginia; Berverley Randolph Wellford's diary, 1865, of the flight of the Confederate cabinet; and other items. James Alexander Seddon, Confederate secretary of war, was a relative and frequent correspondent. Included are a play and several accounts, essays, and anecdotes, many discussing Virginia plantation life and events during the Civil War. more
fewer
Audience Level
Related IdentitiesAssociated Subjects
Andrews family Architects Biography Comedy films Connecticut Criminals Criticism, interpretation, etc. Dorchester Company Drug dealers Dysfunctional families Families Free African Americans Free African Americans--Social conditions Fuller family Genealogy Georgia History Intellectuals Interviews Land grants Law enforcement Manley, Lazarus,--1668-1748 or 9 Manley family Manners and customs Massachusetts Motion picture producers and directors Mountain people Murder--Investigation Netherlands Outlaws Puritans Race relations Randolph, Richard,--1770-1796 Records and correspondence Rockefeller family Rubel family Rural families Short films Smith family Three Stooges films United States Virginia Virginia--Prince Edward County West Virginia West Virginia--Boone County White, Claire Nicolas,--1925- White, John,--1575-1648 White, John,--ca. 1600-1683 or 4 White, Stanford,--1853-1906 White family
|
Languages
Covers
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Related Identities