Letter from NORMAN WILLIAMS to GEORGE PERKINS MARSH, dated May 3, 1858.
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Item Description
Title: Letter from NORMAN WILLIAMS to GEORGE PERKINS MARSH, dated May 3, 1858.
Author
- Williams, Norman
Recipient
- Marsh, George Perkins, 1801-1882
Source Document
Extent: 1 letter
Genre(s): letter
Subject/name
Note [Digital Version]
, Center for Digital Initiatives, University of Vermont Libraries
Type of Resource: text
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Preferred citation
Letter from NORMAN WILLIAMS to GEORGE PERKINS MARSH, dated May 3, 1858., Original located at the University of Vermont's Special Collections in the George Perkins Marsh Collection, filed by date., http://cdi.uvm.edu/collections/item/nwgpm580503 (accessed May 21, 2013)
Letter from NORMAN WILLIAMS to GEORGE PERKINS MARSH, dated May 3, 1858.
Transcribed by : Ellen Thomson and Ralph H. Orth
TEI mark-up by : James P. Tranowski andEllen Thomson
Published by: University of Vermont. All rights reserved.
Woodstock May 3. 1858.
Dear Sir,
It has been difficult to find a day for going to Montpelier, more on account of the engagements of Judge Porter than myself. Probably we shall fix on Monday or Tuesday of next week. Judge Porter will be here on Wednesday and tho' I shall not see him I shall leave a note requesting him to designate the day and advise you.
Silloway and Powers were both here last week. I learned nothing new from Silloway. He came merely to urge a meeting. Powers says he is equally anxious to meet us--that he does not intend to use the defective stones,--nor the mended columns, unless we advise him to do so, and that he intends to carry out the plan to the letter. Powers was on his return from Boston
-------------------------------- Page --------------------------------He asked me if you wished to have Mead execute the figure and said if you did, he was perfectly willing it should be done by him. I told him that might be settled when you and he met at Montpelier.
I suppose all that we are to see and hear can be seen and heard in one day
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