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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC00687.044 |
From Archive Folder | Papers of George May Powell |
Title | Emma Small to George May Powell asking him to write a love letter |
Date | 22 April 1867 |
Author | Small, Emma C. (fl. 1860-1868) |
Recipient | Powell, George May |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | re: She expresses concern that he come visit her very soon. They moved on Saturday, and she thinks she'll move to Minnesota when Mr. Watson moves. She asks him to write him a "love letter" declaration to show to those around her. |
Subjects | Women's History Travel Love Letters Woman Author |
People | Powell, George May (1835-1905) Small, Emma C. (fl. 1860-1868) |
Place written | Pioneer, Pennsylvania |
Theme | Women in American History; Health & Medicine; Children & Family |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1860-1945 |
Additional Information | Powell was a Lincoln supporter and served as a statistician in the Treasury Department during the Civil War. He was an inventer, social reformer, evangelical, entrepreneur, pacifist, and archaeologist. His philosophy and life combined social Christianity and capitalist enterprise. The Republican Party in the 1864 election used Powell's 1863 article, favorably comparing American wartime excise taxes with those of other countries at peace. His photographic montage of supporters of the Thirteenth Amendment (included in this collection) was very popular. Active in religious work as a young man, he was the secretary and manager of the Evangelistic Press Association and led a topographical corps through Egypt and North Africa to create Sunday School maps of Palestine and the Holy Land. He invented many devices both during and after the Civil War, and pursued economic ventures in enterprises such as the Cordell Life Limb company, providing prosthetics for Civil War veterans. After the war he founded the Evangelical Press Association in 1868, led the Oriental Topographical Corps in an archaeological expedition to Egypt and Palestine in 1873 (publishing colored maps and lecturing widely after his return), and ran unsuccessfully for Congress on the Prohibition Ticket. He worked to promote fireproof structures and participated in the American Forestry Commission, the Grange and Patrons of Husbandry, the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, and the National Geographic Society. He was active in Sabbath reform work. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945 |