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Collection Reference Number GLC00686.23
From Archive Folder Collection of the Van Valkenburgh family 
Title Robert Bruce van Valkenburgh to Mary B. Van Valkenburgh about a journey he had recently undertaken
Date 3 August 1865
Author Van Valkenburgh, Robert Bruce (1821-1888)  
Additional authors Van Valkenburgh, Franklin Butler (1835-1924)
Recipient Van Valkenburgh, Mary B.  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Signed "Robt" by Congressman Robert Van Valkenburgh. Writes to his mother to tell her he has just returned to Washington after a trip to Kansas, Missouri, Ohio, Virginia, and then to Elmira, Albany, and New York. Says his health is better than it has been in two years. When he was in Bath, New York, he sold his house and lot to Julia and Mary [Ramsey] and the rest of his real estate to other parties. Hopes to know what he will do in a couple of weeks. Also included is a note to his mother from brother Frank, which is all about family or friends. A note in what appears to be a third hand is cross-written over Frank's note, includes an illegible signature, and says "All well here."
Subjects Women's History  Health and Medical  Travel  Congress  Civil War  Children and Family  Land Transaction  
Place written Washington, D.C.
Theme Children & Family; Health & Medicine; Government & Politics; Merchants & Commerce; Reconstruction; Women in American History
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information Robert B. Van Valkenburgh was admitted to the bar and commenced legal practice in Bath, New York. He was elected to the New York State assembly in 1852 and again in 1857 and 1858. He was also elected as a Republican to the Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth Congresses (1861-1860) and served as chairman of the Committee on Militia. Van Valkenburgh commanded the recruiting depot in Elmira, New York, and organized seventeen regiments for the Civil War. He served as colonel of the 107th Regiment, New York Volunteer Infantry, and was its commander at the Battle of Antietam. After the war, he was made Acting Commissioner of Indian Affairs in 1865, and then appointed Minister Resident to Japan on 18 January 1866, serving until 11 November 1869. After his retirement he settled in Florida. He was appointed Associate Justice of the State Supreme Court in 1874 and served until his death in 1888.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945