Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/5138jd87p

Download PDF

Herbert S. Auerbach Collection on Mormons and Indians, 1808-1935: Finding Aid

WC041

Princeton University Manuscripts Division

Princeton University Manuscripts Division

Manuscripts Division
One Washington Road
Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA
Phone: (609) 258-3184
Fax: (609) 258-2324
rbsc@princeton.edu
http://www.princeton.edu/~rbsc

Published in 2002

Summary Information

Collector:
Auerbach, Herbert S. (Herbert Samuel), 1882-1945.
Title and dates:
Herbert S. Auerbach Collection on Mormons and Indians, 1808-1935
Abstract:
Herbert S. Auerbach was an American renaissance man, involved in music, writing, politics, and philanthropy. The collection consists of copies of letters, documents, stories, newspaper articles, reports, tables, and extracts relating to Mormons and Indians, as collected by Auerbach. Also included are two volumes of Utah and Mormon history, a few photographs, a scrapbook about Utah and Auerbach, and typescripts for a reminiscence of California by W.B. Meek and a book by Charles Mostyn Owen.
Size:
4.00 cubic feet (8 boxes, 1 carton)
Call number:
WC041
Location:
Princeton University Library. Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Manuscripts Division.
Princeton, New Jersey 08544 USA
Language(s) of material:
English.
Storage note:
This collection is stored onsite at Firestone Library.

Biography of Herbert S. Auerbach

Herbert Samuel Auerbach was born on October 4, 1882 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was educated abroad, first at the J.J. Meier School in Wiesbaden, Germany, and then at the Conservatory of Music and Lausanne Technical School in Switzerland. After completing his studies, he toured the continent as a concert violinist. In 1906 he returned to the United States and pursued a master’s degree in electrometallurgy at Columbia University School of Mines. He helped run the family business of department stores in Utah, and was a member of the Board of Regents of the University of Utah. After the United States became involved with World War I, he became a major in the Ordnance Department until 1919. With diverse interests, Auerbach was also a member of the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, and a part of the Utah State Legislature for two terms. One of his favorite hobbies was western history, which led to his collection of books, manuscripts, maps, documents, and pictures of the Old West. Auerbach was also a writer, poet, and philanthropist. He passed away on March 19, 1945.

Description

Consists primarily of copies of letters, documents, stories, newspaper articles, reports, tables, and extracts from various sources collected by Auerbach and relating to Mormons and Indians. Included are a brief history of the Mormons; letters and reports regarding official Indian business in the Southwest and Northwest, often sent by the local Indian agent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs or to local governors; documents found in the Indian Office at Washington, D.C., some of which concern the Mountain Meadows Massacre (Utah) in 1857; accounts of discussions regarding the restoration of refugee Indians to their homes in Indian territory (1883); a copy of a journal kept in 1849 by Isaac Foster en route to Alta, Calif.; a history (1888) of the Nauvoo (Utah) Legion relating an incident of the Black Hawk War; an itinerary of the mail route from Great Salt Lake City to San Francisco (ca. 1850); and a table of distances of the overland daily stage line from Kansas to Utah (1862).

Also present are two volumes of selected items of Utah and Mormon history; typescripts for a reminiscence of pioneering in California, "From Cradle to the Grave," by W. B. Meek and "The Mormons as I Know Them" by Charles Mostyn Owen (1859- ); a few photographs (ca. 1890s) of unidentified persons; photostats of letters by John Wolcott Phelps (1813-1885) written while on a military expedition to Utah in 1857-1859; and a scrapbook (1922) of newspaper clippings about Auerbach and Utah.

The papers contained in this collection are, for the most part, typescripts taken from originals.

Arrangement

Organized into the following series:

Access and Use

Access

Collection is open for research use.

Restrictions on Use and Copyright Information

Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. No further photoduplication of copies of material in the collection can be made when Princeton University Library does not own the original. Permission to publish material from the collection must be requested from the Associate University Librarian for Rare Books and Special Collections. The library has no information on the status of literary rights in the collection and researchers are responsible for determining any questions of copyright.

Processing and Other Information

Works Cited

The following sources were consulted during preparation of biographical note: Utah History To Go, an online Utah History course, http://historytogo.utah.gov

Processing Information

Finding aid written in 1994.

Biography written by Alyxandra Cullen, '09.

Descriptive Rules Used

Finding aid content adheres to that prescribed by Describing Archives: A Content Standard.

Encoding

Machine-readable finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Techbooks, Cristela García-Spitz, and Diann Benti on March 30, 2007. Created from MARC record via MarcEdit and XSL stylesheets in 2007.

Finding aid written in English.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Herbert S. Auerbach Collection on Mormons and Indians, Box and Folder Number; Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.

Subject Headings

These materials have been indexed in the Princeton University Library online catalog using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms.

Browse other finding aids related to the following terms:

Contents List

  1. Series 1: Auerbach, Herbert Samuel
  2. Auerbach correspondence and misc.

    Box 1, Folder 1
  3. Auerbach scrapbook

    Box 1, Folder 2
  4. Photographs of unidentified persons, circa 1890

    Box 1, Folder 3
  5. Bound volumes:

  6. Auerbach, Herbert Samuel, (1882-1945). “Selected Items of Utah and Mormon History, Vol. II”.

    Box 1, Folder 1
  7. Auerbach, Herbert Samuel, (1882-1945). “Selected Items of Utah and Mormon History, Vol. IV”.

    Box 1, Folder 2
  8. Series 2: Biographies
  9. BELLE - travel journal

    BELLE - incomplete, 58 pp. A travel journal from Egypt (rhetorical?) to home in Colorado through Wapello, Iowa City, Tranquillity, Des Moines, Glenwood, Plattsmouth, Platt Valley, Cottonwood, and Denver.

    Box 2, Folder 1
  10. BULLOCH, DAVID - biography

    BULLOCH, DAVID - Biography. 4 pp. Written by Wm. R. Palmer, Dec. 25, 1921, details a winter cattle drive in blizzard conditions in 1886. Bulloch traveled through Antelope Spring to Desert Spring, Nevada for a Mrs. Lawson, of Pioche, Nevada.

    Box 2, Folder 2
  11. CARTER, JUDGE - misc. letters received

    CARTER, JUDGE - Correspondence. 35 pp. Miscellaneous letters received circa 1860s. Judge Carter may have been integral to the running of Ft. Bridger.

    Box 2, Folder 2
  12. CLAYTON, HONORABLE CHARLES - biography, “One of the Representative Men of California, A Prosperous and Eventful Life. Biographical Sketch.”

    CLAYTON, CHARLES, HON. - b. Oct. 5, 1825. Biography. 4 pp. Born in Derbyshire, England. Father was John Clayton, mother's maiden name was Mary Bates. Clayton was a pioneer to California at the same time of the first Mormon expedition.

    Box 2, Folder 2
  13. P. EDW. CONNORS - letters written

    CONNORS, P. EDW - Correspondence. 1865. 11 pp. Letters written by Connors, stationed at Headquarters of the District of Utah, Camp Douglas, Utah Territory and Headquarters of the Plains, Julesburg, Colorado, to Judge W. S. Carter of Fort Bridger.

    Box 2, Folder 2
  14. FOSTER, ISAAC G. - autobiography, and a travel journal, “Lost in a Mountain Fastness”

    FOSTER, ISAAC G. - d. July 6, 1868. 34 pp. A journal dated March 26, 1849, through October 4, 1850, and titled “A Journal of the Route to Alta California, performed by the Rev. Isaac Foster, of Plainfield, Ills.” This is a daily description of the journey overland with oxen from the Midwest (possibly Illinois) to Sacramento. A description of a boat ride to the East Coast from Sacramento to Panama, and return from Panama to the Northeast.

    Sept 24, 1849. 5 pp. An autobiographical story, “Lost in a Mountain Fastness”, details the two-week period in which Foster is lost in the mountains near the Sacramento Valley, is attacked by a bear, encounters Native Americans, suffers near starvation, and is returned to his wagon train.

    Box 2, Folder 2
  15. FOSTER, ROXANA C. - autobiography, “A Sketch of the Life of Roxana C. Foster”

    FOSTER, ROXANA C. - b. 1818, autobiography from 1818 to 1861. 8 pp. “A Sketch of the Life of Roxana C. Foster” includes a history of her family. Living in Grafton Co., N.H., her father was a contemporary of Franklin Pierce. She moved to Plainfield, IL with brother in 1844, and describes life as a teacher, and talks about the inadequate facilities, but interested students. She took a position as a housekeeper, and married ISAAC G. FOSTER on June 26th, 1845. Gold rushes of California occur, she describes her husband's journey to and from the mines. (Miners are fleeced by both the captain of a boat, and the gamblers aboard, causing near mutiny by the passengers). She details her father-in-law's “fever” for life in California, and relates her journey with her husband and two small children through Council Bluffs during winter with Mormon neighbors. The Fosters lived in San Jose, Santa Clara, Half-Moon Bay, and Santa Barbara. She had six children.

    Box 2, Folder 2
  16. GALLACHER, JOHN - biography

    GALLACHER, JOHN - b. April 30, 1850 - d. February 29, 1924. Biography. 3 pp. Born to a family of Mormons, and a baker by profession, Gallacher came to the U.S. on an early steam ship, and then overland to Utah Territory. Member of the state militia, and a restauranteur, he married ANNIE IMPEY in 1873 (see below). Ten children and their birth dates are listed.

    Box 2, Folder 3
  17. GALLACHER, ANNIE IMPEY - biography

    GALLACHER, ANNIE IMPEY - b. January 26, 1852. Biography. 2 pp. Born in Kinsworth, England, to a family of Mormons, she braided straw for hats to earn money for the clothes of the elders. She followed her father to the U.S., and lived in Ogden, U.T. for a few years, and married JOHN GALLACHER (see above) a few weeks after moving to Salt Lake City.

    Box 2, Folder 3
  18. GALLAND, DR. ISAAC - biography

    GALLAND, DR. ISAAC - Correspondence. A letter dated April 5, 1841. 4 pp. Written from Philadelphia, and addressed to Joseph Smith, describes Galland's reception on an eastward journey.

    Box 2, Folder 3
  19. HARRISON, RICHARD - journal

    HARRISON, RICHARD - b. 1808 - d. 1882. Biography. 1 p. An early Mormon pioneer, he helped develop an iron industry in Southern Utah, and was a member of the Territorial Legislature in 1855.

    Box 2, Folder 3
  20. HARWOOD, JAMES - autobiography

    HARWOOD, JAMES - b. July 24, 1834. Incomplete autobiography (to April 1900). 31 pp. Born in Shipdham Co. Norfolk, England. His profession was saddler and harnessmaker. He describes his conversion to Mormonism, as well as the journey from Liverpool to New Orleans in 1851. He gives details of a cholera epidemic in St. Louis.

    Box 2, Folder 3
  21. HEREFORD, BOB - see Bridger

    Box 2, Folder 3
  22. HOLDERBY, MRS. LAURA B. - biography, “... of Salt Lake City writes of her personal experiences with Poke and Other Confederate Indians, And of her release. 1915.”

    HOLDERBY, MRS. LAURA B. - Correspondence. 6 pp. Letter dated April 25, 1915 to Arthur Horn of Washington D.C. “... tells of her personal experiences with Poke and other Confederate Indians, and her release.”

    Box 2, Folder 3
  23. KISKADDEN, ASENATH ANNIE ADAMS - biography

    KISKADDEN, ASENATH ANNIE ADAMS - b. November 11, 1848 - d. March 16, 1916. Biography. 1 p. Kiskadden was born in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah, and was the daughter of Barnabus L. Adams and Julia Ann Banker Adams. She was an actress. She married JAMES KISKADDEN, and had a daughter, MAUDE ADAMS (b. November 11, 1872). Kiskadden died at St. Mark's Hospital, St. Louis.

    Box 2, Folder 3
  24. MANLY, W.L. - biography, “How he crossed the Plains - Description of an Adventurous Journey - Death Valley Experience”

    MANLY, W.L. - b. April 4, 1821. Biography (until 1869). 12 pp. Born in Franklin County Vermont, Manly was a Western pioneer. There is a description of a difficult journey through Death Valley in 1849-50.

    Box 2, Folder 4
  25. MARR, G.A. - correspondence to Brigham Roberts

    MARR, G.A. - Correspondence. 37 pp. Letter dated March 19, 1925. Correspondence to Brigham Roberts (President of the Eastern States Mission, Mormon Church, Brooklyn, N.Y.) regarding the position of businessmen in Utah and their religious affiliations.

    Box 2, Folder 4
  26. MCCONNELL, JEHIEL - letter by J. M. “of Ceder City to His Family, December 14, 1877”

    MCCONNELL, JEHIEL. Correspondence. 2 pp. Letter dated December 14, 1877. He wrote from Orderville, (?), to his son HENRY H. MCCONNELL and family concerning personal information and a description of life in the community.

    Box 2, Folder 4
  27. PAGE, JOHNATHON S. - autobiography, “Biography of Johnathon S. Page By Himself”

    PAGE, JOHNATHON S. - b. June 4, 1833. Autobiography. 7 pp. “The Biography of Johnathon S. Page By Himself” states that Page was born near New Port, New Jersey. From the ages of 3 to 15 he was fostered with other families, and was then returned to his family. His professions were tanner and “merchandiser”. In April 1850 he began to move West, and met up with Mormon emigrants in St. Louis. He lived in Council Bluffs, Salt Lake, Provo, Santaquin, and Payson. Page married MARY LEAVER (b. August 26, 1837- d. March 1896) on August 12, 1855, and had 13 children (some dates given). He saw the beginning of martial law in Utah. Describes Native American uprising, and a standoff with the U.S. Army in Echo Canyon and Fort Bridger. Page was a member of the 70 of the Mormon Church, and held may governmental positions from Justice of the Peace to a seat in the House of Representatives.

    Box 2, Folder 4
  28. PERRY, HENRY - biography

    PERRY, HENRY. b. 1826 - d. 1909. Biography. 2 pp. Perry, born in St. Louis was a Fort Bridger/Henry's Fork hunter, guide, teamster, and builder. He traded with the Native Americans, especially the Shoshone peoples.

    Box 2, Folder 5
  29. PROVOST, ETIENNE - biography

    PROVOST, ETIENNE. Biography. 1 p. A description of the Salt Lake City area in the 1820s-30s.

    Box 2, Folder 5
  30. REESE, JOHN - biography

    REESE, COLONEL JOHN. b. October 15, 1808. Biography. 13 pp. Reese was born in Whitestown, Overda County, New York to John and Susannah (Owen) Reese. He lived in Erie, PA and NYC, where his parents died and he assumed responsibility for the family's younger children. He was a successful grocer, then a soldier. He established a traded route to Nevada, and a squatter government in the first permanent structure there. He petitioned the U.S. Congress for the organization of a new territory. The Reese valley and river are named after him.

    Box 2, Folder 5
  31. ROBERTSON, JACK - see Bridger

    Box 2, Folder 5
  32. SCHLESSINGER, MAX - biography, “Trials of a German Boy who wanted to come to California - How he got here, and what he has been doing since he came.”

    SCHLESSINGER, MAX. b. 1829. Biography. 5 pp. “The Trials of a German Boy who wanted to come to California - How he got here, and what he has been doing since he came.” Born in Kempen, Posen, Germany, he became a San Jose businessman.

    Box 2, Folder 5
  33. WELLS, LOUIE - travel journal, “Nauvoo the Beautiful - 1883”

    WELLS, LOUIE. Letter/travel journal. Dated July 25, 1883. 3 pp. She describes journey through Nauvoo, and stay at German Hotel. She comments on the use of former Temple's rock in much of the local buildings. She visits Joseph Young's house, Brigham Young's, the Nauvoo Mansion, Riverside Mansion, and the homes of Joseph Smith, Aaron Johnson, and H. C. Kimball.

    Box 2, Folder 5
  34. WILSON, MRS. JANE ADALINE - biography, “The Capture and Sufferings of Mrs. Wilson: Shall the Comanches be Punished for Their Savage Cruelty?”

    WILSON, JANE ADELINE, MRS.. b. June 12, 1837. Autobiography dated 1854. 14 pp. In this newspaper article she describes having been born in Alton, IL; moved to Texas; married James Wilson (February 1854), and joined a wagon train bound for California with her husband's family. Her husband and his father were murdered by Native Americans outside of El Paso. She returned to Texas (?) and was attacked and captured by a party of Comanches. During her captivity she was harshly treated and was ultimately rescued by a Mexican trading party, and returned to Santa Fe.

    Box 2, Folder 5
  35. LOCKLEY, F. - autobiography, “The Lockley Manuscript”

    LOCKLEY, F. Autobiography. 102 pp. “The Lockley Manuscript” details life as a journalist at the Salt Lake Tribune in the 1870's.

    Box 2, Folder 6
  36. MEEK, W.B. - autobiography, “From the Cradle to the Grave”

    MEEK, W. B. b. 1856. Autobiography. 81 pp. “From the Cradle to the Grave” discusses a lifetime spent in the mountains of California.

    Box 2, Folder 7
  37. MORRIS, JOSEPH - biography

    Box 2, Folder 8
  38. OWEN, CHARLES MOSTYN - autobiography/social commentary, “The Mormons As I Know Them”

    OWEN, CHARLES MOSTYN. b. 1859. Autobiography/social commentary. 253 pp. Born in Oxford, England and arrived in the U.S. in 1879, “The Mormons As I Know Them” discussed Owen's relations with the Mormons, circa 1903-7.

    Box 2, Folder 9
  39. Series 3: Newspaper extracts re: Mormons and their community, 1838-1848

    Series Description

    For an “Early History of Ceder City and Vicinity” by Sen. John Urie, (13 pp.) see the biography of Richard Harrison.

  40. Bound volumes:

  41. “Mormonism in Illinois Newspaper Source Material 1838-1848”.

    Box 3, Folder 1
  42. “The Nauvoo Legion”. The Contributor.

    Box 3, Folder 2-4
  43. English, Maurice. “The Saints in Illinois”.

    Box 3, Folder 1
  44. “History of Enterprise and Its Surroundings”. 2 copies, 1 bound.

    Box 3, Folder 2
  45. Byrnes, Thomas E. “History of Iron Springs”.

    Box 3, Folder 3
  46. Carter, Chas. W. “The Exodus of 1847”

    Box 3, Folder 3
  47. “Grande Masquerade - Given Under the Auspices of the Ladies Hebrew Benevolent Society, Salt Lake City, February 22, 1878”.

    Box 3, Folder 3
  48. “History of Great Salt Lake”

    Box 3, Folder 3
  49. “The Masonic Organization”

    Box 3, Folder 3
  50. “Mormons in Nauvoo”, 2 copies

    Box 3, Folder 3
  51. “Owen's Business Directory of Salt Lake City - 1867”

    Box 3, Folder 3
  52. Itinerary of the Mail Route from Great Salt Lake to San Francisco, 2 copies, circa 1850

    (Atchison, Kansas to Great Salt Lake, Utah Territory)

    Box 3, Folder 5
  53. “The City of the Great Salt Lake”. May 1, 1858. The London Journal.

    Box 3, Folder 5
  54. “The Early History of This Region” & Misc.

    Box 3, Folder 6
  55. Ward, Artemus, “Gloverson, The Mormon: A Romance”, 3 copies.

    Box 3, Folder 7
  56. Series 4: Newspaper extracts, re: Mormons and religious practice, the U.S. Army, Native Americans, and Misc.
  57. Re: Mormons and religious practice

  58. “An Act to Punish and Prevent the Practice of Polygamy in the Territories of the United States and Other Places, and Disapproving and Annulling Certain Acts of the Territory of Utah, July 1, 1862”.

    Box 4, Folder 1
  59. “Is Polygamy Doomed in the U.S.?”

    Box 4, Folder 1
  60. Clippings, re: Brigham Young, 1873

    Box 4, Folder 1
  61. Re: Mormons and the U.S. Army

  62. “Chamber's History of Ft. Bridger 1885”.

    Box 4, Folder 2
  63. “A Dastardly Outrage”.

    Box 4, Folder 2
  64. “Fort Bridger Characters”.

    Box 4, Folder 2
  65. “From General Connor's Expedition”.

    Box 4, Folder 2
  66. “General Connor and the Mormons”.

    Box 4, Folder 2
  67. “The Murder of Dr. Robinson”.

    Box 4, Folder 2
  68. “The Utah Expedition” - The Irish News

    Box 4, Folder 2
  69. Clippings, re: Mormons - The Daily Union Vedette

    Box 4, Folder 3
  70. Clippings, re: Native Americans - The Daily Union Vedette

    Box 4, Folder 4
  71. Clippings, re: Native Americans - ”

    Box 4, Folder 5
  72. Clippings, re: Native Americans and Misc. - The Daily Union Vedette

    Box 4, Folder 6
  73. Clippings, re: Native Americans and Misc. - The Daily Union Vedette

    Box 4, Folder 7
  74. Clippings, re: Native Americans and Misc. Santa Fe Weekly Gazette, 22-111 pp. (through Sat., Dec. 24, 1853)

    Box 5, Folder 1
  75. Clippings, re: Native Americans, misc. sources

    Box 5, Folder 2
  76. Series 5: Office of Indian Affairs correspondence
  77. December 1777 - February 10, 1810

    Box 5, Folder 3
  78. 1811 - November 29, 1818

    Box 5, Folder 4
  79. January 1, 1819 - January 27, 1827

    Box 5, Folder 5
  80. May 6, 1828 - July 30, 1839

    Includes a pamphlet dated January 8, 1938, Doc. No. 78, 25th Congress, Court of Inquiry - Operations in Florida, &c. Letter from Secretary of War transmitting copies of the Proceedings of a Court of Inquiry, convened at Fredericktown, in relation to the operations against the Seminole and Creek Indians, &c.

    Box 5, Folder 6
  81. Brown enclosure: Records of John Silby, Indian Agent of the Territory of Orleans, 1807

    Box 5, Folder 1
  82. November 2, 1840 - December 28, 1849

    Box 6, Folder 1
  83. February 22, 1850 - December 31, 1851

    Box 6, Folder 2
  84. January 9, 1852 - September 30, 1852

    Box 6, Folder 3
  85. February 7, 1853 - September 30, 1853

    Box 6, Folder 4
  86. October 1, 1853 - August 19, 1854

    Box 6, Folder 5
  87. Report on exploration from the Head of the Missouri River to the Pacific, and Washington Territory - December 29, 1854

    Box 6, Folder 6
  88. Enclosure: “Official Proceedings of the Commission appointed to hold council with the Blackfeet and other Indian Tribes on the head waters of the Missouri River, in the year 1855”.

    Box 7, Folder 1
  89. January 9, 1855 - December 31, 1856

    Box 7, Folder 1
  90. January 13, 1857 - December 31, 1857

    Box 7, Folder 2
  91. January 9, 1858 - December 31, 1858

    Box 7, Folder 3
  92. January 7, 1859 - December 25, 1859

    Box 7, Folder 4
  93. January 7, 1866 - December 22, 1862

    Box 7, Folder 5
  94. January 10, 1863 - November 28, 1865

    Box 8, Folder 1
  95. February 17, 1866 - June 27, 1867

    Box 8, Folder 2
  96. March 4, 1867 - June 14, 1867

    (Investigation of the Fort Phillip Kearny Massacre)

    Box 8, Folder 3
  97. September 6, 1867

    (Testimony of Fort Phillip Kearny Massacre)

    Box 8, Folder 4
  98. Testimony of Henry B. Carrington of the Fort Phillip Kearny Massacre (continued from above)

    Box 8, Folder 5
  99. October 7, 1867 and Report by Special Indian Commissioner JFK - December 29, 1869

    Box 8, Folder 6
  100. January 11, 1870 - November 14, 1876

    Box 8, Folder 7
  101. Enclosure: “Report of the Commissioners appointed by the Secretary of the Interior to examine the Red Cloud and Whetstone Indian Agencies” April 23, 1874

    Box 9, Folder 1
  102. April 26, 1877 - November 4, 1878, March 31, 1880 - May 19, 1882

    Box 9, Folder 1
  103. Telegrams between Red Cloud Office of Indian Affairs and Washington, February 17, 1878 - December 24, 1878

    Box 9, Folder 2
  104. November 12, 1890 - November 30, 1890

    Box 9, Folder 3
  105. December 1, 1890 - December 31, 1890

    Box 9, Folder 4
  106. January 2, 1891 - January 29, 1891

    Box 9, Folder 5
  107. Undated correspondence and misc. pertaining to the Office of Indian Affairs

    Box 9, Folder 6
  108. Series 6: John Wolcott Phelps letters
  109. Xeroxed copies of letters in Phelps' hand, dated from July 11, 1857 - May 30, 1858 while on a military expedition to Utah (1857- 1859)

    Box 10

Permanent URL: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/5138jd87p

Download PDF