00. Small Acquisitions
00
Found in 1212 Collections and/or Records:
Winter school expenses
00-2010-345-0
School bill for 1836-1837, listing students, days they attended, cost per student, cost of tuition and board, public money rendered, and other items.
Joshua Huntington Wolcott letter to Frederick Henry Wolcott
00-2017-38-0
Writes from Boston to his brother in New York about business and family matters in Litchfield, CT.
Oliver Wolcott purchase order
00-2010-89-0
Order from Oliver Wolcott, William Marsh, & Ozias Lewis in Litchfield for Plaster of Paris to be delivered from New Haven
Wolcott papers
00-2023-03-0
One document signed by Oliver Wolcott (1726-1797) certifying that a Continental Sorrel horse was sold to Charles Woodruff who has paid full value. Three orders endorsed by Oliver Wolcott (1760-1833) while working for the Connecticut State Pay Table Office. Circular letter from Oliver Wolcott (1760-1833) from the U.S. Treasury Department regarding specification of ship cargo.
Wolcottville First School District account books
00-1980-35-0
Wolcottville Manufacturing Company certificate
00-2014-09-0
1821 documentation after inspecting the productiveness and value of the Wolcottville Manufacturing Company by John R. Landon, an agent of the Phoenix Bank. The letter includes information about the laborers, machinery, cost and quality of blue broadcloth. Subscribers include Benjamin Tallmadge, Seth P. Beers, James Goule, Charles L. Webb. A certified copy signed by Fredrick Wolcott, (son of Oliver Wolcott).
Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Litchfield record book
00-1936-10-0
The Women's College Club of Litchfield County Booklets
00-2012-28-0
Reuben Woodard family genealogical record
00-2010-253-0
Genealogical record for Dr. Reuben Sherman Woodward (1766-1849) and Rachel Prindle Woodward (1775-1840) of Watertown, Conn., and their children.
Woodbury. Justice of the Peace. Writ
00-2010-62-0
A writ from Gideon Walker, Justice of the Peace to the sheriff of Litchfield County or constables of Woodbury (Conn.) to attach the goods of Sirus Proctor, a negro transient man. To answer to John Mitchell of Woodbury for a debt. The reverse side lists the goods attached.