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Box 1

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Contains 38 Results:

1865 November

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 33
Identifier: Series 3
Scope and contents From the Series: These letters, while not related to Clarkson's anti-slavery works, do fall in the bounds of familial relations. This series of letters and an unpublished typescript were written by Mrs. Mary Dickinson, who was the daughter-in-law of Thomas Clarkson. Several years after the death of her husband, Thomas Clarkson II, Mary Clarkson married Willoughby Dickinson. As wife of a rector and teacher, Mary Dickinson was invited to Sandringham Palace, where the British royal family maintains a hunting...
Dates: 1785-1871

1866 December 1

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 34
Identifier: Series 3
Scope and contents From the Series: These letters, while not related to Clarkson's anti-slavery works, do fall in the bounds of familial relations. This series of letters and an unpublished typescript were written by Mrs. Mary Dickinson, who was the daughter-in-law of Thomas Clarkson. Several years after the death of her husband, Thomas Clarkson II, Mary Clarkson married Willoughby Dickinson. As wife of a rector and teacher, Mary Dickinson was invited to Sandringham Palace, where the British royal family maintains a hunting...
Dates: 1785-1871

1871 January 24

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 35
Identifier: Series 3
Scope and contents From the Series: These letters, while not related to Clarkson's anti-slavery works, do fall in the bounds of familial relations. This series of letters and an unpublished typescript were written by Mrs. Mary Dickinson, who was the daughter-in-law of Thomas Clarkson. Several years after the death of her husband, Thomas Clarkson II, Mary Clarkson married Willoughby Dickinson. As wife of a rector and teacher, Mary Dickinson was invited to Sandringham Palace, where the British royal family maintains a hunting...
Dates: 1785-1871

Thomas Clarkson to Madame Williams, 1815 September 13

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 19
Identifier: Series 5
Scope and contents From the Series: This series contains letters written by Thomas Clarkson and his wife, Catherine Buck Clarkson. The bulk of the correspondence dates from 1793 to 1800. The main recipient was William Buck, Catherine Buck Clarkson's father. The letters deal mainly with personal matters such as visits, birth announcements, and changing wills. A letter of interest, dated October 11, 1818 from Clarkson to his wife, refers to an interview between him and "the Emperor" [Alexander I of Russia] and alludes to...
Dates: 1815 September 13

1871 April 11

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 36
Identifier: Series 3
Scope and contents From the Series: These letters, while not related to Clarkson's anti-slavery works, do fall in the bounds of familial relations. This series of letters and an unpublished typescript were written by Mrs. Mary Dickinson, who was the daughter-in-law of Thomas Clarkson. Several years after the death of her husband, Thomas Clarkson II, Mary Clarkson married Willoughby Dickinson. As wife of a rector and teacher, Mary Dickinson was invited to Sandringham Palace, where the British royal family maintains a hunting...
Dates: 1785-1871

undated

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 37-39
Identifier: Series 3
Scope and contents From the Series: These letters, while not related to Clarkson's anti-slavery works, do fall in the bounds of familial relations. This series of letters and an unpublished typescript were written by Mrs. Mary Dickinson, who was the daughter-in-law of Thomas Clarkson. Several years after the death of her husband, Thomas Clarkson II, Mary Clarkson married Willoughby Dickinson. As wife of a rector and teacher, Mary Dickinson was invited to Sandringham Palace, where the British royal family maintains a hunting...
Dates: 1785-1871

Typescript of Life at Sandringham in the "Sixties" by the late Mrs. Dickinson, Wife of the Rector of Wolferton , undated

 Item — Box: 1, Folder: 40
Identifier: Series 3
Scope and contents From the Series: These letters, while not related to Clarkson's anti-slavery works, do fall in the bounds of familial relations. This series of letters and an unpublished typescript were written by Mrs. Mary Dickinson, who was the daughter-in-law of Thomas Clarkson. Several years after the death of her husband, Thomas Clarkson II, Mary Clarkson married Willoughby Dickinson. As wife of a rector and teacher, Mary Dickinson was invited to Sandringham Palace, where the British royal family maintains a hunting...
Dates: undated

Anne Liceat Invitos In Servitutem Dare? translated as Is It Lawful to Make Slaves of Others Against Their Will?, 1784

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 20
Identifier: Series 1
Scope and contents From the Series: This series is comprised of a few items written by Thomas Clarkson. Included is the original essay in Latin, An Liceat Nolentes in Servitutem Dare? [Is It Lawful to Make Slaves of Others Against Their Will?] that won the Chancellor's Prize at Cambridge College in 1785. This essay was later expanded and published in 1786 under the title of Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African. Also...
Dates: 1784

An Liceat Nolentes In Servitutem Dare? , handwritten copy of essay, 1784

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 21
Identifier: Series 1
Scope and contents From the Series: This series is comprised of a few items written by Thomas Clarkson. Included is the original essay in Latin, An Liceat Nolentes in Servitutem Dare? [Is It Lawful to Make Slaves of Others Against Their Will?] that won the Chancellor's Prize at Cambridge College in 1785. This essay was later expanded and published in 1786 under the title of Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African. Also...
Dates: 1784

Journal of a visit to France after the fall of the Bastille, handwritten, 1789

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 22
Identifier: Series 1
Scope and contents From the Series: This series is comprised of a few items written by Thomas Clarkson. Included is the original essay in Latin, An Liceat Nolentes in Servitutem Dare? [Is It Lawful to Make Slaves of Others Against Their Will?] that won the Chancellor's Prize at Cambridge College in 1785. This essay was later expanded and published in 1786 under the title of Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African. Also...
Dates: 1789