Box 1B
Contains 82 Results:
Letter from Mary[?] ... to Mrs. Joseph Medill, 1884-05-09 (postmark)
Letter from J.M. Patterson ([Chicago]) to "Miss Foote", 1890-06-19
Letter from H.K. French (The Friday Club, Chicago) to Mrs. Joseph Medill, 1893-02-04
Letter from Bertha Honore Palmer to "My Dear Mrs. Patterson", 1893
"Please tell him [Mr.Patterson] my heart was broken by the editorial in the Tribune today about the Woman's [?] exhibit [at the 1893 World's Columbian Exhibition]. I have been in sackcloth and ashes because of it."
Letter from Jane Addams (Hull-House, Chicago) to "My dear Mrs. Medill", 1894-03-20
Telegram from Mrs. Joseph Medill (Chicago) to Mrs. Robert Patterson (Steamship "City of Paris", New York), 1894-06-05
Letter from E... ... (Groton School camp, Holderness, N.H.) to "Mr. Patterson", 1896-07-03
Invitation to the wedding of Alice Higinbotham and Joseph Medill Patterson, 1902-11-19
Invitation to the wedding of Ruth Hanna and Joseph Medill McCormick, 1903-06-10
Invitation to the wedding of Eleanor Medill and Count Gizycki, 1904-04-14
Clipping from the Chicago Daily Tribune: "Letter of Marquise de Fontenoy"
Letter from Margaret ... (III., Reisnerstrasse 48) to Countess Gizyska, 1905-05-30
Letter from Baron Schlipp... to "Mrs. Patterson", 1905-05-04
Letter from "Helena Modjeska ...owska"[?] (Chicago) to "Dear Mrs. Patterson" , 1905-05-10
Postcard from S[?] to Mrs. R.W. Patterson (Paris, France), 1905-06
Letter from Therese, 1905-07
Letter from Orville Hickman Browning (Quincy, Ill.) to Joseph Medill, 1871-10-11
"I sincerely sympathize with you in your great calamity. [The Chicago fire of 1871.] I suppose you are burnt out of house and home. If so, send Mrs. Medill and the children here, without delay, to remain with us, until you can make the necessary arrangements for their comfort."
Letter from Joseph Medill (Tribune Office, Chicago) to Edwin Stanton, 1862-01-21
Letter from Henry Adams to Mrs. Eleanor Medill Patterson, 1905-03-02
"You are so gracious as to send me a card for your ball, though I am but a poor creature beneath the notice of ball-givers, and long ago banished from the gaieties of Dupont Circle. ... I am sorry I have no diamonds and pearls for my guests to decorate your rooms with. Please think of me as wearing a double imperial crown in your honor."
Letter from Marshall Field (Chicago) to Robert W. Patterson, 1903-05-27
"The editorial you sent me in your issue of May 10th I had read before and think it most excellent, only from my standpoint I would have also said that union men must not kill non-union men if they wished to work, and the other side should not kill union men. I have also read your editorial in today's paper: 'The Mayor on Traction' and in the main I entirely agree with it ..."