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- 1927-05-10 (x)
- Brush, Charles Francis, 1849-1929 (x)
- Ford, Allen H. (x)
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Show moreTyped letter from George Brush to Charles F., Sr., discussing George’s knowledge of Brush genealogy. Includes Morrow County, OH, common please court decision which lists descendents of George’s father Charles Talbot Brush as a listing of more Brushes for Charles F.’s data.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreHandwritten letter from Grace Maynard to Charles F., Sr., thanking him for the reply but repeating her mother’s claim as a descendant of Thomas Brush and therefore related to a Charles F. Brush. She then mentions her troubles with no one to help her. Includes envelope
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreHandwritten letter from Mrs. George Brush Carpenter to Charles F., Sr., following up on her 1919 request for a compilation of Brush genealogy because she had not yet heard back after Mr. Brush promised to send the genealogy to her once it was completed
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreTyped letter from Edwin Brush to Charles F., Sr., discussing Edwin’s close family and the history of the Brush Family in America; mentions an enclosed booklet titled the Brush Family in America, but the booklet was returned to Edwin in the following months.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreTyped letter from Lee Harris to Charles F., Sr., asking Brush if there was any record in the Brush genealogy of either a Charles H. Brush or a Leon H. Brush, son of Joshua M. Brush
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreHandwritten letter from Edna Brush Ketcham (Mrs. E.V. Ketcham) to Charles F., Sr., asking him to help her correct a chart of Brush genealogy she had enclosed. Includes envelope, but not the chart she mentions.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 2
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Show moreTyped letter from Charles O’Connor to Charles F., Sr., listing a number of books that contain Brush genealogy that Charles Brush might be interested in. Charles O’Connor is a rare book dealer and genealogical historian.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreHandwritten letter from Edna Brush (Mrs. E.V.) Ketcham to Charles F., Sr., thanking him for his help with genealogy, reminding him of the book at the printers, and discussing some discrepancies between her records of when the Brushes came to America and his.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreHandwritten letter from Grace Maynard to Charles F., Sr., asking if she is related to him, as her mother told her she was. Also asks if, as her mother died making her an orphan, Charles would be willing to help her out at all.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreHandwritten letter from Fanny Brush to Charles F., Sr., reminding him that he had promised her his genealogy book, and also listing her husband Edmund Brush’s family history
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 9
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Show moreTypescript for the genealogy of Henry Wisner, by Captain Charles B. Dahlgren, from May 30, 1896, printed 1898. Contains early draft of publication about Wisner, including a brief description of his Swiss ancestry, a timeline detailing his role in the American Revolution, and as a signer of the Declaration of Independence, as well as a reproduction of his will, a list of relics in existence, the burial place of Wisner, as well as genealogies for the descendants of Wisner. The Wisner family has descendants in the Phillips family. Charles F. Brush, Sr. and his family are linked to the Wisner family through the marriage of Charles F., Sr. to Delia Williams Phillips
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 8: Other Papers (1842-1960)
Subseries 1: Biographical (1880s-1932)
Box 27
Folder 5
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Show moreWith: Geography of Cleveland. Cleveland, OH : Union Trust Co., 1914 "Under the auspices of the Executive Committee of the Woman's Department of the Cleveland Centennial Commission-1896."
KSL Digital Book Collection
Cleveland, Ohio and the Western Reserve Digital Text Collection
Ohio, its people and places. Cleveland, Ohio, selections, 1796-1930 ; reel 12
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Show moreWith: Geography of Cleveland. Cleveland, OH : Union Trust Co., 1914 "Under the auspices of the Executive Committee of the Woman's Department of the Cleveland Centennial Commission-1896."
KSL Digital Book Collection
Cleveland, Ohio and the Western Reserve Digital Text Collection
Ohio, its people and places. Cleveland, Ohio, selections, 1796-1930
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Cleveland, Ohio
Show moreSome genealogical data about Moses Cleaveland, as compiled from his family bible by his son-in-law Samuel C. Morgan, September 1, 1867
Cleveland, Ohio and the Western Reserve Digital Text Collection
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Show moreTwo publications of, one typescript, and one handwritten manuscript for the Brush genealogy entitled, A Concise Genealogy of Isaac Elbert Brush and Delia Williams Phillips, His Wife, and of Their Descendants. First book published in 1925, includes part one and appendices. Second book published in 1932, consists of part one, part two, and appendices. Typescript, dated October 17, 1931, consists of biographical sketch for Charles F., Sr. Handwritten manuscript, dated 1927, early draft for section on the scientific impact of Charles F., Sr.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 8: Other Papers (1842-1960)
Subseries 1: Biographical (1880s-1932)
Box 27
Folder 4
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Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Cor
Show moreHandwritten letter regarding genealogy, includes enclosure listing genealogy that Percy Brush had researched
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 1: Correspondence
Subseries 1: Family and Personal (1889-1929)
Box 2
Folder 1
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Show moreThree typescripts, no date, related to the Brush family genealogy. Includes genealogy of Richard Brush, the Phillips Family, and the Brush family from the origins of the name through Charles F., Sr.
Charles F. Brush, Sr., Papers
Series 8: Other Papers (1842-1960)
Subseries 1: Biographical (1880s-1932)
Box 27
Folder 3
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KSL Digital B
Show moreEdition, 600 numbered copies. Number 423 UL SpecCol copy. Vols. 1-3 have bookplate: Flora Stone Mather College Library and in phase boxes
KSL Digital Book Collection
Books on Cleveland Collection
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Show moreTranscription: "My dear Mr Kingsley I thank you sincerely for your letter. I have been glad to hear about the Duke of Argyle, for ever since the Glasgow Brit. Assoc. when he was President, I have been his ardent admirer. What a fine thing it is to be a Duke: nobody but a Duke, the first time he geologised would have found a new formation; & the first time he botanised a new lichen to Britain. With respect to the pigeons, your remarks show me clearly (without seeing specimens, though I thank you for the kind offer) that the birds shot were the Stock Dove or C. Oenas, long confounded with the Cushat & Rock-pigeon. It is in some respects intermediate in appearance & habits; as it breeds in holes in trees & in rabbit-warrens. It is so far intermediate that it quite justifies what you say on all the forms being descendants of one. That is a grand & almost awful question on the genealogy of man to which you allude. It is not so awful & difficult to me, as it seems to be most, partly from familiarity & partly, I think, from having seen a good many Barbarians. I declare the thought, when I first saw in T. del Fuego a naked painted, shivering hideous savage, that my ancestors must have been somewhat similar beings, was at that time as revolting to me, nay more revolting than my present belief that an incomparably more remote ancestor was a hairy beast. Monkeys have downright good hearts, at least sometimes, as I could show, if I had space. I have long attended to this subject, & have materials for a curious essay on Human expression, & a little on the relation in mind of man to the lower animals. How I shd. be abused if I were to publish such an essay! I hope & rather expect that Sir C. Lyell will enter in his new Book on the relations of men & other animals; but I do not know what his recent intentions are. It is a very curious subject, that of the old myths; but you naturally with your classical & old-world knowledge lay more stress on such beliefs, than I do with all my profound ignorance. Very odd those accounts in India of the little hairy men! It is very true what you say about the higher races of men, when high enough, replacing & clearing off the lower races. In 500 years how the Anglo-saxon race will have spread & exterminated whole nations; & in consequence how much the Human race, viewed as a unit, will have risen in rank. Man is clearly an old-world, not an American, species; & if ever intermediate forms between him & unknown Quadrumana are found, I should expect they would be found in Tropical countries, probably islands. But what a chance if ever they are discovered: look at the French beds with the celts, & no fragment of a human bone. It is indeed, as you say absurd to expect a history of the early stages of man in prehistoric times. I hope that I have not wearied you with my scribbling & with many thanks for your letter, I remain with much respect, Yours sincerely, Charles Darwin As you seem to care for all departments of n. History, I send a pamphlet with a rather curious physiological case." Letter sent from Down, Bromley, Kent, England. Page missing.
The Robert M. Stecher Collection of Charles Darwin Books and Manuscripts
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Show moreTranscription: "My dear Mr Bates, I want to hear a little news of you and your Book, and how you and it go on. We have had a wretched summer and have returned home about a fortnight. One of my poor Boys, Leonard, was fearfully ill for two months from effect of Scarlet fever and on our journey to sea-side, Mrs Darwin sickened with the fever and we were detained 3 weeks at Southampton. My health has suffered considerably, but I am now slowly at work again. When at leisure pray let me have a line, telling me what you have been doing. By the way the other day a Mr Edwin Brown of Burton sent me Procs. of N. Ent. Soc. with a letter, in which he tells me that he is working at a genealogical classification of genus Carabus. In answer I told him that you had thought of something of the kind. Pray believe me, Yours very sincerely, C. Darwin" Letter, signed by sender. Sent from Down House, near Beckenham, Kent, England.
The Robert M. Stecher Collection of Charles Darwin Books and Manuscripts
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