Manuscripts
Thomas Hood autograph letters
Image not available
You might also be interested in
Image not available
The Headlong Career and Woful Ending of Precocious Piggy
Manuscripts
Illustrated by his son Thomas Hood (1835-1874).
mssHM 12406
Image not available
The Dream of Eugene Aram: poem: a forgery
Manuscripts
Also includes a forged letter from Thomas Hood to "My dear Smith," April 13 (mssHM 12384).
mssHM 12384-12385
Image not available
Red Dragon ship logbook
Manuscripts
Log of the voyage of the "Red Dragon" from England to Africa and South America, Captain Robert Widdrington in command; kept by Thomas Hood.
mssHM 1648
Image not available
Thomas J. Hood letter, Walnut Ridge, Ark
Manuscripts
The letter signed "W.G.C.", deals with the elections to the Kentucky Constitutional Convention (1849), the letter of Henry Clay to Richard Pindell (1849) and projects of gradual emancipation of slaves, anti-slavery movement in Kentucky, news of the California Gold Rush and the author's Arkansas plantation
mssHM 58075

Letter from Thomas Greenough to John Greenough
Manuscripts
A sharply worded letter in which Thomas Greenough rebukes his his son John, ( who had been caught selling two chests of English tea) for causing "an alienation of affection between brethren" and lecturing him on the nature of civil government.
mssHM 70282
Image not available
Thomas Nast Papers
Manuscripts
Collection of letters of American cartoonist Thomas Nast (1840-1902) and his family -- his wife, Sarah Edwards Nast, and his son Thomas Nast, Jr. There are twenty five letters by Thomas Nast, chiefly addressed to his wife, written during his trips to England and Italy to cover the Heenan-Sayers prizefight and Giuseppe Garabaldi's military campaign in Sicily (1860), (this group also includes six letters addressed to William Luson Thomas, 1830-1900), the tour of Pennsylvania battlefields in the summer of 1863, the trip to Washington in the beginning of 1872, his 1873 lecture tour, and from Guayaquil, Ecuador (1902). Also included are three letters from Sarah Edwards Nast to her husband (1859 and 1869). There is also a copy (in the hand of Mrs. Nast) of a satire of Andrew Johnson ("So sayeth King Andy Johnson"), perhaps a caption to a political cartoon. The rest of the collection are letters of condolence and official correspondence dealing with Thomas Nast's death and settling of his accounts. Correspondents include Herbert Henry Henry Davis Peirce and Theodore Roosevelt. Selected Nast's letters were published by Albert Bigelow Paine in his Th. Nast : his period and his pictures (New York : Macmillan; London : Macmillan & Co., Ltd., 1904).
mssHM 27714-27783