fully submitted to Congress, by the Memorialist.
Washington City:
January, 1802.
E255 .H89
8vo. 24 leaves.
Probably Jefferson’s copy; separated from a volume of pamphlets and bound in brown buckram by the Library of Congress.
The introductory letter to the Senate and the House of Representatives is dated from Washington, December 31st, 1801. The
period covered by the Memorial is from February 1776, when Hughes was appointed a commissary of military stores in the city
of New York, to January 1, 1783, and the correspondence continues to March 26, 1800.
[3283]
?
J. 9. HALL,
Elisha I.
Observations and Documents, Relative to a Calumny, Circulated by John Brown, a Member of the Senate of the United States,
from Kentucky, to the prejudice of Elisha I. Hall, of Frederick County, Virginia.
[Without name of place or printer, n.d.,
1802.]
CT275 .H283 .A3
Sm. 8vo. 24 leaves.
Bound in blue buckram; possibly Jefferson’s copy.
The Observations occupy pages [3]-16, and are dated from Frederick County, (Virginia,) April 4, 1802. These are followed by
the Documents, twenty in number, dated from Sept. 20, 1798, to March 11, 1802.
John Brown,1757-1837, a Representative from Virginia and a Senator from Kentucky. Accounts of him are in the Dictionary of American Biography and in the Biographical Directory of the American Congress. At his death, on August 29, 1837, he was the last survivor of the Continental Congress.
[3284]
J. 10. WOLCOTT,
Oliver.
An Address, to the People of the United States, on the Subject of the Report of a Committee of the House of Representatives,
Appointed to “Examine and Report, Whether Monies Drawn from the Treasury, have been Faithfully Applied to the Objects for
which They were Appropriated, and whether the same have been Regularly Accounted for.” Which Report was Presented on the 29th
of April, 1802. By Oliver Wolcott, Late Secretary of the Treasury of the United States.
Boston, Printed:
Hartford: Re-Printed by
Hudson & Goodwin,
1802.
HJ273
8vo. 36 leaves, the last a blank.
Sabin 104982.
Dexter IV, page 86.
Unbound.
Contains several references to Jefferson.
Oliver Wolcott, 1760-1833, the son of the Signer of that name, succeeded Hamilton, whose loyal supporter he was, as Secretary of the Treasury.
On April 25, 1802, a House Committee Report impugned the rectitude and efficiency of his Treasury administration, and Wolcott
wrote this Address to the People in answer to the charges made. The first edition was published in Boston earlier in the same
year.
[3285]
J. 11. CARON DE BEAUMARCHAIS,
Amélie Eugénie.
The Memorial and Claim of Amelie Eugenie Caron de Beaumarchais, Wife of André Toussaint de la Rue Heir and Representative of Caron de Beaumarchais by her Agent John Augustus Chevallie for a Balance due his Estate for Sundry Arms, Ammunition, &c. Furnished the United States
during the War between Great-Britain and America.
Richmond: Printed by
A. Davis,
m,dccci
. [1801.]