You
have
selected

  • Recipient

    • Randolph, Martha Jefferson
  • Early Access

    • true

Author

Sort: Frequency / Alphabetical

Show: Top 1

Period

Dates From

Dates To

Search help
Documents filtered by: Recipient="Randolph, Martha Jefferson" AND EarlyAccess="true"
Results 1-30 of 49 sorted by date (ascending)
  • |<
  • <<
  • <
  • Page 1
  • >
  • >>
  • >|
Your letter of Apr. 19. & mr Randolph’s of Apr. 27. have given me the agreeable information of mr...
I have been a month now without hearing from Edgehill, mr Randolph’s letter of May 11. being the...
I have barely time to tell you that mrs Madison has executed your desires and I dare say to your...
I last night recieved a letter from mr Taylor of Baltimore informing me he had sent by the stage...
I performed my journey to this place without any accident or disagreeable circumstance except...
I have been from home now three weeks without having heard from you or of you through any...
Immediately on the reciept of your last letter, as mrs Madison was and is still in Philadelphia,...
I was uneasy at not hearing from you by the last post, that is to say, by the one which arrived...
The carriage goes off in the morning for Centerville, in time, if you should arrive there early &...
I arrived here, my dear Martha, to breakfast, on the Saturday morning before the last, without...
The last letter I have had from Edgehill was Anne’s of June 20. that informed me that the family...
John delivered safely your letter of the 14th. I am sorry you did not continue at Monticello...
Davy arrived last night and will set out tomorrow on his return. by him I send the flower-pot &...
Tomorrow Congress will close; but I hardly expect to get away under a week. it will take that...
I wrote you on Monday evening, and then expected that a morning or two more would have produced a...
I have the happiness to inform you that mr Randolph is entirely well. his fever had left him at...
Altho’ I wrote to you by post yesterday, yet as an opportunity offers by Capt Clarke at noon...
Altho’ this letter which goes by the carts, will not reach you till Monday evening, and that...
I wrote to you by the carts yesterday morning; but as you will not get that letter till Monday...
Mr Randolph continues well. nothing has happened to throw him back. he rides out now on good days...
Mr. Randolph continues well without the least retrograde circumstance. he sleeps well, walks a...
Mr. Randolph’s convalescence proceeds steadily, not a single circumstance having arisen to throw...
I presume mr Randolph writes to you and informs you he continues well. he has rode twice on...
I presume mr Randolph informs you himself that he is quite well. indeed I have no doubt he could...
Being apprehensive we have mistaken, by one day, the departure of the horse post from hence, I...
We are all well here, my ever dear Martha, but I shall not be able probably to set out tomorrow,...
I am in hopes this evening’s mail will bring me information that you are all well, tho in the...
I have just recieved information from mr Jefferson that my shipwrecked goods are gone on from...
As it seems now tolerably probable that the British squadron in our bay have not in contemplation...
My journey to this place was not as free from accident as usual. I was near losing Castor in the...