You
have
selected

  • Author

    • Latrobe, Benjamin Henry
  • Project

    • Jefferson Papers

Recipient

Sort: Frequency / Alphabetical

Show: Top 1

Period

Dates From

Dates To

Search help
Documents filtered by: Author="Latrobe, Benjamin Henry" AND Project="Jefferson Papers"
Results 91-111 of 111 sorted by editorial placement
  • |<
  • <<
  • <
  • Page 4
  • >
  • >>
  • >|
I arrived here on Wednesday evening, having been 11 days on the road, 3 of which were spent in...
I am exceedingly sorry that the verbal, & written orders given on my departure for Philadelphia...
Mr. Latrobe offers his most respectful compliments to the President UStates & sends his annual...
Agreeably to your desire I submit to you an estimate of one intercolumnation as erected on each...
I herewith have the honor to send you two Copies of my report on the public buildings, the...
To the President of the United States of America. The Report of the Surveyor of the Publick...
A Report has just now been made to the House on the public Buildings. It contains all the...
In reply to the letter I have had the honor to receive from you this morning I beg to submit the...
Since I dispatched my letter of this morning, I have gone over with Mr Lenthall the papers in the...
Since your departure I have made every possible exertion to forward the progress of the public...
I herein enclose the strongest specimen of the plant which under the name of Dryrot commits such...
The stone for the Steps of the President’s house is, in part arrived, & I am in hopes that the...
Since your departure the public Works have made regular progress, nor has any thing occurred...
The fall of the arch or Vault of the Court room in the North Wing of the Capitol on Monday last,...
The several appropriations made at the last session of Congress for the progress of the work on...
I have the honor to enclose a sketch of my report on the public buildings. I will wait upon you...
Mr. Latrobe intended to have waited on the President this evening, but as he has returned the...
The impossibility in the present hurry of the Post office of ascertaining correctly the balances...
Your letter of the 29th. relative to the Glass supplied to you from the public Stock, was...
Mr LeMair has no inventory of the furniture of the President’s house, but he informs me that Mr...
Mr Latrobe presents his most respectful Compliments to the President U.S.—& thanks him for the...