Box 1
Contains 408 Results:
Typescript letter signed W.T. Harris [William Torrey Harris], commissioner, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Washington, D.C., to W.V. Byars, South Orange, New Jersey, regarding the receipt of a copy of Byars’ “The Glory of the Garden” and other odes. Harris writes that if he had more power in the country he would recognize Byars “in a proper manner.”, 1896 May 21
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Letter signed Ellen A. Bernoudy, St. Louis, to Wm. Vincent Byars, South Orange, New Jersey, seeking a copy of one of Byars’ poems., 1896 May 22
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Typescript letter signed R.H. Jesse, University of the State of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, to William Vincent Byars, South Orange, New Jersey, thanking Byars for sending them a “dainty volume of verse.”, 1896 May 23
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Letter signed Mary Irwin, Tunica, Tunica County, Mississippi, to W.V. Byars, New York, asking Byars to help her and her sister find employment with a newspaper in New York. Includes untitled newspaper clipping praising Byars’ literary work and his recent association with the literary department of the New York World., 1896 May 24
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Typescript letter signed W.T. Harris [William Torrey Harris], commissioner, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Washington, D.C., to W.V. Byars, South Orange, New Jersey, asking that Byars send a copy of his book to the editor of the New England Magazine for whom Harris will write a letter commending the book., 1896 May 26
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Typescript letter signed W.T. Harris [William Torrey Harris], commissioner, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Washington, D.C., to W.V. Byars, South Orange, New Jersey. Harris includes the address of Mr. Mead in Boston and asks Byars to reconsider not taking compensation for book orders., 1896 May 29
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Letter signed Wm. T. Essex, Kirkwood, Missouri, to Byars, regarding the St. Louis tornado, assuring Byars that the damage in Kirkwood was not as bad as in the city., 1896 May 30
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Typescript letter signed W.T. Harris [William Torrey Harris], commissioner, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Washington, D.C., to W.V. Byars, South Orange, New Jersey, thanking Byars on behalf of the library for sending a copy of “Glory of the Garden,” and Harris promises to send a copy to Prof. Thomas Davidson in Essex County, New York., 1896 June 2
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Letter signed Mary Irwin, Tunica, Tunica County, Mississippi, to William Vincent Byars, New York, regarding Byars’ “The Glory of the Garden” and asking for a sketch of his work and his picture for her work on the poetry of the South., 1896 June 6
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.
Letter signed R.P. Bland, Lebanon, Missouri, to Wm. Vincent Byars, South Orange, New Jersey, thanking Byars for Mrs. Bland upon receipt of his book., 1896 June 15
The collection includes correspondence of William V. Byars with numerous individuals including newspaper men, politicians, and literary figures. Principal correspondents include Arthur Brisbane, William Marion Reedy, and Byars’ father, James Byars. The collection also contains poems and other writings of William V. Byars.