Box 1
Contains 408 Results:
Letter signed Ellen A. Bernoudy, Office Superintendent Public Schools, Board of Education Building, Ninth and Locust Streets, St. Louis, to my dear Mr. Byars, regarding a meeting with Mrs. McClure., 1894 Jan 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 Ellen A. Bernoudy, Office Superintendent Public Schools, Board of Education Building, Ninth and Locust Streets, St. Louis, to my dear Mr. Byars, thanking Byars for a poem. Bernoundy also includes the address of Mrs. Margaret A.E. McClure, 43 Vandeventer Place., 1894 Jan 4
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 E.A. Bernoudy, Office Superintendent Public Schools, Board of Education Building, Ninth and Locust Streets, St. Louis, to my dear Mr. Byars, requesting that Byars look over a few verses that she wrote before they are printed., 1894 Jan 4
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. B. Bate, Washington, D.C., to W.V. Byars, St. Louis, praising Byars for turning down a job at The New York World, and for seeing the importance of pronouncing his own political convictions as more important than earning a large sum of money. He mentions a few papers that might be in need of an editor, and he offers to speak on Byars’ behalf as he has already done in another case. Bate also writes of the party’s failures., 1894 Jan 9
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 P.G. Robert to Mr. Byars, St. Louis, regarding Byars’ work. Robert critiques Byars’ theory on the origin of “agnosticism.”, 1894 Jan 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.
Unsigned letter, Stratman, Missouri, to William Vincent Byars, praising Byars’ work in the Republic., 1894 Feb 7
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 Mrs. Margaret A.E. McClure, St. Louis, to W.V. Byars, expressing appreciation for “The Tempting of the King” and his articles in the Republic., 1894 Feb 16
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 S.R. Shelton, Covington, Tennessee, to Wm. V. Byars, St. Louis, thanking Byars for his good opinion of Shelton’s abilities. Shelton, however, feels that he is not able enough to fill the office of president., 1894 Feb 20
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 W.D. Leeper, Chapman & Leeper, lawyers, Chillicothe, Missouri, to William Vincent Byars, St. Louis, regarding an opening with a county newspaper, the Constitution. Leeper describes the paper, its circulation, and how much it should pay if there is good management. He believes that Byars would be good for managing the paper if he would only desire to do so. (6 pages), 1894 Feb 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.
Letter signed W.D. Leeper, Chapman & Leeper, lawyers, Chillicothe, Missouri, to W.V. Byars, St. Louis, updating Byars on the affairs of the Constitution., 1894 Feb 27
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.