Box 3
Container
Contains 1 Result:
Letter signed Chauncey I. Filley, St. Louis, to Mrs. Beauregard and Miss Drumm. Speaks of the Hudson Bay Trading Post located near Tacoma, Washington. Has a complete record of the Chartrand family who came from France in 1724 and settled in Carondelet thirty-nine years before Laclede and Chouteau laid out Post St. Louis. Calls himself the sole survivor of the Constitutional Convention of 1865. “It was the first Constitutional Convention to fully and completely revise the Territorial Convention of 1820.” Has an album containing the pictures of the members of that Convention. Individuals mentioned: Bishop Tuttle, Hon. W.G. Pettus, and Charles Parsons Pettus. Places mentioned: Missouri [River], France, Canada, Wisconsin, Mississippi [River], and St. Charles., 1919 May 23
Item — Box: 3
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
Papers consist mainly of correspondence of Oliver D. and Giles F. Filley to their family in Connecticut, relating to early ventures in the tin and stove manufacturing business. Giles F. Filley's firm, the Excelsior Manufacturing Company, made the famous "Charter Oak" cooking stove. Also includes records pertaining to affairs and public service of Chauncey Ives Filley. These include Chauncey I. Filley's letterbook, 1862, containing only two letters, one of which discusses railway routes...
Dates:
1919 May 23