Cimmerian-non-existant Campaigning for three years. Here s George Bolton
writing a letter, (which must be answered.) And here am I, on
the threshold of I know not what. Be sure you re right, then
Go Ahead? [words crossed out]
[word crossed out]
/
Page |
Title: | Thomas Butler Gunn Diaries, Volume Two: page thirty-two |
Description: | Concludes his thoughts on the New Year. |
Date: | 1850-12-31 |
Subject: | Barth, William; Bolton, George; Gunn, Thomas Butler; New Year |
Coverage (City/State): | [New York, New York] |
Scan Date: | 2011-02-07 |
Volume |
Title: | Thomas Butler Gunn Diaries, Volume Two |
Description: | Includes descriptions of Gunn's attempts to find drawing work among New York publishers, brief employment in an architectural office, visits to his soldier friend William Barth on Governors Island, boarding house living, drawing at actor Edwin Forrest's home at Fonthill Castle, and sailing and walking trips taken with friends. |
Subject: | Boardinghouses; Books and reading; Gunn, Thomas Butler; Military; Publishers and publishing; Religion; Travel; Women |
Coverage (City/State): | New York, New York |
Note: | Thomas Butler Gunn was born February 15, 1826, in Banbury, England, and came to New York in 1849. During the Civil War he worked as a correspondent for the New York Tribune and the New York Evening Post. He returned to England in 1863, and died in Birmingham in April 1903. The collection includes twenty-one volumes of his diaries, including newspaper clippings, letters, photographs, sketches, and various other items inserted by Gunn. Diary entries date from July 7, 1849, to April 7, 1863, and include his experiences with the New York publishing and literary world, his descriptions of boarding houses, his travels throughout the United States, and his experiences traveling with the Federal army as a Civil War correspondent. |
Publisher: | Missouri History Museum |
Rights: | Copyright 2011 Missouri History Museum. |
Source: | Page images, transcriptions, and metadata of the Thomas Butler Gunn diaries have been provided by the Missouri History Museum. |