Box: F
Contains 9 Results:
Letter from Homer D. Crotty, Friends of the Huntington Library, San Marino 15, California to fellow member, December 31, 1957 Digital
Typescript letter from Homer D. Crotty, Secretary, Friends of the Huntington Library to fellow member (most likely Mildred Bliss) offering a report to the membership and soliciting membership renewal for the year 1958.
Plants for Robert and Mildred Bliss's Q Street residence, between 1948-1967 Digital
Correspondence between Mildred Bliss and Matthew Kearney, the Superintendent of the Dumbarton Oaks Gardens and Grounds.
Letter from William A. Jackson, Library of Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Houghton Library to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1537 28th Street, Georgetown, Washington 7, D.C., February 23, 1951 Digital
Letter from Fleda Straight Myers, "MerryOaks", 614 Wyckoff Road, Ithaca, New York to C.I. Denison, April 15, 1957 Digital
Handwritten letter from Fleda Straight Myers (Mrs. C.H. Myers) to Isabel Denison tells her she is still restoring rare books in Ithaca, New York. Most her her work is for Cornell University Library, but she also does outside work. She tells Denison that she would need to see the books to provide an estimate of the cost. The work she does is painstaking and she does not like to feel hurried. Georgia Coffin, the rare book librarian know the quality of her work if she wants to write her.
Invoice from Joe Lynch to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss for cleaning books at Dumbarton Oaks, June 21, 1958 Digital
Handwritten invoice from Joe Lynch to Mildred Bliss for cleaning books at Dumbarton Oaks. Invoice paid on 6/26/1958.
Letter from Alton H. Keller, Exchange and Gift Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1537 28th Street, N.W., Washington 7, D.C., March 22-29, 1954 Digital
Typescript letter from Alton H. Keller, Libarary of Congress to Mildred Bliss listing three manuscripts the Blisses loaned to the Library of Congress for exhibition purposes. Photostat copies of the documents were made as protective measures and the letter asks if Mildred would grant permission to the Library of Congress to keep the photostats for their reference collection. Mildred returns copy of letter to Keller with her permission.