Box E
Contains 78 Results:
Letter from Julia Wightman to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, May 23, 1959 Digital
Letter from Helen Van Pelt Wilson, 65 Center Street, Westport, Connecticut to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, August 19 between 1933-1960 Digital
Calling cards from Mrs. Charles Warren, 1527 Eighteenth Street, Washington, D.C. and Mrs. George Whiteley Coggeshall, April 15 between 1930-1944 Digital
Two calling cards probably intended for Mildred Bliss. One with Mrs. Charles Warren with a handwritten note, "Mr. and Mrs. Coggeshall would like to see the gardens." The second calling card is from Mrs. George Whiteley Coggeshall.
Letter from James Paul Hudson, Box 2283, Georgia Univ.[ersity] Station, Athens, Georgia to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection, 1703 Thirty-second Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., September 26, 1958 Digital
Letter from Emily Eartes Jeffries, Sulgrave Club, 1801 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. to Mrs. Bliss, May 21, 1941 Digital
Note from Mrs. Hennen Jennings, 1910 Twenty-fourth Street to Mildred Bliss, 1933-1948 Digital
Handwritten note from Mrs. [James] Hennen Jennings (Mary) to Mildred Bliss sending her formal acceptance to an invitation. "A formal acceptance for [illegible name] and me for the 10th is going to you." She tells Mildred, "I was sad to miss you yesterday, if you had come in for only five minutes - it would have been a joy. I was alone." Note undated, probably created between 1933 and 1948 (the year Mary Lucretia Jennings died).
Letter from Ellen W. Johnston to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, April 1940 Digital
Letter from Mary C. Jones, Waldorf-Astoria, New York to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, June 28, 1937 Digital
Note from Mrs. William de Young Kay, 911 Park Ave. New York to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, May 1, 1939 Digital
Letter from Cornelia Knox Kean, 2804 N. Street, N.W., Georgetown, Washington, D.C. to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, August 19, 1933 Digital
Letter from Rachel Young La Follette, 2500 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D.C. to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, May 25, between 1931-1946 Digital
Letter from William Lescaze, 211 East 48th Street, New York to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, Dumbarton Oaks, Georgetown, Washington, D.C., July 1, 1935 Digital
Letter from Emily Lodge, 3337 N Street, Washington, D.C. to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1933-1960 Digital
Letters from Francoise May, Ambassade de Belgique to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, April 21, 1934 - May 9, 1934 Digital
Letter from Mildred Bliss to Mrs. Walter Blount, Yacht "Sunshine", c/o Wilson Line, Washington, D.C., October 3, 1939 Digital
Letter from Robert Woods Bliss's secretary to Laura Mae Andress, Post Office Department, Third Assistant Postmaster General, Division of Money Orders, Washington, D.C., May 31, 1935 Digital
Copy of typescript letter from the secretary to Robert Woods Bliss to Laura Mae Andress thanks her on his behalf for the copy of her poem on "Aquarius" which she so kindly sent him and tells her that he and Mrs. [Mildred] Bliss are very happy she enjoyed her visit of the garden of Dumbarton Oaks.
Letter from Dorothy Miner, Librarian and Keeper of Manuscripts, The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore 1, Maryland to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1537 Twenty-eighth Street, N.W., Washington 7, D.C., November 21, 1957 Digital
Note from Grace Hoyt J. Mosier to Anne Sweeney, April 25, 1946 Digital
Letter from Roy Murphy, "Hillandale", 3905 Reservoir Road, Washington, D.C. to Mildred Bliss, October 18, 1936 Digital
Letter from Harriet Pratt, Welwyn, Glen Cove, Long Island to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, May 26 between 1933-1939 Digital
Letter from Anna Priestley, United States Department of Agriculture, Extension Service, 1851 Columbia Road, N.W., Apt. 705, Washington, D.C. to Anne Sweeney, October 21, 1942 Digital
Typescript letter with handwritten signature from Anna Priestley to Anne Sweeney tells her she did not have an extra printed copy of the Dumbarton Oaks poem she wrote July 29, 1942 that was published in the Washington Evening Star, September 21, 1942, so she typed a copy for Sweeney to send to Mildred Bliss. She is sending a carbon copy too if Sweeney wants to keep one. She hopes to see Sweeney this fall when the Chrysanthemums are at their best.
Letter from Nellie Rogers, Shinnecock Hills, Long Island, N.Y. to Sweet Coms [Mildred Bliss] , July 11, 1940 Digital
Exchange of letters between Elwin J. Sasser, 1316 Church Street, Marietta Georgia and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss and Mr. Robert Woods Bliss's secretary, August 17-22, 1957 Digital
Letter from Esther W. Scott, Public Schools of the District of Columbia, Office in Oyster School, Twenty-ninth and Calvert Streets NW., Washington, D.C. to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 3101 R Street, NW., Washington, D.C., October 31, 1938 Digital
Typescript letter with handwritten signature from Esther W. Scott to Mildred Bliss says the teacher and student trips last week through the grounds of Dumbaton Oaks were an inspiration to all who were privileged to share it and the remembrance of that beauty will lighten and brighten many of the dark winter days ahead.
Letter from S.R. Shapiro, Rare Books and Manuscripts to Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1537 28th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., April 29, 1955 Digital
Typescript letter with handwritten signature from S.R. Shapiro [Solomon Reuben] to Mildred Bliss thanking her for inviting the Junketeers, a New York group of writers, artists, typographers, calligraphers, and publishers, to the Dumbaton Oaks Library on Sunday, May 22. He reports receiving Mr. [John] Thacher's telegram telling him of this courtesy and he wants to thank her for her graciousness. He thinks the Junketeers will find their visit to Dumbarton Oaks Library a memorable one.