Letter from J.B. Crowe to his father, John F. Crowe. He discusses his return to Crawfordsville, Ind. and his attempts to raise money for Hanover College.
A letter from James Blythe Crowe to John Finley Crowe over his family and his job as a minister. First, James expresses his concern over his mother's unsepcified sickness. Additionally, James writes about a sermon he preached...
Undated letter from James Blyther Crowe to John FInley Crowe over his daily life, correspondence, and work as a minister. James wrote about a woman who passed and whose dying wish was for him to preach her service and baptize...
A letter from James Blythe Crowe to Thomas S. Crowe over starting a Presbyterian School. James counsels that progress will be slow, but his letter serves as a status report. Apparently, James Blythe did not receive a lot of...
A letter from James M. Priest to John Finley Crowe over Priest's experience in King William's Town in West Africa, now South Africa. In the letter, Priest talks about the work he and the other missionaries have accomplished...
A letter from James N. Dickson to John Finley Crowe over a debt to be repaid by Crowe via property transfer. and The Crowe Family Papers Digitization project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library...
Letter to John Finley Crowe from James A. Dickson regarding a balance due to Mr. Dickson. He states that he will take the transfer of a parcel of property in Hanover, IN as payment of the reaminder of the debt. He asks John...
Letter from James W. Alexander of the Princeton Theological Seminary to John Finley Crowe, John Matthews, and Mark Niles of Hanover College, 22 October 1836. The letter is a response to a request from Crowe, Matthews and Niles...
A letter of introduction for Esther Crowe when she transitioned from her church in Bellevue, Illinois to her church in Lexington, Kentucky. Written by church Elder Jesse Walker, 29 November 1813. and The Crowe Family Papers...
A letter from James Blythe Crowe to John Finley Crowe over the death of his new born son Charles. The letter discusses the decline in health of the child.