This is a finding aid, which provides information about the contents of an archival collection. The presence of a finding aid on this website does not mean that items from the collection have been digitized or are available...
Letter from D.V. Smock to John Finley Crowe over the Cholera in Madison and the death of Dr. Scovel. Smock remarks on the type of person Scovel was and then proceeds to talk about the process of replacing the President. Smock...
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 John Finley Crowe to Esther Alexander Crowe over his travels and efforts to raise funds for Hanover College. Crowe also discusses several sermons that he delivered since his last letter. Crowe also mentions Dr....
Transcript of a letter from John Finely Crowe to his wife Esther Crowed, 22 January 1840. Location of the original letter is unknown. Crowe discusses his travels to Austin, Texas to perform church work. Crowe talks about the...
Thompkin is writing to Crowe to tell him about the area of land he has settled in Liberia, the journey over of which he mentions a small outbreak of smallpox on the ship the Brig Alida, and his family is "injoying good health".
Meriwether contacts Crowe about paying for the debts of John L. Meriwether. He goes on to talk about the slave trade, colonization, and Liberia. and The Crowe Family Papers Digitization project was made possible in part by the...
A former student with Crowe, Smock writes to Crowe about his Synod in Iowa, his son (who is 16 now) that he wishes to send to Hanover College, and he also writes that his deciding to settle in Iowa versus Kentucky came down to...
Lattimore writes to Crowe about a recent meeting Crowe attended, the debate surrounding slavery in the Presbyterian Church,and his desire for the Synod to support Hanover College. and The Crowe Family Papers Digitization...
Hill writes to Crowe about some financial matters. He also mentions that he regrets that Mr. Stone had broached the question of slavery and Hanover College.