01888mpc 2200349ua 4500001000800000005001700008008004100025035002400066035002200090040002400112100001700136245003600153300001700189524011300206520064200319510006300961544007601024600002201100600002301122600002301145600002101168600001801189600003901207610007401246650002001320650002501340651005001365650004401415650003801459656002001497905002101517208130120001113141921.0850723i18571881nyu eng d a(CStRLIN)NYCV85A400 a(NIC)notisAKR9148 aNICcNICeappmdNIC3 aWall family.00aWall family papers,f1857-1881. a.3 cubic ft. aWall Family. Papers, #2012. Department of Manuscripts and University Archives, Cornell University Libraries. aCollection includes a series of letters from Charles William Wall, a sergeant in the 151st Regiment, New York Volunteers, mainly concerning troop movements, camp experiences, and other aspects of his life as a Union Army soldier in Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C., but also dealing with his employment by a mining and milling company in Colorado (1869); other Civil War letters from William Emerson, Henry Harrington, and Charles McCarthy; letters from Jane Middleton, telling of her work in New York City among indigent women (1864); and an autobiographical sketch (1881) of Andrew Wall, who had emigrated from England in 1833.0 aDescribed in REPORT OF THE CURATOR AND ARCHIVIST, 1958-62. aRelated collection:dAram Houssig Dimijian. World War I Letters, #2014.10aEmerson, William.10aHarrington, Henry.10aMcCarthy, Charles.10aMiddleton, Jane.10aWall, Andrew.10aWall, CHarles William,d1844-1917.20aUnited States.bArmy.bRegiment Infantry, New York Volunteers, 151st. 0aMilitary camps. 0aMills and mill-work. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 0aPoor womenzNew York (State)zNew York. 0aPoorzNew York (State)zNew York. 7aSoldiers.2lcsh a19971022120000.0