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For more results, go to The Collection.

6 April

Stafford, Robert (fl. 1837-1866)

Autograph letter signed

Title: to Ma

GLC02618.089

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circa 1400-1500

Unknown

Manuscript

Title: [Antiphon]

Single sheet of music. Date inferred. An antiphon is a verse usually from Scripture sung before and after a canticle or psalm as part of the liturgy.

GLC00496.124

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1493

Columbus, Christopher (1451-1506)

Pamphlet Include in Object Type Dropdown: 

Title: Epistola Christofori Colom... de insulis Indie supra Gangem.... [exploration]

First edition, in Latin, second (corrected) issue, printed at Rome after 29 April 1493. Gothic type; 33 lines per page. Pamphlet printing letter to King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain concerning his first voyage to America, the so-called Barcelona letter. The earliest printed Columbus letter, describing his discovery of the Caribbean islands of Juana and Hispaniola.

GLC01427

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4 May 1493

Alexander VI, Pope (1431-1503)

Broadside Include in Object Type Dropdown: 

Title: [Demarcation bull, granting Spain possession of lands discovered by Columbus]

Broadside entitled "Copia de la bula del decreto y concession q[ue] hizo el papa / Alexandro sexto al Rey y la Reyna nuestros senores de las Indias conforme al capitu." Unique copy of second version possibly printed at Valladolio, by Francisco Fernandez de Cordoba. Title in Spanish and text in Latin.

GLC04093

circa 1500-1930

Various

Title: [Collection of Americana from Revolution & Civil War] Decimalized

[decimalized]

GLC00496

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21 June 1540

García de Loaysa, Francisco (fl. 1540)

Letter signed

Title: to Francisco Vásquez de Coronado [in Spanish]

Written on behalf of King Charles I of Spain (Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor), by the President of the Council of the Indies, Francisco García de Loaysa. Report of the Niza expedition. Authorizes Coronado's expedition to explore the heart of the North American continent.

GLC04883

1552

Casas, Bartolomé de las, (1474-1566)

Book Include in Object Type Dropdown: 

Title: Aqui se Contiene una Disputa, o Controversia [Second Edition]

The fifth tract on the conquest of the New World and rights of the Indians. In Spanish.

GLC04220

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circa 1580

Grenville, Richard, Sir (1541?-1591)

Autograph letter signed

Title: to John Blighe

Writes to his cousin to ask him to lend him money. In 1585 Grenville sailed to Virginia with 300 settlers that he successfully disembarked on Roanoke Island (off the coast of what is now North Carolina).

GLC00496.027

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1585-1763

Kneller, Godfrey, Sir (1646-1723)

Engraving Include in Object Type Dropdown: 

Title: [Engraving of Samuel Pepys]

Engraving that appears to be based on the painting by Sir Godfrey Kneller, created in 1689.

GLC00496.258.02

1585-1763

Wildes, John (fl. 1746)

Autograph document signed

Title: Petition to move training

GLC01450.248.04

1585-1763

Autograph document signed

Title: To Captain Nathanial Green

GLC01450.248.10

1585-1763

Unknown

Autograph document

Title: Recipe for consumption

GLC01450.600.015

n.d.

Unknown

Photograph Include in Object Type Dropdown: 

Title: William Coddington [picture]

Print of William Coddington, who was an official in the Massachusetts and Rhode Island colonies in the seventeenth century.

GLC02150.53

1585-1763

Allen Goerge

Autograph document signed

Title: Estate Inventory

Assets of Charles Allen (small edit where a word is added)

GLC02924.064

1585-1763

Allen Goerge

Autograph document signed

Title: Estate Inventory

Assets of Charles Allen (no edit)

GLC02924.065

1585-1763

Unknown

Autograph letter

Title: Extracts from deeds

GLC02924.072

1585-1763

Pope Seth

Autograph letter

Title: Land Grant

GLC02924.073

1585-1763

Unknown

Manuscript document

Title: "three things are to be helped in conscience fraud, accident, . . .

. . . things of confidence." Fragment of a larger document. Explains what constitutes an accident.

GLC03107.01338

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1585-1763

Livingston, Robert

Manuscript document signed

Title: to Arent Bratt re: case against John Barnard

The document outlines Christopher Estrat's complaint against John Barnard, who allegedly agreed to lease a piece of land to Jan Baptist and Estrat for 7 years, but then ran Estrat off of it before the lease expired. Estratt is therefore suing Barnard for damages. Livingston's description of the case is then followed by a note from Barnard to Arent Bratt, in which Barnard asks Bratt to attend his case at the Court of Common Pleas.

GLC03107.01822

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1585-1763

Davenport, Thomas

Manuscript document

Title: Account of Peeter Van Brugh & Johannes Cuyler

Van Brugh and Cuyler purchased shroud and some other materials.

GLC03107.01823

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1585-1763

Wessells, Dirk

Manuscript document

Title: "Dirk Wessells Esq: Mayor of the Citty of Albany to the Sherriffe . . .

Constables and other his Majes. officers greting show yee that wee the said Mayor have Lyncenced and" P.1 ends incomplete. P.2 contains an account. Docketed on verso.

GLC03107.01824

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1585-1763

Livingston, Philip

Manuscript document

Title: "a Lyst of Rents due to the estate of father Livingston"

GLC03107.01825

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1585-1763

Johnston, John

Autograph letter signed

Title: to Robert Livingston re: remedies for Livingston's illness [fragment]

Johnston prescribes some remedies to cure Livingston's maladies.

GLC03107.01826

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1585-1763

Unknown

Manuscript document

Title: "Reasons offer to the arbitrators why they ought not to allow . . .

of Jacob Harwoods sham sale of Robt. Livingstons Tallys of 1670." P.1 of the document outlines how Harwood's actions anulled any legitimate sale. P.2 is an account of how Robert Livingston came into possession of a part of the estate of Coll. Dongan. Docketed on verso.

GLC03107.01829

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1585-1763

Hitchcok, John

Autograph letter signed

Title: to Robert Livingston Junior re: offer to lease a farm

Hitchcok offers to lease a farm that Robert Livingston recently purchased.

GLC03107.01830

For more results, go to The Collection.

For more results, go to History Now.

Economic and Financial Crises in American History Day 2

Video

Economics, Government and Civics

Using Visual Images to Teach Colonial History

Video

Art

6 , 7 , 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Lincoln and Wales

Video

Government and Civics, World History

Jim Crow and the Fight for American Citizenship

Video

Government and Civics

Great Biographies: African American Scientists

Video

Science, Technology, Engineering and Math

9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Reflections on the History of Environmental Health and Sustainability

Video

Economics, Geography, Science, Technology, Engineering and Math, World History

Harriet Beecher Stowe: Uncle Tom’s Cabin

Video

Government and Civics, Literature

Harriet Beecher Stowe: Uncle Tom’s Cabin Q&A

Video

Government and Civics, Literature

An Overview of Key Moments in the Separation of Powers and the Supreme Court; Federalism and the Two Court Systems

Video

9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Literature Makes History: How Poets Helped End Slavery

Video

Literature

Societies with Slaves vs. Slave Societies

Video

Economics, Government and Civics, World History

Eleanor Roosevelt’s Role in the White House

Video

Government and Civics

4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945–1974

Video

Art, Economics, Government and Civics, Science, Technology, Engineering and Math, World History

Remarks for the Douglass Prize

Video

Race and Renaissance: African Americans in Pittsburgh Since World War II

Video

Economics, Government and Civics

7 , 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Thomas Jefferson and Southern Electoral Politics

Video

Government and Civics

Lincoln as Commander in Chief

Video

Government and Civics

9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

The Independence of the States

Video

Government and Civics

7 , 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Madison’s Influence on the US Constitution

Video

Government and Civics

8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Madison’s Role in the Virginia Ratification Convention

Video

Government and Civics

8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

Constitutional Originalism

Video

Government and Civics

8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13+

What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States

Video

Government and Civics

The Bondwoman’s Narrative

Video

Literature

The Cousins’ Wars: Religion, Politics and the Triumph of Anglo-America

Video

Government and Civics, Religion and Philosophy

Lincoln, Civil Liberties, and the Constitution

Video

Government and Civics

For more results, go to History Now.

Showing results 1 - 25

One-Year Subscription to the Gilder Lehrman Website

Subscribe for access to the vast offerings of the Gilder Lehrman Institute’s website. Your subscription will allow you to read the latest work of leading historians, join a growing community of history enthusiasts, view available images in the Gilder Lehrman Collection, and help support history education in classrooms nationwide.The Gilder Lehrman Institute’s website features History Now, a chronological and thematic approach to our shared national history, from Exploration to the New Millennium Original essays by renowned historians offering a range of views on American history More than 300

Freedom to Move: Immigration and Migration in U.S. History Timeline

Timelines are a useful tool for teachers of every grade level. These visual chronologies help students put events into perspective and better undertand how historical moments fit together.  This timeline chronicles major events in immigration and migration from 1607 to 2003.

OUT OF PRINT - African American History, 1619–1897

Poster Caption: This pictorial history of African American people in America was designed as a poster for the Negro Exhibition Building at the Tennessee Centennial Exposition, Nashville, 1897. Each scene captures a moment or figure in African American history from the introduction of the first slaves in Jamestown in 1619 and the death of Crispus (here, Christopher) Attucks in the Revolutionary era, to the lives of Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, and all the ordinary black people chronicled at lower right. (Goes Litho. Co., Chicago, Ill., 1897) These posters are 22" x 30", full color

#18 North American Colonies, 1733

Poster Caption: Despite inaccuracies in scale and detail, this 1733 map shows the sweep of British colonial possessions in the New World set amidst their French and Spanish counterparts. (Map of the British Empire, by Henry Popple, published in London, 1733) These posters are 22" x 30", full color, and printed on a semi-gloss ivory stock. Each one features a caption that places the image in historical context.

OUT OF PRINT - British Troops Landing in Boston, 1768

Poster Caption: As tensions heightened following the Boston Massacre of March 1770, Paul Revere published this engraving that recalls the military occupation of Boston by the British army and navy in 1768. Protests against British taxes and policies boiled up in the late 1760s and early 1770s until war broke out in April 1775 at Lexington and Concord. (Print by Paul Revere, Boston, Mass., 1770) These posters are 22" x 30", full color, and printed on a semi-gloss ivory stock. Each one features a caption that places the image in historical context. 

OUT OF PRINT - Yellowstone: First National Park, 1872

Poster Caption: In 1871, a partnership of ordinary citizens and railroad executives persuaded government officials to withhold a large portion of Wyoming Territory from a public land auction, in recognition of its importance as an example of the grandeur and diversity of America’s natural resources. An Act of Congress in 1872, signed by President Ulysses S. Grant, made Yellowstone the first national park in the world. Since then, the United States has designated nearly 400 national parks, sites, and monuments to preserve the nation’s natural, historical, and cultural heritage. (Photograph of

OUT OF PRINT - World War I Recruiting Poster, 1918 (2)

Poster Caption: This World War I recruiting poster invokes the memory of Abraham Lincoln and the bravery of black troops to inspire African Americans to sign up. Ultimately, some 350,000 African Americans enlisted and served in World War I, although in segregated units. (Charles Gustrine, Chicago, Ill., 1918) These posters are 22" x 30", full color, and printed on a semi-gloss white stock. Each one features a caption that places the image in historical context.  

OUT OF PRINT - Little Rock Nine, 1957

Poster Caption: In September 1957, after school integration was federally mandated, nine courageous black teenagers in Little Rock, Arkansas, were the first African American students to enroll at Central High School. Elizabeth Eckford (pictured here) and her fellow students were screamed at and harassed, and the National Guard was called on to escort the students and quell rioting. Of the nine students, three went on to graduate from Central High, while six completed their education elsewhere. (Photograph, September 6, 1957) These posters are 22" x 30", full color, and printed on a semi-gloss

OUT OF PRINT - School Desegregation, 1963

Poster Caption: In the summer of 1963, nine years after the US Supreme Court overthrew the doctrine of “separate but equal” in public education (Brown v. Board of Education), parents of African American children joined with the NAACP to protest unfair educational practices in St. Louis, Missouri. They demanded, in particular, an increase in the number of minority teachers, the redrawing of school district boundaries, and an end to intact busing, which brought black students to white schools but kept them in segregated classes running on a different time schedule from the white students’

OUT OF PRINT - Citizen or Slave: The Dred Scott Decision, 1857

The constitutional legacy of the Dred Scott case has been long lasting. What started as a “freedom suit” filed by Dred Scott and his wife in the St. Louis Circuit Court in 1846 erupted into a US Supreme Court case that ended in 1857. Read about the case details and political consequences surrounding one of the most infamous court decisions of our time. This booklet also includes a timeline of important dates.

Historians on the Record: Slavery and Abolition Format: DVD-ROM (DVD)

Historians on the Record: Slavery and Abolition (DVD) includes eight lectures by leading American history scholars on various topics surrounding slavery and its subsequent abolition. Speakers include James Oliver Horton, Lois E. Horton, David Blight, Ira Berlin, Philip Morgan, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., David Brion Davis, Catherine Clinton, and David Reynolds.

OUT OF PRINT - The U.S.A. in World War II, 1942

Poster Caption: This World War II poster seeks to stir American support for the war by systematically exposing the untruth of Nazi propaganda. (Office of War Information, Washington, DC, 1942) These posters are 22" x 30", full color, and printed on a semi-gloss ivory stock. Each one features a caption that places the image in historical context.

Online Course: Understanding Lincoln Registration

Use this item to purchase a registration for the Understanding Lincoln online course. Please do not purchase this item unless specifically instructed by GLI staff to do so.

Teaching with Documents: Using Primary Sources in the Classroom (affiliate)

Teaching with Documents is a self-paced course with instructional videos and lesson plans for teachers of grades 5-12. Each video focuses on a different way to use primary sources to improve student content knowledge and core literacy skills. Teaching with Documents demonstrates the same tested, Common Core-aligned approach used in Gilder Lehrman’s Teaching Literacy through History™ professional development program. Teaching with Documents includes Five demonstration videos, each covering a different literacy strategy Five classroom-ready teaching units, one for each demonstration video An

#64 Japan's Strategy in World War II

Poster Caption: This map of the South China Sea, published by the US Navy in 1943, outlines Japan’s military and economic incursions in the region. The embedded text summarizes US relations with Southeast Asia between 1784 and 1925, and icons mark battles between Japan and the Allies through May 1942. (Printed by the Naval War College, 1943; courtesy Library of Congress Maps Division)

Romeo Smith: Slave, Soldier, Freeman

Born a slave, Romeo Smith of Windham, Maine, entered the Continental Army with the promise of freedom in exchange for military service. He served in the 7th Massachusetts for three years and was supposedly manumitted. Yet in January 1784, the threat of being reclaimed as a slave surfaced and Romeo sought the assistance of General Henry Knox. The document featured here is Knox’s retained draft certifying Smith’s freedom. "This is to certify that the bearer hereof Romeo Smith is a free man, and has served three years in the Army of the United States of America. Any person [struck: going a]

Women in the Civil War: Vivandieres

Vivandieres, sometimes known as cantinieres, were women who followed the army to provide support for the troops. Ideally, a vivandiere would have been a young woman—the daughter of an officer or wife of a non-commissioned officer—who wore a uniform and braved battles to provide care for wounded soldiers on the battlefield.  The history of vivandieres can be traced to the French Zouave regiments in the Crimean War. By 1859, many local militia regiments in the United States had adopted the name "Zouave," wore colorful uniforms, and adopted the practice of having a "daughter of the regiment" in

A Civil War soldier’s letters: "Save them if it cost the farm"

George Tillotson from Greene, New York, enlisted with the 89th New York Infantry in November of 1861. This ambrotype (photograph made on glass) and a series of letters from the summer of 1862 remind us that soldiers and their families faced hardships on the home front as well as on the battlefield. George had been in the army for five months and was stationed at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, when his wife, Libby, sent him the photograph featured here. The photograph was damaged in the mail and began a heartbreaking series of correspondence.  April 19, 1862 – "Your letter of the 6th inst

Washington Dodge: <i>Titanic</i> Survivor, April 1912

One hundred years ago this weekend, the RMS Titanic sank, claiming the lives over 1,500 passengers and crew. In this account, Dr. Washington Dodge recounts his tale of survival. Written on board the RMS Carpathia during the three-day journey back to New York, this eyewitness account is one of the earliest and most compelling accounts of the disaster. Dodge’s handwriting and sentence phrasing offer a glimpse into his state of mind as he penned his testimony. Excerpt: When boat 13 was lowered to A deck to be loaded I went to this deck – After 8 or 10 women had been placed aboard, no [struck:

Abraham Lincoln, Mary Owens, and the accidental engagement

In 1836, Abraham Lincoln found himself in a tenuous situation. He was engaged to a woman he barely knew and didn’t want to marry. Mrs. Elizabeth Abell had been pushing for a romance between Lincoln and her sister, Mary Owens, whom Lincoln had met briefly in 1833. When Elizabeth went home to visit her family in Kentucky three years later, she said she would bring Mary back to Illinois if Lincoln would agree to marry her. Lincoln jokingly agreed. He realized the consequences of his rash statement when Mary came to New Salem and considered herself engaged. Lincoln immediately regretted his

Mother’s Day, 1919: "may you never get another letter from France as long as you live!"

What would be a better Mother’s Day present than learning that your child would be returning home from war? In 1919, thirty-year-old Lawrence Hopkins of the 305th Engineers was at the Forwarding Camp in Le Mans, France, awaiting orders to return home. On Wednesday, May 7, he wrote his mother in Ashtabula, Ohio, an early Mother’s Day letter in hopes he would be at sea by Sunday. With great excitement he announced the possibility of being home by Decoration Day (Memorial Day): Forwarding Camp, Le Mans, FranceMay 7, 1919 Dear Mother: It is my fond hope that this will be my last letter written

Civil War–era sketches by David Stauffer

When the Civil War broke out, David McNeely Stauffer (1845–1913) was only sixteen years old. While attending Franklin and Marshall College in Pennsylvania from September 1861 through June 1863, he served brief, emergency enlistments when the state of Pennsylvania was threatened by Robert E. Lee’s forces. He joined the 2nd Pennsylvania Emergency Regiment in September 1862 and served until winter. In June 1863, he joined in the defense of Gettysburg with the 
Independent Battery of Pennsylvania. When Stauffer’s enlistment expired in January 1864, he briefly joined the Engineering Corps of the

Death of Confederate General Paul Semmes, 1863

On July 10, 1863, Confederate General Paul J. Semmes died from wounds he received at the Battle of Gettysburg eight days earlier. A set of materials in the Gilder Lehrman Collection paint a vivid image of a soldier and his family facing death. On June 1, 1863, when Emily Semmes wrote her husband to update him on news of thier children and enclosing flowers like the ones she had carried in her bridal bouquet. Paul received the letter ten days in Culpepper City, Virginia and was particularly touched by the flowers. Two years of service far from home took its toll on the Georgian who wrote "When

Patriotic Verse in a Schoolboy’s Math Book during the Revolutionary War

Between the pages of his math exercise book John Barstow jotted down a patriotic tune called "The Amaricans Challing" on January 2, 1777. Carefully written in a youth’s unsteady hand, the text appears to be a transcript of a popular camp song from the Revolutionary era. How this declaration of patriotism found its way into Barstow’s math lessons is unknown. The book is filled with conversion tables for weights and measures, time and money tables, and multiplication and division tables in addition to mathematical problems. One can imagine a young child learning the song from a father or older

"Document of the Month" - October

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