Letter from Robert E. Preston (1836-1911), of the United States Mint Bureau, to Margaret M. Booth, wife of James Curtis Booth (1810-1888), concerning Preston's attempts to secure relief for James Booth from responsibility for making good on two stolen bars of silver from the United States Mint.
Letter from Robert E. Preston (1836-1911), of the United States Mint Bureau, to Margaret M. Booth, wife of James Curtis Booth (1810-1888), informing her that progress is being made in Washington on the bill for James' relief.
James Curtis Booth (1810-1888) writes to Archibald Loudon Snowden (1835-1912), Superintendent of the Mint of the United States at Philadelphia, to request that the suspension of a skilled worker be reconsidered. Booth notes on the verso, "not submitted." Dated July 1888.
Letter from Robert E. Preston (1836-1911), of the United States Mint Bureau, to Margaret M. Booth, wife of James Curtis Booth (1810-1888), concerning Preston's attempts to secure relief for James Booth from responsibility for making good on two stolen bars of silver from the United States Mint.
Eulogy read before the American Philosophical Society in memoriam of James Curtis Booth (1810-1888), melter and refiner of the United States Mint from 1849 to 1887, by Patterson Du Bois (1847-1917), son of United States Mint Assayer William Ewing DuBois (1810-1881).