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This letterbook records Fitch's correspondence to American and English merchants and ship captains from 1 February 1702/03 to 22 October 1711. The following people and companies are frequent recipients: Alexander Carstairs; William and John Crouch and Company; John Crouch and Samuel Arnold; Benjamin Faneuil; Capt. Richard Gerrish; Adrian Hooglant; Stephen Sewall; Edward Shippen; and Levinus Van Schaick. Fitch's business activities reflect the colonial pattern associated with the traditional northern overseas or "triangular trade" of New England, West Indies, and England.
Letters to Fitch, chiefly from Gov. William Buckingham; commission of Thomas Fitch as Commissary General with rank of Lt. Col. in Militia (1861); and ticket to ceremonies at the unveiling of Governor Buckingham's statue.
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Handwritten copy of business letters by Thomas Fitch sent between 9 October 1714 and 15 July 1717 to about 190 merchants, ship captains, etc. The bulk of the letters were sent to the following individuals: Samuel Arnold, John Crouch, Richard Gerrish, Clement Hughes, Thomas Ingersoll, Henry King, Joseph Lawson, John Lloyd, John Moore, George Newport, Samuel Penhallow, Samuel Terry, Nathaniel Sheffield, John Van Horne, and Edward Warner.
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A utopian novel in which a general strike results in the death of industrialist Lorin French. The story presents a narrative history of a gold mine owner who uses his money to start a co-op, fund urban renewal projects, and develop powerful weapons to enforce peace. Contains many anti-Semitic and anti-Indian passages.