Transcript of letters of the King's County Regiment of Militia.
- IE OH OHS77/6/3/1/3
- Stuk
- Dec 1798
Part of Woodfield Papers
Transcript of three letters to and from Captain John Warneford Armstrong of the King's County Regiment, from December 1798.
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Transcript of letters of the King's County Regiment of Militia.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Transcript of three letters to and from Captain John Warneford Armstrong of the King's County Regiment, from December 1798.
Letter from C to Mister Crosbie.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Letter from C to Mister Crosbie regarding a letter he sent to Lady Cloncurry in Blackrock, County Dublin.
Receipt from Law and Son to Mister Armstrong.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Receipt from Law and Son, Goldsmiths Jewellers and Watch Makers of 1 Sackville Street, Carlisle Bridge, Dublin, to Mister Armstrong Esquire.
Receipt of return of money borrowed by John Rice Lamb.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Receipt from Mister Mckenna for the return of £150 borrowed by John Rice Lamb.
Professional reference letters of John Lamb.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Letters from eight different professional references testifying to the good character of John Lamb.
Letter from William Gainfort to Henry Crosbie.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Letter from William Gainfort at 69 Lower Dorset Street, Dublin, to his nephew Henry Crosbie, regarding a young man named Francis leaving on a ship. William Gainfort requests that Henry purchase a bible and prayer book for Francis at William Gainfort's expense, if Francis has not left yet.
Receipt of payment from John Rice Lamb to Edward Pennefather.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Receipt for £100 paid from John Rice Lamb, Governor of Smithfield Convict Depot, to Edward Pennefather, Lord Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench for Ireland.
Letter from Henry Crosbie to Theodore Cronhelm.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Letter from Henry Crosbie in Liverpool to his brother-in-law Theodore Cronhelm at 7 Upper Gardiner Street, Dublin. He proposes that they start writing each other monthly and discuss subjects in Christian theology. In the second half of the letter he congratulates Theodore Cronhelm's sister, Louisa Cronhelm's, engagement to Mister Cooper. Henry Crosbie states that he is happy for them, and that he hopes Theodore won't disapprove because of Mister Cooper's lack of noble ancestry. Henry also mentions that he is expecting a letter from his brother, Edward William Cronhelm, who has had traveled to Bombay and that he is anxious for it to arrive.
Letter from Mister Lawson to Theodore Cronhelm.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Letter from Mister Ken Lawson in Kilkenny to Theodore Cronhelm in Dublin, regarding the Ryder versus Lynch case.
Letter from T M Ray to Abraham Stritch Fuller.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Letter from T M Ray of the Loyal National Repeal Association at Corn Exchange Rooms, Dublin, County Dublin, to Abraham Stritch Fuller at Woodfield House, Clara, King's County, regarding his request for his name to be erased from a record book.