Lucy Knox To Henry Knox Updating Him On Her Situation And Complaining At The Lack Of Letters From Him 16 October 1781 PDF Download

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Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Updating Him on Her Situation and Complaining at the Lack of Letters from Him, 16 October 1781

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Updating Him on Her Situation and Complaining at the Lack of Letters from Him, 16 October 1781
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Total Pages: 0
Release: 1781
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Writes that Martha Washington and Nellie Calvert Custis received letters from their husbands letting them know how they are and what is happening in the war, while she is clearly unworthy of being written to. She misses their daughter Lucy, who was living in Philadelphia, but has heard that she is well. Urges him to write back. Knox was then engaged in the siege of Yorktown. The letter is not complete.


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox, Thanking Him for Recent Letters, Encouraging Him to Come Home and Updating Him on Family News, April 1776

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox, Thanking Him for Recent Letters, Encouraging Him to Come Home and Updating Him on Family News, April 1776
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1776
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Expresses her love for Henry and attempts to make him feel guilty for being away from home and family, particularly his infant daughter. Thanks him for his three recent letters (see GLC02437.00273, GLC02437.00275, GLC02437.00276) but wonders why the letter he promised from New York has not arrived. Mentions that their daughter Lucy was christened at Trinity Church. Comments on her alarm at hearing that the British have taken George's Island in Boston Harbor. Knox was then moving southward toward New York, planning coastal defenses against the British navy for Rhode Island and Connecticut in the process.


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Chastising Him for Not Writing to Her, 8 October 1781

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Chastising Him for Not Writing to Her, 8 October 1781
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1781
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Chastises her husband for not writing. Asks Henry when she will see him and why he has not written. The Continental Army was then involved in the siege of Yorktown.


Reply from Henry Knox to Lucy Knox, Written Shortly After Storming the British Works at Yorktown, 16 October 1781

Reply from Henry Knox to Lucy Knox, Written Shortly After Storming the British Works at Yorktown, 16 October 1781
Author: Henry Knox
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Release: 1781
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Responds to his wife's letters chastising him for not writing. Reports that he is well and comments on the siege of Yorktown. Mentions that they stormed the British works with little loss the night before. Hopes to end the operation in 10 to 12 days. (See also GLC02437.01244 and GLC02437.01257.).


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Lamenting His Absence and Updating Him on Their Daughter and Her Dealings with Benedict Arnold, 3-8 June 1777

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Lamenting His Absence and Updating Him on Their Daughter and Her Dealings with Benedict Arnold, 3-8 June 1777
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1777
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Laments Henry's absence, noting he has been gone for three months exactly. Relates that their daughter, Lucy, is well and beautiful despite five pitts of the small pox in her face. Comments on Henry's loss, possibly of clothes, noting that she will attempt to procure more cambric (a cotton fabric) for him. Mentions the sale of Knox's horses. Relates that she wanted to sell them separately, but Knox's brother William did not wish to do so. Remarks, ...you had better make me your future agent- I'll assure you I am quite a woman of business. Begins writing again 4 June. Plans to send Knox madeira, good old spirit, and sugar. Requests that Knox ask General Benedict Arnold what she should do with some things Arnold left with her. Mentions a scarf among the items. Notes that Catharine Greene (General Nathanael Greene's wife) would also like one of the items. Begins writing again 5 June. Criticizes Henry for his cold correspondence. Defends herself, arguing that it is William's responsibility, not hers, to inform Knox of his well-being.


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox on His Lack of Communication and Family, 28 August 1777

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox on His Lack of Communication and Family, 28 August 1777
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1777
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Reprimands Henry for not writing sooner. Notes that she sent a letter to Henry with Captain Randall. Asks Henry to intervene on behalf of Captain Bliss regarding an unspecified matter. Writes, It is very strange that you mention nothing to me of a strange letter I sent you from the pretended Dutchess addressed to his excellency- I do not like to be treated so... Notes that your man Jacksons wife is displeased by hearing nothing from him. Reports that she and their little girl, Lucy, are doing well.


Henry Knox to Lucy Knox Expressing His Love for Her, 8 January 1777

Henry Knox to Lucy Knox Expressing His Love for Her, 8 January 1777
Author: Henry Knox
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Release: 1777
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States that his other recent letter, probably GLC02437.00514, is not full of sentiment because its contents is of public importance and she might wish to show the letter to others. Says that, while there love is public, the full expressions of it need not be put in a letter that may be seen by strangers. Here he expressed the love for her that he did not in the previous letter. Hopes to be with her soon, and hopes for more letters. In a postscript advises her to sell the horses if she is in Boston, and in a note on the address leaf asks her to forward a letter for him. Dated 1776, but written 1777.


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox about Her Hardships, Child and Quoting Poetry, 18 March 1777

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox about Her Hardships, Child and Quoting Poetry, 18 March 1777
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1777
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Badly misses Henry and hopes to hear from him, her only comfort being her young baby, Lucy Flucker Knox. Hopes that he cries when thinking of her hardships. Reports that William Knox, who she calls Billy, has set out for Newburg, in order to purchase stationery which he hopes to sell. Lucy and William Knox reopened the Boston bookstore that Knox had operated before the war began. They tried to sell other stationery items, but were not very successful. Notes that a shipping embargo may begin soon, but feels that it is privateering to take the goods of those innocent people who are not directly involved in this revolutionary quarrel. Mentions business debts, and worries about the state of the revolution, saying it grieves me to think you are embarked in a cause so wretchedly managed. In the postscript, which she could write only after crying, she includes a number of lines from Caspipina's Letters on the subject of yearning for a loved one.


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Complaining at His Absence and Talking about Her Social Schedule, 14 October 1788

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Complaining at His Absence and Talking about Her Social Schedule, 14 October 1788
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1788
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Complains that Henry has stayed away later than he had originally planned. Discusses her busy social schedule and numerous invitations, noting Since the arrival of Mrs. Ogden I have passed my time as agreably as possible seperated [sic] from you. Understands that his business in Boston, settling with creditors, may extend until the end of the month (it is possible Henry was settling the matter of Henry Jackson's unauthorized sale of 10,000 dollars of Knox's notes). Remarks that her sister sent her a Queensware china set.


Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Lamenting Their Separation and Asking to Join Him, 26 May 1777

Lucy Knox to Henry Knox Lamenting Their Separation and Asking to Join Him, 26 May 1777
Author: Lucy Flucker Knox
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Release: 1777
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Laments her lonely situation, noting that a recent visitor brought her news of Henry, but no letter from him. Envies the wives of generals able to travel with their husbands: happy Mrs. Washington happy Mrs. Gates in short I do not recollect an instance like my own- Mrs. Greens you will say is similar, but it is not Mrs. G and myself were not cast in one mould. Wishes to visit Henry (at that time in Morristown, New Jersey) declaring Boston is called a place of danger. Discusses the health of their children.