Manuscripts
The Inscription
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Manuscripts
Not produced as the licence was refused. This burletta centres around the myth of the judgment of Paris.
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The Golden Pippin
Manuscripts
Application of 05 Feb 1772 was had the licence application refused. This burletta centres around the myth of the judgment of Paris.
mssLA 339

Acting Mad
Manuscripts
One act manuscript Burletta. The first scene opens with a doctor complains that both his apprentice and his daughter have caught the acting bug, confessing that he caught his daughter reading a playbook in bed. When his apprentice returns he answers all of the doctors questions in Shakespeare quotes.
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The Inscription. Burletta, 2 acts. Jane M. Scott
Manuscripts
The collection consists of official copies of plays submitted for licensing between 1737 and 1824. Most of copies were written by professional copyists. Approximately 95 of the plays submitted were printed texts, either whole or partial. These have been cataloged individually and may be searched in the online catalog.
LA 1804
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Quest for empire : the saga of Russian America
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Historical novel about the lives and loves of the first Russian settlers attempting to establish an empire in North America, their troubles with Indians in Alaska and their adventures involving the Spaniards in California. Several of the principal characters and many of the peripheral figures lived and left accounts of their activities which have been used as a basis for the novel.
633862
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Account of a trip from Missouri to California
Manuscripts
Written to his father and mother by T.J. Ables, this manuscript is an account of Ables' overland journey from Boonville, Missouri to California by way of the Oregon Trail. He arrived with friends after a journey of five months and two days, having departed Boonville on May 7. He writes of his slavery discussions with locals while in Kansas, his travels through Nebraska, and how he inscribed his name on Independence Rock. In Utah, his party's cattle were driven off by hostile Indians, and Ables and his companions pursued the Indians, eventually recovering thirty-six head. This was the only direct encounter Ables had with the Indians, but he heard of many others, including one woman who survived a scalping. Typescript copy.
mssHM 16763