Correspondence to Benjamin Franklin from Robert R. Livingston, 1783 May 9.
- Description
- Philadelphia. Anxious for the treaty of peace. Finances still greatly embarrassed; question of a loan. As yet no estimate of the losses sustained by the States from Great Britain. All prisoners will soon be delivered at New York. United States ports swamped with foreign goods. L.S. 3p. Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution, Wharton, VI, 418.
- Creator
- Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790
- Form
- letters (correspondence)
- Date
- 1783-05-09
- Language
- English
- Geographic Subject
- United States -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia
- Collection
- Benjamin Franklin Papers (University of Pennsylvania)
- Physical Location
- Ms. Coll. 900, Volume VIII Page 17
- Provenance
- Bequeathed by Benjamin Franklin to his grandson William Temple Franklin. Bequeathed by William Temple Franklin to George Fox who in turn passed on possession to his children, Charles and Mary. Found at the Fox family estate at Champlost in a stable loft by Mrs. Holbrook around 1862 and given to her by Eliza Fox subsequently. Sold by her son George O. Holbrook to a committee of friends of the University of Pennsylvania Library in 1903 and gifted by them to the University the same year.
- Rights
- http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/
- Resource Type
- Text
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