- Collection Overview
- Collection Description & Creator Information
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Correspondence with Harold and His Father, 1892
Collection Overview
Collection Description & Creator Information
- Description:
The collection consists of twenty-seven letters and one report card (1891) sent by Alexander Marshall Thompson to his family in St. Paul, Minnesota, while he was a student at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) from 1889 to 1893. The letters are addressed to his mother, father, his brothers, Harold and Huston, his sister, Fanny, and to William M. Thompson; almost all are signed "Marshall.". Thompson gives a detailed picture of the life of a student at the College of New Jersey at the end of the nineteenth century. He writes about classes he is attending, visiting speakers, his friends, the cost of buying shoes, clothes, train tickets, and textbooks, and doing his laundry. In all of his letters, Thompson gives a detailed athletic bulletin about games he has attended on and off campus between the different teams of the College of New Jersey and other colleges such as Harvard and Yale. In a long, detailed, letter to his brother Huston, dated October 11, 1891, Thompson writes about his classes and his professors, and informs Huston that he is taking a class on jurisprudence taught by Woodrow Wilson, who "is about the best man in the faculty." In other letters, he describes the parties and "Balls" he attended, and his trips to New York City, Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh. He writes about initiations at the Clio and Whig societies, the construction of the two white marble buildings to house both societies, the Glee Club, the construction of a "Chemical building" and a new dormitory. In a letter dated March 27, 1890, he mentions applying for an editorial position at the Daily Princetonian. In another letter, dated November 16, 1890, he gives news about the college receiving "one of the largest gifts in its history" from a lady [Harriet Crocker Alexander] to build a commencement hall, which was to become Alexander Hall. He also talks about the "junior prom attended by Mrs. Wanamaker and all the swell people of New York and Philadelphia." In several of his letters Thompson talks about the "Junior Oration" contest he entered, qualifying for the "Lynde Debate," and of commencement. Most of his letters mention his family's difficult financial situation due to the cost of his education..
Collection History
- Archival Appraisal Information:
No appraisal information is available.
Access & Use
- Access Restrictions:
Collection is open for research use.
- Conditions for Reproduction and Use:
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. No further photoduplication of copies of material in the collection can be made when Princeton University Library does not own the original. Inquiries regarding publishing material from the collection should be directed to RBSC Public Services staff through the Ask Us! form. The library has no information on the status of literary rights in the collection and researchers are responsible for determining any questions of copyright.
- Credit this material:
Correspondence with Harold and His Father; Alexander Marshall Thompson Letters to His Family, C1254, Manuscripts Division, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Location:
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Firestone LibraryOne Washington RoadPrinceton, NJ 08544, USA
- Storage Note:
- Firestone Library (mss): Box 1