JOHN ARMSTRONG FAMILY:
An Inventory of Their Papers at the Minnesota Historical Society
Manuscripts Collection
OVERVIEW
| Creator: | Armstrong, John, 1793-1865, creator. | |
| Title: | John Armstrong family papers, | |
| Dates: | [175-]-1944. | |
| Abstract: | Correspondence (1819-1944), genealogical materials (1750s-1930s), photographs (undated and 1886, 1906), clippings (1866-1943), certificates (1837-1917), and scrapbooks (1842-1941) documenting five generations of an Ohio family, many of whose descendants lived in Minnesota. | |
| Quantity: | 0.9 cubic feet (2 boxes and 1 oversize folder, unboxed). | |
| Location: | See Detailed Description for shelf location. |
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Biographical data was taken from the collection. More detailed information about the people mentioned above, and about other family members, can be found in the collection's genealogical materials. See also Minnesota History, 14:101; 17:211.
JOHN ARMSTRONG, JR.
John Armstrong, Jr. was born on April 20, 1793 in Allegheny County, Pennsylania, the son of John and Elizabeth McElroy Armstrong. In 1803 the family moved to Columbia County, Ohio. A farmer, contractor, carpenter, and builder, Armstrong served as a corporal in the War of 1812 and worked his way through the ranks to major general in the Ohio militia (1819-1859). He married Elizabeth McKaig on April 12, 1816 and settled in New Lisbon (now Lisbon), Ohio. The couple had eight children: James, John Milton, Margaret King, Bezaleel Wells, Albert, George Washington, Eliza Jane, and William Wallace. Armstrong died on December 22, 1865.
JAMES ARMSTRONG
James Armstrong, first child of John and Elizabeth, was born on December 23, 1816 in New Lisbon, Ohio. He graduated from Washington and Jefferson College (Washington, Pennsylania) in 1837, studied law in New Lisbon, was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1842, and established a practice in New Lisbon. In November 1842 he moved his practice to Canton, Ohio. Sometime during the mid-1840s he moved to Janesville, Wisconsin, where he served as a district court judge and, in the late 1850s, published a local newspaper. During the Civil War, he served as first lieutenant in the Third Wisconsin Cavalry. He died at Leavenworth, Kansas on October 3, 1862.
MARY ANN NELSON
James married Mary Ann Nelson of Columbus, Ohio on May 24, 1842. She was born on December 4, 1823. The couple had five children: Mary Isabella, Duane James, John Nelson, Robert Milton, and Caroline Amelia. Following James' 1862 death, Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong married Reverend Matthew A. Fox (1812-1883). After Fox's death she moved to Missoula, Montana, where she resided with her daughter, Caroline Armstrong Tillinghast, until her death on May 12, 1901.
GEORGE WASHINGTON ARMSTRONG
George Washington Armstrong, the sixth child of John and Elizabeth, was born on February 27, 1827. He apprenticed in the printing trade on the Mt. Vernon (Ohio) Banner and served as the paper's joint editor and proprietor from 1847 to 1850. In 1850 he moved to Keokuk, Iowa, where he owned and published a local newspaper. During the spring of 1863 he moved to St. Paul, Minnesota, where he engaged in the real estate, insurance, and loan business. He was appointed Minnesota territorial commissary general on November 25, 1856, and treasurer on May 6, 1857. He was elected Minnesota's first state treasurer on December 22, 1857, serving from May, 1858 through 1860. He died of a stroke on July 1, 1877 in St. Paul.
Armstrong married Anna Miller on March 24, 1852. She died of dysentery on October 16, 1852 in Keokuk. He married again, on November 10, 1859, to Jane Caroline ("Jenny") Colman. She was born in Berford, Ontario, Canada on February 21, 1838 and moved to Fort Atkinson, Iowa in the 1850s with her, parents Thomas William Coleman and Caroline Newington Coleman. Jane and George had seven children: George Coleman, William Newington, James Douglas, Caroline Isabel, Thomas Miller, John Milton, and Albert.
WILLIAM WALLACE ARMSTRONG
William Wallace Armstrong, the eighth child of John and Elizabeth, was born on March 18, 1833. In May 1847 he was apprenticed to learn the printing trade at the Seneca Advertiser, Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio. By the early 1850s he was the paper's editor and proprietor, and in May of 1854 became its owner. He also served (1857-1861) as Tiffin's postmaster. In 1862 he was elected Ohio's secretary of state, serving one term. He then moved to Cleveland where he published the Cleveland Plain Dealer until 1884. He served (1887-1891) as Cleveland's postmaster and was a candidate for Cleveland city treasurer in 1895. He died on April 21, 1905.
Armstrong married Sarah Virginia Hedges on November 10, 1857. They had three children: two sons who died in infancy and Isabella Hedges (1864- ).
JAMES DOUGLAS ARMSTRONG
James Douglas Armstrong, the third child of George and Jane Armstrong, was born on April 8, 1866 in St. Paul, Minnesota. He graduated from St. Paul High School in 1885, attended the University of Minnesota and the University of Minnesota law school, and was admitted to the Minnesota bar in 1889. He was solicitor for the St. Paul and Duluth Railroad (1890-1895); member of the Hadley and Armstrong law firm of St. Paul (1895-1900); assistant general solicitor and general attorney, Great Northern Railway Company (1901-1912); general counsel, Great Northern iron ore properties (1912-1915); and vice-president, Merchant's Trust and Savings Bank (later First Trust Company), 1915-Oct. 1931. He was also president of the Ramsey County Bar Association (1905) and a St. Paul College of Law lecturer and instructor (1909-1930). He married Mary Elizabeth Brinckerhoff (1871-1931) in 1894; they had five children. Armstrong died on November 15, 1939.
JOHN MILTON ARMSTRONG
John Milton Armstrong, the sixth child of George and Jane, was born on April 10, 1875. He attended the St. Paul public schools and the University of Minnesota, and graduated from the latter's medical school in 1901. He interned at St. Joseph Hospital, St. Paul (1901-1902) and established a practice in Montgomery, Minnesota late in 1902. He soon moved back to St. Paul, however, and established a practice in that city. He was St. Paul's assistant commissioner of health; president of the Ramsey County Medical Society (1914), the Minnesota Society for the Study of Medical History (1935-1937), and the Minnesota Academy of Medicine (1941); vice-president of the Medical Library Association (1939); and a member of the Minnesota State Medical Association, American Medical Association, Minnesota Historical Society Executive Council, and Nu Sigma Nu Medical Fraternity. Armstrong also joined the Medical Reserve Corps in 1909, and was commissioned a first lieutenant in 1911 and captain in 1918.
He married Ida Dulany Dobyns (1880- ) on May 31, 1909 in Shelbina, Missouri. They had four children: Jane, Anne, Elizabeth, and John Milton. Armstrong died in 1945.
ALBERT ARMSTRONG
Albert Armstrong, the seventh child of George and Jane, was born on March 23, 1877. He attended the University of Minnesota and was a Northern Pacific Railway Company roadmaster (1899-1905); corporate secretary of several Tacoma, Washington businesses, including the Far West Lumber Company, the Far West Clay Company, and the Pacific Car Company (1906-1916); and manager (1917-1928), president, and owner (1929- ) of the Interlocking Tile Corporation, Seattle, Washington. He married Emilie Thomas and had two sons.
SCOPE AND CONTENTS
Correspondence (1819-1944), genealogical materials (1750s-1930s), photographs (undated and 1886, 1906), clippings (1866-1943), certificates (1837-1917), and scrapbooks (1842-1941) documenting five generations of an Ohio family, many of whose descendants lived in Minnesota.
Most of the papers document the families of James Armstrong (1816-1862), a Wisconsin lawyer, and George Washington Armstrong (1827-1877), a real estate developer and state official in Minnesota. The papers contain information on Minnesota and Ohio politics, especially in the 19th century; on real estate transactions, especially in Minnesota; on the genealogy and history of the Armstrong family in several states; and on the daily lives of many family members over the course of more than 100 years.
ARRANGEMENT
These documents are organized into the following sections:
| Genealogical Materials | ||
| Correspondence and Related Papers | ||
| Photographs | ||
| Clippings | ||
| Armstrong Family History | ||
| Scrapbooks | ||
| Oversize Papers |
ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION
Availability:
The collection is open for research use.
Preferred Citation:
[Indicate the cited item and/or series here].John Armstrong Family Papers. Minnesota Historical Society.
See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional examples.
Accession Information:
Accession numbers: 4143; 5569; 5606; 5619; 5670; 5711; 5765
Processing Information:
Processed by: Cheryl Norenberg Thies, April 1984
Catalog ID number: 990017298740104294
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
GENEALOGICAL MATERIALS
| Box | |||||||||||||
| P1450 | 1 | 1750s-1930s. | |||||||||||
| Charts and genealogical data detailing the Armstrong, Duncan, Brinckerhoff, McKaig, Nelson, Newington, Noakes, Spaulding, and Gorman families. Includes an Armstrong family chart (1780s-1900s), an undated biographical sketch of William W. Armstrong, a pamphlet on the Duncan-Brinckerhoff families (1830s-1930s), two McKaig family charts (1700s-1890s) compiled by Thomas Kerr (July 27, 1894) and updated to 1906 by John Milton Armstrong, and an undated booklet by Harriet McIntyre Foster entitled Lt. David Nelson and His Descendants (1750s-1900s). | |||||||||||||
CORRESPONDENCE AND RELATED PAPERS
This section contains chronologically arranged papers that document generations of Armstrong family members from John Armstrong, Jr. through his great-great-grandchildren. They deal mainly with the families of his two sons, James Armstrong (1816-1862) and George Washington Armstrong (1827-1877). Included are letters, wedding announcements, certificates and appointments, financial and estate documents, and programs and invitations.
Note: In the following annotations, James will refer to James Armstrong (1816-1862), George to George Washington Armstrong (1827-1877), John M. to John Milton Armstrong, M.D. (1875-1945), and James D. to James Douglas Armstrong (1866-1939).
| Box | |||||||||||||
| P1450 | 1 | Undated and 1819-1839. | |||||||||||
| Includes the Armstrong tartan and coat of arms; notice that John M. was placed on the Chinese Imperial Reform Army (Yankton, S.D.) roster as captain and assistant surgeon (undated); marriage invitation of Albert and Emilie Thomas Armstrong (undated); a letter from Jane Armstrong to her father, John M., concerning her U.S. Navy commission (undated); commissions of John Armstrong, Jr. as captain (1819), aide-de-camp (1824), adjutant (1829), major (1830), brigadier major and inspector (1832), and brigadier inspector (1839), in the Ohio militia; letters concerning the marriage of Jane Coleman Armstrong's grandparents, James and Caroline Noakes Newington (1820); a letter from Elizabeth Newington to her stepmother, Caroline, detailing a summer vacation (1820); English game tax receipts of James Newington (1822-1823); documents detailing Elizabeth Newington's estate (1829) and John Armstrong, Jr.'s election as Columbian County (Ohio) treasurer (1834); marriage certificate of James Coleman Armstrong's parents (1835); and James' graduation speech at Washington and Jefferson College (1837). | |||||||||||||
| 1840-1842. | |||||||||||||
| Contains love letters between James Armstrong and Mary Ann Nelson (Columbus, Ohio) both before and after their 1842 marriage. The letters include details of their secret engagement (May 1841); Bezaleel W. Armstrong's departure for West Point and James' law studies (May 1841); the possibility of James joining his father's business (June 1841); Margaret K. Armstrong's wedding (Oct.-Nov. 1841); their marriage plans; Mary Ann's numerous visits with James' brother Milt (John Milton) Armstrong, Ohio state auditor living in Columbus; James' attendance at a temperance meeting (Jan. 1842); Mary Ann's views on "animal magnetism" (Feb. 1842); and James' law partnership in New Lisbon (April 1842) and Canton (Nov. 1842), Ohio. Also included are letters from Bezaleel to his father describing West Point (Feb. 1842); from Milt Armstrong, to Mary Ann with news of her Columbus friends (Aug. 1842), and to James (Canton) concerning Ohio politics (Nov. 1842); from Thomas Noakes (London) to his sister, Caroline Noakes Newington (Paris, Ontario, Canada), with family news (Nov. 1842); and from George (Columbus) to James, and from Milt (Columbus) to his father, both concerning the death of their mother Isabella (Dec. 1842). | |||||||||||||
| 1843-1849. | |||||||||||||
| Continues the letters (1843) between James and Mary Ann, while James resides in Canton and Mary Ann is still in New Lisbon. Describes James' acceptance of Christ (Jan.), the birth of their daughter (May), and the possibility of James joining the Ohio militia (June). Also included are letters from Bezaleel (West Point) to his father discussing his grief over his mother's death (Jan. 1843), and to Mary Ann, expressing anger over his father's remarriage (Jan. 1844); from Thomas Noakes (London) to his sister Caroline, detailing their mother's death (March 1844); and from James Noakes (Burwash, England) to Caroline and James Newington enclosing a statement of their parents' estates (Dec. 1844). Other papers include receipts for Caroline's share of the estates of her mother and her aunt, Ann Farrance (Feb. 1845); a recommendation of William W. Armstrong to John G. Breslin, publisher of the Seneca Advertiser (March 1847); and a letter from George (New Lisbon) to William W. (Tiffin) announcing Bezaleel's death (Feb. 1849). | |||||||||||||
| 1850-1889. | |||||||||||||
| Includes a sales receipt for Caroline N. Newington's Canada farm (May 1852); a congressional bill authorizing her to enter certain lands in Iowa (April 1856) along with a letter from U.S. Representative Henry Rice concerning the bill (July 1856); letters from Thomas W. Coleman (Fort Atkinson, Iowa) to George concerning George's handling of Coleman's St. Paul business (1857-1859) and giving his permission for George to marry his daughter, Jane Caroline Coleman (Aug. 1859); William W. and Sarah Hedges Armstrong's marriage certificate (Nov. 1857); George's Minnesota state treasurer election certificate (Dec. 1857); a letter from John Armstrong, Jr. (New Lisbon) to his sons, Albert and George (St. Paul) detailing his fourth marriage (May 1862) and his honorable "Squirrel Hunter's Discharge" certificate (Sept. 1862); wedding announcement of Emily Coleman (Jane's sister) and George C. Spaulding (Aug. 1869); and letters from Milt Armstrong (Florida) to George containing family news (May 1875), and from James Noakes Taylor (London) to Caroline N. Coleman, thanking her for her hospitality during his St. Paul visit and containing Noakes family news (Jan., March 1887). | |||||||||||||
| 1890-1920. | |||||||||||||
| Contains letters from Henry Newington (New York) to his nieces, Jane Coleman Armstrong and Emily Coleman Spaulding, describing a trip to Paris, Canada (Sept. 1893); from Milt Armstrong (Florida) to John M., containing genealogical data (May 1895); a series of letters (Jan. 1896-Sept. 1898) from English cousin Susannah Noakes to Jane C. Armstrong giving family news and sending her condolences on William Newington Armstrong's death (Sept. 1898); a pencil drawing of Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong Fox (June 1898); a letter from James D. (Minneapolis) to John M. describing William's severe illness (Aug. 1898); and several condolence letters to their mother, Jane C. Armstrong, following his death (Sept., Dec. 1898). Other items include a printed notice of Susannah Noakes' death (Sept. 1899); the wedding announcement of John M. and Ida Dulany Dobyns (May 1909); John M.'s commission as first lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps (June 1911); and several letters between cousins Carrie Armstrong Tillinghast (Missoula, Mont.), James D. and John M. (St. Paul), and Isabella (Belle) H. Armstrong (Cleveland), concerning Carrie's financial problems (Aug. 1911-Dec. 1918). | |||||||||||||
| 1921-1929. | |||||||||||||
| Includes a series of letters (1921-1927) from Belle Armstrong (Cleveland) to John M. and James D. (St. Paul) detailing the deaths of her mother, Sara Hedges Armstrong (March 1921) and of Carrie Armstrong Tillinghast (Aug. 1922), and commenting on her father, William W. Armstrong's first trip to Tiffin at age 14 (May 1927). Letters (1924-1925) from Minnie Newington Goodwin (New York) to her cousins, Jane C. Armstrong (St. Paul) and Emily C. Spaulding (San Francisco) describe her fortieth wedding anniversary celebration (March 1924) and a voyage to England (Aug. 1925), and offer condolences on the death of Jane's son George (Oct. 1926). Other papers include Jane C. Armstrong's will (typed copy; Oct. 1926); the wedding invitation of James D.'s daughter Margaret and Francis Baylis Dean (May 1927); John M.'s correspondence with several University of Minnesota regents and the University's president regarding a fine arts program at the university (April-May 1912); and the University High School commencement announcement of John M.'s daughter, Jane Armstrong (June 1928). | |||||||||||||
| 1930-1944. | |||||||||||||
| Contains letters from T. K. Armstrong (Chicago) to John M. forwarding Armstrong genealogical data (Dec. 1930), and from Kate Spaulding Cathcart announcing the death of her mother, Emily Coleman Spaulding (June 1934); the marriage announcement of John M.'s daughter Anne and William A. Wallis (Oct. 1935); notice of John M.'s election to the Informal Club of St. Paul (Nov. 1937); a series of letters (March-Nov. 1939) between John M. and several Swedish professors regarding Swedish runes and the authenticity of the Kensington (Minnesota) runestone; a letter from Margaret B. Newington (Connecticut) to John M. detailing his relationship to her husband, Harry M. Newington, a grandson of James and Caroline N. Newington (Aug. 1939); obituaries and a biographical sketch of James D. (Nov. 1939); a letter from Albert Armstrong (Seattle) to his brother, John M., giving his views on the United States government and the war (June 1942); and an article about Albert Armstrong in the Topnotcher (Jan. 1943). | |||||||||||||
PHOTOGRAPHS
| Box | |||||||||||||
| P1450 | 2 | Undated and 1869, 1906. | |||||||||||
| Photographs of Margaret King Armstrong Garretson (undated), Carrie Armstrong Tillinghast and her mother, Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong Fox (undated), and a portrait of Minnie Newington Goodwin (1906). | |||||||||||||
CLIPPINGS
| Box | |||||||||||||
| P1450 | 2 | 1866-1943. | |||||||||||
| Due to their rapidly deteriorating condition, the clippings were photocopied in March 1984 and the originals discarded. Arranged chronologically, they include obituaries of George S. Spaulding (1875), Willis A. Gorman (1876), George W. Armstrong (1877), Emily Newington Gorman (1879), Thomas W. Coleman (1885), Caroline Noakes Newington (1887), William W. Armstrong (1905), John Nelson Armstrong (1911), Mary Brinckerhoff Armstrong (1931), Emily Coleman Spaulding (1934), and Jane Coleman Armstrong (1940). There are announcements and descriptions of the weddings of James D. and Mary Brinckerhoff Armstrong (1894), Carrie Armstrong and C. W. Tillinghast (1901), Elinor Dittenhofer and John B. Armstrong (1930), and James D. and Cora H. Johnson Armstrong (1933). Other articles detail John Armstrong, Jr.'s memorial sermon (1866); a trip by Carrie Armstrong from Chicago to Missoula, Montana (1882); William W. Armstrong's retirement from the Cleveland Plain Dealer (1884); the 100th anniversary of New Lisbon, Ohio (1903); James D. Armstrong's appointment as Great Northern Railway Company attorney (1906) and election as Merchant's Trust and Savings Bank vice-president (1915); Carrie Armstrong Tillinghast's divorce (1907); Jane C. Armstrong's ninetieth (1928), ninety-fifth (1933), and ninety-ninth (1937) birthday celebrations; scholarships received by John M. Armstrong's daughters Anne (1930, 1936) and Jane (1935, 1937); the appraisal of James D. Armstrong's estate (1940); and John M. Armstrong's work with blood donations (1942). | |||||||||||||
ARMSTRONG FAMILY HISTORY
A handwritten genealogy and family history compiled by John Milton Armstrong in 1939, with 1942 additions. The volume covers the period from 1754 through 1942, and contains numerous notes and charts on the Armstrongs' ancestry and on many individual family members; vital statistics for the family from 1793 through 1888 (p. 87-89); information on the military career of John Armstrong, Jr. (p. 83); numerous copies of genealogical letters; and comments on the related Coleman, Newington, Noakes, McKaig, and Spaulding families.
It also contains biographical sketches of John Armstrong, Jr., George Washington Armstrong, John Milton Armstrong (1875-1945), William Wallace Armstrong, James Douglas Armstrong, Susannah Noakes, Jane Coleman Armstrong, and John Milton Armstrong's children Anne, Elizabeth, and John M.
| Box | |||||||||||||
| P1450 | 2 | Volume 1. 1939-1942. | |||||||||||
SCRAPBOOKS
Due to the rapidly deteriorating condition of both the scrapbook pages and the clippings mounted on them, Volumes 2 and 3 were dismantled in March 1984, and the deteriorating materials photocopied. Other materials were removed and refiled, along with the clippings photocopies, in their original location among the scrapbook items.
| Box | |||||||||||||
| P1450 | 2 | Volume 2. 1842-1893. | |||||||||||
| Arranged in no apparent date or subject order, the volume's contents mainly document the life of William Wallace Armstrong (1883-1905). Included are clippings and correspondence detailing Armstrong's appointment as Cleveland postmaster (1877); obituaries of John G. Breslin (Tiffin), the man who taught Armstrong the newspaper business (undated); promotional flyers, tickets, and clippings concerning Armstrong's speech at the 1888 Democratic national convention in St. Louis; his recollections of Artemus Ward as a Seneca Advertiser employee in the 1850s (undated); his proposed Ohio gubernatorial candidacy (undated); his retirement from the Cleveland Plain Dealer (1884) and the Cleveland postmastership (1891); his initiation of the rooster as the Ohio Democratic Party symbol (undated); and his candidacy for Cuyahoga County treasurer (1893). There are tickets for the 1888 Republican and 1892 Democratic national conventions in Chicago, and the 1893 Ohio Democratic convention. | |||||||||||||
| Volume 3. 1842-1941. | |||||||||||||
| Possibly assembled by John Milton Armstrong (1875-1945), the volume's contents display no apparent order. Included are several undated articles detailing the life of John Armstrong, Jr.; obituaries of Thomas Miller Armstrong (1874), Isabella McKaig Armstrong (1842), Eliza Jane Armstrong (1849), Anna Miller Armstrong (1852), John Milton Armstrong (1901), Matthew A. Fox (1883), George Washington Armstrong (1877), Caroline Armstrong Robinson (1941), William Newington Armstrong (1898), and William W. Armstrong (1905); several clippings concerning William W. Armstrong, particularly his retirement from the Cleveland Plain Dealer (1884) and candidacy for Cleveland city treasurer (1895); a number of articles on James D. Armstrong's law career, including his appointment to the St. Paul city charter commission (1903), his role as a St. Paul College of Law instructor (1904), and election as Ramsey County Bar Association president (1905); and clippings concerning the settlement of Emily Newington Gorman's estate (undated), and Albert Armstrong's participation in the Pacific Northwest International tennis championships (1904). | |||||||||||||
| Volume 4. Family album/scrapbook, 1848-1911. | |||||||||||||
| This volume was begun by Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong Fox, passed on to her daughter, Caroline Armstrong Tillinghast, and (following Caroline's 1922 death) given to John Milton Armstrong. It contains handcopied poems, original watercolor and tinted ink drawings, clippings, handcut silhouettes, handwritten genealogical notes, photographs, and braided samples of family hair. | |||||||||||||
| The clippings, mainly wedding announcements and obituaries, include the weddings of John Nelson and Lizzie McKittrick Armstrong (1884), Caroline Armstrong and C. W. Tillinghast (1901), Duane James and Mary S. Rudd Armstrong (1880), and Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong and Matthew A. Fox (undated). They include obituaries of Matthew A. Fox (1883), and Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong Fox (1901), John Nelson Armstrong (1847), Margaret K. Armstrong (1849), Eliza Jane Armstrong (1847), Margaret K. Armstrong Garretson (1852), James Armstrong (1862), Mary Isabella Armstrong (1864), George W. Armstrong (1877), Duane James Armstrong (1890), Albert Armstrong (1888), John Milton Armstrong (1901), and William W. Armstrong (1888), John Milton Armstrong (1901), and William W. Armstrong (1905). | |||||||||||||
| Also included in the volume are silhouettes of Duane James Armstrong (ca.1885-1890) and Martha Nelson, grandmother of Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong Fox (undated); photographs of the James Armstrong home in Janesville, Wisconsin (ca. 1860), and of Mary Isabella Armstrong (undated); and hair samples from the members of the John Armstrong, Jr. and James Armstrong families, Anna Miller Armstrong, and various members of the Nelson (Mary Ann Nelson Armstrong Fox) family. | |||||||||||||
OVERSIZE PAPERS
| +121 | Architectual plan, undated. | ||||||||||||
| Floor plan and exterior view of an unidentified house, possibly the James Armstrong house in Janesville, Wisconsin. James was the eldest son of John Armstrong, Jr. | |||||||||||||
| Diploma, Washington (and Jefferson) College, October 1837. | |||||||||||||
| Issued to James Armstrong. | |||||||||||||
| Will, December 31, 1845. | |||||||||||||
| Will of James Newington (Paris, Ontario, Canada), grandfather of Jane Coleman Armstrong, the second wife of George Washington Armstrong. Includes a Jan. 3, 1846 codicil. | |||||||||||||
| Diploma, Patapsco Female Institute (Ellicotts, Maryland), July 31, 1850. | |||||||||||||
| Issued to Anna Miller, first wife of George Washington Armstrong. | |||||||||||||
| Appointment of George W. Armstrong as Commissary General, Minnesota Territory, November 25, 1856. | |||||||||||||
| Appointment of George W. Armstrong as Treasurer, Minnesota Territory, May 6, 1857. | |||||||||||||
| Speech, July 5, 1861. | |||||||||||||
| Printed copy of James Armstrong's July Fourth oration at Janesville, Wisconsin. | |||||||||||||
| Architectural estimates, March 31, 1863. | |||||||||||||
| Cost estimates on a house planned for George W. Armstrong. | |||||||||||||
| Appointment of George W. Armstrong as Notary Public, Ramsey County (Minnesota), February 1, 1868. | |||||||||||||
| Architectural plans, 1869. | |||||||||||||
| Floor plans done by architect John Summer for George W. Armstrong's house at 151 (now 252) Summit Avenue, St. Paul. | |||||||||||||
| Architectural plans and specifications for material and labor, 1869. 4 items. | |||||||||||||
| Submitted to George W. Armstrong by architect A. L. McKnight for a house at 151 (now 252) Summit Avenue, St. Paul. The plans were not accepted. | |||||||||||||
| Armstrong family genealogical chart, January 14, 1896. | |||||||||||||
| Four-generation chart (1757-1895) compiled by John M. Armstrong. | |||||||||||||
| Soldier's Memorial Roster of Men Mustered into United States Service for the Spanish-American War at Missoula, Montana, (illustrated). May 10, 1898. | |||||||||||||
| Appointment of John M. Armstrong as First Lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps, U. S. Army, May 20, 1911. | |||||||||||||
| Appointment of John M. Armstrong as Captain, Medical Reserve Corps, U.S. Army, April 2, 1917. | |||||||||||||
RELATED MATERIALS
CATALOG HEADINGS
This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons or places should search the catalog using these headings.
- Topics:
- Administration of estates.
- Dwellings -- Minnesota -- Saint Paul -- Drawings.
- Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Canada.
- Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Iowa.
- Real estate business -- Minnesota.
- Newspapers -- Ohio.
- Inscriptions, Runic.
- Persons:
- Armstrong, George Washington, 1827-1877.
- Armstrong, Isabella Hedges, 1864-
- Armstrong, James, 1816-1862.
- Armstrong, John Milton, 1818-1901.
- Armstrong, John Milton, 1875-1945.
- Armstrong, Mary Ann Nelson, 1823-1901.
- Armstrong family.
- Breslin, John G.
- Brinckerhoff family.
- Coleman, Caroline Newington, 1815-1893.
- Coleman, Thomas William, 1805-1885.
- Duncan family.
- Goodwin, Minnie Newington, -1930.
- Gorman, Willis Arnold, 1816-1876.
- McKaig family.
- Nelson family.
- Newington family.
- Noakes, Susannah, -1899.
- Noakes, Thomas.
- Noakes family.
- Rice, Henry M. (Henry Mower), 1816-1894.
- Spaulding family.
- Tillinghast, Caroline Amelia Armstrong, -1922.
- Ward, Artemus, 1834-1867.
- Organizations:
- Democratic Party (Ohio).
- United States. Army. Medical Reserve Corps.
- Places:
- Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government.
- Great Britain -- Economic conditions.
- Janesville (Wis.).
- Minnesota -- Social life and customs.
- Minnesota -- Politics and government.
- New Lisbon (Ohio).
- Ohio -- Politics and government.
- Ohio -- Social life and customs.
- Saint Paul (Minn.) -- Social life and customs.
- Document Types:
- Obituaries.
- Human hair.
- Love letters.
- Marriage certificates.
- Photographs.
- Diplomas.
- Occupations:
- Lawyers.
- Physicians--Minnesota--Saint Paul.
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