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6 linear feet (in 7 boxes)

Burrows-Avery-Smith families of New York, Connecticut, and Michigan. Correspondence and business papers of Lorenzo Burrows, New York Congressman, 1849-1853; George L. Burrows, Saginaw, Michigan, banker and speculator; material concerning the Whig Party and New York state politics, 1848-1860. Correspondents include: Millard Fillmore, Washington Hunt, and John Young.

The Burrows / Avery / Smith collection was brought together and preserved by Emeline Burrows (daughter of Lorenzo Burrows) and Julia Smith (granddaughter of the elder Roswell Burrows).

The collection has been arranged into the following series: Correspondence and other papers of family members (arranged chronologically); Family records; Topical files; Visual Materials; and Financial materials.

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Correspondence and other papers of family members

The bulk of the collection has been arranged into a chronological series: Correspondence and other papers of family members. This series dates from 1761 to 1916 and contains an amalgam of personal, business, and political materials. As these papers were accumulated by different family members, it was not always possible to separate papers into series by name of either Burrows, Avery, or Smith family member. To facilitate access, therefore, the papers were arranged into one chronological sequence.

The earliest materials in this series were of Latham Avery, a Connecticut businessman. This is followed by papers of his daughter, her husband Roswell Burrows, and two of their children Roswell Burrows Jr. and Lorenzo Burrows. Papers from the period when Lorenzo Burrows was served in Congress consist primarily of letters to him requesting his aid in obtaining positions within the government and letters about his Whig party activities. It is in the papers for the years 1849 to 1853, that the researcher will find correspondence from Whig politicians, Washington Hunt and Millard Fillmore.

For the mid to late nineteenth century, the correspondence is primarily to Julia Smith from her sister and her nieces about family matters. For the twentieth century, the letters are mainly addressed to Emeline Burrows and also relate to family matters. Business correspondence is interspersed throughout with the family letters.