Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for A. Hitchcock or search for A. Hitchcock in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
hot-Tower Company, of Baltimore, offered to furnish soft pig lead at $5.75 per 100 pounds. A. Hitchcock, late master armorer at the United States arsenal at Watervleit, N. Y., made an estimate for mp-kettles, 500,000 minie balls, 6,000 altered muskets, etc., the whole amounting to $125,000. Hitchcock also made proposals for doing the work of altering the State's muskets at Newbern and to make rom New York to Norfolk, Newbern or Wilmington. Lieutenant Lee made an adverse endorsement on Hitchcock's proposal, saying the latter had not signed it, was a drinking man, and his bids were generaly 14th, the Governor wrote Lieutenant Lee that he did not like to make a contract with Smith & Hitchcock for the reasons named in Lee's endorsement on their proposals. He asked Lee to make out an orfuses and friction primers for cannon, and said if he could not do better, he would order from Hitchcock. The next day the Governor wrote Dr. E. C. Evans, at New York: The military commission has
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.12 (search)
hot-Tower Company, of Baltimore, offered to furnish soft pig lead at $5.75 per 100 pounds. A. Hitchcock, late master armorer at the United States arsenal at Watervleit, N. Y., made an estimate for mp-kettles, 500,000 minie balls, 6,000 altered muskets, etc., the whole amounting to $125,000. Hitchcock also made proposals for doing the work of altering the State's muskets at Newbern and to make rom New York to Norfolk, Newbern or Wilmington. Lieutenant Lee made an adverse endorsement on Hitchcock's proposal, saying the latter had not signed it, was a drinking man, and his bids were generaly 14th, the Governor wrote Lieutenant Lee that he did not like to make a contract with Smith & Hitchcock for the reasons named in Lee's endorsement on their proposals. He asked Lee to make out an orfuses and friction primers for cannon, and said if he could not do better, he would order from Hitchcock. The next day the Governor wrote Dr. E. C. Evans, at New York: The military commission has