Skip to main content Skip to search results Skip to Facets & Filters

Smith, Albert, Dr. , 1801-1878

 

Found in 6 Collections and/or Records:

Albert Smith letter

 Item 1
Identifier: Mss 867580
Mss 867580
Date(s): 1867-10-30
Scope and Contents

Letter from Albert Smith at Nashua to Asa Dodge Smith. Albert Smith writes that he has been studying Manchester as a location for the medical school.

Albert Smith letter

 Item 1
Identifier: Mss 868528
Mss 868528
Date(s): 1868-09-28
Scope and Contents

Letter from Albert Smith in Peterborough to Asa Dodge Smith with information about Dr. Field for the forthcoming catalogue.

Albert Smith letter

 Item 1
Identifier: Mss 868605
Mss 868605
Date(s): 1868-11-05
Scope and Contents

Letter from Albert Smith in Peterborough to Asa Dodge Smith asking whether Luther C. Bean was given an honorary degree at the last Commencement.

Albert Smith letter

 Item 1
Identifier: Mss 860410
Mss 860410
Date(s): 1860-07-10
Scope and Contents

Two-page letter from Albert Smith in Peterborough, NH to Daniel Blaisdell, sending a list of candidates receiving an M.D at the 1859 commencement. Prof. Hubbard will provide additional names.

Edward P. Harris letter

 Item 1
Identifier: Mss 827213
Mss 827213
Date(s): 1827-03-13
Scope and Contents

Letter from Edward P. Harris, Chesterfield Academy, Chesterfield, New Hampshire, to Albert Smith, at Peterborough, NH. Harris, Dartmouth class of 1826, discusses his dissatisfaction with local and state politics, his professional trajectory, and the value of a Dartmouth education. The letter mentions Josiah Fairfield and Dartmouth professor William Chamberlain.

Francis Perry Fitch letter

 Item 1
Identifier: Mss 849451
Mss 849451
Date(s): 1849-08-01
Scope and Contents

Two-page letter from Francis Perry Fitch in Amherst to Albert Smith in Hanover, telling him that he wants Dr. Smith to collect information on diseases in his district and send them to Dr. Fitch, a member of the Committee of Correspondence of the New Hampshire Medical Society. Raises question that exposure of large amounts of skin in infants cause disease. Includes explanatory note from Robert E. Nye.

Back to top