A letter is addressed to Thomas and Charity Rotch while they were living in New Bedford, Massachusetts. Rebecca Young thanks them for their hospitality, she makes multiple references to the Bible and she may have been an itinerant minister. There is a note on the letter form Deborah Darby, a minister, and Rebecca Young may have been accompanying her on religious service as her companion. 9.25 x 11.6" (18.5 by 29.6 cm
In a letter addressed to an unnamed recipient, Charity Rotch quotes Epistles and encourages the reci...
This letter was forwarded to the Rotches in Hartford by Abraham Barker, a cousin by marriage who vis...
Mary Rotch was the unmarried daughter of William Rotch Sr and his wife Elizabeth Barney. Expectation...
A letter is addressed to Thomas and Charity Rotch while they were living in New Bedford, Massachuset...
A letter to Charity Rotch while she and Thomas Rotch were traveling in New England in 1821. The coup...
News of family to Charity Rotch in New Bedford in 1797 from Lydia Rotch Dean while traveling in reli...
Sarah Rodman Morgan was one of twelve nieces who formed a writing circle after the Rotch visit to Ne...
In this letter written in 1787, three years before her marriage to Thomas Rotch, 21-year-old Charity...
John Wigham addresses Charity by her first name. He apparently received religious counsel from her a...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Hartford. The writer notes that Charity's 'epistle' came to hand....
Sarah Rotch Arnold writes to Charity in Ohio, filling her letter with news of family. The Rotches re...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Hartford from Martha Routh (1743-1817), a prominent British Quak...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Hartford, Connecticut. Rachel thanks the Rotches for the hospital...
Mary Morton mentions Charity's 'complicated trials' without being more specific, but it is clear tha...
News of family to Charity Rotch in New Bedford from close family friend, H. Whithall in Woodbury, Co...
In a letter addressed to an unnamed recipient, Charity Rotch quotes Epistles and encourages the reci...
This letter was forwarded to the Rotches in Hartford by Abraham Barker, a cousin by marriage who vis...
Mary Rotch was the unmarried daughter of William Rotch Sr and his wife Elizabeth Barney. Expectation...
A letter is addressed to Thomas and Charity Rotch while they were living in New Bedford, Massachuset...
A letter to Charity Rotch while she and Thomas Rotch were traveling in New England in 1821. The coup...
News of family to Charity Rotch in New Bedford in 1797 from Lydia Rotch Dean while traveling in reli...
Sarah Rodman Morgan was one of twelve nieces who formed a writing circle after the Rotch visit to Ne...
In this letter written in 1787, three years before her marriage to Thomas Rotch, 21-year-old Charity...
John Wigham addresses Charity by her first name. He apparently received religious counsel from her a...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Hartford. The writer notes that Charity's 'epistle' came to hand....
Sarah Rotch Arnold writes to Charity in Ohio, filling her letter with news of family. The Rotches re...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Hartford from Martha Routh (1743-1817), a prominent British Quak...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Hartford, Connecticut. Rachel thanks the Rotches for the hospital...
Mary Morton mentions Charity's 'complicated trials' without being more specific, but it is clear tha...
News of family to Charity Rotch in New Bedford from close family friend, H. Whithall in Woodbury, Co...
In a letter addressed to an unnamed recipient, Charity Rotch quotes Epistles and encourages the reci...
This letter was forwarded to the Rotches in Hartford by Abraham Barker, a cousin by marriage who vis...
Mary Rotch was the unmarried daughter of William Rotch Sr and his wife Elizabeth Barney. Expectation...