Charity's will of July 11, 1824, a month before she died appears to be an addendum in which she leaves various possessions to close family, particularly women including Mary Rodman, (1757-1835), an unmarried sister who received $500 'for her use if necessary', meaning that all others were excluded from acquiring this money. 7.5" by 12.5" (19 x 31cm
In this letter written in 1787, three years before her marriage to Thomas Rotch, 21-year-old Charity...
William Rotch in New Bedford attempts to iron out the complex resolution of Thomas Rotch's Will with...
Ann Bull again expressing concern for Charity's mental and physical state in a letter written a mont...
Charity's will of July 11, 1824, a month before she died appears to be an addendum in which she leav...
In the month before her death on August 6, 1824, Charity made out this memorandum of how she wished...
In this addendum to her will of 1824, Charity remembered those women who cared for her in her final ...
Charity Rotch remembered those women who cared for her in her final illness, many of whom were trans...
News of family to Charity Rotch with news of the birth of twins. By this date Charity had drawn up h...
This is the last letter from Elizabeth Rotch to Charity Rotch who grew increasingly ill. Charity mad...
Lydia Rotch Dean describes the nursing care of a female member of the Barney family, an aunt of Char...
Mary Rotch was the unmarried daughter of William Rotch Sr and his wife Elizabeth Barney. Expectation...
News of family from a niece in New Bedford to Charity Rotch, in Kendal, Ohio with comments and refle...
In a letter written three months after Thomas Rotch's death in 1823, his brother, William Rotch, Jr....
William Rotch offers his assistance regarding the resolution of Thomas Rotch's estate. He tells Char...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Kendal, Ohio from her niece, daughter of Samuel Rodman. Francis ...
In this letter written in 1787, three years before her marriage to Thomas Rotch, 21-year-old Charity...
William Rotch in New Bedford attempts to iron out the complex resolution of Thomas Rotch's Will with...
Ann Bull again expressing concern for Charity's mental and physical state in a letter written a mont...
Charity's will of July 11, 1824, a month before she died appears to be an addendum in which she leav...
In the month before her death on August 6, 1824, Charity made out this memorandum of how she wished...
In this addendum to her will of 1824, Charity remembered those women who cared for her in her final ...
Charity Rotch remembered those women who cared for her in her final illness, many of whom were trans...
News of family to Charity Rotch with news of the birth of twins. By this date Charity had drawn up h...
This is the last letter from Elizabeth Rotch to Charity Rotch who grew increasingly ill. Charity mad...
Lydia Rotch Dean describes the nursing care of a female member of the Barney family, an aunt of Char...
Mary Rotch was the unmarried daughter of William Rotch Sr and his wife Elizabeth Barney. Expectation...
News of family from a niece in New Bedford to Charity Rotch, in Kendal, Ohio with comments and refle...
In a letter written three months after Thomas Rotch's death in 1823, his brother, William Rotch, Jr....
William Rotch offers his assistance regarding the resolution of Thomas Rotch's estate. He tells Char...
News of family to Charity Rotch in Kendal, Ohio from her niece, daughter of Samuel Rodman. Francis ...
In this letter written in 1787, three years before her marriage to Thomas Rotch, 21-year-old Charity...
William Rotch in New Bedford attempts to iron out the complex resolution of Thomas Rotch's Will with...
Ann Bull again expressing concern for Charity's mental and physical state in a letter written a mont...