letters (correspondence)
Found in 38 Collections and/or Records:
Extract from letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1884 Dec 31
Typewritten transcription of part of the 1884 Dec 31 letter from Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan, on the importance of receiving the rite of Confirmation.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1884 Aug 22
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan while at sea on the U.S.S. Wachusett to his daughter, Helen. In this letter Mahan includes books that he would wish her to read during the following winter.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1884 Dec 31
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan while serving on the U.S.S. Wachusett to his daughter, Helen. In this letter Mahan writes about the importance of receiving the rite of Confirmation.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, [1889] Aug 6
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan wishing her a happy birthday while he was away in Newport, RI.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1890 Jul 9
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan in which he provides advice on how to care for people to whom she may feel indifferent towards.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1890 Jul 20
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan in which he discusses marriage.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1893 Jul 3
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan in which he relates how he bruised his leg on his passage over to Queenstown (present day Cobh), Ireland, what he wishes to see while in Ireland, and what he read while traveling overseas.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1893 Jul 25
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan while in Cherbourg, France to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan. In this letter, Mahan updated Helen on his recovery from an injury and the ship's passage through the English Channel. He also expressed his interest in Helen's poetry.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1893 Aug 6
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan wishing her a happy birthday while he was away in Southhampton.
Letter to Helen E. Mahan, 1893 Sep 3-4
Letter written by Alfred T. Mahan to his daughter, Helen E. Mahan while he was away in Southhampton. In this letter, Mahan assured Helen that he does take notice of what she writes to him in her letters, even though she told her mother she felt that he does not. He recounts some of the family events he was apprised of to prove to her his attention.