Library of Congress
Manuscript Division
Washington, DC
Papers:
1796, 1 item.
Letter of Henry Glen, 1796.
Papers:
In the Benjamin Stoddert Papers, 1784-1812, 37 items.
Correspondents include Henry Glen.
Papers:
In the Peter Van Schaack Papers, 1776-1841, 53 items.
Correspondents include Henry Glen.
The Morgan Library
Department of Literary and Historical
Manuscripts
New York, NY
Papers:
1778, 1 item.
A letter from John Stark to Henry Glen written on June 15, 1778.
Papers:
1779, 1 item.
A letter from James Clinton to Henry Glen written on June 30, 1779. In the letter, Clinton writes concerning provisions.
Papers:
ca. 1781, 1 item.
A letter from J. Cuyler to Henry Glen written on an unidentified day in 1781 concerning the Surrender of Cornwallis.
Papers:
1781, 1 item.
A letter from Philip John Schuyler to John Stark written on November 13, 1781. In the letter, Schuyler writes concerning the payment of the "creditors of the public," by Congress.
New-York Historical Society
New York, NY
Papers:
In the Glen Family Papers, ca. 1712-1880, approximately 330 items.
Persons represented include Henry Glen.
Papers:
In the Richard Varick Papers, 1774-1830, 2.3 linear feet.
Correspondents include Henry Glen.
New York Public Library
New York, NY
Papers:
1770-1801, 1 box.
The Henry Glen Collection consists of correspondence with General James Clinton, William Popham, General Philip Schuyler, Henry Ten Eyck, Colonel Marinus Willett, and others, concerning supplies and activities of the Continental Army, news of the British surrender at Yorktown, Va., and Willett's failure to take Oswego, N.Y. Also, personal letters relating to politics and other matters.
New York State Library
Albany, NY
Papers:
1792, 1 item.
A letter from Alexander Hamilton to Henry Glen written on June 26, 1792. In the letter, Hamilton discusses Mr. Van Inger's visit at the Treasury Department on Glen's behalf.
University of Michigan
William L. Clements Library
Ann Arbor, MI
Papers:
ca. 1781-1801, 15 items.
The Henry Glen Papers consist of fifteen letters written to Mr. Glen over a period of twenty years by family members and business acquaintences. All but one of the letters was written while Glen was a representative in Congress. Nine of the letters date between February 1795 and February 1796, including five discussing the Jay Treaty, from its arrival in Philadelphia through ratification and the ensuing political turmoil. Three additional letters discuss troop supply in northwestern New York.
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