Difference between revisions of "Millet to Stoddard: March 25, 1887"
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Delighted you are in town! Come down & see us at any hour. We are engaged | Delighted you are in town! Come down & see us at any hour. We are engaged | ||
tomorrow & Friday eves. I’ll try to see you tomorrow. Have had a two weeks | tomorrow & Friday eves. I’ll try to see you tomorrow. Have had a two weeks | ||
− | card for Players club sent you. Very nice quiet club. Go there, do! | + | card for Players club <ref> The Players Club, built in 1847 and founded by Edwin Booth, the actor and brother of the assassin of President Lincoln, still exists at 16 Gramercy Park in New York. According to a Wikipedia entry, members of the Players originally included the local pillars of society of the day, prominent bankers, lawyers and businessmen, as well as those identified with other arts - writers, journalists, sculptors, architects and painters. Today it serves as a social club but is also a repository of American and British theatre history, memorabilia, and theatrical artifacts. </ref> sent you. Very nice quiet club. Go there, do! |
Yours in haste | Yours in haste | ||
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+ | =Notes= | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
=Next: Letter 28: [[Millet to Stoddard: June 18, 1887]]= | =Next: Letter 28: [[Millet to Stoddard: June 18, 1887]]= |
Revision as of 15:50, 19 March 2012
Letter 27: Letters of Frank Millet to Charles Warren Stoddard: May 10, 1875 - January 3, 1900
92 Clinton Place [note: N.Y.C. or the Bronx]
March 25
Dear Charlie:
Delighted you are in town! Come down & see us at any hour. We are engaged tomorrow & Friday eves. I’ll try to see you tomorrow. Have had a two weeks card for Players club [1] sent you. Very nice quiet club. Go there, do!
Yours in haste
Francisco de Milleto
Notes
- ↑ The Players Club, built in 1847 and founded by Edwin Booth, the actor and brother of the assassin of President Lincoln, still exists at 16 Gramercy Park in New York. According to a Wikipedia entry, members of the Players originally included the local pillars of society of the day, prominent bankers, lawyers and businessmen, as well as those identified with other arts - writers, journalists, sculptors, architects and painters. Today it serves as a social club but is also a repository of American and British theatre history, memorabilia, and theatrical artifacts.