Letter from George B. Cortelyou to Edward A. Moseley
Collection
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
Creation Date
1902-01-24
Creator(s)
Cortelyou, George B. (George Bruce), 1862-1940
Your TR Source
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1902-01-24
Cortelyou, George B. (George Bruce), 1862-1940
William Loeb received Edward A. Moseley’s letter and will add Claudine E. Clements to the list of invitees for the reception on January 17.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-12-28
William Loeb encloses a letter from President Roosevelt awarding Edward A. McGrath with a Medal of Honor to Edward A. Moseley of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1907-12-07
Secretary to the President Loeb encloses President Roosevelt’s letter to Mary Guinan and requests that Secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission Moseley send the letter and medal once her medal of honor is ready. Also enclosed is a draft letter to Mr. Hagen and “the committee’s recommendations in both cases.”
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1907-05-08
William Loeb sends Edward A. Moseley, secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission, two letters written by President Roosevelt for Charles W. Haight and George H. Williams, winners of the Congressional Medal of Honor. Loeb informs Moseley that in the future Roosevelt would prefer to use a form letter and simply sign his name when sending medals to recipients.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1906-06-23
William Loeb asks Edward A. Moseley to forward a letter from President Roosevelt to George H. Poell of Grand Island, Nebraska, awarding him a medal of honor. (Earlier in 1905, Poell lost a leg and broke both arms rescuing a toddler who had fallen into the path of an oncoming train.)
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1905-12-21
On behalf of Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt, William Loeb thanks Edward A. Moseley for the gift of violets.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1902-01-03
James J. Coutts sends a report on the conditions of the anthracite coal mines in Scranton and Carbondale, Pennsylvania. Coutts covers the level of coal available, the morale of the strikers, and the qualifications to become a coal miner in Pennsylvania.
Library of Congress Manuscript Division
1902-10-18