F-3 1826, April 28 Letter to E. R., sent first to Andover and then forwarded to Boston, MA. Although no signature is visible on this letter, its legal content, the return address (Southington, CT.), and the salutation ("Dear Brother") suggest the letter is from Charles Robinson.
Note
1826, April 28 - Letter to Edward Robinson from Charles Robinson.
C-3 1819, July 15 Letter to E. R. in Clinton from John T. Kirkland, Cambridge, MA. John sends his condolences to E. R. upon the death of his sister, Eliza. John mentions that his mother is very ill and cannot be told of her daughter's death, for it would "destroy her."
Note
1819, July 15 - Letter to Edward Robinson from John Thornton Kirkland, expressing condolences upon the death of Eliza Kirkland.
F-6 1829, June 11 Letter to E. R. from John T. Kirkland who is in Paris. Tells E. R. that he did not have a correct address for his residence in Paris and therefore is not surprised that E. R. did not receive his letter of last October. Reiterates what was in that lost letter, namely, he married shortly before resigning from the presidency of Harvard and then planned to travel in the U.S. before embarking on a tour of Europe. In the October letter John not only had asked for advice on travel in Europe but he also relayed the news that his sister, Mrs. Amory [Sarah Kirkland], had died very suddenly. He now asks E. R. to write him in Paris where he plans to stay for a month.
Note
1829, June 11 - Letter to Edward Robinson from John T. Kirkland.
C-2 1821, Nov. 23 Letter to E. R. in Southington, CT. from his sister-in-law Jerusha Lothrop in Utica. She mentions that "mother is in good health and is not alone, and she has rented the dining room and the chamber that was Elisabeth's, with a privilege in the kitchen, to the new Prof. Monteith, who very unexpectedly brought a wife with him."
Note
1821, November 23 - Letter to Edward Robinson from his sister-in-law Jerusha Lothrop.