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5 resources
5 items
Subject
MissionariesMoney
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Letter from Jesse Boring (Columbus, Georgia) to Robert Paine (Aberdeen, Mississippi) - January 1, 1850
Boring, JesseA letter from Jesse Boring to Robert Paine recommending his estimates on the financial needs for the first year of the California mission and requesting Paine write him immediately. -
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Letter from Jesse Boring (Mobile, Alabama) to Robert Paine (Aberdeen, Mississippi) - February 21, 1850
Boring, JesseA letter from Jesse Boring to Robert Paine updating him on the California-bound missionaries' plans to travel on to New Orleans and providing an informal report (with the promise of a formal one forthcoming) of the collections they've made in support of the mission. -
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Letter from Jesse Boring (New Orleans, Louisiana) to Robert Paine ([?], Alabama) - February 25, 1850
Boring, JesseA letter from Jesse Boring to Robert Paine reporting on the planned departure of the missionaries aboard a steamship and including an itemized report of the mission finances. -
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Letter from Jesse Boring (San Francisco, California) to Robert Paine (Savannah, Georgia) - November 15, 1850
Boring, JesseA letter from Jesse Boring to Robert Paine giving an update on the mission and requesting additional missionaries be sent to support the mission, discussing the presence of Northern Methodist missionaries, and addressing published comments made in regards to Boring's management of the mission's finances. -
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Letter from Jesse Boring (San Francisco, California) to Robert Paine - June 10, 1851
Boring, JesseAn incomplete letter from Jesse Boring to Robert Paine expressing his dismay over his treatment by the Board of Managers and Secretaries in regards to his handling of the mission finances, detailing the struggles the missionaries and their families have had to endure only to be so poorly treated by the church itself, expressing his concern that the delay in sending monetary aid is too late to make up the lost ground, announcing his intention to no longer personally draw on the missionary funds so that more of the money may be spent to support additional missionaries, assuring Paine of his