Image Text 484 Items Confessionario en lengua Castellana y Timuquana con algunos consejos para animar al penitente. Y assi mismo van declarados algunos effectos y prerrogariuas [sic] deste sancto sacramento de la confession. : Todo muy vtil y prouechoso assi para que los pa Text in Spanish and Timucua. Signatures: [cross]⁸ *⁸ B-2F⁸. Errata: preliminary leaves [15] verso-[16]. Digitized from microfilm copy of original formerly in the Buckingham Smith papers at the New-York Historical Society. View Item
Image Collection 2 Items Ladies' Christian Union records, 1850-2001 (bulk 1858-1960). Series XII: Manuals, 1869-1870, 1876 View Collection
Image Collection 13 Items Ladies' Christian Union records, 1850-2001 (bulk 1858-1960) The records of the Ladies' Christian Union include annual reports, minutes, financial and real estate records, correspondence, photographs, biographical writings, membership lists, ephemera, printed brochures, articles, and manuals. The Ladies Christian Union was founded in New York City in 1858 with the aim of creating and maintaining safe, affordable housing for young, unmarried Christian women employed in the New York area. Between the years 1860-1922, the organization owned and operated a total of eight buildings in Manhattan. View Collection
Image Collection 5 Items Five Timucua language imprints, 1612-1635 The five works in this collection are among the earliest known primary sources that provide information about the now-extinct language of the Timucua, a Native American people who once lived in a large area of northern Florida, southern Georgia, and southern Alabama. The first two works, printed in Mexico City in 1612 and bound together into one volume, are catechisms in Spanish and Timucua written by Francisco Pareja, a missionary in Spanish Florida. The third work is a Confessionario, also by Pareja, printed in Mexico City in 1613. View Collection