Research Catalog

William Alexander papers

Title
William Alexander papers, 1709-1835, bulk (1762-1812)
Author
Alexander, William, 1726-1783.

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
Mixed materialBy appointment only *ZL-239Schwarzman Building - Manuscripts & Archives Room 328

Details

Additional Authors
  • Bancker, Gerard, 1740-1799.
  • Franklin, Samuel.
  • Ogdon, Uzal, 1744-1822.
  • Rapelje, Garret, 1771-
Description
  • .4 linear foot (1 box).
  • 1 microfilm reel.
Summary
Collection consists of correspondence and documents dealing with personal, legal and commercial matters.
Subjects
Access (note)
  • Restricted access;
Additional Formats (note)
  • available on microfilm;
Source (note)
  • Sayre, F.
Biography (note)
  • William Alexander (1726-1783) of New York City, popularly known as Lord Stirling, was a merchant, public official, the first governor of King's (Columbia) College, and a soldier in the American Revolution.
Processing Action (note)
  • Surveyed
  • Cataloging updated
Call Number
MssCol 44
OCLC
NYPW89-A262
Author
Alexander, William, 1726-1783.
Title
William Alexander papers, 1709-1835, bulk (1762-1812)
Additional Formats
Entire collection available on microfilm; New York Public Library.
Restricted Access
Restricted access; Manuscripts and Archives Division; Permit must be requested at the division indicated.
Biography
William Alexander (1726-1783) of New York City, popularly known as Lord Stirling, was a merchant, public official, the first governor of King's (Columbia) College, and a soldier in the American Revolution. He joined the British army at the onset of the French and Indian War, acting as commissary, aide and secretary to Governor William Shirley. In 1757 the House of Lords officially revoked his appeal as rightful heir of the earldom of Stirling; despite the ruling, Alexander assumed the title of Lord Stirling. On his return to America in 1761 he was made a member of the New Jersey Council and he acted as surveyor-general and assistant to the governor of the colony. He subsequently became the leader of the first New Jersey Regiment of the Revolutionary army. Alexander fought throughout the war in the Battles of Long Island, Trenton, Princeton, Matouchin, Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. In 1781 Alexander took command of a battalion in Albany, New York, and two years later he died after preliminary peace negotiations were drafted.
Occupation
Merchants.
Added Author
Bancker, Gerard, 1740-1799.
Franklin, Samuel.
Ogdon, Uzal, 1744-1822.
Rapelje, Garret, 1771-
LCCN
ms 70001692
Research Call Number
MssCol 44
View in Legacy Catalog