The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II eBook

Burton J. Hendrick
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 516 pages of information about The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II.

The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II eBook

Burton J. Hendrick
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 516 pages of information about The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II.
confidence in British Navy, Wilson’s
  reply to Pope, etc., II 322;
  Christmas letter, 1917, depicting a war-weary world, II 328;
  on pacifists-from the President down, II 337;
  views on Palestine, II 350;
  on personal diet, and the benefit of Secretary Baker’s visit, II 369;
  on the anti-English feeling at Washington, II 385;
  while resting at Sandwich, II 388

Page, Mrs. Catherine, mother and close companion, I 7;
  Christmas letter to, I 8

Page, Frank C. in London, I 134;
  with his father in Rowsley when news of Arabic sinking was
  received, II 26;
  in service with American troops, II 375;
  realizes his father is failing fast and insists on his returning home,
  II 393
  Letters to:  on building up the home farm, and the stress of war, I 353;
  Christmas letter, 1915, II 121

Page, Henry A., letters to, stating a government might be neutral, but
  no man could be, I 361;
  on illusions as to neutrality and the peace proposals, II 152

Page, Miss Katharine A., arrival in London, I 134;
  married in the chapel Royal, II 87;
  see also, Loring, Mrs. Charles G.

Page, Lewis, leaves Virginia to settle in North Carolina, I 3

Page, Logan Waller, has proper perspective of European situation, II 176

Page, Mary E., letter to, II 376

Page, Ralph W., letters to;
  impressions of London life, I 161;
  on wartime conditions, I 352;
  Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
  on longings for fresh Southern vegetables and fruits and farm life,
  II 335;
  on style and good writing, II 340;
  on the big battle, etc., II 371, 372;
  in praise of book on American Diplomacy, II 381;
  on success of our Army and Navy, II 390

Page, Mrs. Ralph W., Christmas letter to, 163

Page, Robert N., letters to, impressions of social London, I 153

Page, Thomas Nelson, Colonel House confers with in regard to peace
  parleys, I 434

Page, Walter Hines, impressions of his early life, 1;
  family an old one in Virginia and North Carolina, 3;
  maternal ancestry, 6;
  close sympathy between mother and son, 8, 11;
  birthplace, and date of birth, 9;
  recollections of the Civil War, 10;
  finds a market for peaches among Northern soldiers, 14;
  boyhood and early studies, 16;
  intense ambition, 20;
  Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins University, 24;
  renewed for the next year, 27;
  early prejudices against Yankees, 28;
  travels in Germany, 1877, 30;
  lectures on Shakespeare, 30;
  teacher of English at Louisville, Ky., 32;
  enters journalism, 32;
  experience with Louisville Age, 32;
  reporter on, then editor of, Gazette, at St. Joseph, Mo., 33;
  a free lance, 34;
  correspondent for N.Y. World at

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Project Gutenberg
The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.