Collis S. Hough writes to his wife, Harriet Stevens Hough, asking if she has received the money he sent via an intermediary, then telling her he wants her to buy some heeled shoes for herself and their daughters. He says he is well and hopes they are too, then requests a token of memory from her. He asks her to pass along to her father that he is well and has not forgotten his family, then expounds on the duty he feels to stand for his country. (Includes transcription)
description
Collis S. Hough writes to his wife, Harriet Stevens Hough, asking if she has received the money he sent via an intermediary, then telling her he wants her to buy some heeled shoes for herself and their daughters. He says he is well and hopes they are too, then requests a token of memory from her. He asks her to pass along to her father that he is well and has not forgotten his family, then expounds on the duty he feels to stand for his country. (Includes transcription)
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