Letter from Alfred E. Stearns to Mary Sun, New Haven, Conn., November 1, 1930
Dublin Core
Title
Letter from Alfred E. Stearns to Mary Sun, New Haven, Conn., November 1, 1930
Subject
Letter from Alfred E. Stearns to Mary Sun, New Haven, Conn., November 1, 1930
Transcription
Dear Mary:
I have your letter of October 31, and am mailing you as requested a check for five hundred dollars to replenish your bank account and to enable you to face necessary expanses still ahead.
I do hope that you and Tom are going to see a good deal of each other while you are together in New Haven. Tom needs a little cheering up apparently, as he finds the life and surroundings at New Haven a good bit different from those to which he had been accustomed at Middlebury.
I had a fine letter from Charlie only yesterday and another from Tom in the same mail. Charlie gives me some interesting news of the doings of some of our old Andover boys now in China and intimates that he himself is getting somewhat accustomed to London and is in consequence not quite so homesick as he was at first. Tom clearly finds it hard to adapt himself to his new surroundings at Yale, but I hope that he, too, will in time find that the rough edges will rub off and that life will get increasingly smoother.
My very best to you as always.
Very sincerely yours,
I have your letter of October 31, and am mailing you as requested a check for five hundred dollars to replenish your bank account and to enable you to face necessary expanses still ahead.
I do hope that you and Tom are going to see a good deal of each other while you are together in New Haven. Tom needs a little cheering up apparently, as he finds the life and surroundings at New Haven a good bit different from those to which he had been accustomed at Middlebury.
I had a fine letter from Charlie only yesterday and another from Tom in the same mail. Charlie gives me some interesting news of the doings of some of our old Andover boys now in China and intimates that he himself is getting somewhat accustomed to London and is in consequence not quite so homesick as he was at first. Tom clearly finds it hard to adapt himself to his new surroundings at Yale, but I hope that he, too, will in time find that the rough edges will rub off and that life will get increasingly smoother.
My very best to you as always.
Very sincerely yours,
Creator
Alfred E. Stearns
Publisher
Phillips Academy
Date
November 1, 1930
Rights
All Rights Reserved by Phillips Academy
Language
English
Type
Correspondence