| OCR Text |
Show Copy of Governor Fauquier’s letter to the Board of Trade in London, with details of the Stamp Act Crisis in Virginia. eT POAY4 #3764 Mrs. Campbell appears to have been more celebrated as a manager than as a beauty. A traveler sketched her appearancein vivid strokes. “Our Landladys looks were not . . . inviting. . . . Figure to yourself a little old Woman, about four feet high; & equally thick, a little turn up Pug nose, a mouth screw’d up to oneside; in short, nothing in any part of her appearancein the least inviting....” Washington,at least, was not deterred; he dined and spent manyevenings at Mrs. Campbell’s, and continued to frequent the place until the Revolution took him far from Williamsburg. \ | \ ¢ , . lf reproduced credit SPECIAL COLLECTIONS SPOON BREAD STIR one Cup of Corn Meal into one Pint of boiling Water, which contains one half Teafpoon of Salt. Stir one minute, remove from Fire and add two Tablefpoonsof Butter. Beat well, add four beaten Eggs and beat in one UNIVERSITY OF UTAH LIBRARYCup of cold Milk. Beat again and pour into hot buttered Baking-difh. Bake twenty-five Minutes in hot Oven and {erve from Baking-dith. (Traditional Virginia Recipe.) Garden scene at Campbell's Tavern. 22. THE PRESIDENTS REPORT |