A few weeks ago, I shared a letter from Henry Joslin, a Civil War Corporal from Fitchburg, Massachusetts. On October 20th, 1861, Henry was again writing home to his mother. Below are some excerpts from the letter. You can read the full transcription here. I suppose that before you get this you will have received the ...
Author: Tracey Kry
Hannah Weld Part III
And now for some concluding thoughts from Jeanne McDougall about her encounter with Hannah Weld. If you've missed the previous two posts about Hannah and her mother Mary, click here to get caught up. What can you say after experiencing such an extraordinary epistle? My reading for the day came to a full stop; any day ...
150 years ago this week…
...a young man named Henry L. Joslin, from Fitchburg, Massachusetts, was writing home to his mother on September 24th. Henry, born in 1843, was serving in the Civil War and was working picket duty in Poolsville. In his letter he describes his camp, what guard duty was like, and gives updates about his health, and other young ...
A Lesson to Procrastinators…
One way we add to our manuscript collection is through what staff and readers find within other collections at AAS. Often we will find letters, notes, or other ephemera interfiled in books, periodicals and newspapers, and often it is deemed best to move this material into the manuscript collection. These items are fun because, while ...
The Acquisitions Table: Charles Eastman & Co. Letterbook
Charles Eastman & Co. Letterbook, 1828 – 1834 The South Hadley (Massachusetts) Canal opened in 1795 to bypass waterfalls on the Connecticut River and it was one of the earliest canals in the United States. Steamboat traffic on the canal began in 1828. This letter book was kept by Charles Eastman (1803 – 1884) and contains ...
California Gold
Although the majority of AAS’s manuscript collection is focused on New England, we do have collections that cover other parts of the country. Our Book Trades Collection and Slavery in the US Collection, for example, have a national scope, and collections such as the Louisiana Collection and the California Papers are focused outside of New ...
Frankenstein Book
Recently we acquired an interesting new addition to our ever growing scrapbook collection. In 1869, Mary H. Hill of Nelson County, VA, somehow got her hands on a salesman's sample book and proceeded to use it as a scrapbook for her favorite recipes over the next decade or so. What makes her book stand out ...
Lucy Chase, Part II
Last week I shared a letter from Lucy Chase to a Henry Sargent, and promised more about it this week. Here’s the letter again, as a refresher! Any thoughts? Well, according to those who have studied this letter, many agree that it is, in fact, a joke! Knowing Lucy’s personality (her wit, her humor, and her ...
My Dear Henry…you fiendish rascal
I have always found Lucy Chase to be one of the most interesting women represented in our manuscript collection. Lucy was born in 1822 to a successful Worcester family. She spent time teaching in contraband camps and freedman schools in the South, and travelled across Europe with her sister for 5 years. She was intelligent, ...
The Acquisitions Table: Lewis Bradford Letters
Bradford, Lewis. Letters, 1817 – 1829 Lewis Bradford, a descendant of Governor William Bradford, and son of Levi Bradford and Elizabeth Lewis Bradford, was born in Plympton, Massachusetts in 1768. Lewis lived his entire life in the town of Plympton, working as the town clerk for forty years. In addition to his work, Bradford was a ...
Log Book + Diary = Story of a Voyage
In 1849, the Cayuga Joint Stock Company of Auburn, NY set sail for California. The company of men had their sights set on California’s gold, and established their joint stock company “to engage in mining, trading and such other business in the territory of California” according to the company by-laws. For a nominal fee of ...
Memorandum of a Dream
While sorting through a recent donation, I came upon an interesting item. "Memorandum of a Dream" as it's titled, recounts a dream of a woman from Maryland in 1799. What is so interesting about this piece is not only the dream itself, but the mystery behind it. Manuscripts can prove to be difficult, but at the ...
Charles Dickens: Novelist, Social Reformer and…Flashy Dresser?
In 1842, Charles Dickens made his first of two visits to America. He took a sweeping tour of the country, meeting with dignitaries such as Longfellow, Poe, and President John Tyler. He visited Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Washington D.C., Virginia, Maryland, Ohio, Kentucky and Missouri. While in New York City, he was welcomed with a ...
Raise a Glass to the 4th
In honor of Independence Day, I thought I'd take a look into AAS's manuscript collection to see how folks observed the holiday in the past. Sure, it's all about barbeques and fireworks now, but closer to our independence the holiday probably meant something different to those who lived through the Revolution. Elnathan Scofield (1773 - 1841) ...