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1844 - Letter home from a man who traveled from New Hampshire to Alabama to retrieve the personal effects of his brother-in-law

1844 - Letter home from a man who traveled from New Hampshire to Alabama to retrieve the personal effects of his brother-in-law

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1844 - Letter home from a man who traveled from New Hampshire to Alabama to retrieve the personal effects of his brother-in-law

by Horace Brooks

  • Used
  • Very Good
Condition
Very Good
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Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States
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About This Item

Gainesville, Alabama, 1844. Envelope or Cover. Very good. This three-page stampless folded letter measures approximately 15" x 10" unfolded. Two pages were written by Horace Brooks in Gainesville, Alabama to his brother, Ira, at Franconia, New Hampshire and one page was written to his sister, Dolly Whitney. It is dated December 8. It bears a circular Gainesville postmark dated December 11 and a "25" rate mark. In nice shape.



In this letter Horace reports that he had located the boarding house where Dolly's husband had stayed and found his trunk, paperwork related to cash and bank accounts, and some clothes "them negroes wore out." More interestingly, he describes his voyage to Mobile and steamboat trip up the Tombigbee River.



"After experiencing all the vicissitudes of a land & sea voyage I have at last got to my journey's end in good health. It was midnight when the signal gun was fired to break the slumber of the inhabitants of Gainesville. It is refreshing after having been on the water ever since the 9th of Nov. to lay down on something like a bed. I have no wish to be a child of nepture, I have got to be too old to be rocked to sleep like a child. . .. To me there was not veriety enough [on the trip, although] we had the promis of something grand when we first sailed. . .. We run affawl of a schooner & [it] carried away our jib boom, it created some excitement but our voyage up the river was sick with veriety at every turn we found something to amuse us and . . . our boat seemed to be unmanageable at times and we several times came near having broaken to pieces she would be running into the woods at a angry plenty of ducks, crains, & other water fowle but little of the country is to be seen [as] the banks are mostly covered with timber. . .. I wish Luke had come out with me. The sea voyage & our Chinese cook would have cured him. . .."



Horace also reported that he had obtained a job at a mill, so perhaps he was planning to wait for nicer weather before making the return trip to New Hampshire.

. (For more information, see Doster and Weaver's Historic Settlement in the Upper Tombigbee Valley and "Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway" at Steamboats.org.)

.

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Details

Bookseller
Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
010266
Title
1844 - Letter home from a man who traveled from New Hampshire to Alabama to retrieve the personal effects of his brother-in-law
Author
Horace Brooks
Format/Binding
Envelope or Cover
Book Condition
Used - Very Good
Quantity Available
1
Place of Publication
Gainesville, Alabama
Date Published
1844
Bookseller catalogs
Philately;

Terms of Sale

Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

Sales tax of 6% required for books shipped to addresses in Virginia. Standard domestic shipping is free, however additional fees may be required for heavy, oversized, or unusually-shaped items.

Returns accepted for any reason for a full refund (less shipping) if we receive the return within 14 days of shipment and items are received in the same condition as sent. Advance notice of any return would be appreciated.

About the Seller

Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2003
Virginia Beach, Virginia

About Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

We always have an inventory of unique, primary source Americana on hand, that is, we keep a selection of personal narratives such as diaries, work journals, correspondence collections, photograph albums, scrapbooks, and similar items that shed light on some aspect of North American life, history, culture, or society.

We also have a nice selection of unusual ephemera and postal history items in stock as well.

Member: Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America, Ephemera Society, Manuscript Society, American Stamp Dealers Association, American Philatelic Society, U.S. Philatelic Classics Society, Military Postal History Society

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