Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Collection of Memories by Frances Brooks Chase, Wilkes-Barre Pennsylvania, 1890

Look Back with Me:   A collection of memories written by Frances Brooks Chase


Biography:   Frances B. Chase was born December 15, 1873,  the daughter of Edward Henry and Elizabeth Taylor Chase.  She was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pa, the last of 5 children.  She was baptized on September 28, 1874 by Rev. F.B. Hodges.  She never married, living with her brother Samuel Cogswell Chase, until Samuel’s death in 1938.   In 1919, she lived at 186 South Franklin. Then,  she lived at 76 West South Street in Wilkes-Barre, PA.  She died December 26, 1964 and is buried in Hollenback Cemetery in Wilkes-Barre, PA.


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We were a close-knit family.  Our meal-time approached the “Feast of Reason” and the “Flow of Soul”.  Nothing annoyed father more than to have us disappear all over the house when the dinner-bell sounded.


We were brought up on stories that centered around the dinner table, - mother’s consternation, for instance, one night when “Sally Lunn” was our main supper dish.  
Father, a staunch (almost BLACK,Republican) had brought home, unexpectedly, a tall, shy, awkward farmer, a political leader in the lower part of the County.  Father was taking him to an important campaign rally.  Katie, our comely,  fresh-cheeked maid-of-all-work, came in bearing aloft the steaming dumpling-like dish, and mother (to cover up the simplicity of the meal) said jauntily:  “I don’t know if you are acquainted with Sally Lunn.”  Getting awkwardly to his feet, the young man bowed jerkily: “Pleased to meet you, Miss Lunn.”  Father’s black look and the children’s suppressed giggles depressed Mother exceedingly.  Her friend and neighbor, Mrs. Isaac Hand, found her mooning over the fire after the man had left, and asked her what was the matter.  Mother told her of the tragedy, dejectedly.  At first, she could not understand Mrs. Hand’s wild peals of mirth, but soon she was joining in the contagious laughter.  When father and Mr. Hand, coming in after the meeting, found their wives in high spirits, they only shook their heads and never acknowledged anything funny about the episode.  It might have cost the Republicans some lost votes!  Mother always said that father never acknowledged a Democratic victory.  “The votes are not all in as yet” , was his steady refrain.


Then, there was the time I pulled mother’s chair from under her just as she was about to sit down, - I had heard that it was a vastly funny thing to do and would make everyone laugh.
Mother, who was not strong, having had what was called a delicate spine, did not find it funny at all.  I received a delicate spine myself that day? - - - -


Cards were banned by my strict New England grandfather, Deacon Samuel Chase.   However, father had learned to play behind the barn.  Mother decided she preferred to bring such practices right into our house and as a result she accepted much that the other boy’s mothers would not allow.  For instance, when the boys held an indignation meeting in our long sitting-room, because the constable had chased them off the River Common opposite our house where they had been playing foot-ball, mother was not entirely sympathetic.  “I thought you always played it here,” she commented, pointing to the gas chandelier they had recently broken with the same ball.


Our house was on the site of a tavern, standing as it did at the end of the original town.  The drovers from the many farms down the valley came up Saturday to sell their produce on Public Square.  They had an awkward way, when returning late at night, of beating on our front door with their whip-stocks and refusing to believe that father was not wilfully depriving them of a last night-cap when he apologized for living in his own house, which was in no sense a tavern.


Our big old barn at the end of the grape arbor, had a cupola to which we loved to climb.  It was chiefly inhabited by pigeons, and to reach it we had to climb more than one ladder inside the barn.  We had a delightful neighbor, older than we were but young and beautiful, who rescued us from many a predicament.  One afternoon, our cousin,  Will Taylor, had reached almost to the big beams high up in the roof, when he slipped:  he was only saved by the seat of his short pants catching on a nail.  Minnie Emory arrived as he was spread-eagled on the beam,  just in time to save a big splash, as my sister Ethel had found a long pole and was trying to unfasten him from the nail.   She was small, but determined, and was poking away with all her might!


I, being the youngest, was the victim of many experiments, and it was Minnie, coming around the house one day, who found a fine funeral going on, and spied me well buried in the sand-pile.  She pulled me out, quite purple in the face, and full of nice seashore sand.


Minnie and her mother traveled extensively abroad, and in Russia she had a most romantic experience.  A close relative of Czar Nicholas 1st, the GRAND DUKE ALEXIS, was desperately determined to marry her! - - -


Our right-hand neighbor - a widow - had a kind heart in a large body.  Father had bought a chair especially for her use.  It was semi-circular, conveniently open except for a top railing all around.  I admired the chair very much and felt aggrieved when I was not allowed to jump up and down on its plump gold upholstered seat.  Mrs. Bennett played cards in it many evenings, and being a good business woman rather than a good whist player, she would hold onto her high cards,  to lay them down at the end of a game,  triumphantly, her aces and kings intact, though they had long outlived their usefulness.


Mrs. Bennett had a daughter whom in those days we called crazy.  No one trusted much to institutions then and she was kept at home.  She was a brilliant musician, could read the most difficult music at sight, but she had no idea of keeping time and would run mercilessly over the keys,  hour after hour, to the distraction of her father, reading in his study just across the driveway from the piano.


Mrs. Bennett gave delightful parties for her other daughter, whom we all loved, and who did not marry but devoted her life to poor Sadie and to all good works.  She was a generous donor The Children’s Home of Wilkes-Barre.  In fact, she died  in her thirty-fifth year, worn out by her responsibilities.  Sadie, however, lived happily on into her eighties, on a cousin’s farm in the West.


Mrs. Bennett was a shy woman.  Tired and embarrassed at the end of her long receptions, when we went up to say our goodbyes, she would speed the parting guests with a cheerful: “How do you do!”


One hot summer afternoon, after such a reception, a brother and sister,  making a party call, were ushered into the long tree-shaded parlor.  They were greeting by a plump white figure at the piano at the other end of the room - Sadie had slipped off all of her clothes, it was so hot, and had settled herself ably on the piano stool.   The callers,  Miss Gussie Hoyt and her brother Harry, quietly disappeared!


My brother Sam and Sadie had a common bond in their chickens, for they both raised the same kind.


I was supposed to look like Sadie (a family joke I did not appreciate).  One evening at dinner, the maid brought in a package just left at the front door.  A dozen cabinet pictures of Sadie.  The family’s uproarious agreement that it was quite natural for the photographer’s boy to leave them at our house, sent me in tears from the table.


Quite a different family lived on the other side of our house.  Mr. Reuben J. Flick had made his fortune from one of our few drygoods stores.   He lived in the beautiful stone house on the corner, pride of the town, built of the warm mellow stone from Campbell’s Ledge, a historic spot up our Susquehanna River.   The Flicks had shown some eccentricity in naming their five children.  Our dear Dr. Hodge christened the first born son “Welcome Liddon”,  sister Helen Jessie followed, to be succeeded by brother Warren.  The next unwanted son was baptized “Extra Harry,” but when “Double- Extra Reuben J.” arrived instead of a sister,  Dr. Hodge rebelled and refused to accept the “extra” titles.  Whether it was due to this handicap or not, the boys were not much comfort to their parents.  When one was suspended from college, he was considerate enough to send his weekly letter to his mother, mailed from college instead of from the town where he was rusticating.


Mrs. Flick, telling her troubles to mother, would wipe her eyes and complain: “I don’t understand it.  I do so much for my children and you do nothing, and yet yours turn out all right.”  It may be her’s had to learn to play cards behind the barn! - -


Sunday was a quiet day when I was young.  Father generally took us for a long walk to the cemetery.  Many other Wilkes-Barre families did likewise.  My brother Sam, rather shy and sensitive, was nearing home one Sunday, trotting along holding father’s hand.  Suddenly he looked up to find that somehow he was holding the hand of a stranger.  He looked back and found us all smiling.   That hurt his pride.  Quickly dropping the stranger’s hand, he walked deliberately into the deep mud of our non-macadam road, and lay down, kicking with rage, in his best Sunday suit!  I think a strap helped clean those white pants.


Ethel was like quicksilver, and her punishment was to be put to bed in the daytime.  One day, after she had thrown her sixth summer hat off her head as a nuisance in running after a passing hand-organ and monkey, father and Mr. Hand coming down River Street from their offices at noontime, saw a little white-clad bare-footed figure fly by.  “Why Chase, that looks like Ethel” said Mr. Hand.   They were just passing the fashionable Wyoming Valley Hotel, with its long rows of porch rockers full of summer visitors.  Father decided not to claim such an embarrassing child;  so she had her fill of the monkey and music.  To be sure, she was put back to bed on her return home - but this time with happy memories.


Father had a strong philanthropic interest in the welfare of our Valley.  He wrote the charter of our General Hospital and was its Secretary all his life.


When father moved to Wilkes-Barre from his home in Haverhill, Massachusetts, on the Merrimac River, the chief doctor was an allopath and his cure for all ills was blue-mass pills, given in quantity.


Owing to its anthracite coal beds, Luzerne County was then the richest County in the world.
Our lovely Valley was full of black diamonds, and the discontented of Europe poured in looking for work.  First came the Irish, Scotch and Welsh.   As they prospered, the left the mines, and the peasantry from the Balkan states took their place.  Many of these Slavs were from Hungary and in our callous indifference, we called them “HUNKIES”.  Many were injured in the mines and came to the hospital.  We heard many funny stories of their abyssmal ignorance of hospital rules.  A doctor told a nurse one day that he was sending in a foreigner about four o’clock and to give him a bath and get him to bed.  When a foreign-speaking mild mannered man arrived at that hour, nurse did as she was bid.  Vainly the man protested, she carried out her orders and scrubbed him well, removing as much accumulated mine dust as possible.   It turned out that he had come to call on an injured cousin.  He had been warned that there was much red-tape to be gone through but did not expect the indignity of being given a bath, but the nurse’s indignation was greater.


The foreign population settled around the coal mines, furnished many of father’s tenants.  They were very fond of “Mr. Chasey” and soon discovered that he was not a hard landlord.  “Oh, Mr. Chasey, next month we pay the rent.”  So many things to buy in America;  and their small back-yards were full of empty cans that had held choicest peaches and other fine fruits and vegetables.  They fed their babies almost anything.  Father would remonstrate with a housewife, begging off on her rent while holding a little babe sucking on a large cucumber, telling her how bad it was for the baby.  “Oh, Mr. Chasey, he like”;  and the next month, on father’s collection trip, his inquiry for the baby would be greeted with tears.  “Oh, Mr. Chasey, we bury baby.”


Because our Valley had a reputation for malaria in the old days, father built the Wigwam, three miles up the mountain at Laurel Run.  We had a view below us of the whole Valley.  When we drove down to school in the early autumn, before moving back to town, we went into a fog that from our ridge looked like the loveliest pearly clouds, not a steeple or tower showing through.  The Wigwam was made of Georgia pine, and when the sun shone into my dark closet, the resin glowed ruby red.  It was one of my childhood pleasures to wake up and see it.
Life on the mountain was primitive.  We pumped our water, and father would always remind the prevalent Katie (the same name for all who came - and went), at mealtime, to be sure to pump the water from the north corner of the well.   Huge red-painted hogsheads stood at the corners of the house to catch the rain water, in case of fire.  Our mountain was a great huckleberry and rattlesnake country, and our old cook,  Louise Lambert, picking up a stick from the woodpile outside the annex door one day, unearthed a coiled rattler.  Louise was thin and irritable.   She and the boys had carried on a long unspoken feud, she hiding the cookie box and they discovering it.   The time it stayed hid the longest was when she buried it among the soiled clothes in the laundry basket.


Our nearest neighbors at Laurel Run were the Palmers.  Mr. Palmer was our Congressman - a tall, very handsome man.  Madeline, Harry Palmer and I had played house one hot summer morning under the front porch, and towards evening someone called out that there was a large rattlesnake in the corner under the porch.  We children were fervently caressed and fairly prayed over because of our miraculous escape.  The snake must be killed - neighbors gathered -- Mr. Palmer stretched his long length on the lawn, gun in correct position - a terrific bang.   A couple of the bravest ventured under the porch, and brought out  -- a large braided straw hat!   To Mr. Palmer’s disgust the story got into our local paper.


The Palmers were an interesting family.  Mrs. Palmer started The Boys Industrial Association among the breaker boys of the coal mines.  The B.I.A. flourished for years and was really the forerunner of The Boy Scouts.  Many of its members who turned into very successful men, said they owed their start and ambition to Mrs. Palmer.  The lovely Carrara statue of Mrs. Palmer that decorates our River Common, was made in Italy and erected by her children.


We used to have wonderful all-day picnics over at the Bear Creek Pond, where Mr. Lewis had a fine boathouse with canoes and boats for our use.  A crowd of children would go, and some were always falling into the water.  Mrs. Palmer was very cold-blooded and though a dainty small woman, gave the impression of plumpness.  She had been known to furnish seven petticoats as well as several pairs of stockings taken from her person, for the children while their own clothes dried.


The ponies used to take us to this ideal picnic spot.  They were a pair of little Kentucky horses, the homeliest and smartest little pair;  they could run up and down the mountain and pass all the big horses who had to go slow.  They were called the “Chase Rats”.  Bill had a lovely disposition, but Pet was practically vicious.  Sam had to put pebbles  in her oats to slow her down as she would gobble her own and then kick Bill aside to eat his.  The ponies ran away periodically, Pet lashing out and kicking the harness off.  It even drove father to use his strongest swear word - “Drat it!”  
Her sense of irony must have been strong, for after having been treated with the greatest kindness by us and responding with constant ugliness, when she was finally sold to a milkman she was meekness itself.  Her owner found her so well behaved that he mistrusted us and our treatment of her when we told him of her misdeeds.


Our three mile climb up the mountain to the Wigwam, took us through a rough mining villiage, aptly called “WHISKEY HILL”.  After school one day, father was taking us children and Nan and Grace Phelps (two elegant young ladies - our neighbors at Laurel Run) home, and we had to detour around a circle of men surrounding two large, ugly white bulldogs locked in a deadly and bloody struggle.  The young ladies were naturally horrified, and begged father to try and stop the fight.  Father, not being of bruiser size himself, had no desire to get into the melee.  “But, Mr. Chase, can’t you get the constable to stop it?”  “Unfortunately,” said father, “One of the dogs belongs to the constable!”


As I took myself quite seriously in those days, I felt it my duty to try to educate the family by sharing the ernest articles I read.  To this day, I never can say:  - “I read an article”, without mentally hearing a groan from the family.  “OH, SHE’S BEEN READING AN ARTICLE AGAIN!”


Father generally withered my well-meant efforts by saying, as he slammed his fist down on the table:  - “Fan, I call that INFORMATION.”  He had his own ideas of information and had a nice wit of his own.  Years before strikes had become chronic,  I passed his chair as he was reading the morning paper, and heard him say, sotto voce: - “So, the barbers are going on a strike -  well I must get up town and get some shaves in advance.”


Mother had a good friend who kept house for a widower.  Her housekeeping was sketchy, such as letting her shawl hand over the banister as she came down to breakfast to dust the stairs, but her fund of information was not.  She had the habit of filling her newsbag and emptying it at a friend’s house.  She would come in without ringing, rattling off 100 words to the minute before she even found mother.  “Poor Eliza”, father would shake his head from his safe vantage point in the library, and murmur: - “One has only so many words to say before one dies, and how she is shortening her days!”


When mother and my Aunt Mary were girls,  Wilkes-Barre was a small town and they had to make a good deal of their own fun.  One afternoon they decided to look for a fictitious “Maria Mulligan”.  They rounded up the “Rutter girls”, always ready for mischief;  dressed like plain country women, the four made the rounds of the town inquiring for Maria Mulligan.  They even rang the doorbell of the highly respected Judge Conyngham, and when the Judge opened the door, he was met with indignant demands for Maria Mulligan.  Their shrill invectives ran on till he finally managed to close the door on Mag Beaumont, who had thoughtfully stuck her foot over the door jam.  The dignified Judge never discovered that the fiery old women were the young maidens who bowed so demurely to him passing in the street.  Finally, the girls reached the milliner shop kept by two maiden sisters,  and demanded why Maria Mulligan’s bonnet wasn’t ready as promised several days earlier, for Easter Sunday.  The elder sister, who had a slow, drawling voice, called to her sister behind the curtain at the end of the shop: - “Sister, is Maria Mulligan’s bonnett ready?”  Naturally it was not produced.  However, the wicked girls raised such a hubbub that they finally had to run to escape the town constable who happened along.


Old Zion Church, on Northampton Street, held meetings for other denominations than the Presbyterians.  In passing, these lively girls heard loud “HALLELUJAHS” and  “AMENS” steaming up from the basement where a sect, perhaps similar to our present “HOLY ROLLERS” was holding a revival.  Aunt Mary went down to peek through the glass door.
Mother and the others, tired of waiting, spied a broom at the head of the stairs.   This they shot down, bumping on every step and finally hitting the door with a mighty bang which brought the end of the world right to the meeting.  Aunt Mary had a great time not getting caught as her long full skirts hindered her wild dash up the stairs.  Aunt Mary sang in the choir, as did Mr. Samuel Lynch, who wrote in her hymn book one Sunday: --


“This Church, as I have oft been told,
In summer’s hot, In winter’s cold,
Not so the folk who worship here,
For they are cold throughout the year.”


The Rutter girls were full of pranks and their niece, Hortense Beaumont, was a true descendant.  She and Ethel were great friends, seeing each other almost daily.  One afternoon, they were playing alone in Harold’s gym on the third floor, to the disgust of Harold and his boy friends who came in for exercise and wanted no girls around.  Ethel was all for leaving, but high-spirited “Tonsie” Beaumont would have none of it, as they had come first, and pleasant insults were hurled back and forth.  It had begun to snow, and with the dusk it was time for Tonsie to start for home, several long blocks away.   Suddenly, she turned her ankle;  there was nothing to do but put her on a sled.  Harold and Bud Palmer dragged her that long distance over rough pavement with too little snow to make it easy going.  When they finally reached her door, she jumped off the sled, made a bow, and skipped into the house, on two uninjured ankles.


Ethel always had “things happening to her” as we used to say.  Once she was on the train going from Aunt Mary White’s in Haverhill, Massachusetts, to visit her great friend Ethel McClure at Gerrish Island, Kittery Point, and the train went through a tunnel so short they did not bother to light it  -- suddenly she felt a man’s whiskers at the back of her neck.  At that moment the train came out into the daylight.  Blushing and profusely perspiring, the brakeman gasped: -- “I ax your pardon, Miss, I thought you was Miss Johnsing,”  who was in a state of giggles across the aisle.


When visiting Annie Thompson, Harold’s fiance’, in Topeka, Kansas, she was invited one summer night to go to the theatre by the great catch of the town, a young Harvard graduate and Easterner.  Annie’s mother advised her to take a wrap, so she rushed upstairs in a hurry and grabbed her white shawl off the bed.  It was quite chilly in the open trolley and her escort turned to help her put on her wrap.  To her horror, she discovered that her shawl had apparently turned into one of the little scalloped petticoats that we all wore in those days.  At the young man’s frequent, no doubt malicious urgings to put her wrap on, she insisted, with chattering teeth, that she wasn’t C-O-O---LD  A- A-T   A-L-L!


Ethel really was one of the women who threw an umbrella out of the car window, just as the train started, to a lady on the platform who had been sitting with her, and had to appear perfectly innocent when the man who owned it came strolling leisurely in from the smoking car to get his umbrella before getting off the train.


Grandfather Taylor’s house was at the corner of River and Northampton Streets and had a lovely big backyard full of fruits trees and currant bushes, as well as flowers.  One very snowy winter afternoon, Aunt Mary was entertaining a not at all exciting beau, at the end of the long parlor, and mother was sewing by the front window.  It was snowing hard, but every little while mother would smile, bow and wave her hand to someone passing.  Aunt Mary would raise up in her chair trying to get a glimpse of the passerby, only to fall back disappointed to her boring young man.  Of course, no one had passed at all!


The only recollection I have of Grandfather Taylor was when I was very little.  I had been playing by myself in our backyard one summer evening, and suddenly I realized it was getting dark and my only companions were fireflies.  I rushed indoors to find no one at home.  In a panic, I flew across the street to the River Common, bumping into a rather stout elderly gentleman taking an evening stroll along the river.  Kindly Judge Taylor looked down at the bawling child to comfort her.  “Good gracious” said he, “Why this is Lizzie’s little Fanny.”


Grandfather was very good company and when the businessmen of the town went to Easton by stage-coach, and then on to Philadelphia by train, to get their supplies, they always like to include Edmund Taylor in the party.


The house where I was born on River Street, faced the Common along our broad Susquehanna River.


There were many fine old homes on this street, and in one of the largest lived Judge and Mrs. Stanley Woodward and their two sons.  Mrs. Woodward was a handsome, slow-moving and dignified lady of much simplicity and very absent-minded.  She had been known to call on a neighbor who lived near our Church, who had been about to start for midweek prayer meeting, and during her visit, hearing singing, asked what it was.  On being told, she said: “Why, this is where I started for.”
Another of our pet stories was about her having a nice morning chat in a store with a certain Judge in our town, and after leaving him she crossed the street to Regan’s Oyster House to continue her shopping and found Judge there.  “Well, Judge” she greeted him, “We seem to be of the same mind this morning.”  But the Judge, not being a bigoted prohibitionist, was in the saloon next door to the Oyster House, which she had absent-mindedly entered.


The chairs in our Presbyterian Sunday School faced the entrance doors, and one week we were entertaining an Evangelist.   Mrs. Woodward, late as always, saw the congregation standing, and after seating herself in the only remaining seat in the front row and adjusting her wraps, rose to her feet, not having heard anything the speaker had said.  He had asked those who were Church members to stand and most of us had risen as Mrs. Woodward came in.  He had then asked those who would like to join the church to rise.  After Mrs. Woodward had stood long enough, she looked around to see no one, alas, but herself standing.  So she placidly sat down, while the Evangelist welcomed one good sister to the Church.  Mrs. Woodward had not taken any of this in, and was slightly nonplussed to find many of her friends almost having to leave the meeting, in trying to suppress wild laughter.


In my old age, no longer do the sleighs race up and down River Street in front of the house.  Nor does anyone skate on the river.


We heat our houses with steam, and I can think of only one friend who keeps a glowing coal fire in the grate of her sitting-room.


Mother found my older brother, Harold, then a little boy, quietly slipping off his paisley flannel dressing-gown before the coal fire in our sitting-room, the tail of it having caught fire.


One of our friends kept a little old man busy all day tending the coal fires all over the house.  His sole occupation.


Gone are the days when everyone called on everyone else;  Always leaving cards.  If a household consisted of three daughters and they had three girl visitors, we left six cards.  But nowadays, if anyone came to see me, I would faint away with joy.


We are very much more sophisticated.  Time and space seem very little.  No one has time to be bored, but are we so much happier?  I wonder.
Frances Brooks Chase January 1901

Frances B. Chase January 1901

Frances B Chase, October 26, 1892




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To Frances L Chase
423 College Street,  Winfield, Kansas
From Frances Brooks Chase
“Wild Goose Chase”,  R.F. D. No. 2, Dallas, PA, near Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
August 16, 1934


Dear Frances: --


Today I looked out the window and there I saw eleven robins all trying to get into the bird bath under the apple tree all at once !   Three got in and how they do splash! Rather than wash themselves. I hope you can get here in September to help me keep it filled.  
Ned Milligan has a tiny donkey and there he was in our yard, eating all yellow flowers.  I hope you will be here the next time he runs away to eat our grass and help me send him home next door.
Your father’s letter came today and I am so glad your grandmother is better.
Love to your mother,  father --
Much love Frances
From Aunt Frances


P.S.  I can wait until you can surely find out if you can come in September.
(August the sixteenth)

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FBC with Hamilton Chase August 1958

FBC with Hamilton Chase at 76 West South Street,  W-B, Penna, August 1958

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Stephen Wilson's Journal, Wilkes-Barre, PA, 1887; Part 1

Biography:  Stephen Wilson was born May 13,1802, the son of Elnathan Wilson and Elizabeth Baker (who came to Wilkes Barre, PA from Connecticut to run a mercantile store and hotel in Kingston, PA).  He was one of 10 children.
He had a book binding and printing office in Milton, PA and was the editor of a weekly paper called “The Milton Ledger”.   He live in the old ferry house in Kingston, PA at the end of the Market Street bridge (Wilkes Barre).  His children are Elle,  Ann,  Stephen and Kate Wilson.  He died in 1891 in Collumbia, PA.
He wrote in this journal for his niece, Clara, in 1887

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Dear Clara,

In answering your letter, I will begin with your great grandfather Uriah Wilson.  He had 3 sons and two daughters - Uriah Jr., David,  Elizabeth, Elnathan and Mary Ann.   When the Revolutionary War broke out, Uriah was a Captain and David was a Sargent.  The day your grandfather was 16, he also entered the army.  When Washington’s  army lay at White Plains, about twenty miles above New York, Elizabeth, on one occasion, acted as a spy for the Colonists.

I have written quite a detailed account of the transaction as related to me by my father sixty years ago.  Elizabeth afterwards married a man by the name of Fowler and after his death she married Enoch Homes and they lived for some years in the upper part of what was Luzerne County, now Lachawana, at a place called (Capouse); not far from Scranton.
They moved from there to the western part of New York State, from there to Canada, when Aunt Elizabeth died at the age of ninety-eight.  Their only son Benjamin remained in New York state.  I visited him in 1822 at Lockport.  He married in 1811 a Miss Alsworth and with his bride visited us.  We then lived in the old Ferry House on the west side of the Susquehanna, right opposite your Uncle Taylor’s mansion.  I recollect Cousin Ben from his introduction of his young wife to father as well as if occured yesterday.  It was “Uncle, this is my girl!” and she was a very pretty young woman.  Benjamin had two sisters, Amy and Eunice;  I cannot say much of them.  The last time I ever saw Uncle Homes family together was in the winter of 1808, when they lived at (Capouse).

Of Uncle Uriah and Uncle David, I can say very little.  Uriah may be living yet for aught I know.
Uncle David died at the premature age of one hundred and six years, I am told.  Elnathan, my father and your grandfather, I can say more about.  Before he came to the Valley of Wyoming, he lived with his parents in Connecticut near New London.  The Wilson family at one time owned a great part of the land upon which New London now stands.  After the Revolution, Continental money began to depreciate and finally became worthless.  Grandfather and his family held thirty or fourty thousand dollars of this depreciating currency;  they were supposed to be rich and held on to this paper money, hoping and expecting that Congress would make some provision for its redemption; which in common honesty they should have done - but never did.  This national repridiation of its promise to pay (reviled) many credulous confiding persons, grand-father’s family among them.  Father at the age of twenty-five left Connecticut and came to Stroudsburg, PA.  He remained there four or five years and then went to Wyoming Valley and took up his abode in the Forty Fort in Kingston town-ship.  He employed himself at any kind of labor that presented a chance of making money;  he had a good deal of Yankee vim and grit in him and always found something to do.

In those primitive times the village of Wilkes Barre had no better way of getting their salt, sugar, molasses and such heave articles of household use, than to send down the river,  approached the towns along the river.  At the sound of the boat-horn all the boys and girls within hearing would rush to the river shore; for the sight of a Durham boat was as exciting to the juvenile of that day as Barnum’s show would be now.

Father, for a time, had an interest in one of these boats and went with it as Captain.  At that time, there were thousands of shad caught every spring at Wilkes Barre.  I have seen five thousand shad on the river shore and selling at three cents apiece (the dams have put an stop to that).  About the time father was engaged in the boating business, a family by the name of Baker moved from Connecticut, and settled in Forty-Fort, near where father made his house.  The family consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Baker, two sons and three daughters.  Shortlly after moving into the valley, Mrs. Baker was killed by lightening while sitting in the house on the side of her bed.  The was situated in a beautiful grove of large trees near the high bank of the river, near the Fort, which has given name to that part of Kingston.
Near the grove is a Methodist Church which is still standing and three years ago when I last saw it, a new coat of white paint made it look as bright and young as it did sixty years ago, when I was a boy, used to go there.  The house in which the Baker family lived and in which the old lady was struck by lightening was the one in which I was born.  It has long since been entirely demolished.  At my last visit in 1884, I could find no vestage of it.
As the Baker family were some what remarkable for their size and athletic exploits, I will say a few words about them.  The names of the boys were Hubbard and Stephen.  The girls were Polly,  Elizabeth and Eunice.  Hubbard was six feet four inches tall and Stephen was six feet two inches.  Polly was nearly six feet , stout and well proportioned, she was called handsome, she married George Cahoun.   Elizabeth was the smallest of the girls, when she was fifteen years old, father and Betsy (as he called her) were quietly married by the Rev. A Owens, an old Methodist minister who lived near by in the house that Gov. Hoyt was born in.  Eunice the youngest of the Baker girls was tall and stern and as active as a deer.  She married Stephen Scott, who, in his prime, could have whipped the boasted prize fighter Sullivan into a jelly in thirty minutes.  I once saw his son, Nathan Scott and another cousin of mine John Cahoun clear the courthouse at Wilkes Barre of twenty men, who had taken possesion in order to prevent a public meeting.  They bustled them out as though they were children.  It was the custom in those early days for the militia of a county to meet every spring at what they called general training and often the review by the General Brigade Inspection.  The rest of the day was devoted to athletic sport, wrestling,  running, jumping and throwing the shoulder stone.  Hubbard and Stephen Baker could throw down, out run and out jump any of the thousands who took part in these exercises.   An old friend of Uncles Hubbard and Stephen, told me that two men would hold a pole horizontally six feet and eight inches from the ground and Stephen would stand back a few rods, run and clear it at every jump.  This was more than father could do, but he could run and jump over a thirteen inch stone wall as high as his head, this was what few dare attempt, for fear of hurting themselves in they failed.
The Bakers were related to a family in New York by the name of Temple, who were extensively engaged in the Chinese Tea trade.  The Temples were rich and their sons and Baker boys had frequent chances to take an ocean sail and in that way acquired a disposition to ramble which they afterwards did.  Hubbard left home when I was two years old and his family did not hear from him for ten years.  He was then in South America;  he never returned to Wyoming Valley.  Stephen, the uncle for whom I was named, left home when I was six years old.  One evening as I was returning from school, I met Uncle Stephen, who said he was going away and I would not see him for a long time.   I have never seen him since.  I heard from him fourty-six years after;  he was then living in the state of Illinois and had a family of twelve children.  But the country was becoming too thickly settled for him and he was preparing to move farther west,  that was thirty-three years ago.  If he is now living, he is ninety-nine years old.   When we parted seventy-nine years ago, he gave me a little Turkey oil-horn to remember him.   I have it yet.  
Grandma Baker was a sister of the celebrated America traveler John Ledyard, who sailed around the world with Captain Cook and was on shore with Cook when he was killed by the savages of the Sandwich Islands.  Ledyard, after he had been around the world by water, determined to travel ‘round it by land and water.  As he is a great uncle of yours, I will add a few more lines of his history.  Peter the Great,  Czar of Russia, was one day walking through the market of St. Petersburg and saw a very pretty girl selling apples.  Her beauty attracted his attention.  He bought some of the apples and, in conversation, learned that she was a poor orphan with no other way of making a living.  Her quiet and ready replies to his questions bespoke her good common sense and enlisted his sympathy.  He told her to quit the apple business and he would support her and give her an education, to this she gladly assented.  He sent her to school and as the years passed by, she grew into womanhood,  her beauty and intelligence captivated his heart and he married her, much to the disgust of many maidens of high degree, who had been hoping for the royal hand.  But Peter was an independent old Russ, he loved Kate, the apple girl, and he made her the Empress Catherine and her plebian blood has to Russia the brainiest monarchs in Europe.  After Peter’s death, she ruled Russia as the most intelligent monarch in Europe of that day.
It was during her reign that John Ledyard found himself in his travels around the world in St. Petersburg, without friends or money.  He was a learned man, had traveled in all quarters of the globe and to be travelling without money just for the fun of it, was a circumstance that, when it came to Catherine’s ears (as it soon did) she did not fully believe; but concluded he must be a British spy, who was in her dominion for an evil purpose.  She ordered his arrest and had him sent to England.   In London he found Thomas Jefferson, then our Minister to England with whom he was intimately acquainted,  he made his circumstances known to Jefferson, who informed him that a company of gentlemen were fitting out an expedition for the purpose of exploring some parts of Africa.  A suitable man was wanted to take charge and if he was willing to go in that capacity, he would inform them, which he did, they wrote asking him when he would be ready, he said , “tomorrow morning.”  The expedition sailed to Cairo and from there went into the interior.  After some months among the negroes, Ledyard was taken sick, he was brought back to Cairo and died there.

We were living in a house about a hundred feet from the west end of Wilkes Barre bridge.  My sister Ester was born there.  We left the house in the fall of 1807 and went to spend the winter with Uncle Enoch Homes at Capouse.  In the Spring of 1808 we moved back to Kingston into a house on the farm of Esq. Peirce.  A farm that lies between Col. (Dorrance’s) and the river.
Here your Aunt Ann was born.  One day, Polly saw a squirrel in a cherry tree and ran in the house to ask father to shoot it, he said the little squirrel didn’t want to be shot.  Polly then said, “if the squirrel said it wanted to be shot, would you shoot it?”  He said yes, but he would wait ‘till the squirrel made that request so with that she went away satisfied.
One evening,  Father said “ now children, go to bed and sleep and in the morning you can go with mother and me to see the elephant show with your uncle George Chahoons (born) in Wilkes Barre.  We hurried to bed but to get to sleep with the glorious anticipation of seeing live elephants and monkeys in our brains was a stretch of power, that, with the help of old Morpheus himself we could not accomplish.  We were up at the peek of dawn, hurried on our best wearing gear and little appetite for breakfast, began teasing our parents to go.  At last, go we did and saw the most wonderful show.  A big elephant called Bets and two long-tailed green monkeys.  For a long time afterwards, I boasted of the daring exploits of feeding Bets a roll of ginger bread.
In the spring of 1811, Father leased the old Ferry House, about five acres of land, and the ferry with its equipment of flats and skiffs for one hundred dollars a year.  This was a fortunate move, for he took in the first week enough to pay the years rent.  The first year we were at the Ferry, father built two flats and two skiffs, as the old ones were getting too shabby and he wanted to own all the ferrying-crafts himself so that if the (rental) should be (mixed) on him the next year, he would own all the boats.  The sequel will show the wisdom of this move.  The first year of ferrying he made a good living, paid for his flats and skiffs and had three thousand dollars in Bank.  He often took in thirty or fourty dollars a day, but then in the winter when the river was frozen over his income ceased except what he took in the tavern, for in those primitive days the old Ferry House was also a hotel.  The Trouble brewing between Great Britain and the country that resulted in the war of 1812 caused thousands of families of the Yankee states to move to the far west, but the far West of that day was not the far West of our day.  The great bulk of immigration was to what was then called “ The Holland Purchase”, a large piece of good land in the western part of York state that had been bought many years before by a company of Hollanders, who now offered it for sale at a low price to settlers.  Thousands took advantage of this offer, traveling mostly by the route that led them to cross the Susquehanna at Wilkes Barre, thus putting sheckles into father’s pocket.  Some of the sharp ones of Wilkes Barre who had an eye to business thought and said Wilson is making too much money, we must out-bid him next spring.  The ferry was rented by auction.
The next spring, father bid one hundred dollars and George Chahoon bid one hundred and twenty dollars.  Father would bid no higher and Chahoon got it, but he soon found he had an elephant on his hands;  the crafts belonging to the company were no longer fit for use.  Father owned the new ones and wouldn’t sell them, he had not been legally married by the company to give up possession and could not be dispossessed ‘till the ferrying season was nearly over.   Chahoon was in a dilemma;  the best thing he could do was to let father have it at his own bid and pay the twenty dollars to the company, which he did.  At the end of the year, father had an additional three thousand in Bank. By this time,  travel began (sensibly) to decrease and father concluded he had got the cream out of the place and would go at something else.   He could command six or seven thousand dollars in ready cash and would try store keeping.
Your uncle William was born at the Ferry House on the fourth day of June 1812.  The day the world was to end according to the prophecy of the old Nimrod Hughes (Stern) living in Philadelphia.
Now I’ll say something about myself;  seeing father handled so much money gave me an itching to make some too;  this I did by occasionally rowing a  foot passenger over the river and by other means that I will mention presently.  One day I ferried a venerable looking man over who told me his name was Asbury.  When he got out of the skiff, he put his hand on my head on my head, and pronounced a blessing on the flaxen haired boy, who had brought him safely over the river.  He was the Bishop Asbury of M. E. Church.
At another time, I was on the bank of the river and saw a man strip on the Wilkes Barre side and plunge into the stream,  he swam one fourth across then threw up his arms and sank.
I was the only person who saw him, I screamed for father and Adam ( a black man who lived with us) father reached the river first and pushed off a skiff,  I jumped in with him to show him where to go.  Adam came a moment after and, being a powerful young negro, took a flat and rowed across nearly as quickly as father.   We saw the man at the bottom of the river, and stopped.  While, Adam went to the shore and took in Stephen Butter, who had heard my cry and ran to the river and stripped ready to dive for the drown man.   When Adam rowed the flat over the place, Butter went down and brought him up.  By this time a crowd had gathered on the shore, when the flat reached there, the man was taken off and every exertion made to restore him,  but in vain, the vital spark had fled.  Thus died the drunken (Fan) Fry.   
I was in the habit (when out of school) of rowing across the river, to make a little money for myself, and father thought I must learn to swim or I might some day fall out of the skiff and go as Fan Fry had gone.  We had a long plank running out from the shore to where the water was four feet deep.  Father and I stripped for bathing.  He was an expert swimmer, and took me out to the end of the plank,  put me in the water in nearly a horizontal position and held his hand under my (brest), while all but my head was under water and told me to hands and arms and strike out with my feet just as a frog does.  This I did ‘till he said my performance was perfect,  he then removed his hand and told me to swim to shore, and I believing I could, struck out without fear and easily reached the landing.  This was all I tried to learn, since then I have had no trouble in swimming.  Any boy can learn to swim in one hour if he adopts the proper means.  Every animal that swims at all can swim the first time it goes into the water and man can do so too if he would exercise common sense.  
I had great satisfaction in jingling and counting of the money I earned and when I gathered fifty cents in change, I would go to the bank, which was a few rods above Taylor’s house, and get Mr. Bredle, the cashier, to give me a new half-dollar for it.  I was then bent on making money and was after everything I could turn in to cash.  There were quantities of wild hops,  purple, grapes,  walnuts and butternuts growing along the river and the Flats.  I knew every vine and tree with in two miles of our house and used to grab the first as soon as ripe.  One day, your aunt Polly and Ester and I picked seventy pounds of green hops.   They would make twenty pounds when dried and were worth twenty five cents a pound.  This was a glorious days work and added to my pile five dollars.  Tis said Nimrod of old was a mighty hunter before the Lord, but I don’t believe he ever trapped half as many muskrats as I did when a boy.  The last year we lived in the Ferry House I had at one time seventy five muskrat skins hanging in the garret.  These I sold to Barney Ulp, a (liatier) in Wilkes Barre for eighteen dollars and seventy five cents.  We had a great number of hens, I would start out in quest of eggs, some mornings, and out of the barn and (bushes) along the river shore would gather six or eight dozzen.  These I might sell and half of what I got for them was mine.  In these and various other ways my ducats accumulated ‘til when we moved from the Ferry, I had ninety-nine and a half silver dollars,  These I lent father when he commenced store keeping and have not seen them since.  
Before we moved father built a store house and dwelling in the lower part of Kingston village to which we moved in the spring of 1812 and commenced the mercantile business.  Trade was brisk and profits large.  I remember selling fifty dollars worth of goods one morning to old Ann Blanchard (who kept a tavern at Heulock’s Eddy) and all for cash down.  About this time,  George C. Wilson was born and about two years after your father was added to the Wilson family, which now consisted of myself, Polly,  Ester,  Ann,  William,  George and Lyman.
The war with England was now over.  It had been declared June 19, 1812 and a treaty of peace was signed Dec. 24, 1814 and ratified Feb. 17, 1815.  It had lasted a little over two years and a half, and during this time the mercantile business was brisk and profitable but the price of goods began to rapidly to decline after the war.  This was a time that if it did not try men’s souls, it seriously tried the pockets of all the Merchants in the country.   Three fourth of those in this business in the Valley failed and father having a large stock of goods on hand, thought the best thing he could do was to trade his goods for lumber and carpenter work, which he did and built a large hotel with capacious stabling about sixty rods up the street - he was then living on.  In this way, he got rid of most of his goods and at fair prices and saved himself from bankruptcy.  He closed out his stock, sold his dwelling and store house to a Yankee by the name of Gilbert Lewis and moved into the hotel, which was the largest building in Kingston.  He also built another two story frame house about twenty rods further up the street and paid the hands, as well as boarded them who built the large stone house for James Bauer, which is still standing across the street, a hundred feet below our hotel.   Father lived in the hotel several years.   Your Uncle Thomas was born in the house.. Thomas died at the age of 2 years and was buried in the old grave yard at Forty Fort, first at the right hand of the entrance gate.   This was the second death that had occurred in the family of 10 children - I forgot to say I was not the first born - the first child, a boy, died when a week old.
There was a family of Hurlbuts living in a tavern a few rods from us & their oldest son Layman took a great fancy to Betsy Wilson’s boy and would have him called Lyman-Uriah.  She did & I believe the goze (goes) by that name yet.  The Hurlbuts were very particular friends of ours.
The father, Naphthale Hurlbut, was once sheriff of Luzerne Co.   His children were Layman,  Esten,  Mary Ann & Avery-Lyman married Caroline Sevfield.  Esten married (Able) Hoyt,  Mary Ann married a man of New York state named Canada & whether Avery ever found a bride, I do not know.   This is all I will say of that named you Father.
Mother began to be tired of bringing up a large family of children in a hotel - Our house, for years, was the home of itinerant Methodist preachers.  Rev. Benjamin Bidlack Geo. Lane,  Marmaduke Pierce,  Geo. Peck & a score of others liked in there (their) travels round their circuits, to make it convenient to stop with brother & Sister Wilson, a day every few weeks, for Methodist preachers are proverbial for having a keen relish for good things of this world.  They knew their horses would fare well in brother Wilson’s stable & they themselves would fare sumptiously at Sister Wilson’s table, and at the bar, they could take a glass of wine or of good brandy if it were preferred, as it often was.   In those days of primitive symplicity Methodist preachers thought it no sin to drink if they did not get drunk.  Mother was a splendid cook & her table was always loaded with a profusion of good eatables and well did these good people know it.   Mother at last got tired of so much unprofitable patronage & persuaded father to sold his hotel and retire to private life.  But before he sold it Polly were married & left the old home, but before I say more, I will give you the record from our old family Bible:

Elnathan WIlson was born Feb.23, 1762
died Mar. 1834
Elizabeth Baker born Dec. 19, 1782
died Oct. 10, 1840
Elnathan Wilson & Elizabeth Baker were married May 1798.  The first child died when one week old.
Stephen Wilson was born May 13, 1802
Polly Wilson was born Aug 11, 1804
died May 2, 1883
Esten Wilson was born May (5) 1807.
died Sept. 8, 1848
Ann Wilson was born Aug 27, 1809

William C. Wilson was born June 4, 1812
George C. Wilson was born April 17, 1815.
Lyman H. Wilson was born Dec 4, 1817

Elizabeth Wilson was born Oct 29, 1824

Sometime after Father sold his Hotel & other real estate, he moved to W.B. bridge house & lived there ‘til his death in 1887 - William had learned the harness trade, but two boys were home yet.  They were bright specimens of Young America as well could be found, not vicious, but had about as much mischief in them as could be - they were given to all sorts of boyish athletic sports - hand springs,  ground & lofty tumbling & they had a peculiar knack of converting themselves into human cartwheels & rolling on hand & feet from one end of the bridge to the other, to the astonishment of pedestrians  - George was famous for jumping.  I have seen him jump 12 feet & 4 inches on a level floor back & forth.  He was also a great wrestler on a side hold - he often took hold of men much larger than himself but I never saw anyone throw him.  He was also an expert boxer
-  Lyman had his peculiarities.  If there was a fish in the Susquehanna river, Lyman could catch it - and if there was a small bird on a tree & he wanted it;  he was as good as (David) at throwing stones - He could throw as straight as he could (shous).
At this time I had moved to Milton & had a bookbindery and printing office - George had been apprenticed to Mr. Lynde, a match-maker, but he soon found that sitting so much gave him pain in the breast & would soon kill him.   I sent for him & he had not been with me 6 months before he was the fastest type setter & in every way the best printer in the office.  We printed a weekly paper called “The Milton Ledger” and books.  George could make large wooden type that we often required in printing show bills, could repair the press,  or do any other mechanical job that was needed -  He was a natural genius,  He could write sharp & pointed articles of poetry.  The best New Year’s address received at the office of the Keystone” Harrisburg for the year 1841 was set up in type by George, composed as he set it up in the (stock), without having it written off.
After he married Kate Stoughton & moved to Columbis, Ohio, he worked in the largest printing office in the state, & in 1848, I was a delegate to the National  Convention that nominated George Cass for the Presidency.  I formed the acquaintance of a delegate from Ohio who know George.   He told me that George was reported to be the best practical printer in the state.
After William had learned his trade, he also came to Milton & started business & after father’s death, Mother was left with but two children Lyman & Elizabeth at home & she wanted to come to Milton.   I bought a house & large lot of ground for her in Milton & she & the two children moved into it, but she did not remain there long before she got tired of keeping house, so broke up & came to live with me where she remained ‘till her death in 1840 --
Ann had married & living in Phila, & Elizabeth went to live with her,  Your father, then a good chunk of a boy, drifted into the employ of Gen. Frick, who made a Whig & then a republican of him & what he has been & done since then,  he must tell you himself.  In his younger days, he was noted for his strength -- I am told he lifted a 1000 lbs. one day on a bunter.  I did not see it done, but this I did see -- I had in my store a large sugar hogshead weighing over one thousand four hundred lbs. that lay upon its side.  I wanted it set on end and put out of the way & had two negroes trying to do the job but both together could not put it on end -- Lyman happening to come in, saw the fellows had more than their match -- hustled them out of his way telling them they could not lift as much as they could eat for dinner.  He set the hogshead on end himself and shoved it where I wanted it -- to the astonishment & dismay of the negroes -- one of whom said, “I don’t want to get in dat boys path no way -- suh”.
At another time, Lyman and I were walking up the canal at Cumley Wharf were some men were unloading plaster from a flat -- They had a plank from the flat to the canal bank & would pick up a piece of plaster as big as a man’s head & walk the plank with it to the shore & drop it on the heap.   Lyman asked them why they did not stand on the flat & throw the pieces on the pile without running back and forth wasting time.  The men said they were too heavy -- no man could do that.  Lyman went on to the flat & began to hurl the chunks of plaster, from 50 - 60 or 80 lbs weight, onto the pile on the shore without stepping off the flat.  He threw off a doz. or more pieces & then came on shore & said to the men “that’s the way to unload the flat.”  They were very much surprised at this performance and said if old Charley Cumley know that Samson was in town, he would employ him to unload plaster.

Luther and Peter Yarrington of W.B. were the brag fisherman of the valley.  They did nothing else for a living -- they could push their fishing canoes up & down the river shore almost as fast as a horse could run -- Your father must have taken lessons from them for he could catch fish where nobody else could get a nibble.  I had a proof of this during a little fishing excursion he & I took to Watson town.  He rowed up the river opposite that village & set an outline of a 100 or more links baited with lampreys but had hardly reached the shore before we had to go over the line to take off fish & in this way, we were kept busy from a little after dark till midnight, when our bait ran out & we had to quit & go home.  On counting our fish, we had 29 salmon,  about 100 catfish, eels and other fish.   Our extraordinary luck did not satisfy your father he must try it again the next night.  We hired boys to catch lampreys for us & got at our fishing station before dark.  Some other fishermen, who had witnessed our haul the night before, were persuaded there must be some mystery in your father’s fishing and were determined to find out the secret.  They watched him baiting his links.   He cut up the bait as they did & so, as they did not see him put anything on his bait to charm the salmon, which was the fish we were all after, they went away satisfied.  Your father then went back over the lines, took off all the cut bait & put on line squirming lampreys for salmon are carnivorous & want live food.   Your father was then kept busy going back & forth till near daylight, when he again ran out of bait.  We counted our fish, found 31 salmon, some weighing seven or eight lbs & more than 100 other fish.   There were 3 or 4 other lines above & below us out all night & none of them had caught a salmon.  Col. Ed Pipher came our boat & was much surprised when he saw our salmon.   He knew there must be some secret about it & offered your father a ten-dollar bill if he would let him know what it was but the money was refused, for your father said he had no secret to disclose.



another section of the journal
(See blog post June 2021)

Newspaper article in the Wilkes- Barre Record, June 1956
(when the journal was re-discovered)
(see blog post June 2021)


close- up of the June 1956 article


the second half of the June 1956 article