Macoupin County
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Churchill-Bingham Letters

March 4, 1836

Self envelope mailed to George Churchill Esq., PM, Ridge Prairie, Illinois. Postmarked St. Louis. Then sent to Miss Caroline Elisabeth Churchill, Monroe, Greene County, Wisconsin Territory with postmark of Ridge Prairie Illinois, March 4. Franking (Free) by G Churchill, PM

Ridge Prairie, April 25th 1837

Dear Cousin

I improve this opportunity to inform you that your Cow has got a Calf she found it the next day after your Mother left here. We are all well Mary stuck a thorn in her hand yesterday at school and it is tolerable sore. We have got our Garden made I got three hollyhock roots and some pink cammomile worm wood and live forever roots at Mrs. Cornwells. Today we are planting corn. The peach trees are in full bloom. I expect this cold weather will kill the peaches if it does not you must come and help us eat them next fall.

Miss Minerva Gaskill went to Carlinville with the intention of attending school there but the school did not suit her and she came home again and has gone to Lebanon.

Cordelia and Jane continue at school Candace G. attends school now. Cordelia has got a new tuscan bonnet. Mr. Bennet pays his compliments to Fanny Gaskill. George Brown goes to see Tharsalia Scott. John Hays and Cynthia Cornwell are going to be married no preventing providence. Auld Lee has gone to the shades (?). Uncle George has hired a man to work by the name of Coats lately from Tennessee. ???Mc says that he is going to New York City. James Gaskill has gone to Chicago. Mc? Works for old Mrs. McMahan. Mrs. Carswell has got a little young one in her old age. Joshua Gaskill said that they missed you in school very much. You have all the news exhortations omitted for want of ability. Love to all.

Your affectionate cousin
Hannah Amelia Weeks

PS Please to write as soon as you get this.

Self envelope. Postmarked Ridge Prairie April 25. Number 6 written in corner (for stamp)
Addressed to Miss Caroline E. Churchill, Middleton Madison Co Illinois

Ridge Prairie, Aug. 18th 1839

Dear Cousin,

I have just finished a letter to Sarah Chipman and am in a perspiration nevertheless. I will say a few words to you hoping these few lines may find you in a comfortable degree of health. I was very sorry to hear of your illness. Harriet was taken sick the day you left. She is getting better now. She is as homesick as you was. She wishes she had never left Pike. I came home Saturday after you went home and found the folks in such distressed situation that I did not go back again. Father and Mother went out yesterday and got my things. They were both to let me off. Mother told Mr. H that I might go back in a few weeks if she could get help. James Posey died last Tuesday. Mother Wood and McMan are very sick. John Piston (?) is sick with the augue and fever mixed together Dr. Jennings was there last Sunday trying to separate it. Williams was at home last Sunday. We all went to camp meeting all the beauty and fashion of the Prairie. Collinsville and Troy were there. George Coppasway (?) as native ? was there and gave us a talk. My pen is so bad I will not write any more for fear you cannot read it and write an answer this week. Please to write us soon as you get this an let me know concerning your health and all other matters and things. Yours truly.

H. A. Weeks
Miss C. E. Churchill

Alton Illinois
(Postmarked Ridge Prairie Illinois Aug. (written in ink) 28. 6 written in stamp corner

Ridge Prairie, Feb. 2, 1840

Dear Cousin,

Your favor of Jan. 18th was duly received and I should have answered it before if it had not been so very cold. I am very glad to hear that you are still in the land of the living. We had almost concluded that you had left this world from your long silence. Gov. Finley said that you had gone to fever river. (?) I am glad that Sall Two-legs has got through with the troubles of this world.

I have not heard any thing about Ann H. and the slip shod Philosopher. Mr. Whealtey was here not long, since he is doing pretty well I believe. Brother Ben has been here since the Doctor left here. He appears as well as ever and if you will come and spend the summer with us you may have him if you want. Mother thinks that he took a shine to you.

As for your cosin (sic) Alfred that you speak of hard hearted wretch has forsaken us without just cause or provocation. He told Pharsalia the other day that he had almost forgotten me. Harriet Buckley returned home soon after you left here. Her Mother and Brother came after her. Pharsalia say tell you that she and Orson (?) are married. She told me the other day that she did not lover Orson or Sam. Rather she seemed very candid about it. I do not think she will ever have O. and M (?) Gillit is going to take Sam so you see that her cake is like to be dough.

The Doctor left here a few weeks ago in great displeasure. He says he asks no favors of any body but Mr. Churchill. I believe that he is teaching in town. I shall say no more about him because I cannot find words to express his meanness. Now I have answered all the queries in your short letter but I am not through yet. ??? Scott is in jail for shooting the Esq Scott. The ball entered his leg a little above the ancle. He intended to have killed him. Mr. Scotts youngest daughters name is Mariann Minerva. It is a wonderful child. Mr. Weiston (?) also have a wonderful child. They don't know nothing. What it is going to be. They never raised such a child before. Jesse Mc is married and Eveline Clark has a daughter, Jenny Botkin is married to some body on the bottom. Sally Good and Cyrus Davison are married, and I don't know who all. Mr. Nelson Danniels wife died not long since and left two children.

We have had many merry sleigh rides. Orson and Sam have each a string of sleigh bells. New Years day four or five sleighs of us went down to St. Clair Co and got dinner. Christmas eve we all went from a quilting at Mr. Peters (?) to Edwardsville and took supper and went into the ballroom a few minutes. Orson was going to take the most comfort of any that night but Horace asked Pharsalia to ride in his sleigh and Orson was so made he swore he would not go so he went to Troy and got a black eye. So much for him. Maryanne Gillit had a quilting last Thursday and at night we had a merry ride. The slete is so hard that horses that are not sharp shod cannot stand up. I always ride in the best sleigh and go ahead. Ran some races and turnover and break down some times.

The late slete has tore out shade tree very bad. The willow tree is nearly ruined.

Everybody except me have gone to meeting at Mr. Guthries today. They say that Nancy Peter (?) is going to run away with Mr. Roudefelt before long. Mr. R. is a Yankee and Mrs. Teter says always did hate the Yankees and she believes in her soul that every one of her children will marry Tankees. Don't you pity her.

We expect uncle George home next week. I have had several letters from him. He boards at his cousin Charles Boardman Francis. We have a Boston gentleman living here this winter. He is going to Boston as soon as uncle G. gets home. He did expect to bring his wife here to board and crop it next summer but he has heard of his fathers death and his Mother wants him to come and live with her and I am glad. Aint you.

Mr. Kraft has sold to Dr. Green and left Troy and Seet (?) Hunter has gone or is about to (small bit of page torn here). The Troyans have had two bulls of late and Perham Bull brought me a ticket he .. one to Mrs. Blair, Mrs. McClannehanand(?) andMrs.Gillet. Mrs. G. went foot and alone and danced allnight. Now I have told you all the foolishness that I can think of and if you can read it in a fortnight and do your chores you will do well. Please to write when you get through with it and tell me where you are and what you are doing. All about matters and things. Did you come to Edwardsville when Hannah S. was married? Who came with you? Was it G. Conlee or the brickyard fellow. Why did you not come to our house. Please to excuse all mistakes for my pen is very poor. My fingers very cold, and my family very impatient for their dinner. All well as common love to all.

Yours truly
Hannah A. Weeks

Miss Caroline E. Churchill
Browns Prairie Ills.
Self envelope to
Miss Caroline E. Churchill
Brighton, Macoupin Co, Illinois
Postmark looks like Jerseyville????

Ridge Prairie April 20, 1840

Dear Caroline,

Miss H. A. Weeks is teaching school in the Marine Settlement and will not probably receive your letter for some time to come.

We are all as well as usual. Yours, George Churchill

Miss Caroline E. Churchill Brighton, IL

PS. Miss Fanny Gaskill is teaching school in this neighborhood, and Miss Julia Small in the upper part of the Marine Settlement.

Postmarked Ridge Prairie, April 22. Free franking. G. Churchill, PM

Ridge Prairie, Madison Co, Illinois, Sep 15, 1840

Dear Caroline, Your letter for Hannah arrived yesterday. She is sick, and so is her mother, but both are getting better. Mr. Weeks also has been sick a long time, but is now nearly well. Boardy and the Baby are both comfortably sick: -- You know what that means - about as sick as you made yourself last year when you wanted to go home.

You need not wait for the Rev. Samuel Kelly. He is safely married to his cousin Rebecca McMahan, and carries on Uncle Isaac's farm. Uncle Isaac has removed to Shoal Creek, Clinton Co., where he has bought Curtis's mills. George W. McMahan was drowned near those mills last spring.

Dr. Jennings die last week at Troy of delerium tremens.

Mr. Wm. C. D. Harrington, formerly of Otsego Co. NY teaches school in this neighborhood.

Isaac Holt and his wife are no longer one flesh, but twain.

You may as well direct your letters to your uncle as he will read them anyhow, and bits and picayunes are not very plenty in the school. Ma'ams pocket. Your uncle will safely hand over your letters to the school Ma'am; and as they will meet her critical eye, let me advise you to try to spell as well as you can, and point your letters, and begin every sentence with a capital letter.

Please give us some idea of the geography of Monroe, Greene Co WT. How far from Galena and in which direction? Which "uncle T" is it that lives six miles from you? What is Ma doing. Tell about Jackson, and Gilen (?) and RooseyAnn, and Maria. The Baby is trying to learn to write, so look out for a letter from her.

Andrew Miller elected sheriff: Lyn (?), Edwards, Joseph Gillespie, James Reynolds representatives. Henry C. Camdell, Coroner of Madison Co.

Yours, George Churchill.

(Postmarked Ridge Prairie, Sep 16. Self envelope to Miss Caroline E. Churchill, Monroe, Greene Co., WT

Ridge Prairie, Illinois, Sept. 20th, 1840

Dear Cousin, I was very glad to hear from you again although I did not expect to hear from Wisconsin. I didn't get the last letter you wrote from Brighton until it was too late to go and see you. If I had I should not have let you gone out of the world to live with the Badgers if I could have helped it. Why did not you write your letter as long as a horses head. We wanted to hear more particulars about you all. What you are doing and how you like the country. I expect we will be poking up that way next spring. I wish you was here to go with me don't you? Father and Mother expect to go to see the country and people in about two weeks. They intend to find a place we donot know where probably about a mile from Galesburg, and William and I will go up early in the spring to get in some corn wile the others stay here to build a barn for uncle George. You must step over and stay with us. I shall be very lonely up ther without friend or foe. How far are you from Galena and which way.

Horace is going to St. Louis next week to live a year with Mr. I. Lockwood and learn to be a leather merchant. We are not all well. Father has had the ague and fever for more than two months he is well now Mother has had the fever five or six weeks she is getting better, every one except I have had the ague more or less, it has been sickly here a good many have died with the flux down south around Bethel and on the bottom. Dr. Vennings (?) of Troy died of the delerium tremens. Mr. McElroy (?) is dead. Also Mrs. Widow. McClannahan. Old Mrs. Merry. Tennydum (?), Botkin. I do not think of any others that you were aquainted with. Luann Merry in the Spring. I forget wether it was before you left or not. Was George McMahan drownded or not while you were here. He drowned in School Creek. It was two or three days before he was found. Isaac has moved his family to School Creek. Rebecca occupies the old stand with her darling honey. I will mend my pen and then tell you who has entered into the holy state of matrimony of late. I am sure it will break your heart for the priest is gone! In the psring John Henderson married Elisabeth Whiteside. They live on your old place. The Wrictons (?) live on the old ? place near Gilead. Old man Henderson is going to move next week to Marine and Lloyd is going to move into the tavern. Mrs. Hott is going to live with big sister Susan. She and Old Holt have dissolved copartnership on George and Elisabeths account. Uncle John Wriston (?) has moved down as poor as poverty. They are a mean set from one end to tother. Tillia thinks his wife loves Alfred Wriston better than she does him. John Mcvey married Eliza Hall and lives where his father did.

The Rev. Samuel Kelly to his cousin Rebecca McMahan. Mr. James Willoughby married Miss Polly Janette Gates. Mr. Benjamin Franklin Slate would marry Miss Mary Ann Minerva Gaskill if he could get her. Mr. Shaw has figured about run in debt all he would and last week absquatutated(?).. He drowned our horse Royalist in the spring in Silver Creek.

I taught one quarter at the same place and boarded at Mr. Andersons. Your Father was here two or three weeks ago. He lives at Middletown. He talked of going to see you this fall.

Please to write often. Love to all.

Your True Friend. Hannah A. Weeks.

(Self envelope. Postmarked Ridge Prairie Sep 23. Written in stamp corner: 18 ¾)

Ridge Prairie, Madison Co. April 26, 1841

Dear Caroline, Your letter of the 4th arrived on the 19th April. I did not hand it to the school marm, but I think she has read it. Our folks are all well, although most of them have had the ague this spring. Wm. W and Chamby (?) B. Weeks have been gone to Galesburg 20 days. They took 3 horses, wagon, plows.

I see you have dropped the "Elisabeth" out of your name. You must not forget the memory of Miss Betsey Free.

I saw your father at Collingville yesterday. He was well. He is making a crop at the Bluff, 4 ½ miles SW of Collingville.

Do you live in the town of Monroe? If not, how far from it? Do you go to school? Do the other children go? Which of the O'Flynns is in "cahoots" with Miss Burt (?) of Gardner (?).

The Baby goes to school once in a while and does (have?) stroke of bumps at playing. Miss Hannah Seybold (?) is our school marm. Joseph Gaskill is married to a girl of one of the Smarts.

Next time you write to me, please put "PM" after my name on the outside of the letter to save Mr. Phelps the trouble of writing "18 ¾".

Divine (?) and Mindry (?) boys and girl have got married. Among them Mr. George Brown and Miss Moore. (?) McMahan's School Creek speculation turned out bad, and he is nearly broken. Yours G. C* *George Churchill

Ridge Prairie, Madison Co., Illinois, Oct 19, 1841

Dear Caroline, Yesterday I rec'd a letter from Miss Hannah A Weeks saying that you "complain because I do not write oftener." Now, it was my opinion that I wrote last, and that it was your turn. If I was in error, this letter will set all right again.

I was at Kingston Bluff about 2 weeks ago. Your step-brother, little Samson Kingston, had been very sick, and had been calomeored (?) and Talinvested (?) by Dr. Butte of Butteville so that the boy had picked out several of his teeth with his fingers. Your other step-brother, William Wesley Kingston, and the old folks were well. The old gentleman had rec'd a letter from you, but could not find it to show to me. He does not "make rich come" yet. ? will not pay for hauling, and apples are cheap. Jane has been offered $1 per (?) here are well. Aunt Harriet Gaskill is dead: so is John Reid of Troy and Miss Ann Marriat Guernsey (?) of Collingsville. I am sorry to hear that all you Wisconsin swains wear yellow breeches, and that you cannot bear that color. I reckon Miss Hannah will get married before you yet, not withstanding your anxiety to enter the holy estate of matrimony. She don't like Galesburg therefore I guess she will take a Ridge Prairie man. Guess who? Now please give me a geographical and topographical description of Monroe, and Greene county, and the characteristics of the Bagders, Wabarham (?), and Yellow Breeches. How do you like your step father, if you have one - for rumors are contradictory on this point. Remember me to your mother, and Jackson, Giles, the Doctor, and Maria.

Yours. GC

Ridge Prairie, Madison Co., Illinois, March 2, 1842

Dear Caroline, Your letter of Feb. 4, postmarked Feb. 8, came to hand yesterday. I send in reply a piece of a yellow letter in compliment to the "yellow breeches" of which you appear so fond, and hope it will shine."

Mr. James R. Perrigo jun. And Miss Hannah A Weeks were united in the holy estate of matrimony at Galesburg on the 25th Jan. 1842, at 6 o'clock and 30 minutes, PM by the Rev. H. H. Kellogg, President of Galesburg College and the happy couple arrived at this place on Saturday evening, Feb. 5.

Mr. Perrigo and his father, mother, grandmother, 2 brothers and sister and boy young and small (about 3 years) live in my house. They are from "York State". The old man is very deaf, and not healthy. The old man and son had a ?? of spell of sickness last fall which caused the wedding to be postponed. Grandmother and Mother Perrigo are Methodists, the old man nothing in particular, and the young man is not a member of any church, but is very worthy, ready, sober, young man; and goes to meetings with his wife.

I was informed by somebody that you had become a "school marm". Is it true? You have a sousin teaching a splendid school at Prairie du Ghien, WT, among the Badgers at $4 and $5 per scholar a quarter. She has 45 scholars, in Chemistry, Philosophy, Geography, Grammar, and Arithmetic. Her name is Amily Amelia Churchill, and she lives with her uncle Rev. Jedidiah Dwight Stevens. So you can write to her, if you choose.

I was at Kingston Bluff in Jan. All well; and plenty of nice apples to eat. Your stepmother showed me a piece of the upper jaw of Master Samson Kingston with 2 or 3 teeth in it. This piece fell out by the operation of that "Samson of Medicine" Coloned (?) administered by one Dr. Butte. But little Samson is alive and does not seem to mind it. He calls his mother "Jane". Nevertheless the graveyards in these parts have received quite an acception to their population by means of Lancet, Calomel & Co.

What made you cut out your signature from your letter? Are you married? And don't want to tell me your new name? If your mother married yet? I hope your "little Yankees" will teach you so much Geography that you can tell whether "Monroe" is on the Mississippi or Lake Michigan or Lake Superior or Green Bay or the Wisconsin. You say nothing about Grandmother Gardner (?) or uncle Temple.

I was once well acquainted with your Hon James R. Vineyard who lately killed Mr. C. C. P. Arndt in the Badger Legislative Council. Venyard was a printer at Vandalia when I knew him. Are such scraps common among the Badgers? I understand that the Badgers are so fond of the Tuckers (?) that they are trying to get 12 or 15 counties of ?? away from us. If they should succeed the Badger country would be completely luckervied (?). Tell your Mother and grandmother that the Goose Creek farm once owned by your Father has recently been sold to Wm. W. Stine (?) for twenty dollars per acre, and that without any more additions to the improvements since you left it. The best bargain your father ever made was when he got the Goose Creek farm in exchange for the Skeamsborough (?) and Rice estates: and the worst bargain he made was when he trucked it off.

Squire Scott has built a barn, and an addition to his house, and has a nice new cookstove therein, and is getting along "prime".

I have excused all your mistakes, and in return I want you to study diligently while you go to school and afterwards and learn punctuation, and how to spell "opportunity", "description", "hear", and "affectionate".

Times are pretty hard here, but nothing like what they are at Galesburg and up north. We still use coffee and sugar. Coffee 8 lbs. For a dollar, and sugar 15 lbs. For a dollar, corn 25 cents and wheat 87 ½ cts a bushel in St. Louis, and the mud so deep that we can hardly get there. Give my reports to all inquiring friends. Tell Norman and George that I will thank them to write to me.

I have some more news to tell you, but will not do it till I have another letter from you. Two of your acquaintances have got married here, much to the astonishment of the public. I will tell you who they are after I receive your next letter. GC

PS: Since you left I have built a new barn, 30 by 40 feet, a stable with loft 30 x 12 ft. a new ?? house, and have raised a ? of a Wood, Tool, and a Carriage house. I conclude my letter because it will take you a week to ? out all that I have written. GC.

Ridge Prairie, Madison County, IL, May 4, 1842

Dear Caroline,

Your favor of April 19 was rec'd yesterday. I am sorry that you cannot find out in what part of Wisconsin Green Co. is situated, and that the little muddy stream running through your mudless country has no name. What is nearest (?) county to you? Is it Lake or McHenry or Boone, or Winnebago, or Stephenson, or Jo Davies? How far from Galena to Monroe? How far from Rockford? How far from Belvidere?

"Thos astonishing weddings". Martin Joseph Macdonough Gates to Miss Mary Ann Loving Gillet. Mr. Joel M. Davis whose wife died not quite 3 months before to Mrs. Engor??? Who had already had 3 or 4 husbands. Mr. Tompkins to Miss Serena Morris. Miss Sally Watt to somebody up the prairie. I forget the name. Most of the people have joined the Washington Temperance Socieities. Isaac Hall among the rest. Troy has become a sober town. Mr. Henderson is the President of the Temperance Society there.

Where does Felix O'Flynn live? Uncle Temp? and Uncle Thompson? Does your grandmother live at Monroe? Is it a very healthy place?

Mrs. H. A. Perrigo's husband has a name handsome enough for any woman or girl, and he is a fine young man, but unfortunately he lived at Shoal (?) Creek till the fever and ague got such a fast hold of him that it seems impossible to eradicate it. He presently has a chill or a shake.

Mr. Silvanus Gaskill died on the 29th April, and was buried at Collinsville on the 28th by the side of his wife. So there is a family of orphans. Sam Teter (?) has shot his left hand to pieces with a pistol.

St. Louis prices - Coffee, 8 lbs. For $1; Sugar 15 lbs. Do; Wheat 73 cts. Per bushel. Times hard enough, but not so bad as among the poor Badgers.

All well at Kingston Bluff. Sister Jane makes a splendid dish of coffee. Little Samson goes to school at Silver Creek.

I have built a new bar, stable, and smoke house, and have up the frame of a wood, carriage, and tool house. I have also built a very nice frame house, 8 by 12 feet and 10 feet high, and finished it with a cookstove and other furniture for your Uncle Levi so that he may not be troubled with "noise", and that other people may not be annoyed with his presence. He had been teasing for a house more than three years, and when done he still wanted me to pay for his board in Mr. Perrigo's family. I declined the honor, and let him take his choice: to cook for himself, somebody to cook for him, eat his victuals raw or starve. He was quite "stuffy" and tried starvation about 2 days and then concluded to cook for himself. The house is six rods east of the SE corner of the Pear Orchard where I have fenced in and plowed a quarter of an acre for him to use as a garden. I hope he will gradually alter his opinion that "it is not right for him to do any work." We people here all think he is as able to work as most other people. He lets his beard grow, and looks far worse than Lovero (?) Don. He can make a great deal of money at boot and shoe making and mending if he will only work. He has the best shop in the state. Please write soon.

Yours, George Churchill.

PS. I do not know who told me you were a school marm. Your old lover, Rev. Samuel Kelly is building a log cabin on Hendershot Hill near the head of Goose Creek. Why do you write "satisfied" for "satisfied"? PS. Remember me to all inquiring friends, especially to Jackson, Giles and the Doctor.

Ridge Prairie, Madison Co., IL, Nov. 5, 1842

Dear Caroline,

We are all as well as usual. You have a little half-sister at Kingston Bluff. "Jane" requested me to name it. Whereupon I named it "Elisabeth Jane". Is not that a pretty name?

There is a Presbyterian church established at Troy. Dr. Joel K. Reiner and Mr. James R. Perrigo, Jun. Are the Elders. The members are Elders Reiner and Perrigo and their wives, Mrs. Scott and 5 children, Bennet Posey, Elizabeth Goodin, Hardy Goodin, Ellen Davis, and Mrs. Kimberlin. Rev. Mr. Chamberlin preaches to them every other Sunday.

Uncle David Gaskill died in September. Miss Margaret T. Henderson has died since.

I am no longer Post Master. Mr. Thomas J. Brady has been appointed to fill my place so this letter will cost you 18 ¾ cts if you get it. I hope money is plentiful among the Badgers than among the (?) for here it provides us to raise portage money.

There is a little letter in the Post Office directed to "Mr. George Churchhill, Postmaster". I have concluded that it is not from any of my relatives for they would know how to spell better. It is post-marked "Monroe, Wisconsin" and I cannot get it without paying 18 ¾ cts. And as it cannot have been written by you or any other Churchills, I have concluded to let it be. But perhaps you have changed the ancient and honored name of Churchill for some other. If so give us some hint of the matter. Send me a good long letter and I will try to buy it.

I papered through Middleton yesterday, and perceived that your father's late (?) was still there. I learn that corn and potatoes have been sold at Alton for 8 cents per bushel. Hard times!

When you write that long letter, please tell whether you are married or not, and to whom. Also about your mother, and Norman, and George, and Lucena (?) and Maria.

Have you yet found out where Monroe is situated?

There was an earthquake at Alton yesterday, a little after noon. No damage done.

A huge brick building has been erected at Upper Alton for Shurtliff College. It looks odd, seen through the trees and oak bushes.

Martin Alexander Blair is married to a girl named Lucitta Willis - Martin James Blair to a daughter of Mr. Swain, the tailor. Mr. Swain has joined the temperance society and removed to Collinsville.

The Methodists expect to build a meeting house at Collinsville. This will be the nearest Methodist meeting to Kingston Bluff. I usually attend the Episcopal Church at Collinsville every other Sunday. Mr. Darrow preacher the other Sundays at Marine Settlement.

There has been a great Temperance reformation in this region, and it has been followed by an extensive revival of religion.

Old Isaac Holt has committed an assault upon Linus (?) Bates; given surety for appearances at court, and cleared out to Kentucky.

William W. Hisss (?) has bought the old Goose Creek farm, and put up another log cabin on it. I reckon it would take a good many Middleton houses and lots to buy that farm now.

Your Mother promised little George to me. If he were here, I would try to clothe him and send him to school, but I apprehend his father would not be satisfied till he got him home; and how he and the young Kingstons would agree, I cannot predict. But three boys in one family are too many to be profitable.

I had a letter from Mary C. Weeks on the 18th Oct. All well there at Galesburg. Mr. Weeks had not yet raised his house.

Times are very hard here. Potatoes are hauled to St. Louis and sold for 10 cts. A bushel. Corn, same place, 15 cts. What 37 ½ cts. Castor Beans at Edwardsville, 30 cts. White beans, 25 cts. Chickens are hauled from Edgar Co to St. Louis and sold for 20 cents per dozen. Old debts remain unpaid, and it is not very east to get trusted.

Hail Moron, Esq. Died a few days since at Monticello, aged 49. A great loss to society.

I remain your affectionate uncle, George Churchill.

PS: It is expected that cousin Hannah will before long supply the world with another Perrigo.

Your Uncle Levi is quite as well as common. I have built a nice little frame house for him, furnished it with cookstove and "fixings" and let him cook for himself. He wanted me to. I had furnished him with a new house, but I told him no. Since he finds that he is at perfect liberty to cook for himself or starve, he makes no more fuss about it. He shaves oftener than formerly at least. Once a month. He has cost me a great deal to support him in all his whim whams. GC

I understand Mr. Weeks is making corn stalk sugar at Galesburg.


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