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Everett, Henry (brother), Everett family outgoing correspondence, 1849
Everett, Henry (brother), Everett family outgoing correspondence, 1849
Everett, Henry (brother), Everett family outgoing correspondence, 1849
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Everett, Henry (brother), Everett family outgoing correspondence, 1849
Title
Everett, Henry (brother), Everett family outgoing correspondence, 1849
Date
1849
Language
English
,
Welsh
Subjects
Abolitionists
,
Brothers and sisters
,
Congregational churches
Extent
6.9 linear feet (16.5 boxes)
Format
Correspondence
User-Contributed Transcription
Last week a young lady drownd herself in the mill-dam of this place. She was attending school at the Academy, she had not been very well during the day and desired to be excused from school. Her friends hearing nothing from her for three days became alarmed and after much search her body was found in the dam. It is supposed that the blood rushing to her brain deranged her and she threw herself into the water without knowing what she did. Yesterday and today have been very rainy. I washed yesterday and my clothes are out in the rain. It is very gloomy here when it rains, every thing seems to weep. There the clock strikes 10 and I must hasten or I shall be tardy in retiring, good night.Wednesday morn. This morning as I was sleeping in my quiet room dreaming of absent friends I was startled by my room-mate coming in into the room and exclaiming "Oh! you will be tardy." "I expect the bell to ring every moment." I had hardly opened my eyes before I was on the floor. I am now in the middle class. I do not know whether I shall be so classed in the catalogue or not. I shall try to do my best to have it so. My time is so much taken up that I cannot stop to think, as I suppose you have thought while reading this almost senceless letter. (We walk a mile every day when it does not rain. It seems a long way and I am pretty tired by the time I have walked a mile and back. When I get home I shall be such a walker that I shall think nothing of walking to the village and back before breakfast, or to Utica between breakfast and dinner. Has father got a new span of horses yet? If he has not, tell him I think it would be cheaper for him to send his children here to school and he would soon have no need of any. We have very beautiful sunsets here. The sun sinks in all its golden grandure behind Mt. Tom's lofty head. I must close or this will be too late for the
Transcription Status
Needs review
Transcription Note
This document was transcribed by volunteers as part of the Newberry Transcribe crowdsourcing initiative.
Archival Collection Title
Everett family papers
Link to Catalog
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Call Number
Midwest MS Everett Box 4 Folder 152
BibID
998218028805867
Rights Status
No Copyright - United States
Contributing Institution
Newberry Library
Newberry Open Access Policy
The Newberry makes its collections available for any lawful purpose, commercial or non-commercial, without licensing or permission fees to the library, subject to
these terms and conditions.
Size
2599px × 3256px 24.23 MB
File Created
07/25/2016
Filename
998218028805867_mms_everett_ser_01_box_04_fl_152_001_02.tif
Unique Identifier
NL1FWGQ
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