The
Kimber Letters are writings exchanged between the Kimber sisters and their
mother, Keziah (Bennett) Kimber. The letters found their way to the sister’s
descendants. They’ve been saved and shared among us for over 150 years. I
treasure them and am grateful to the late Edna Raymond for giving me
transcriptions.
“It is with much pleasure that I set down this afternoon to
wright you a letter” begins Jane Eliza Kimber’s letter to her mother, father
and sister Abigail back home in Orange County, New York. Keziah and Benjamin
Kimber must have found comfort in her words. During the last nine months Jane
Eliza and her husband, Moses Seely, endured difficult times. In November of
1854 their home burned to the ground, and they lost nearly all their belongings
(see Letter 6). Hardship turned to heartbreak the following month when Jane and
Moses’ baby boy Willie Emit passed (Letter 9).
Moses
and Jane Eliza left Orange County and moved to Troy, Bradford Co., Pennsylvania
around spring 1855. I’m certain Jane Eliza’s sister, Sarah Bethia, and husband
William Mackney were happy to have the Seely family join them in Troy.
As
I read Jane’s letter, I heard enthusiasm in her words describing her peas and
beans, Isabel’s schooling, the wheat fields and even the price of potatoes,
butter and milk. She’s hoping her brother-in-law, Erastus Elston, will visit
and bring one of the Kimber’s with him. Sister Phebe Decker owes her a letter.
Jane
Eliza has news she didn’t tell but I’ll share. She was expecting a baby. Six
months after this letter was written, a baby girl, Sarah Alice Seely, joined
the family in January 1856.
Transcription
Letter 11
July
25th. 1855
Dear
Parents and Sister
It
is with much pleasure that I set down this
afternoon
to wright you a letter you think no
doubt that I have
forgotten you but I have not
and
now I would say to you that we are all well
and
doing as well as we can we received
your
letter
the 17 and was glad to hear from you it
done
like seeing you and talking to you
Mother
you
wanted us to write if we wanted you to dry
us
some currents we should like to have
some
if
they are not all gone when this reaches you
as
we have not any here we havent any
fruits
here
but one plumb tree our garden looks
very
good
what there is of it it is very small
so
we
do not have much of a variety we have
had
no
potatoes but soon will we have had
peas and
beans Mr. Dobbins sowed a lot of peas a little
way
from the house and they told us to go and
get
what we wanted and I tell you that we have
almost
fatten on them Mother Isabel goes to
school
now she likes to go and learns very
fast
she reads in her AB abs she says that
she
is going to write grandma a letter some day
she
has good health and grown very fast we
have
had a sight of rain here and are still
haveing they have commenced to get there
harvest
around here but O Mother if you could se
the
wheat fields around here it would do your
eyes
good to look at them there is a lot of
forty
acers in it all wheat I think it will make
some
man sweat to get that it looks as if
might
be lowed than it is flour is selling at
eleven
dollars a barrel here and young potatoes
at
one dollar a bushel we have to pay
eighteen
pence
a pound for butter three cents a quart
for
milk that dont seem like going to our own
milk
pan and butter tray I tell you I think
if
we
can get a farm we shall go on one another
year we shall build our house and rent it out
we can
make as much at that as any thing for
rents
is so high here in Troy O if I could
come
home once in a while it would do me so much
good
Mother you said in the leter that you
sent
to me that Erastus talks of coming out here
after
haying
tell
him to come and if he does come some one of
you
must come with him for I do want to see you
so
bad now tell him if he comes to write
what
time
he will come I dont know whether I
shall
come
out this fal or not I will if I can
Mother
you must tell me if Mr. P. comes to our
house
yet if he does it is time they put a
match
to it and struck it of and come and see us
I dont know as I have got much more to wright
at
this time I would like to know what
has
becom
of Phebe I writ them a letter two or
three
months ago but I have not heard from them
since I am a going to write her a nother and
se
if she will answer it O Mother if I
could
se
you I could talk a week night and day but
I
must
close for this time give my respect to
all
that ask after me and my love to Father
Mother
and Sister and ever remain your
affectionate
Daughter and Sister until Death
so
no more
Wright
soon
Good
by
Jane
Eliza Seely
Still life with peas
and plums
Painted by Mateusz Tokarski
circa 1795
Courtesy of Wikimedia
Commons
To read earlier Kimber Letters click on the
label 'Kimber Letters' at the bottom of this post.
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