William Douglass to Dr. James H. Minor 1857 August 19 | ||
August 19, 1857 from William Douglass to Dr. James H. Minor
Dr. Sir
I am pleased to
acknowledge the recipt of you
letter by the ship
M. C. Stevens
which arrived July last; and I learn
that she has completed her
voyage on this coast
and now is lying in the port of Monrovia on her re
turn trip home.
And I am certain you will be
pleased to hear from us, as no doubt you are
anscious
to know how we are —
where we are — and how we are
getting along. 1st We are all doing tolerable Well
in
health for there have been only a part of us sick
with the fever;
as for myself, I hav never had cause
to lie down a day since here I have been, neither
hav any of my family been sick — those who
hav
been sick did not suffer as much as was
antis
cipated and some of them caused
their sickness
by inadvertence in living & otherwise. Dr We are
all at Careysburg with the escception of Robinson
Scott's family who are still at Clay Ashland,
& who I am sorry to say are
much reduced — yet,
I rather escpect
the old lady will come here;
but her son desires to buy land there with a
small
tenement on it at a cost of $100.00. How success
log cabbins, and I am pleased to say that in our sisc
months were up we were in them and pretty comfortably
situated. All of us have our lots pretty well planted down
in potatoes, cassada, eddoes, tomatoes, lima beans, some
coffee trees set out & other little articles which will do service
in our families. Our boys I am happy to say have up
to this time conducted themselves pretty honorably &
I hope their present good character will be their
index through life with farther improvement for use
fulness.
I beg to call your attention to an Acct. due
for lumber by some of our people whom I will name,
for which they draw in
favor of the A.C.
society upon
you and Mr Nelson the
Escecutors which amount
we are advised were not paid up to the time
of the departure of the
M. C. Stevens
for
Liberia
The amts as far as I can collect just
at this time are as
follows: viz
Young Barrett | $20.00 |
Hugh Walker | 50.00 |
Washington Coleman | 10.00 |
Martin Coleman | 15.00 |
C & P Twine | 25.00 |
Washington Michie | 20.00 |
140.00 |
cial Secretary of the Society, or in fact the draft drawn
upon you & Mr Nelson Escecutors will be presented
for payment as the parties who are indebted no doubt
attached their sword signaturs or marks to it
I am pleased to say, that the articles which you
were kind enough to
procure & send us, & for which
we are thankful have been
landed at Monrovia,
and are being forwarded us evry week. We have
all received portions of them, & will
receive the bal
ance as soon as forwarded to the
depot. You
know we have no steam boats nor
railroads
in this Country & business cannot be done with
that
escpedition as in other Countries.
I am sorry to acquaint you of the death of
sister Mollie Michie,
Patty Walker &
Sy
phon Terrill
which took place at
Clay
Ashland.
Mollie Michie had got
pretty well through with
the fever but she at
some greens which caused a complicated
attack of sickness &
she died. I am pesuad
to belive that the death of many were caused
through their own
impudence & not going
according to the Drs direction. If you re
member when
you were giving us flannel shirts
you said that Charles
Twine would be the
first one to pull his off — and he
was the
first one according as you said.
Tell
Mr Howe Lewis
that his boy John
had had the fever very
bad at Clay Ashland
& found his way here
— He imprudently over
loaded his
stomach with new rice
po
tatoes & honey and died with the
cholic
My kind regards to Mr Howe Lewis
& the whole family. Give our love to all
the Colored folks also to
Mr Robert
Lewis & his family both white & colored
Mr
Andrew Brown & his family &
to
My dear old aunt Rachel, and I am
thankful to God that she is living — and
I belive she is better off where she is for
she is now too old to
scuffle to make a
living here. Tell her that all who professe
religion as we learn from folks who died
—
died in the faith — and the others died
so they
lived.
your affairs & matters general about home,
I will write you by any chance
Yours obdent Servant
William Douglass to Dr. James H. Minor 1857 August 19 | ||