Horace Purdy Journal January 1905 Entry
8 pgs
JANUARY 01 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 36. A beautiful morning. Mary attended church this morning. I wrote a postal to Clara Watkins for her, wishing her to answer one sent recently to her. Just before doing my barn chores, I called across the street to see how old Mr. Hickok is doing. He is gradually growing weaker; he can’t last long. He is liable to drop away at any time. JANUARY 02 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 26. Last night was a beautiful starlit one and the sun rose with a beautiful red, but it soon began to cloud over and about 11 o’clock, it began to rain. News by morning papers of the surrender of Port Arthur. After George arrived this morning from Bethel we changed from sleigh to wagon and I drove downtown and mailed a policy and calendar to Henry Supple at Brookfield. Then I delivered a policy and collected from Henry Beradi; also delivered a policy to Morelock & Husk and then returned new pension certificates and vouchers for next month’s payment to Andrew Bell on Lake Avenue. Alexander Lee called in the PM for a calendar. Catherine Ryan came in also in the PM and paid for her furniture insurance. In the evening, I made up the accounts for the Sun and Reliance and sent a check in each and mailed them before I closed the office at 9 PM. JANUARY 03 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 35. Rainy. In the forenoon, I went over to Meadow Street and arranged for the renewal of Booth Radcliff, Howard Bradley and O. B. Sanford. I made a new case of insuring Joseph Knowlton’s market. In the PM, the widow of Rufus Rice called and started papers in application for a pension and about dusk called again to say that her son, unbeknownst to her commences proceeding for the same with Captain Quien. In the PM, I went up to Balmforth and had George Bard make up his proof of loss for the fire on Christmas Day. I wrote to J. H. Searle ordering pension supplies and enclosing a postal order for $1.15 in payment of same. M. Daragan gave me a check for $20.50 for insurance on his block. I made a deposit and added to same a $300 note which was discounted for three months. I received from the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company cash of $.89 in a letter as being the amount overpaid of the October balance. JANUARY 04 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 10. A regular blizzard. Snow and wind. I dug out to the office and bar before George came from Bethel which was about 9:30 AM, when he brought ½ dozen tire bolts and we used one of them to repair the spindle buggy, after which we finished shoveling the snow paths. At noon time, Eugene Hyatt came in and had his pension voucher executed and sent to Charles Orr, US pension agent at Buffalo, NY where he draws his pension. After dinner, while digging a path from curb to street (task of about 5 minutes), Fred Bevans came along and insisted against my wishes to help me shovel. I said now and he said yes. When done, he wanted to borrow $.25 cents, just as I expected; he did not get it. I went up to O. B. Sanford’s to deliver a furniture policy but as no one was home, did not succeed. I then called at George Bard’s for my fountain pen which I left there yesterday while making up his proof of loss. On my return, I stopped at Bryant’s and had him touch the regulator and set my watch. Mrs. Selleck stopped about 5 PM for their 1905 calendar. JANUARY 05 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – zero. Pleasant and cold. A letter from the Equitable declining the application of Anne Regan. Letter also from W. Furness wanting more particulars about the small loss of John Greeley under the Greenwich policy reinsured by his company, the Commercial Union. Before dinner, George went with me to deliver O. Sanford’s policy and arrange for renewal of Mrs. Spencer, Lottie Cowl and Howard Bradley. After dinner, I wrote for Mrs. Hawley a letter to the teacher s pupils of room 14 of the New Street School, acknowledging the receipt of a Christmas box from them. After doing my barn work, just about dusk, I went downtown, mailed a reply to W. Furness, went over to the Bates place and arranged with Mrs. Spencer for renewal of her furniture policy, then went over to Sarah Austin about change of store to dwelling and a reduced rate therefore. Fannie Hirsch called this evening. JANUARY 06 FRIDAY – Mercury at 6 AM 10. About 2 inches of snow during last night and it has continued moderately during the day. Mr. Beeman rode with me about an hour before dinner to collect from O. B. Sanford and a balance from William Conklin. I delivered a store policy to Joseph Knowlton at 56 White Street and got another bottle of liprozene at Doran’s, after which Mr. Beeman looked at some weather strips for his doors and then we came home. In the afternoon, I walked up to Dr. Sunderland’s to show him a stone from my bladder dragged out with a catheter while drawing my water. From there, I went over to Rundle & White’s to talk about the Sun policy I wrote for them for which they paid by way of Herbert Wildman from whom I am unable to collect, but they were not at the factory. I then called on Fred Seymour and collected $5.00 on his insurance, then went over to the Bates place and got Mrs. Spencer’s name. It is Mary Catherine Spencer. I then called at the village store and got a pound of butter and arranged with Doran for 6 more bottles of liprizene for $5.50. I called on Frank Ives but collected nothing. I arranged with insurance inspector Howe to make minimum rates on Sarah Austin’s building at 234 White Street. George Harvey called this AM and arranged for the renewal of his Steven Street property and paid the premium. After supper, I went over to George Purdy’s to give him Dr. Sunderland’s and my order for coffee for which George will send the order to Mrs. Kimball. From there, I went over to Orchard Street and left a big figured calendar for Mrs. Jennie Townsend. JANUARY 07 SATURDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 45. The storm turned to rain last night and continued all night with which the melted snow has given us quite an addition to the city water supply. It cleared away giving us bright sunshine before dinner, the clouded over again about 2 PM. In the forenoon, I delivered two polices - Agricultural and Sun - to Flint & Smith on the Danbury News Plant. I collected of Joseph Knowlton on insurance for his store. After dinner, John Greeley came in and signed the proof of loss which occurred December 26 for the amount of $5.00 which I mailed to special agent W. Furness at Boston. George this forenoon helped Mr. Beeman put weather strips on his door. John Loricko called this PM for a calendar for himself and Mrs. Mary C. Spencer. William Hickok arranged and paid for furniture insurance this PM. I stayed in the office all the PM until 4 o’clock when I went to market for oysters for our Sunday breakfast. JANUARY 08 SUNDAY – Mercury at 7 AM – 25. Clear and colder. The melting snow of yesterday had now turned to ice with sufficient to hold the sleighing if renewed in a few days by a couple of inches of new snow. We had stewed oysters for breakfast. Silvio Cresci sent his boy over this morning to pay his January rent. I mailed a calendar to W. S. White at Great Plain. I also mailed Rufus Rice’s pension certificate to his son Harry for use with Captain Quien who is getting a widow’s pension for his mother. Before doing by barn work about 5 PM, I went over to see how Clark Hickok is doing. He had an uncomfortable night last night and a more comfortable day today by sleeping most of the time. His life apparently is fast ebbing away. In the evening, we attended the Baptist church to hear the evangelist F. Shepardson; we liked him. JANUARY 09 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 18. A pleasant morning. Received by the morning mail a package of pension blanks from J. H. Soule, publishers of same as per order of January 3. Mr. Beeker made us a call in the PM. I drove up to Millard’s shop to notify Mike Regan that his mother was rejected for insurance by the Equitable Life Insurance Company on account of family history. I delivered a policy to Lottie Carol and collected $2.00 of Frank Verra. I then looked at a storage building on the McArdle place 51-53 Main Street in reference to anticipated storage of furniture for Arthur Stowe. In the PM, I delivered and collected a policy to Mrs. Mary Spencer and started to drive to Stony Hill to arrange for the renewal of Mr. Vail, but finding so much bare ground in making Beaverbrook, that I found it not advisable to attempt going in a sleigh and returned. JANUARY 10 TUESDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 28. About a half inch of snow fell last night. Received by the morning mail a draft for $15.00 from the Sun to pay the loss of George Bard. I drove over to John Vail’s in the AM to arrange for the renewal of his insurance on the 13th instant and returned at noon. On my way over, I gave S. W. Bradley the bags he brought potatoes in to Harry Biddescombe. On my way home, I saw Mortimer Rundle on Elm Street and told him that I had got through fooling with Herbert Wildman about the $100 premium on their policy and should make somebody trouble. After dinner, I mailed a legal 5-days’ notice to Rundle & White and registered the letter. Before going to Stony Hill this morning, Arthur Stowe came in and signed a return premium receipt for cancellation of Reliance policy No. 129762 that we may rewrite a policy covering his furniture store in another location. About 4 PM, I called on Mrs. Regan on Foster Street to see if she could give me more information on her parents, the lack of which rejects her for insurance in the Equitable. Not being at home, I made the trip for nothing. Old Mr. William Lyon died today in Orchard Street at his daughter’s. JANUARY 11 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 20. A mixed and partially cloudy day but no storm. I went up to Mallory’s shop in the morning and arranged for the renewal of Charles Pierce’s furniture policy. After dinner, I mailed a letter to the Sun regarding the cancellation of the Rundle & White policy on account of non –payment of premium to me by Herbert Wildman. I bought meat at Joe Knowlton’s and sent it home .I took the receipt from the postal card from Rundle & White’s cancellation of Herbert Wildman’s broker policy. I called at Daragan’s shoe store for shoes for Mrs. Dean. I then called on Ann Regan at 5 Foster Street to find out if I could more about her family history, ages of her father and mother at death, etc. in the matter of life insurance. I sent a pension certificate by young Mrs. Griffith to Melissa Griffith. While we were at supper, Fred Vail called and arranged for the renewal of their policy in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company on the 13th instant. After supper, I went over to brother George’s and carried a calendar for him to give to L. Robinson, a shop mate of his and a customer of ours. I brought home a pincushion Sarah has been making for me. On my return, I found the house locked, Mary and Mrs. Hawley having gone to the Baptist church to hear “The Rocking Chair Evangelist.” I called for a short time on our neighbor, Mr. Rogers. JANUARY 12 THURSDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 32. Rain. I spent the forenoon in the office. I looked up the State Mutual Life Insurance of Mass. to make comparisons with the Equitable for use with George in George Bedient’s case who is contemplating life insurance and is considering the State Mutual with Hodge. William Harris from Miry Brook called about 3 PM for me to go out there tomorrow morning and insure his property, formerly the George Allen place. About 4 PM, I went downtown and came home by way of Stevens Street and delivered a policy to Jennie Bratton, endorsed transfer and then delivered the policy to Thomas Ferry on Cherry Street and returned to James Newton his policy with loss endorsed therein. I then called on V. V. Morrell who is sick with La Grippe. After supper, I took a car over to Sarah Austin’s on White Street to get her policy for cancellation and rewriting at minimum rates. On my return, I went over to brother George’s for coffee which arrived from New York on Friday. Old Mr. William Lyon’s funeral was attended this evening at his daughter’s on Orchard Street. His remains will be taken to Southport tomorrow for burial. JANUARY 13 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 28. Pleasant and growing colder. Received by the morning mail a check for $5.58 from the Commercial Union for payment to John Greeley for loss under his Greenwich policy which occurred on December 26. Also a letter from the Sun Insurance office justifying our action in the Rundle & White cancellation matter vs. Herbert Wildman and referring the matter to Special Agent Hatch to instruct in the matter. About 10 AM, Mr. Beeman went with me over to Miry Brook to take insurance from Mr. Harris on his property. From there, we came home by way of Dewey’s Inn and returned to Mrs. Ada Bradley her policy with endorsement of loss on same. After dinner, I went over to Sarah Austin’s at 234 White Street to get her release of old policy prior to writing a new one on the same property but did not find her at home. On my return, I called at the Express Office for the Pig Model for brother George which came to him with no card explain who it was from or what it was for, on which account, thinking mistake had been made he returned it, but since receiving a letter explaining and as designating him as being the proper recipient. On my way downtown, I met Emil Popke and took an order for $1,000 furniture insurance at 55 Jefferson Avenue. The stamp clerk returned the D. R. of John Vail for correction on the rate for tobacco. I think we is wrong and we are correct in this matter. I tried this PM to see him and adjust it but could not find him. In the evening, I went over to White Street again to have Sarah Austin sign a return rate premium for cancellation of insurance, which she did and before retiring, I mailed it to the company. John Greeley came in the evening and signed a receipt for a draft for $5.50 for a loss at Christmas time. He did so and I cashed the draft. I retired at 10:30. JANUARY 14 SATURDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 16. Pleasant. A break in the water main in the street near my driveway which they commenced to repair this morning and shut the water off in consequence. An overlooked October accident account with Loomis & Nettleton, I made out this morning and enclosed a check. I made a bank deposit. Mrs. Mary Osterhaut called just at dinner time and paid for furniture insurance. Charles Bevans called in the PM and wanted to borrow $2.00; I did not lend. Mrs. Hawley rode with me downtown about 4 PM to do our Sunday marketing. Mrs. Jennie Townsend called in the evening and paid her insurance. George and Sarah came over in the evening and George and I called on Mrs. Gross to have her read the German instructions on how to make a hedgehog from a clay pig sent to him from New York. I called to see Mr. Hickok in the evening. He is dying; every hour may be his last. Mina Dean called in the evening. A. H. Hawes called in the PM and we settled about the rate on the tobacco in John Vail’s dwelling, wood house and wagon house. I endorsed the loss on the Greely policy. JANUARY 15 SUNDAY – Mercury at 7 AM – 8. Pleasant and cold. Mr. Hickok died this morning at 7:20. Mary attended church this morning. Lottie and Julia Hirsh came from Sunday School and took dinner with us. After dinner, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s and he examined the pocket, i.e., the opening which never fully closed in my scrotum where he made an operation about two years ago. There being nothing serious about it and no trouble, not even any inconvenience, he says to leave it alone; it will do no harm. The children returned home by trolley at 4:30 PM. While at Dr. Sunderland’s he paid me $4.20 for coffee which George Purdy ordered for him for New York. We called a few minutes over to Mr. Hickok’s about 4 PM, his father now a corpse in the house. I then went down to Dr. Clark’s and left Ann Regan’s application with the doctor’s examination (a copy) for him to go over again and write to the Equitable life Insurance Company, explaining further in the case. As it stands now, it is not satisfactory to the Company. In the evening, we went over to brother George’s and spent the evening and gave him the $4.20 from Dr. Sunderland for coffee. JANUARY 16 MONDAY – Mercury at 6 AM - 18. Pleasant. We wrote up Rebecca Warner; also one for George Stevens & Son on John Green and delivered both; also one to James Doran. After dinner, I went downtown and had my hair cut by Silvsestri and called on Fred Seymour to collect on account of his furniture policy but did not succeed; collected $2.00 from Frank Verra. Mary went out this PM for a call on Aunt Sarah Boughton. The 5 days legal notice of the cancellation of the Rundle & White policy expires today of which we have heard nothing. George Purdy came over with his clay pig to exhibit it to Mrs. Gross who last Saturday evening translated the German instruction on how to make a hedgehog of it. He also brought me a check for $16.00 to the Larkin Soap Company for Emmaline Glaus’ soap order. I today got the last three bottles of liprizene to make a half dozen for $5.00 of James Doran on account of his store insurance on furniture and fixtures. JANUARY 17 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 22. Pleasant. After George arrived from Bethel, I drove down to Dr. Clark’s to see about a letter he was to write to the Equitable in the Ann Regan case, but found that he was away from home. I then drove up to Hoyt Street and delivered a policy to Charles Pierce and collected the premium. I also delivered one to Flint & Smith and left Adelia Dean’s policy at the Union Savings Bank. I got a calendar of E. E. Hamilton for Mrs. Hawley. I came home, put up the horse and then went downtown to do some marketing. After dinner, I went over and reviewed the insurance of Clark Hickok. His funeral was attended at 2: 30 PM at which I was a pall bearer. After supper, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s with a calendar and delivered his quarterly renewal for standard accident policy for $5,000 due tomorrow, after which I took the trolley over to Samuel Hayes on Meadow Street and arranged renewal of his house insurance and arranged for an increase from $1,800 to $2,500 on same and gave him a calendar. I met J. Holton on the car. He has given up his hat store in Bridgeport and returned to Danbury and is working at hatting again, now at Mallory’s. On the way over to Mr. Hagen’s I met Herman with Lottie and Georgie. I gave an old pension certificate of Sarah Cromwell to William Knowlton. JANUARY 18 WEDNESDAY – Mercury at 6AM – 20. Pleasant. In the forenoon, I delivered policies and arranged some renewals. After dinner, Fannie called and she rode with me up to Millard’s store to see Mike Regan. She then took a car to do some trading. I gave Mrs. Hawley a pitcher of cider for mince pies. I wrote to George VanFleet at New Haven for some medical examination blanks for the Equitable and mailed it in the evening. I then went up to Dr. Sunderland’s with Mary, but he was not at home, being out for the evening if not for the night attending the doctor’s banquet at the Turner House. JANUARY 19 THURSDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 32.Pleasant in the morning, but some indications of a coming storm. George brought in the Sarah Austin Connecticut policy cancelled and rewrote on the 13th instant at minimum rates for 3years which policy we today mailed to her. In the PM, I received (after mailing the policy to Mrs. Austin) a note from her to write the same for one year only. Before dinner, I rode over to E. S. Fairchild’s to ascertain about the mortgagee in the Hambridge policy. After dinner, Josiah Day called to make an application for an increase in pension under the old age order. I wrote to Special Agent Hatch of the Sun for further instructions in the Wildman and Rundle & White matter. Just before supper, I went up to Mrs. Mary Maybie’s to deliver a $2,500 policy in the Agricultural Insurance Company. James Patilla called in the evening to have his furniture policy transferred from the Bates place to his own dwelling on 246 White Street. Mary this evening attended our special revival services at the church. Office work prevented me from attending. JANUARY 20 FRIDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 34. Pleasant. I rose early and met Josiah Day at the Post office about 9 AM for his signature on an application for an increase in pension on account of old age erroneously signed last evening. He did so in the presence of George as notary. I called on Stamp Clerk Hawes regarding furniture insurance for Mrs. Turner at Plum Trees in a frame dwelling. I then rode up to Morelock & Rusk and got a check. On my return, I stopped at Rundle & White’s to talk over the Herbert Wildman insurance matter. Not being in their office, I met George Rundle as I was going away and had a talk with him. In the PM, I delivered a policy to George Andrews on his store and he paid one dollar on account. Just before supper, I delivered a policy to Francis Benedict and collected the premium. I mailed the application of Josiah Day for an increase in pension on account of old age to the commissioner of pensions. The son of Fred Vail called this evening for their fire insurance policy in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. JANUARY 21 SATURDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 2. Fairly pleasant in the morning. It gradually became cloudy and after dinner, began to snow. As soon as George came from Bethel, I drove over to Mrs. Sarah Austin’s on White Street, but had to go to the Danbury Hat Factory to see her about changing her policy recently written for three years to a one year policy. From there, I came home by way of Liberty Street and collected premium from Adelia Dean for store and dwelling insurance policy, then did some marketing and came home. I found the son of L. Foster Lyon at the office talking life insurance with George. I made up a deposit and went to the bank with it before dinner. Mrs. Dwight Camp called with Mr. Camp’s tobacco policy for cancellation, he having sold the tobacco. About tea time, Arthur Booth called for his furniture policy and paid for same. Saul Hager called and paid for his policy which we left at the Danbury Savings Bank today. Also Augusta Popke sent a $3.00 balance on her policy due on her insurance since last September. Old Mrs. Depew, mother- in-law of Hart Purdy, died this morning. JANUARY 22 SUNDAY – Mercury at 7 AM – 30. It snowed moderately during last night and continued gently until noon. The sun came out in the afternoon. I went to the Post Office at noon, got the Sunday Press and then called on cousin Hart Purdy, where the remains of his mother-in-law, Mrs. Jane Depew lie. On my way home, I met Carroll Rider. He has a similar case with Frank Benedict as I have with Herbert Wildman on a broker policy with Rundle & White. We, of course, could confer and sympathize. The weather is mild and if it continues with sunshine tomorrow, the 4 inches of snow we have will disappear. In the evening, I wrote a letter for Mary to Clara Watkins. JANUARY 23 MONDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 7. Clear and cold with a prospect of a few day’s sleighing from the 4 inches of snow and the cold to hold it. I hitched the sleigh and drove to Dr. Clark’s about 9 AM to get his letter to Dr. Curtis (head medical man of the Equitable) regarding the Ann Regan rejected case. He promised to write it for me today. I the collected $5.00 on account from Fred Seymour; also $4.50 from William Repola as per agreement. I drove up to 15 Summit Street to see about the renewal of W. Warden, but found that he had gone up to Great Plain. On my return, I took in Mr. J. S. McCullum’s daughter, Edith and gave her a sleigh ride to her dinner on 21 Pleasant Street. I attended the funeral of Mrs. Jane Depew at cousin Hart Purdy’s. Frank Loper called in the PM to see what it would cost to insure household furniture. He wanted a calendar, but we had none left. JANUARY 24 TUESDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 9. Pleasant but cool. George brought from Bethel this morning a case to write for Louise Turner, grass widow (Ed. Note – A woman who is divorced or separated from her husband or an abandoned mistress) of Irving Turner, $500 on her furniture in the house of George Lawlor in the Plum Trees district. Received from the Commercial Union Greenwich policy, the Pitella endorsed policy. Great excitement and many lives lost shot down by soldiers at St. Petersburg, riots and great bloodshed and promises to be the commencement of a Russian Revolution. In the morning, I went over to Rundle & White’s factory and talked over the insurance policy of $5,000 I wrote on the 26th of last May for Herbert Wildman. I made a compromise proposition to them and am to see them tomorrow morning for their reply. Just before dinner, Mr. Beeman rode with me, first to Clarence Morgan’s for him to order some coal, and the with me to Great Plain to see Mr. William Warden about renewing his furniture policy. He has no occasion as he has broken up housekeeping. As I went, I saw George Morgan about the renewal of his policy. After dinner, I went over to John Parslow’s and collected $16.80 for insurance on two dwellings, no. 5 and 7 Williams Street. It has snowed moderately and in a squally way since the middle of the forenoon. I remained in the office for the remainder of the day. JANUARY 25 WEDNESDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 14. Snow and wind last night, giving us a blizzard this morning. George arrived from Bethel about 8:30. I went over to Rundle & White’s about 10 o’clock and arranged the Herbert Wildman insurance matter by cancelling the present policy at 8 months and rewriting the $5,000 direct from Rundle & White. A continuing blizzard all day with about 18 inches of snow up to 5 PM. I stayed in the office in the PM. I substituted cut paper No. 34 in the office door until a painter can put them in properly. I also busied myself changing No. 18 to No. 34 on envelopes. JANUARY 26 THURSDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – zero. Clear and very cold. Everything buried in snow. The drifts are waist deep in some places. It is difficult to find an even place to measure as to depth, but there must be about 1 ½ feet of snow on a level. I shoved the snow path except for the front walk which George completed when he arrived about 10 o’clock from Bethel. Just before dinner, I went over to the Rundle & White factory and delivered the $5,000 policy as per agreement and took up and cancelled the one which had been in force for 8 months. The same being in adjusting the Herbert Wildman broker policy which he appropriated the premium of $100 much to the discomfort of Rundle & White and myself. The James Shelby piano policy came to me this PM to increase the same from $250 to $325 which I did as requested and mailed the policy with a bill to Mr. Shelby at New Milford. I gave the same to Postman Phil Owen to be mailed about 4 PM. About 5 PM, I took a trolley car to go over to 234 White Street to see Mrs. Sarah Austin about making the policy written on the 13th instant a one year or longer term. She decided to have it for one year. I took it away with me to make it as directed. I returned home about 6:30. On my way, I met Howard Betts and arranged for the renewal of his policy tomorrow. JANUARY 27 FRIDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 8. We finished the snow shoveling were unable to do yesterday. I wrote to Judge William Conley, attorney for Mrs. Austin, also for Alice Jennings, mortgagor for Mrs. Austin for her signature with that of Mrs. Austin in release of the cancelled policy. I also wrote the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company explaining and endorsing the cancelled policy and with the same sent a check for $66.00 for the November balance. After dinner, I went over to Mrs. Eugene Selleck’s to ascertain if possible about Rollo Goodell as to his whereabouts, the situation of his farm property which he has apparently abandoned, etc. Mary went over to brother George in the PM. Fanny and little Julia called for a few minutes early in the evening, after which about 7 PM, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s with Mary. On the way, I mailed a letter to the Flint Building Company of Providence, R. I. about the Rollo Goodell mortgage. On her way home from work tonight, Mrs. Virginia McKnight called for two Metropolitan Life Insurance Company calendars which I promised her. JANUARY 28 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 28. Just a little flurry of snow last night but the moon shone bright early this morning. I wrote Herbert Wildman this morning notifying him that we had cancelled the Rundle & White policy in self-defense, them and us assuming the loss until at such time he returns the $100 premium to them. About 10:30, I went over to the D. G. Renfield Company and delivered policy of $3,000. On the way, I stopped at Rundle & White’s and told them that I had notified Herbert Wildman that their policy had been cancelled and that the return of the $100 premium to Rundle & White was in order. I got the New York Press, made some purchases at the Village Store, ordered oats and bran of C. W. Keeler and came home. George brought us a chicken from Mrs. Becker at $.18/lb. The oats and bran order came in in part about 5 PM – 100 lbs. Of bran but only one bag of the four ordered of oats. JANUARY 29 SUNDAY A clear cold morning; mercury at noon about 24. I went to the Post Office and for my paper at noon. After dinner, I went down to Dr. Clark’s for the explanatory letter to Dt. Curtis at the Equitable office concerning the Ann Regan life insurance application. I caught him and obtained the letter. After which, I mailed the endorsement of transfer of Jane Depew’s transfer of policy to the Agricultural Insurance Company. I attended church in the evening with Mary to hear the revivalist Henry Delany. JANUARY 30 MONDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 14. Hazy in the morning with the appearance of snow. Before Dinner, George went with me driving for the collection, etc. of Lottie Cowl, Frank Verra and Wallace Williams. We also drove up to Elroy E. Boudry’s at 40 Westville Avenue to see about the renewal of furniture insurance in the Danbury Mutual Company; we find that it expires on February 20. Sarah Keeler called at noon and I paid six months’ interest from last May to November 1904 on my $100 note ($2.50). I this morning mailed Dr. Clark’s letter (in the Ann Regan case) to George VanFleet to forward to Dr. Curtis to whom it is addressed. Just at night, I went over to Mrs. Keeler’s on 39 Stevens Street and endorsed the interest paid to November 1904 and came home by way of Main Street. The afternoon has been pleasant. Mrs. Tosi came in about 76 PM and paid their February rent. JANUARY 31 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 14 below. The coldest morning thus far this winter. Wrote a policy this morning for N. T. Buckley on the C. H. Merritt shop in the name of North American Hat Company in the amount of $5,000 in the Sun. Also on the estate of Margaret Sprague on a barn on the Agricultural Insurance Company and left the same at the Danbury Savings Bank, both being for February 1st. We also ordered supplies of the Reliance. Mrs. Branch came in after dinner and paid the rent. About 3 PM, I went downtown for some errands and got a rate on Stevens’ market, 1.7% to insure Michael Darak who keeps meat in ½ of the store. I bought a piece of pork for George S. at the Village Store and left it at his house on my way home. I also engaged ½ ton of hay at A. H. Barnum’s to be bought tomorrow. At his place, I telephoned to C. L. Morgan to bring me furnace coal tomorrow. Mrs. Hawley called a few minutes in the evening. Also Mr. J. Herbert Holton called for one of our agent calendars, but I had not one left.
1905-01
Horace Purdy Journal December 1904 Entry
8pgs
DECEMBER 01 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 25. Pleasant. Before dinner, I signed an endorsement for a Reliance policy on E. A. Mallory & Sons for George C. Stevens & Sons written by them when they represented the Reliance, changing same to firm name of E. A. Mallory & Sons, Inc. I delivered same. I called at the bank about my note of $100 due today. I paid it. Then, Mr. Beeman being with me, we drove up to Mr. Corbulon’s fruit store on Patch Street and delivered his policy and collected, then delivered a furniture policy to Clarence Nelson, bookkeeper at Roger’s Silverplate Shop. From there, we drove over to Sarah Austin’s store and dwelling on White Street to see if the store had been removed that a reduced insurance rate may be given it. After dinner, I walked downtown and gave the bank a check to pay the note and went to Meeker’s Hat Shop to find Bert Hitchcock. Not finding him, I went to his home on Maple Avenue, and his mother gave me his policy for transfer or cancellation. Then I called at the silver plate shop for Nelson’s policy, then came home about 4 PM. George and Sarah were with again in the evening. Mrs. Virginia McKnight called this evening to say that Arthur Durgie had resumed work, being disabled for one week only. DECEMBER 02 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. Hazy with the appearance of snow but neither storm nor sunshine. I was kept busy all the forenoon doing insurance correspondence with the Connecticut Insurance Company regarding the Targett & Siemon new laundry risk, making Agricultural report and notifying Standard Accident of Arthur Durgie’s one week disability claim. After dinner, George Olmstead called to arrange for unoccupancy for two or three months which he expects to be away from home. About 4 PM, I went downtown and got Davis Knapp’s PO order for $5.40 cashed and arranged with E. Pancirole for renewal of the Italian Co-operative Grocery Provision Company. George and Sarah came over again in the evening. DECEMBER 03 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 20. Colder. Sent by early morning mail a dunning letter for $10.00 to the estate of John Wixtead. The day being cloudy, chilly and cold with an indication of snow, I stayed in the office all day except about 4 PM when I went hastily downtown for Sunday marketing. Just before going, Mrs. Lucy Haines called as she promised and said that she had decided to let Mr. Budd do her insurance at Brewster. I therefore at once cancelled her insurance in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company covering her barn, etc. In the PM, I burned rubbish in my yard. Discussion with George as to the Sun liability with Rundle & White on Wildman’s broker policy with us when Wildman neglect to pay. 2 ½ pounds of coffee and ½ pounds of tea came today which brother George ordered from New York. 15 pounds came in the same shipment from Dr. Sunderland which George delivered, but the doctor not being in, he did not collect. He with Sarah spent the evening with us again. When they went home, I wrote a letter to A. J. Hoyt, US pension agent at Boston making inquiry as to whether a pension voucher issued on Sunday would be legal. DECEMBER 04 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 24. Hazy, cloudy, cold and unpleasant. Not a moment’s sunshine or not a drop of rain or a flake of snow. A beautiful red in the west at sunset thought the sun never shone. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came after Sunday School and stayed in the PM. I received by mail a voucher to sign for new life insurance renewals which I signed and also mailed with it to Schiffer, agent at New Haven; also my new fire insurance account to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company in Hartford. Mary dictated a letter which I wrote for her to Clara Watkins at Hartford requesting her to come and make us a two or three week visit over the holidays. We called on brother George in the evening. On the way, we called on Dr. Sunderland. He gave a check for George to pay for his 15 pounds of coffee which came yesterday. Notwithstanding clouds and threatening of storm, it became clear about sundown and a beautiful starlit evening. DECEMBER 05 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 14. Clear until after daylight when it became cloudy and about 2:30PM, it began snowing and continued through the day. It being Pension day, we were very busy. After dinner, Mr. Beeman rode with me to make vouchers for the cripples, lame and lazy and old widows. We were caught in a snowstorm before our return. Rachel Dickenson, a widow of the Revolutionary War, lies at the point of death. I took her signature by X mark at her bedside. She will probably never sign another voucher. J. L. Day came early in the evening and made his voucher. He will make an application for an increase under the old age order, he being 65 years old, which will give him now $8.00 instead of $6.00. It ceased snowing at bedtime, about 9 o’clock. DECEMBER 06 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 14. A beautiful sunshine morning. The cleaning of the paths was the first thing on order this morning. George finished them when he came from Bethel. James Martin called about 9 AM, of course to borrow something on the strength of his pension to come in a few days. I allowed him a small amount. I delivered to E. Pancirole on the Italian Co-operative Grocery and Provision Company for which he paid me. In the PM, George drove Gip to the blacksmith shop and left her there to be shod while I went down to Dr. Clark’s for his statement as to the treatment of Arthur Durgie’s finger which was hurt and for which he makes a claim for one week’s disability to the Standard Accident Insurance Company of Detroit, after which I went to Gage’s shop for Gip. She having been shod, I drove home. After which, I went up to Fancher’s shop and had Durgie sign and execute his proof of claim to the accident insurance company. George and Sarah came over for the evening. He got shopped and went to Mallory’s shop for the first time in about a week. W. H. Merritt came in the PM and made his pension papers; Elias Osborne came this evening. DECEMBER 07 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – Sunshine at intervals during the day. Most of the time however, squally looking clouds prevailed. Between 8 and 9 AM, I went up to Fancher’s shop and got his eyewitness statement as to the hurt Arthur Durgie received for which he is making a claim. I mailed the proof of said claim today to Loomis & Nettleton, agents to the accident insurance company. James Martin came in the morning to borrow on his pension check which will come in a few days. After dinner, I drove over to Beaverbrook to see about furniture insurance of Eliza Hoddinott which she has moved from John Street in the city to her son John Hoddinott’s at Beaverbrook and stored them in an outbuilding. I cancelled the policy. After I returned, I delivered a policy to Joseph Pond on White Street and collected the premium of $30.48. Peter Hardwick called in the evening and made his pension voucher which I completed and mailed. I received a check from cashier Schiffer for my commissions on the second quarter of John Watkins life insurance which he mailed to New Haven. DECEMBER 08 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 28. Fire alarm 32 struck last night about 10 o’clock for a fire in the 5 & 10 cent store which is pretty well burned out. A little before daylight this morning, it began snowing moderately. Before dinner, I went up to the Union Shop and arranged for a renewal of sand paper stock for Charles Croft and before I left I took an order for a $500 furniture policy for Joseph Gauche at 72 Elm Street. S. W. Bradley brought the two bushels of potatoes to George Purdy which I had engaged of him. In the evening, William Bedient came in with two other members of the painters union to make an oath in a funeral benefit claim in the loss of life of the wife of one of the parties. About 8: 30 in the evening, after executing papers for Bedient and others, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s with the duplicate of his life insurance examination by Dr. Clark on December 29, 1898 for his record as to a family record, etc. in contemplation for an application for new insurance. DECEMBER 09 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 18. Pleasant; received my pension check this morning. Mr. Beeman received his last night. He came in and paid me the $2.00 he borrowed of me. A postal by mail this morning, from Col. Saul Gregory to come up to his place and make out his pension voucher for him, he being unable to come down. George and Mr. Beeman drove up there and attended to it. A fire last night about 10 o’clock destroyed a house owned by John Walsh on the west end of Highland Avenue. Another call for the firemen about 9 o’clock this morning on Cherry Street. A chimney fire in a house occupied by James Newton insured by us in the Greenwich Insurance Company on furniture. A small damage will come to us from it. I immediately notified the Commercial Union, the reinsurers of the Greenwich Insurance Company. After dinner, I mailed up and mailed the Sun account for November, enclosing the cancelled Bert Hitchcock policy. I called at the Turner Machine Shop with the tools policy for Henry Biddescombe. I called on William Lyon at the Renfield Wholesale Store on Rose Street to try and write him up for life insurance but could not. On returning, called on Mr. Daragan to insure more on his stock if possible; he will wait for an inventory to ascertain the amount wanted. At 5:20 PM, the postman brought pension checks for Fred Bevans, Charles Bevans, Joel Bates and John Cree. During the evening. Fred Bevans called and I cashed his check. George and Sarah were over in the evening. Fannie also called. DECEMBER 10 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 14. Cloudy with indications of snow in the morning. About 3 PM, it commenced snowing gently and continued through the day and evening. I went downtown in the forenoon ad made a deposit in the bank. I saw Herbert Wildman and got another good promise for the $100 he owes me on the Rundle & White insurance. I saw Mortimer Rundle in the bank regarding it; he was surprised that Wildman had not paid me. Joel Bates called in the morning and I cashed his pension check for him. In the PM, I got a check for $57.00 of Jake Hartz on account. George Nelson called about 5:20 PM to see about $1.50 due him for transfer to a lower rated location. Clarence Wilson called in the PM and paid $3.00 on account of furniture insurance. DECEMBER 11 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 5; at noon – 24. Pleasant and very cold; the coldest we have had yet this winter. The water pipe to our sink froze for the first time but it was easily started however with a little warm water. About 10 AM, Frank Hart called and for his wife, Celia Hart paid $3.00 on house rent which he promised to pay yesterday, there being now $1.00 balance due. Grandchildren Lottie and Julia Hirsch came from Sunday School and were with us to dinner. In the PM, I mailed our November account to the Reliance Insurance Company and enclosed a check for the August balance. In the evening, we went over to George Purdy’s, prior to which I called at Charles Sherwood’s to see how old Mrs. Dickenson was, as she is not expected to live day to day as she is 93 years old. While at George’s, I cashed his pension check for $18.00, deducting the $10.00 he owes me for money borrowed to pay his rent on December 1. MONDAY DECEMBER 12 - Mercury at 6 AM – 10. Not entirely clear yet not stormy in the morning. Later, there began to be flurries of snow which continued more or less all day without more than 2 inches of snow. Mrs. Hawley borrowed 50 cents of me this morning. George and I drove over to Mrs. McDermott’s on West Wooster Street and arranged for the renewal of her little store building, then to Lake Avenue and renewed W. H. Jones and Mrs. Catherine Ryan. I then left George at the office and drove over to 11 James Street and renewed Mrs. Susanna Taylor. After dinner, I rested in the office until 3 o’clock and then went over to White Street and renewed William Charles and brother; then took a car at West Wooster Street to renew for Frank Andrews. James Martin called this morning for his pension check, but it had not yet arrived. It snowed steady all evening. DECEMBER 13 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 25. It snowed all last night and still at it at 10 AM with 20 inches of snow. As yet no wind accompanying the storm and the snow lies pretty and level. Before dinner, I put on my hip boots and went downtown and left Mrs. Emma Taylor’s policy at the Union Savings bank; also one on the pipe organ at the 1st Congregational Church with Mr. Rundle and received his order for payment on Rev. Reynolds, the church treasurer. James Martin called in the forenoon for his pension check, but it had not come. About 3:30 PM, I went into the street and got G. Rundle’s order on Perry Reynolds, the treasurer of the 1st Eccliastical Society for the premium on the church organ insurance cashed. I then called on William Conklin, engineer at the Turner Machine Shop and got $2.00 on account of his insurance. DECEMBER 14 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 6 above. Another very cold morning. When George arrived at 8:30, we finished digging out snow and got the sleigh out from upstairs in the barn. James Martin called again to get his pension check, but was disappointed as it had not arrived. I let him have another dollar on same, making it $4.00 advanced on same. Before dinner, I went downtown and called on Wagner Brothers, clothiers on White Street for $1,000 insurance by word of J. Hartz. They did not deal today, but promised to consider it. I received by morning mail forms from Lewis Reed wishing us to write $750 on the shop of P. Young & Sons. I wrote back on the forms “Please Excuse Us.” Ruth Waterman called after dinner with her voucher returned for correction; George omitted the date on the first. I supplied the want and remailed the voucher. About 4 PM, I delivered the Shaffer Brothers policy and collected same. Also $5.00 on account of Fred Seymour. About 5 PM, the postman delivered the pension check for James Martin. DECEMBER 15 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 4 below. The coldest morning yet this winter. James Martin called for his pension check. I cashed it for him. I delivered Frank Andrew’s policy to Mrs. E. Mallory, mortgagor. I got another bottle of Liprozine on account of insurance of James Doran. I called again to see Charles Watts about renewing policy on his barn. Not being able to see him, we wrote the policy and sent it to him by mail. After dinner, Mr. Beeman went with me (our first sleigh ride) and I collected from Mrs. Emma Taylor the $7.00 balance of her account. I called at William Charles Brothers, the corner of White Street and Ives Street to deliver a policy. He being undecided about accepting it, I promised to hold it open for his acceptance until next Monday. From there, we drove to Bell’s Lane off River Street to see a Mr. Repoli for furniture insurance; we did not find him at home. We went later and found him. I secured a policy of $500 on furniture for a 5 year term. I also delivered a policy to William Jarvis on his store. I found him sick; his son promised to send a check tomorrow. After tea, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s to see how he is. Yesterday he was sick n bed. He is better, having been out attending to his patients today. He wants 5 lbs. more coffee. From there I went over to brother George’s on Montgomery Street and gave the order. Charles Betts called in the evening and paid $4.50 the first half of the rent. DECEMBER 16 FRIDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 25. A $5.00 check from Standard Accident Insurance Company for one week of disability for Arthur Durgie was received this morning from Loomis & Nettleton, state agents at New Haven. I delivered the same before dinner and cashed it for Mr. Durgie. I also received notice from the Pension Bureau that an old age pension had been granted to Andrew Bell; I drove up there and told him, after which and before noon, I drove over to Clarence Morgan’s with Mr. Beeman for him to pay for a tone of coal and for myself to tell Clarence to finish putting in my coal. After dinner, Charles Watts called to say that he had received his policy on his barn and will in a few days’ pay on the same. Charles Bevans called while I was out for his pension check; George delivered it to him. After dinner, Robert Chambers called and endorsed a blank note for me to use in the bank for such amount as I may need for discount about January 1st. I gave him calendars for the New Year -1905. While doing my barn work about 5 PM, George Brush called for two Agricultural calendars. Following that, Mrs. David Hoyt called and paid me a $2.00 fee for the age increase of David’s pension. About 3 PM, I carried Mary down to Dr. Oley’s for eye treatment. While away, Nellie Johnson left a note on my desk to call tomorrow at her place of business at 209 Main Street. Mrs. James Newton called just before tea to see if I had heard from the insurance company about her damage. Fannie Hirsch and Sonya Lyon called about 8:45 in the evening. DECEMBER 17 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM- 2. Letter this morning from W. Furness, special agent of Commercial Union Company, re-insurers of Greenwich Insurance Company, asking for more particular description of the James Newton damage. I went over there and looked up the matter and then wrote Special Agent Furness and recommended a half damage on the value of the carpet - $6.00 and the value of a child’s dress - $1.00. See letter of this date. I then went down and made a deposit in the bank. I called on Nellie Johnson as requested yesterday by a note left on my desk. She wanted to know about her pension voucher received with her last check. Arthur Barnum delivered before dinner 10 bushels of oats I ordered yesterday. In the evening, Charles Watts called and paid me the insurance on his barn. Also Clarence Wilson called and paid me the balance due on his furniture insurance. Mary is having another attack of her liver problem which nearly prostrated her. Minnie Wilberg’s rent is overlooked; she supposed it had been paid. DECEMBER 18 SUNDAY – Mercury at 7 AM – 25. The day has been pleasant though about 4 inches of snow fell during the night. Mary is still feeling badly though around and still doing her work. Mrs. Hawley came over and helped her make a chicken pot pie for dinner. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came from Sunday School and took dinner with us returning home about 4:30 PM. I mailed a check for the August balance to the Agricultural Insurance Company. I shoveled all the paths this forenoon and went to the post office at noon. I felt pretty tired the remainder of the day. George and Sarah spent the evening with us. I wrote the Watkins family for Mary and George mailed it as they returned home. A beautiful moonlit night. DECEMBER 19 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 10. A hazy frosty morning without sunshine. Received by mail from W. Furness, Special Agent of the Commercial Union, and a short proof of loss of James Newton loss under Greenwich policy No. 2668093 reinsured for us to make up and refer to him. Before dinner, I drove over to 14 James Street and delivered a policy transferred thereto for Charles Small and gave to his wife, $1.42 returned premium for lesser rate in this location. From there I drove up to Lake Avenue to see if Andrew Bell had received pension papers from Boston in the matter of age increase allowed him. He has not yet received them. Mary received a letter from M. Delos Thomas from Bridgeport. In the PM, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s for a bottle of lame back medicine for Mrs. Hawley. From there, I went to the Foster Brothers’ shop and delivered a furniture policy to William Elwell. From there to William Charles & Brothers’ Fruit Store on White Street to deliver a policy. They put me off until next Monday the 26th. Received a check from Charles Hallstead for $2.00 for his barn. Mrs. Ella Smith sent her husband Arthur Smith and her policy for endorsed permit for other insurance. Nathan Hoy called for a large agent’s calendar. DECEMBER 20 TUESDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 22. A beautiful morning. About 9 AM, I called on James Newton at Cherry Street to see why he did not call last night and sign proof papers for his loss. I arranged to see him tonight. I then with Mr. Beeman (taking Mary over to Sarah’s as we went), went to Frank Verra’s at 169 Main Street to deliver a furniture policy. I received a letter from the Sun Insurance Company asking for the September balance, which I mailed to them by check in the PM. I then called at the Foster Brothers’’ shop and received a check for $5.00 from Wilbur Elwell in payment for furniture insurance. Then over to Clark’s Box Shop with an agent’s calendar for John Coyne. I stopped at Hugh Allen’s store and met Mary and Sarah there. Jake Hartz stopped me near Spiro’s clothing store and took me to task for George dunning them for a broker policy on his account. I pacified him and he promised to pay before January 1st. About 4 PM, I wrote a letter for Mary to Clara Watkins in which she enclosed a dollar for a Christmas present. About 8 o’clock in the evening, I went over to Cherry Street thinking to get James Newton’s signature on loss proof. I did not succeed as he had not yet arrived home. DECEMBER 21 WEDNESDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – I arose at 5 AM thinking to catch Mr. Newton as he took the freight train to Norwalk (of which he is conductor) to sign the proof of loss, but he did not stop. George and Lill made me a Christmas present of two night shirts. I slept in one of them last night for the first time. They are very nice and comfortable. About 10 AM, I with Mr. Beeman drove down to Frank Verra’s and received from Ms. Verra an order for renewal of their furniture insurance policy. I then delivered one to William Repoli at the barber shop on White Street. I also went to the Union Shop to see Joseph Gancher as to his policy already written. We then came home and I let Beeman take the horse and give his wife a sleigh ride out to Fry’s corner for an errand and then to go to the Dewey Inn for me to see the brick chimney Mr. Bradley, the owner said he had built at our request. He found it all right. I wrote a dunning letter to Arthur Dibble at Bethel and also mailed a calendar to him. In the PM, I took Mary up to Mrs. Raymond’s. I then delivered a policy to Mrs. Frank Verra on furniture and she paid me $2.00 on account. We also drove out to Clarence Morgan’s to have him bring me some furnace coal if possible tomorrow morning. Fannie called just at night and took tea with us. George and Sarah came in the evening and brought 2 ½ pounds of coffee from New York. Also five pounds for Dr. Sunderland which I sent up and delivered and collected for same. I gave George a check to send to Mrs. Kimball to pay a bill to her for coffee, etc. About 8:30 in the evening, on his way home from his train, Mr. Frank Newton called and signed a proof of loss under the Greenwich Insurance Company, reinsured in the Commercial Union. I mailed the proof before retiring. Charles Dean called in the evening to notify me that Frank Oeztel had sold his grocery to his wife Adelia Dean and to change the policy. DECEMBER 22 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 4 below. Mr. Beeman rode with me to arrange the Oetzel policy, then we got an express box for Beeman at the Express Office. I called on Sunderland’s shop with agent calendars. We then called on Byron Dexter’s house on Pleasant Street about a renewal on his house but, he being sick, I did not see him. Clarence Morgan brought me 1 ½ tons of furnace call this morning. After dinner, a son of Henry Supple called to have us insure a house near Lime Kiln above the Iron Works at Brookfield. About 4 PM, I harnessed and drove over to Frank Oetzel’s to arrange assignment of the store policy to Adelia Dean. He not being home, I took Mrs. Robert Haskins and daughter home on Hoyt Street, giving them their first sleigh ride. In the evening, I went over to Orchard Street to collect the balance from Mrs. Jennie Townsend, but could not as she was not at home. Mrs. Hawley presented me with a pair of home knit mittens. DECEMBER 23 FRIDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 35. The snow has melted fast today. In the morning, I drove over to Frank Oetzel’s store on Liberty Street and made over his store policy to his mother-in-law, Mrs. Adelia Dean. I then drove to Brookfield and made up a policy to Henry Supple’ farm just at Lime Kiln just above the Iron Works in the amount of $1,000. On my return, I stopped at Robert Jones, hoping to collect. He was not at home but is expected to return tomorrow and will see me next week. I arrive home a little before 1 PM. After dinner, I made up the daily report and George took it for mailing. Stephen Pierans called about 2 PM and I settled with him for the November rents. At 4:30 PM, after doing my barn work, I went into the street trying to collect. I did not succeed but got a promise from Mr. Daragan for January 2nd. On my way home in front of Warner’s store, I found a pair of spectacles minus the glass. A postal this evening from Andrew Bell that the papers from his pension increase had come. DECEMBER 24 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 40. Soft and the snow is getting away fast. Without a cold change we will lose our sleighing. After George arrived from Bethel, we rode up to Andrew Bell’s on Lake Avenue to care for his pension increase recently allowed - $10.00 – for age 68. A new certificate was sent and the old one ordered returned with the voucher. I mailed the old papers to Boston. I wrote Henry Supple at Brookfield to see if I left my fountain pen there yesterday. I also made an application at the bank for a loan about January 1st. It has grown cold since morning and the thaw has turned to freezing. After dinner, Mr. Beeman rode with me to do a little shopping for Sunday and Christmas. George and Sarah came over to spend the evening with us. We gave them a large lamp and I received an umbrella. This PM, Mrs. Stuart from Bethel came to borrow money to buy a watch for a Christmas present for her daughter. Not being financially fixed to do so, I declined. DECEMBER 25 SUNDAY – Mercury at 7 AM – 15. Christmas Day. Cloudy all day with the appearance and feel of snow. We rose about 7:30 AM. Mary attended church in the morning. I went to the Post Office and to get the paper at noon. After dinner, I bound by entry in the Register a policy in agency for Byron Dexter on 40 Pleasant Street occupied by himself and one for Charles Cary on furniture in Dr.Oley’s house at 135 Main Street. I found my fountain pen today in my room which I thought I left at Henry Supple’s in Brookfield on Friday and wrote to them to save it for me. I wrote to them again to say that I had found it. It commenced snowing at 4 PM and was still at it when we retired at 9 PM. After doing my barn work today, I called on Mr. Hickok who has taken to his bed and will probably never be any better. DECEMBER 26 MONDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 20.It snowed moderately during last night giving us a topping of snow. I made paths to the barn, privy, office and to the driveway. George arrived from Bethel around 8:30 AM. I sent him up to Carol Rider’s to ascertain if Byron Dexter’s policy which expired yesterday was still payable to the Union Savings Bank. Rider was not at home. Later, I saw L. L. Hubbell, the teller. He said the policy should be made payable to the bank. I had a controversy with William Charles & Brothers, corner of Ives and White Street about taking the policy I wrote for them. I left them without settling the matter. We were notified this morning of a small loss of George Bard of 48 ½ Balmforth Avenue under Sun policy No. 678530 originating from the kerosene lamp and Christmas decorations last night about 7:30. We notified the Company that the damage would not exceed $25. We took Christmas dinner with brother George on Montgomery Street. After dinner, I called on Frank Seymour and collected a $5.43 balance on a policy expiring today at 19 Elm Street in Perry’s block. I arranged for the renewal of the same. I then went home to do the barn work, fed Gip, and then returned to George’s to spend the evening. DECEMBER 27 TUESDAY- Mercury at 6 AM – 34. I commenced raining before morning with signs of losing our snow and consequently our sleighing. I delivered and collected premium of William Charles & Brothers by changing the date of the policy from December 14 to December 24. We renewed on the 14th without orders and they declined taking it on account of the high rate of premium. I today however persuaded them to be insured on condition that the policy be dated as of today. I then made a deposit on the bank and left the policy of Byron Dexter at the bank as mortgagor. In the PM, I sent a check for $23.72 to the Equitable Company for George and myself due on the 29th. Lottie Hirsch came up and spent the afternoon with us. I wrote to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company to change the date of the Charles Brothers’ policy, explaining the matter. About 6 PM, Mrs. Hickok called to me across the street to assist her to get old Mr. Hickok back in bed. Being out of his head, he imagined he was obliged to move and attempted to get up and dress himself. The bandages on his sore leg were partly torn off and he was bleeding profusely. I sat by him until they could send for his son, William. DECEMBER 28 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 48. Warm and foggy this morning. About 9 o’clock it cleared up with the wind northwesterly and growing colder. After breakfast, I cut a new tin bottom and with the help of George, we riveted it to the bottom of the ash pan. About 10 o’clock, George went with me in the sleigh and arranged fort the renewal of Morelock & Husk Machine Works and 19 Summit Street for Peter Beradi. By the morning mail, I received a letter form Estelle White in reference to James Shelby’s insurance on piano at New Milford.; also a draft for the James Newton loss in the amount of $7.00 from W. Furness, special agent of the Union, reinsurers of the Greenwich. Rufus Rice, the soldier and pensioner, died about 7:30 this morning died this morning of apoplexy at Byron Dexter’s where he was caring for Mr. Dexter as a nurse. In the PM, I sleigh rode Mary don to Dr. Oley’s office for her to consult him about her eyes. Then I dove up to Mallory’s shop and delivered to Clifford Sturgis the Edwin Whaley policy now owned by Mr. Sturgis and his wife, the daughter of Mr. Whaley, now deceased. From there, we drove to Rufus Rice’s to ascertain about his death. As we started from there, the bits to Gypsy’s bridle broke in her mouth and very fortunate it was that they did not break while driving fast or downhill. I used the hitch strap put around her neck, then passing same around her nose, I led her home with Mary riding alone. In the evening, I went over to Mr. Newton’s on Cherry Street to have him receipt for the draft of $7.00 from the Commercial Union, but he was not yet at home. DECEMBER 29 – THURSDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 20. Pleasant. Slept well last night and did not rise until 6:30. William Phillips, an old fire insurance customer called for a calendar. I started to go downtown and met Davis Monroe coming to pay his insurance. I returned with him. As he departed, he, by mistake, took my mittens, but a little later, returned them. I then started again for the street and arranged with K. Come for renewal of his furniture insurance policy on January 1st. I saw John Vail’s grandson and he drove up home with me for calendars. Lewis Orton called after dinner for a calendar. I then went up to Willard’s shop and arranged with Mr. Regan for a policy on the life of his mother. I went to their home on Foster Street and took their application. From there, I went down to Dr. Clark’s to arrange for the examination, but did not find him. In the evening, I wrote and sent a check for the September balance to the Reliance Insurance Company, and for the first time in my life sent a check without money in the bank to cover it to the Agricultural Insurance Company and other balances, but I have arranged for money to be there by the time the checks are returned on next Tuesday, January 3rd. DECEMBER 30 FRIDAY – Mercury at 6 AM – 25. Cloudy with the appearance of snow early this morning. It soon, however, came off clear and pleasant. I got up at 5 AM and opened and lighted my office, thinking that possibly James Newton, who goes by about 5:30 to take his freight train as conductor would see that I was open and would call and sign the receipt for a draft to pay his loss; he did not, however, call. After breakfast at about 8:30 I went down to 5 Foster Street and got a specimen of Ann Regan’s urine and took down to Dr. Clark and arranged for her further examination to be made at noon, while I was there. We drove up to Millard’s Hat Factory just before noon and got the particulars of Michael Regan as to being the beneficiary of his mother Ann Regan. One hind foot was off Gip’s foot this morning and while I was attending to the examination of Ann Regan, George went to Gages shop and had it put back and also had the other hind one reset. About 5 PM, Rufus Reed came in and paid the quarterly premium du today in the Equitable. I immediately made the check and mailed it to W. Schiffer the agent at New Haven. Rufus Rice was buried this PM at 2 o’clock. George mailed Ann Regan’s application after dinner to G. W. VanFleet, manager at New Haven. Received this morning from the Sun, a short form proof of loss for the case of George Bard. DECEMBER 31 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. Pleasant. I made up the Connecticut December account and enclosed check for the October balance and, being too late for the mail at the Post Office, I went to the railroad station and gave it to the mailman for the train. I received this morning another short form proof of loss for the Bard loss from Arthur Hatch, special agent, with orders to adjust. Mr. Wixtead called in the PM and settled for his insurance. I delivered a policy to K. L. Comes. Jennie Bratton send word in the evening that they had moved to 29 Stevens Street. Harry Gray also called and settled his insurance. James Newton also called about 9 o’clock on his way home from his belated freight train and signed his receipt for payment of loss in amount of $7.00 and endorsed the draft and I cashed it for him. George and Sarah spent the evening with us.
1904-12
Horace Purdy Journal November 1904 Entry
9 pgs
NOVEMBER 01 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 28. Pleasant. I mailed before dinner a check to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company; left a policy on 12 Balmforth Avenue for Claude Henry at the Union Savings bank, also on that block with George Williams, administrator for the Averill Estate to whom the Daragan policy is payable for mortgage. After dinner, Charles Baldwin came in for a twenty payment life policy and paid an annual premium. I went with him to Dr. Clark’s office for examination. He was not at home, but at the City Hall where we found him and where we made the examination. Then I came home and wrote another letter to David Dignan urging him to send the policy or a lost policy receipt. I registered this letter also. About 5:30 PM, I called at Harry Gray’s about his insurance in the John L. Griffin store building, but did not find him at home. Leno Tosi brought the Chester Wilson policy to me when he came from work as Wilson promised me yesterday he would do. In the evening about 10 o’clock, Dr. Clark sent the Baldwin examination. Just prior, Mr. Baldwin came in with the records of his grandparents on his father’s side. I today called at F. Austin’s and paid a bill of $15.50 for carpeting bought last April. Joseph Barber of Hartford talked to the Republicans this evening at the Opera House. I, having too much office work, could not attend. George left his wife Sarah with us while he attended. NOVEMBER 02 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 25. After breakfast, I drove down to Charles Baldwin’s at the Elmwood district to get the current history of his grandparents. I did so and stopped at Dr. Clark’s office on my return and he made the corrections on the examination blanks. We mailed the papers after dinner to Manager VanFleet at New Haven. I wrote awhile after dinner and then helped Mary about some plants, the took up a root of White and Pink Peonas and carried them up to Mrs. Whaley’s on Division Street as I promised her. Then back to the office where I found Albert Arnold visiting to pay a premium on insurance for Wooster Hose Company No. 4. I received in the PM a return receipt card for registered letter of yesterday to Daniel Dignan. Mr. Barber came in about 5:30 with a bushel of turnips. MOVEMBER 03 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 45. A little cloudy in the morning with some indications of a coming storm, but it came off pleasant later in the day. We raked off the leaves from the dooryard in the AM. Before dinner, I drove up to David (?) in answer to a postal that he would not renew his insurance with me on the 9th instant. He had the cheaper Danbury Mutual in view. I persuaded him however to continue with us. In the PM, brother George came over to see about sending for more coffee and I then and George rode with me to Bethel where I collected a balance from Andrew J. and Laura Wildman. I called to explain to O. B. Smith about permits for housing automobiles and went to his barn and saw his new one, THE WINSTON, a spark machine that he has taken in exchange for former gasoline steam. It is beauty. We then went to Higson’s shop where Sidney True works to try to collect a balance from him but he had gone home. On our return, I collected a $1.00 balance due from Lottie Williams at Rocky Glenn. NOVEMBER 04 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 35. Pleasant. After breakfast, we built a skid for rolling barrels in and out of the cellar, then rolled out two barrels and filled them with water –one to exchange with David Wilkes when he brings a barrel of vinegar stock which I ordered and the other possibly for filling with new cider. Elsie Terwilliger came and had her pension voucher made which goes to New York. I received by the morning mail from A. J. Olmstead of Bridgeport that a fire damage has occurred at 12 Cleveland Street, the house of Sarah J. Olmstead about 12:30 noon on November 1st. After dinner, I drove down to John Bigham’s at 163 South Street to look at his new barn for insurance, after which I went to William Hall’s shop and had the tire set to one forward wheel on the spindle buggy. After supper, I went down to the corner of Grand and South Street and collected $3.00 from Annie O’Toole and from there I called at 163 South Street and took insurance on the barn and contents for John Bigham for one year which will expire about the time the insurance on his house expires on December 29, 1905, when he will give us the whole line now carried by Frank Benedict. Not being able to catch a car coming home, I walked both ways. George and Sarah spent the evening with Mary while I was away. NOVEMBER 05 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 42. No dew this morning. Cloudy with the appearance of rain. It continued so with neither rain nor sunshine all day. In the forenoon, I delivered John Bigham’s policy on his house and contents. I saw Mr. Gomell about noon about looking at and repairing damage to Mrs. Olmstead’s home on Orchard Street, there being smoke damage in the kitchen. After dinner, Mr. Beeman and myself took the office stove to pieces and put in the new fire pot which came today from the Danbury hardware store. We could not get the stove together again and adjourned until Monday when, with the help of George, we will try again. The about 4 o’clock, I harnessed and took Fannie, who was here, down home after doing my Sunday marketing. ON our way down, I stopped at John Bigham’s and collected $2.91 for insurance on his house. In the evening, Ernest Gomell called and after looking over the damage at Mrs. Sarah Olmstead’s home on Cleveland Street, he estimated $15.00 to paper, paint and varnish the kitchen and pantry. I told him to do the work. Fanny’s birthday. - 32years old. NOVEMBER 06 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 34. It began snowing about 6 o’clock this morning and continued for about two hours when it ceased leaving the ground white with quite a wintry appearance. I cleared away before noon, at which time the snow disappeared. About 11 AM, I went down for my mail and the Sunday paper, The Sunday Press, and took the trolley to tell George when he comes up tomorrow morning to bring some fire putty for filling joints when we put the office stove together. In the PM, I mailed to the Agricultural Insurance Company, a notice of a small loss under No. 7396 – Sarah Olmstead. Before church, Mary and I called at brother George’s. Dr. Wilson preached in the evening on Secret Orders. NOVEMBER 07 MONDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 34. Partly cloudy, cool and chilly and seemingly colder than indicated by the mercury. After George came from Bethel, we resumed the work that Mr. Beeman and I abandoned at dark Saturday evening of setting up the office stove, or rather, putting it together after taking it to pieces to put in the new fire pot. George and I finished the repairs which took until nearly noon, just before which, I walked over to River Street and collected the $3.50 balance from Mrs. Marion St. John. After dinner, I drove over to Cleveland Street to see the smoke damage to Mrs. Olmstead’s house. I called at C. L. Morgan’s about my order for coal; he will try to bring it tomorrow. Stephen Pierans called in the PM and I settled by check for October rents. He brought over Mrs. Elizabeth Parrish, who had been looking at rooms at 29 Williams Street; I rented them to her, she paying in advance for the November rent. George and Sarah came over in the evening and I filled his ink bottle and fountain pen. NOVEMBER 08 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 28. Presidential Election Day. I lighted the oil heater in my office before breakfast and after breakfast on going to there, I found that the stove had in some manner unaccountable turned to smoking instead of heating and while it was out and not heating, I could not see across the room. Smoke had condensed into a lampblack, settling over everything in the room. If the same is an omen of a black Republican victory in today’s election as large and complete as the office is black, it will be an overwhelming defeat for the Democratic Party. It took nearly all day to clean off, and then imperfectly. Lampblack smell over everything. NOVEMBER 09 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 34. A veritable landslide in the election; news come in this morning of an overwhelming victory for the Republican Party. Theodore Roosevelt is elected President of the United States by a large majority, having as now indicated 326 electoral votes out of a total of the electoral college of 476. The state has gone Republican by a large majority. Our city and town carried everything Republican except for Judge of Probate in the election of a Democrat in the person of Eugene Dempsey. After breakfast, we took the oil heater apart and gave it a thorough cleaning after the smoking it gave us yesterday. Before dinner, I drove up to David Morris and delivered his policy which was due today. I then called on Dr. Mead at his dental office and got the date of expiration of his mother’s place at 80 Elm Street for renewal on the twentieth of this month for one year for an amount of $2,500. I then called at Charles Rowan’s box shop to see Frank Moody about payment of life insurance premium due today under a 30 day extension. Mrs. Sophia Allen’s pension came to her today and this afternoon, I went over to her place and made the voucher fro amount due from the date of application, July 8, 1904 to September 4, 1904 at the rate of $8.00 per month for a total of $62.93. Charles Baldwin’s Equitable Life policy came today. NOVEMBER 10 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 32. Pleasant in the forenoon; cloudy and very chill in the PM. Before dinner, I took the office stove doors down to the New Machine Company shop and ground off the edge to make it shut closer. Just before night, I drove out to Great Plain (brother George rode with us ) to try to persuade Frank Moody to continue his life insurance in the Equitable, he having paid one year, he thinks he will give it up. I could not persuade him to go on with it. George and Sarah came over and spent the evening with us. NOVEMBER 11 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 34. My birthday – 69 years old. According to the calendar, I was born on a Wednesday. A light snow during last night, being the second snow of the season, but it melted fast and little was to be seen after daylight. In the morning, George blocked up the office stove and we built a coal fire in it. While he was working up the stove, I put up a flight of glass in the north basement window. After dinner, we went over to Cleveland Street and had the proof of loss made up in the amount of $15.00 for the Sarah Olmstead loss by her son Edward Olmstead whom she authorized to settle for her. From there, I drove over to River Street to see about buying one or possibly two barrels of new cider at the cider mill on the old John Bussing place. I then called at Pat McGrath’s store to see if he was ready to insure his grocery stock; he was not ready. Pleasant in the PM and evening. George and Sarah came over to spend the evening. A. H. Barnum brought me 10 bushels of oats for $.48 each. I mailed the October report to the Agricultural Insurance Company in which I enclosed the proof of loss of Sarah Olmstead. Fannie came up just at night with little Georgie and took tea with us. The spent the evening with Uncle George and Sarah who were also with us. NOVEMBER 12 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 30. Pleasant. The first morning with a good coal fire in the office stove overnight. George helped me level up the flagstone in front of the office after which I drove down to the Savings Bank and had the duplicate receipt for the $15.00 proof of loss attached to Sarah Olmstead’s policy reducing the same in said amount. I also made a deposit in the bank myself. Also before dinner, I called on Mrs. Emma Shepard and collected $3.00 for furniture insurance and on William Conklin; he will pay part of his insurance this evening. Just at noon, Aunt Mary Hoyt from South Salem called with a Mr. Horn who also brought her up to draw some money from the Savings Bank. She was too late, the bank closing on Saturday at noon. She will stay with us over Sunday and attend to her bank business on Monday. Sent policy transferred to East Norwalk of Louis Schoonmaker by mail. Mrs. Hawley rode with me in the PM to do some Sunday marketing. I bought a rib roast of beef over to L. W. Andrews on West Wooster Street early in the evening. I went over to the Peoples’ Market on White Street and collected $2.00 on account of William Conklin who works there Saturday evening. I then took a trolley car home on which I found Ernest Gomell coming up to settle for the paint and paperhanging he did for the Agricultural Insurance Company on Sarah Olmstead’s house on 12 Cleveland Street, the bill being for $15.00. Being short, I left $5.00 over to pay next week. George and Sarah came over to spend the evening with Aunt Mary Hoyt. NOVEMBER 13 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 40. It commenced raining about daylight. About noon it became mixed with snow and continued to increase showing about an inch notwithstanding that it wasted nearly as fast as it came. Aunt Mary Hoyt being with us, we had George and Sarah come over to have dinner with us. Mrs. Hawley baked a nice apple pie for us. I wrote a letter to Charles Baldwin at Lansing, Michigan notifying him that his life policy was received all right and that I would at an early date deliver it to his mother in Bethel. The storm was still on with an increasing wind when we retired at 9 PM. George and Sarah went home at about 6:30 PM. NOVEMBER 14 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 35. The first morning this season we were obliged to shovel snow form our walks, which was about an inch in quantity, soft and slushy. Blue patches of sky with clouds and very windy with indications of being colder. While at breakfast, Andrew Bradley called and reported a loss in their little store, known as the Dewey Inn, on the corner of Miry Brook Road and Sugar Hollow, caused by an accident with a kerosene stove. I mailed a Sun policy on a piano to James Shelley at New Milford. On my return from Miry Brook, I took Aunt Mary Hoyt down to the Danbury Savings bank to draw some money for which she came up last Saturday. I mailed the report of the Bradley loss with our October report after dinner. Mrs. Mary Waite, daughter of Sophia Allen came in also after dinner and gave me $15.00 for services in securing her mother’s pension which came last week. Mary C. Dean went down to Dr. Oley’s this PM for treatment on her eyes. I had a 48 gallon cask of cider from the River Street Cider Mill this afternoon. George and Sarah came over to spend the evening with Aunt Mary Hoyt. I wrote to J. C. Crabbe at Washington D. C., attorneys for Frances Dexter, and as requested by them enclosed a $3.00 check as fee for collecting accrued pension of Leonard Dexter. Also wrote a postal to Clara Watkins for Mary. NOVEMBER 15 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 25. Pleasant, clear and cold. After breakfast, about 9 AM, I drove down to Cousin Edwin Mills with Mary Hoyt who has been with us since last Saturday. On my return, I stopped at Andrew Bradley’s (Dewey Inn) and took the measure of the broken glass in the show case for which damage the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company is liable. After dinner, I sent a check to W. Schiffer, agent of the Equitable Life Insurance Company, for $16.47, the net premium of Charles Baldwin’s policy. Mrs. E. Griffith called with a blank from the Bureau of Pension for George Purdy to sign and a certificate for the clerk of the county court to attest the genuineness of the notary’ signature. About 3:30 I took Mr. Beeman and rode up town. I paid $3.00 for 48 gallons of cider at the River street Cider Mill. The I went up to Downs Street and got the address of Charles Halstead, it being 599 Whitney Avenue in New Haven to whom in the evening I wrote as to renewing his policy on barn and contents which expires tomorrow. I called at Harry Gray’s to get his policy to reduce the amount but his wife could not find it. I then drove up to Thomas Boyd’s on Franklin Street to arrange for renewal of his furniture policy. George and Sarah came over again on the evening. NOVEMBER 16 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 35. Pleasant. Requisition from the Pension Department for George to be a Notary Public to be certified by the clerk of the Superior Court was this morning attended to by Clerk Booth and mailed to the Pension Department this noon. Letter by the morning mail from the Sun Insurance Company office by order of Hartwell & Shackleford, agents at Saratoga Springs, NY to write $1,600 on each of Mrs. Balmforth’s two houses - 93 and 95 North Street, the same being already insured by us in the Agricultural Insurance Company. As we have no order from Mrs. Balmforth in this matter, we wrote her of the present fact of the policies. After dinner, Mr. Beeman rode with me to arrange for the renewal of Harry Biddescombe, John J. Bradshaw and William McGill. I also called at 55 Maple Avenue to see about transfer, etc. of Bert Hitchcock and found him sick in bed, then called at H. Biddescombe for 5 potato bags to be returned to S. W. Bradley. Fannie came up while we were away. Mary was also away at the dressmakers (Mrs. Connelly). George and Sarah again spent the evening with us. Fanny came up also and made known that she was ruptured and contemplated going to see a doctor. I gave her a pad from an old elastic truss of mine and showed her how to fix an appliance to help her. Herman requested some paper and envelopes which I sent by Fanny. I wrote to cashier Schiffer about the Frank Moody elapsed policy. Last evening, George presented to William Stoker a $5.00 gold watch chain in return for an office cabinet presented to us by him. NOVEMBER 17 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 25. A beautiful morning. After breakfast, I made up the October Reliance Insurance Company report, also the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company, sending a check to each. After dinner, Daniel Wilkes brought me a 47 gallon cask of old cider for vinegar making @ 10 cents for a total of $4.70. About 6 PM, while we were at tea, C. L. Morgan came with a half-ton of coal for furnace use. George and Sarah came and spent the evening with us. While not sick, I did not feel like going out for business today and continued at home. NOVEMBER 18 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 20. Pleasant but the coldest of the season, the worst being 22 on Friday the 28th of October. I received by morning mail, short proof papers from the Sun Insurance Company to adjust the Dewey Inn loss of Ida Bradley. After doing the morning barn work, George helped me put a barrel of new cider in the dark cellar, after which Mr. Beeman went out with me to Harry Gray’s for his policy to endorse a reduction of same. Then we went out to Miry Brook and adjusted the Sun loss of Mrs. Bradley, the so-called Dewey Inn. In the PM, I received letter from Charles Halstead of 515 George Street in New Haven replying to mine as to the renewal of his barn insurance. Before tea, I went over to call on Clark Hickok for a few minutes. He is a great sufferer with his afflicted leg. I wrote agent regarding my damage from office kerosene stove. Mr. and Mrs. Beeman spent the evening with us at brother George’s at 19 Montgomery Street. NOVEMBER 19 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 22. Pleasant and warmer. Before dinner, I delivered the reduced policy to Harry Gray. Also delivered and collected to Dr. Mead for his mother’s estate and to Thomas Boyd. After dinner, Dwight Camp from Brookfield called to have $200 business on tobacco which we arranged and paid at 1.8% bank premium - $3.60. After which, I drove up to 31 Patch Street and insured $400 on a fruit store for John Carbulon. I left $5.00 with Andrew Clark the printer to give to Ernest Gomell the balance due him on the Olmstead job on Cleveland Street. Mrs. Hawley drove around with me just at night to do our Sunday marketing. After tea, we found that what I supposed to be peanut brittle candy which I bought this PM at the ten-cent store was hard stale old style peanut candy and I returned it for exchange. They refused to exchange it and I refused to keep it and I told them I would make them a present of it which they also declined to accept but insisted on making me a present of the candy to my satisfaction and keep the old one which they would not take back. By this means, I was compelled to be the owner of both lots. In the evening, John Rowan came to have a Massachusetts Mutual policy assigned to Mrs. Hattie Brown - $500, 20 year endowment. NOVEMBER 20 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 40. Pleasant and warmer. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came in after Sunday School and took dinner with us returning home at 3:30 PM. After their departure, Mary went over to Will Dean’s and stayed until evening. On her return and before retiring, I wrote a postal card to Miles Thomas at Bridgeport stating that on account of her eyes, she could not write. NOVEMBER 21 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 48 Pleasant and warm. After breakfast, we raised the right side of the privy building about an inch so that the door will shut, it having settled which prevented it from doing so. Before dinner, I drove over to the Danbury Hat Company on Chestnut Street and got from John Bradshaw the amount of increase he wanted on the renewal of hi furniture policy tomorrow. Then I called on Mrs. Claude Harvey on Balmforth Avenue and she gave me $10.00 on account of insurance on Nov. 1st. Then to the Union Shop to see William Murphy on the transfer of hos policy on Golden Hill. After dinner, George Starr (Purdy) went with me to the Elmwood District in Bethel and I arranged with John McFarland for $1,070 additional insurance on personal to increase the present Connecticut Fire Insurance policy No. 2200 on a building for $650, making total insurance $720. From there, we went down nearly to Dodgington and delivered an Equitable policy on Charles Baldwin to his mother the beneficiary. Then we drove across to Plum Trees to W. S. Harris for $7.00 balance due but did not get it. We got a promise instead. Then we drove home, arriving about dark. We had plain mush and milk for supper. George and Sarah came over again and spent the evening. John Rowan with Mr. Brown came in the evening not being satisfied with the assignment of his policy made Saturday, rather desiring to make Hattie Brown beneficiary under same. I recommended that he give Mrs. Brown a note for the amount of the policy which would thus absorb the full policy in case of his death, being equal in effect to a change in beneficiary. I drew the note which he signed. NOVEMBER 22 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 28. This morning, I found my barrel of new cider in the cellar about to burst in want of a vent, which I proceeded to give it. We wrote the policies of Camp, Bradshaw and Carbulon in the morning and delivered and collected from Bradshaw. Received draft by morning mail from the Sun in payment of Ida Bradley’s loss on the Dewey Inn on Miry Brook. After dinner, I took Mrs. Beeman for a ride over there and Mrs. Bradley signed and endorsed the draft for $20.50 and I cashed it. On our return, I had the draft cashed at the bank. Also one from the National of Hartford, reinsurers of the Lafayette for $1.88 as a return of premium for the cancellation of policy 525194 on John Hine’s billiard parlor, they not wishing to continue on as transferred to a new location at the corner of Greenwood Avenue and Railroad Place in Bethel. After going to the bank, I carried Mrs. Beeman up to Harley Beeman’s on Balmforth Avenue and called to Mrs. Raymond’s for an umbrella which Mary left there last Sunday. About 5 PM, Mrs. Hawley went with us to buy our Thanksgiving turkey, a 12 pounder at 30 cents a pound at Eccles’, the most I ever paid for a turkey in my life. I loaned $2.00 this PM to Mr. Beeman until his pension check comes next month. George and Sarah came over and spent the evening. Wrote to G. W. VanFleet replying to his urging for business. Wrote to John Davis of Stratford replying to his of this morning asking for transfer of policy from Bridgeport to Stratford and asking for a more definite description of the locality to which he has moved. NOVEMBER 23 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. Another beautiful day. I sent dunning missives this AM to Herbert Wildman for $92.50 due on the Rundle & White Factory insurance and to Jacob Hartz for balance due on the Spiro property. I got my haircut and then called on Targett & Siemon in reference to the renewal of their laundry insurance on the 24th and to Joseph Brothers for theirs due on the7th. I received a PO order from John Sherman to pay his insurance and sent his policy by mail to him at Atlantic City, New Jersey. Arthur Durgie notified me this morning that about 5 PM yesterday, he accidently cut the end of his index finger off. As there is a possibility of loss under his accident policy, I this PM called at J. R. Flanders’ shop (he works there) further about it. He not being at work due to the hurt, I obtained from Mr. Fancher the facts of the matter. Just before tea, Edith Mills on her way from Waterbury home for Thanksgiving and her sister Ella Blake called with a peck of apples that her mother promised to send me. George and Sarah spent the evening with us again. Connecticut ordered cancelled Camp, Hines and Carbulon. Got my first bottle of Lipozine to try of James Duran on account of insurance to come. NOVEMBER 24 THURSDAY – Mercury at 6AM – 30. Thanksgiving Day. Pleasant. Mrs. Hawley, who with Mr. Hawley will dine with us, came over about 9 AM to help Mary in preparing the dinner. About the same time, a hand of celery was delivered from Herman who with Fanny and the children will take dinner with us. I wrote to Charles Watkins and mailed it before dinner. Then I went up to Patch Street with a policy for John Carbulon on his store. From there, I went down to Abbott Avenue with a policy on furniture for William Mc Gill on which he paid half of the premium - $3.00. After dinner, I mended my harness and wrote a letter to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company requesting that the policy which they wanted cancelled for Dwight or Camp be allowed to stand. After our Thanksgiving dinner just at dusk, I responded to a postal from Clarence Wilson of Miller Street to arrange to rewrite his furniture policy of $500 raising the same to $800 on account of a new piano. Herman, when off from trolley work at 6 PM came for his Thanksgiving dinner, leaving with Fanny and the children about 8:30. NOVEMBER 25 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – A fine rain about daylight with an appearance of a storm, but soon passed off with more or less sunshine. Fearing snow, we raked off the balance of leaves on the yard, after which I went down to Thomas Regan’s’ on Foster Street to see about life insurance as proposed by her on Sunday night. After dinner, I drove up to Charles Betts and arranged for the renewal of his insurance tomorrow for which he paid me. Our neighbor, Mrs. Alexander, age 79, died last night. She will be taken to Pennsylvania for burial. After supper, I mailed Wilson’s voucher for retirement of premium on cancelled life policy which I omitted to enclose with the policy previously mailed today. Then I called on Mrs. Jennie Townsend on Orchard Street and collected $2.00 on account of her insurance. Then I called on Ann Regan about life insurance. The day proved pleasant after a little threatening in the morning. Arthur Durgie, lost the end of his finger, accident insurance, called in the evening. NOVEMBER 26 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. Pleasant and a little cooler. The remains of our old neighbor, Mrs. Alexander, was by her four daughters taken by an early train this morning to Hereford, Pennsylvania for burial. Mary had me write a postal for her to Minnie Dean that, if pleasant, she would be with them to dinner tomorrow. I sent it about 8 AM by the postman Owens. Before dinner, I delivered and collect for policies of F. Austin, left one at the Union Savings Bank for Charles Betts; deposited some $ in my bank; had my watch set and regulator adjusted at Bryant’s store. After dinner, I found that George had made a mistake in the rate of insurance on Barlow’s barn written this morning, so I immediately went down to the stamp clerk, A. H. Howe, and had DR corrected. Then I went to Targett & Siemon's laundry and made arrangements for a renewal nest Monday. Lottie and Julia came up this PM for the baby carriage left on Thanksgiving and carried two plant shelves for window which their mother wanted with them. George and Sarah came over and spent the evening. George went into the street and brought me a letter by evening mail from Clara and John Watkins from Hartford, giving us the price of Liprozine, it being 70 cents for what cost us a dollar. NOVEMBER 27 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – It began snowing about 5:30 and continued until about 8 AM when it ceased and the sun broke though giving the appearance of a fairly pleasant day. About 9:30, Mrs. Hawley came over with a chicken for me to kill, desiring it for her dinner. About noon, Mary went over to William’s to spend the day and took dinner. I went to the Post Office and walked with her as far as Gigliotti’s fruit store and bought a 12 box package of Blue Hen Tomatoes and then came home. I took dinner about 2 PM with Mr. and Mrs. Hawley. Mary returned home about 7:30 PM. NOVEMBER 28 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM -16. The coldest thus far of the season. I wrote up Targett & Siemon's insurance on laundry and fixtures. After dinner, I went over to Sarah Austin’s place at 234 White Street to see if she had, as reported, remove the store arrangement on the first floor and replaced it for dwelling purposes. I found that she had done so. I came home by trolley and did not go out again. George and Sarah spent the evening with us. I received 50 calendars today by express from the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. A. W. Rogers came in this evening for change in his insurance policy from Montgomery Street to 16 Division Street. NOVEMBER 29 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 22. Not so cold; cloudy in the morning with the appearance of snow. We put new springs in the shank of the spindle shafts this morning. George reported work last evening and this morning on Alexander Eastwood (known as "Pinky"), the trolley conductor, for a $2,000 life insurance policy. After dinner, I went up to the New Machine Company and got a small strip of maple about an inch square and 13 inches long to repair Mrs. Hawley’s washboard. From there, I went up to Willard’s shop to see Michael Regan about life insurance for his mother. He promises to consider it in about a week. George and Sarah came over to spend the evening. Early in the evening, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s to see how much coffee he wanted to order. I again referred to the additional life insurance he has been contemplating; he thinks he will do so soon. After George went home, I wrote up John Parker’s policy; also Lena Parker’s for cancellation as they refuse to give a description for the new location or pay the premium. Before closing the office at 10:30 PM, I mailed to the Agricultural Company for cancellation. NOVEMBER 30 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – A slight warm rain last evening. Neither pleasant nor stormy; clouds interspersed with sunshine. Mrs. Melissa Griffith came over this morning, having received her pension to have the voucher made on the accrued pension on Mr. Griffith’s old pension and the one for her new pension from the date of application to September 4. I mailed them to go to Boston by the noon mail. George and I tried to fix Mrs. Hawley’s washboard but broke it worse than before. We abandoned it for the present. After dinner, George S. Purdy went with me over to Mill Plain and thence to the New York state line to see Lucy Haines about writing a permanent policy on her house when the builder’s risk policy expires on Saturday. She will call on Friday or Saturday and arrange the matter. On our return, I stopped at the old Herman Knapp place for a call on Mrs. Dexter who has moved from Ridgefield to this place. On my return, I drove up to Harry Gray’s to see if he could pay on his policy. He promises to pay on Saturday. Brother George borrowed $10.00 from me until he gets his pension to pay his rent. After supper, I wrote to John Watkins replying to his asking where he shall pay his life insurance quarterly premium due on the 9th instant. George and Sarah came over again to spend the evening. Frank Hart came in the evening and wanted until December 10 to pay his November rent.
1904-11
Horace Purdy Journal October 1904 Entry
8 pgs
OCTOBER 01 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 50. Picked the last of the tomatoes and mowed the front yard. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Betts called in the AM and arranged to rent Mr. Pierans’ corner house, first floor. I drove over to Rose Street to get the key from Mrs. O’Conner, the former tenant. Soon after we engaged the house to Mr. Betts, a Mr. E. G. Horton wanted it and offered to pay the rent in advance. In the PM, Mrs. Hawley and I rode downtown and did our marketing for Sunday. Mr. Betts commenced moving in in the afternoon. George Walter came in accordance with a promise in the evening and paid $10.00 on account of his life insurance. As requested by Frederick W. Seymour, I called at his house at 17 Elm Street to receive money on account of his furniture insurance which he promised for tonight, but he had gone out. George and Sarah called in the evening. OCTOBER 02 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 52. Cloudy and cool, but no rain. Lottie came after Sunday School and took dinner with us returning home on her father’s trolley car at 4:40 PM. I mailed Agent Policy #7272, Elizabeth Burnett to Bristol for her to execute the assignment blank making the property over to Theodore Scofield to whom she sold. I also wrote to John Parker about his new location at Torrington as to the transfer of his insurance. In the evening, we went over to brother George’s and from there to church. OCTOBER 03 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 38. Pleasant. Mowed upper half of front yard after breakfast. S. W. Bradley brought potatoes this morning for Beeman, Biddescombe and me. George went to Stevens Street with Biddescombe potatoes with Bradley. The Larkin Soap with oil heater and costumer I got today, but the heater was not the one we ordered; they sent another kind. We borrowed one of Serena Lyon until we can get an exchange with the Larkin Soap Company. Herman sent a man in the evening to borrow the pistol which he found and left with me. In the evening I went up to the Ferdinand Brush Place to the Schoonmaker’s to acknowledge some deals, but they deferred it to another day. OCTOBER 04 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 32. A light frost this morning. A magnificent day for the commencement of the Fair. George and I finished mowing the dooryard this morning. Also put the new number – 35- on the front of the house. We received from the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company this morning, two pocket books as a present to each of us. After dinner, I made up and mailed the September account to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. Then I took Mary to deliver soap orders to Glover, Biddescombe and George S. Purdy, also to make some business calls on Theodore Scofield, Harry Gray, Frank Power and Anna Hinman. I also called at Henry Gray’s over John Griffith’s store to get his policy to transfer and rewriting at the new location under annual premiums. I bought a loaf of homemade bread of Mrs. Gray. OCTOBER 05 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 42. Another pleasant day for the Fair. After getting up some office work in the morning, Mr. Beeman rode with me to see Theodore Scofield and read to him a letter to Mrs. Elizabeth Burnett regarding payment to her of the cash value of insurance for expiration of the policy on the property sold by her to Scofield. He wished me to also show the letter to Dwight Rogers, the agent who negotiated the sale. Not being in his office, but expecting to be employed at the fair, we drove over there, but did not succeed in finding him. I got the consent of Mrs. John Gallagher to write the renewal of her furniture policy in the name of her sister, Fannie O’Toole and did so, the mailed the policy to her. By this morning’s mail, I received a new pension certificate for David Hoyt, being an increase on account of age from $6.00 to $8.00 a month. The Union Savings Bank paid the premium for insurance for Valentine Patch on the dwelling at 81 George Street. About 4 PM, I delivered the policy to Harry Gray over John Griffith’s store. On may return, I found William Mead waiting to pay his life insurance premium due on the 10th instant, after which I carried him home to 17 Town Hill Avenue. George and Sarah came over in the evening. After they went home I went over to Louis Tosi’s to deliver a soap order. While we were there, we also called on Mrs. Clark upstairs. OCTOBER 06 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 51. A small splatter of rain during last night. Cloudy and windy and doubtful during the AM. The sun came out bright at noon and continued pleasant during the balance of the day. I walked downtown in the forenoon. I met Maud Luck, who was more than sociable and would like to live in a house as nice as when she lived with us seven years ago. I called on Sam Newman for the balance due us. He gave a promise for next Monday. Also for next Monday, Jacob Hartz for the premium on the Spiro Brothers policy. After dinner, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s with a specimen of urine for Mary; he pronounced it OK. He gave me some tablets for my own use and paid 35 cents for soap in a Larkin order and also ordered 10 lbs. of coffee for George to send for. Later in the PM, I harnessed and Mary went with me to arrange renewals for James Fitzsimmons, Kate Lynch and Emma Shepard. Then we went down to Fannie’s and she made arrangements for Lottie, Georgie to come and stay with us tomorrow that she may attend the Fair. George and Sarah came over to spend the evening. OCTOBER 07 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. This is Danbury Day for the Danbury Fair. Factories and businesses are suspended to enable all to attend the great carnival. After breakfast, I drove over to Clarence Morgan to see where the fire was last evening. It was a small scare in one of the hat factories near Austin Street. I bought two porterhouse steaks of Morgan, the drove over to Rose Street to see Mrs. Bridget O’Conner about the rent for September at her Pierans house where she moved from. She refused to pay anything at all on account of him warning her out. Fannie took little Julia with her to the Fair and had Lottie with baby Georgie stay with us. Just before dinner, I went up to 5 Deer Hill avenue to consult Mrs. Mary Stevens regarding the sale of 11 Pearl Street to Theodore Scofield, as to any return premium to W. Burnett or his wife, Elizabeth Burnett, on the policy made over. On my return, the fire engine, etc. was called under alarm box 31 on West Wooster and Division Streets. Some burning leaves near Mr. Treadwell’s barn was the cause. No damage done. W. Burnett’s letter this morning calling my letter an insult to him and his wife for stating the plain fact regarding the insurance, etc. and the return premium demanded by him. I made a check for John Pieran’s for September rent collections; also made a check and mailed to the Agricultural Insurance Company for the July balance. George M. Bradley brought ¼ cord of wood sawed short on account of insurance. OCTOBER 08 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. The last day of the Danbury Fair. The day has been cold and cloudy but no rain. I am still alone since Wednesday; George is attending the Fair. I gave Stephen Pierans a check for $40.92 for the September rents. Charles Hawley from New Milford called for his furniture policy and paid it. Mary and Mrs. Hawley went shopping this afternoon. Mrs. Lena Knapp of Bridgeport called about 5:30 PM to see about the mortgage. George and Sarah came over in the evening. OCTOBER 09 SUNDAY - Mercury at 67 AM- 54. Lowery, but no rain. After breakfast, I cleaned my furnace preparatory to making fires. Went to the Post Office at noon and for the Sunday Press. Lottie Hirsch came from Sunday School and took dinner with us. In the PM, I mailed our September account to the Sun Insurance Company and enclosed the check for the July balance. I also wrote the Larkin Soap Company exonerating Mary for the funny wording of my letters of the 3rd and 5th instant regarding the oil heart. We attended church in the evening. Mrs. Hawley went with us. OCTOBER 10 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 52. George reported this morning for duty, having been absent since last Wednesday attending the Fair. A reply by this morning’s mail from the Larkin Soap Company to Mary in the matter of the oil heater. The explanation is satisfactory and George this morning set it up and filled it ready for use. I bought a bottle of ink of Harry Bristol. David Hoyt came at noon and made a voucher for the difference in old certificate of $6.00 per month and the new one of $8.00 up to September 4, the new one being issued for an increase for 65 years of age. George Walsh, an old soldier and inmate at the Soldiers’ Home in Noroton called in the afternoon to make an application for an increase for disability. I not having the proper blanks referred him to Captain Quien. Our coffee with that of Dr. Sunderland’s came today. George came in the evening for my check to send to Mrs. Kimball for coffee. I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s and collected for his 10 lbs. before making the check for George. Mr. W. S. Lane today requested to have his life policy made semi-annual instead of annual. I spoke to George Rickerts to keep his chickens home as they annoy me by leveling my manure heap and covering horse bedding spread out to dry. OCTOBER 11 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Warm with sprinkling showers in the morning and during last night. After breakfast, I made up the September balance of the Agricultural Insurance Company and mailed it with a check for the July balance. The express man brought a package of supplies, chiefly policies from the Reliance. Before dinner, I went downtown and collected $10.00 of Jacob Hartz on the Spiro brothers’ policy, also $2.00 of Saul Newman. Going into the Post Office, I saw H. A. Wildman talking with a party. After attending to my mail matter, I looked for him but he had disappeared. I talked with Dwight Rogers about the insurance being turned over from William Burnett to Theodore Scofield on the Pearl Street house. He understood that the same was to be turned as part of the deal. After dinner, Mr. Leonard Carney from Patterson called to see about the property of Frances Perry at Beaverbrook being reoccupied, etc. as he has a mortgage on the same. John Case came in the PM and ordered a policy of $1,000 on his house and furniture in the Connecticut Insurance Company. He leaves the Danbury Mutual Company. I drove up home with him to take a diagram. He paid the premium of $10.00. On my return, I drove up to Anna Tinman and delivered her policy, then up to James Fitzsimmons on Deer Hill with his policy. OCTOBER 12 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 42. A cold rain which has continued all day. We wrote and delivered to W. W. Sunderland, builder, a two month’s $1,000 additional builder’s risk policy on the Lucy Haines’s house. I mailed an order for supplies to The Connecticut Fire Insurance Company at Harford. In the PM, Mrs. Kate Lynch called and paid a premium for insurance on her Deer Hill Avenue house. I left the policy at the Union Savings Bank a little later in the afternoon. I then called on Orlando Williams at Hadley’s Hat Shop to see if he had decided to accept the policy I wrote for him He has not yet decided. His son, Wallace M. Williams gave me an order for $500 insurance on his furniture before I left the shop. From there, I called on Marion St. John and arranged for the renewal of her Grandview Avenue double house. The on Franklin Street, I also arranged to renew for Widow Iola B. Richardson. I called a few minutes on Benjamin Bailey at the Rose Street city weigher’s office and then came home. In the evening, I made up the Standard Accident September account to Loomis & Nettleton. Mrs. Sarah Whalley came in the morning to have her furniture policy transferred to her house on 16 Division Street. OCTOBER 13 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 40. Cloudy, cold and damp in the morning. I received from Boston U. S. Pension Agent a check for the $2.00 fee for the D. B. Hoyt pension increase for age 65. About 9:30 AM, I went to the courthouse and called on Judge Ralph Wheeler for his certificate showing me to be of good moral character, etc. for me to act as pension attorney for the Pension Bureau in Washington. He left it with me to have Clerk Frank Booth prepare the certificate for his signature tomorrow morning. In the PM, I drove down to Dr. Oley’s with Mary to consult about her eyes, after which we drove up to Padanarum and delivered a policy to John Cove. I then called on Mrs. Annie McDonough’s at Grandview Avenue to collect but got nothing, then called at the Scofield’s shop on River Street to see if my furnace pipe was repaired which I left there this morning as I went to Marion St. John’s to deliver her policy. From there, I went to the Post Office and village store and home. While we were riding, the clouds disappeared and we have a clear sky and cooler. George and Sarah were over in the evening. In the evening, I answered letters of Davis Knapp as to his share of the premium due on the insurance of estate of Silas Abbott. A. H. Barnum delivered a ½ ton of baled hay this AM. OCTOBER 14 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 36. This morning before breakfast, I mailed the Estate of Silas Abbott policy to Davis Knapp, executor. The same should have been enclosed last evening with the letter. Theodore Scofield this morning handed in the W. Burnett policy (i.e., Elizabeth Burnett, his wife) duly assigned to him after refusing to sign and deliver to me. About 9:30 AM, after having D. Wilson typewrite my application for pension attorney to the Pension Department at Washington with the accompanying certificate of Judge Ralph Wheeler, I called on the judge at the courthouse for his signature which he kindly gave to me. I left it with Clark Booth to affix the seal of the Superior Court which I obtained in the PM. Sam Hoyt and Mrs. Clark of Ridgefield called at noon and had dinner with us. In the afternoon, I called at Clark Booth’s for the certificate of Judge Wheeler’s, then walked up to D. Lowe’s shop to see Mrs. Dittus about renewal of her insurance. I found that she had left and was now working for Jake Irving in his silk mill. From there, I called on Majik Garlick on Henry Street to collect for his insurance. They had broken up housekeeping. I am to call tomorrow and if possible take up the policy. I then called on Edward Hendley and came home and returned the oil heater to Serena Lyons by driving up there and to Scofield’s Tin shop on River Street and got my furnace pipe which he has been repairing. In the evening, I wrote and mailed to Edward Dawson, Chief Clerk of the Department of the Interior, my certificate from Ralph Wheeler, Judge of the Superior Court, as to my good moral character, etc. OCTOBER 15 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 38. Clear and Cool. Before breakfast, I attempted to adjust the pipe on the furnace and found that it required further repairs before I could do so. After taking it to the shop again, I drove up to Henry Street to see if Majik Garlick had found his policy which he wants to surrender. He signed a lost policy receipt in the event he could not find it. I had the horse shod at D. Gages’ before dinner. After dinner, I adjusted the furnace pipe to be ready to be heated up. The later in the PM, Mrs. Hawley went with me to do some marketing and I delivered the Burnett-Scofield policy to the mortgagee, Mrs. Mary Stevens. George and Sarah came over in the evening. OCTOBER 16 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 31. A magnificent day. Mary attended church in the morning to hear the presiding elder preach. Lottie came from Sunday School and took dinner with us. We went over to brother George’s about 6 PM and attended church in the evening before which we called at Dr. Oley’s that Mary might consult him about her eyes and make arrangements for going to the hospital in New York, and possibly Dr. Oley to go with her. OCTOBER 17 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. Another beautiful day. After breakfast, Mr. Beeman rode with me up to Henry Street to get and cancel the policy of Majik Garlick. After dinner, we drove over to Beaverbrook and by a half dozen eggs and cash, I cleared for six months ended October 1st. up the balance of George Bradley’s premium. Mr. Pierans was over today and we made some arrangements about renting the house visited today by Mr. Scheppaccasse (?). I made a check today for $7.00 for rent of church seat, $117. In the evening, I went up to 2nd Avenue and arranged for the renewal of John Murphy’s insurance. Mrs. Payne called in the evening and paid for insurance to be renewed on their Mill Plain house. George and Sarah came over in the evening. Mary arranged this afternoon for Dr. Oley to go with her to New York at the hospital for treatment of her eyes. I, with Mr. Beeman, also in the PM, drove up to Franklin Street on returning from Beaverbrook to deliver a policy to Mrs. Richardson, but found that George had omitted to attach a permit for a kerosene stove; on that account, I did not leave it. After supper, I took the trolley up to 2nd Avenue and arranged the renewal of the furniture policy of John Murphy. OCTOBER 18 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM- 36. Another pleasant day. Mary, in company with Dr. Oley took the 10:09 AM to New York to go to the 23rd Street Homeopathic Eye Hospital for treatment of her eyes. I carried her to the train and brought home the second Larkin container from the freight yard. The freight on same was 44 cents. George and I got our dinner of baloney sausage sandwiches and coffee. Mary returned by the 5:08 PM train with Dr. Oley from New York. In the evening, I wrote to the Larkin Soap Company enclosing freight bills that they might send a rebate on same as requested by themselves. As I went to the station to meet Mary, I carried nearly a bushel of our potatoes over to George Starr Purdy. OCTOBER 19 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 40. After George arrived from Bethel, Mr. Beeman and I rode to the Danbury Hat Company where I gave to Mr. F. Wilson, the financial secretary of the M. E. Church, a check for $7.00, the seat rent to October 1. I then went to 12 Cook Street to see Mr. Dignan about insuring his furniture. He is to see me again, probably next Saturday. Another delightful day. I delivered a policy on tools to Charles Fowler at the New Machine Company. I wrote another letter in lieu of one written last night, and not sent to the Larkin Soap Company; also to W. B. Schiffer in the matter of the extension of Frank Moody’s life insurance. In the PM, Mary went down to Dt. Oley’s for eye treatment in connection with their visit yesterday to the hospital in New York. George and Sarah came over in the evening. I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s while they were Mary and had a specimen of my water examined which was all right. I delivered his October 18 quarterly policy and returned home. George took the Larkin container home which came to Mary and she sold to them. OCTOBER 20 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 54. Foggy. After breakfast, I wrote for Mary to Clara Watkins. When George arrived from Bethel, we fixed up the lattice work under the front porch of our office. Then we went over to Mrs. Hawley’s and castrated a cat. Before dinner, I walked downtown and called at the Turner Machine Company and arranged for the renewal of machine tools of William Reed. He wanted figures for accident and sickness insurance. On my return, I found F. F. McFarland talking with George about insuring some property on the Elmswood District in Bethel. We made arrangements to do so. After dinner, I drove down through Putnam Park to Redding Ridge to fix up the David Dignan insurance matter. He was not at home, therefore, I did not succeed. I came home by way of Daniel Woods and collected from him $46.55 for insurance on his homestead place written August 27. From there, I came home by way of the Elmswood District to see the place Mr. McFarland spoke of. It is the former Jerome Bates place. I stopped to see George as I came by Mr. Becker. Republican speakers tonight on the issues of the day. OCTOBER 21 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Warm and showers during the night. It commenced raining hard and steady at daylight and continued with high winds until noon when it cleared away and began to grow colder in the PM. After breakfast, I repaired the lining to my cook stove with fire cement. I wrote to Daniel Dignan enclosing a cancellation notice and a lost policy receipt for him to sign if he cannot find the policy. I registered the letter, In the PM, I called at Hadley’s Shop to see Orlando Williams. He has concluded not to insure for one year. I will therefore cancel the policy written. I then called at Mallory’s shop and had a chat with old. Theodore Power about his insurance at Noroton. Called on several others in the factory and came home by way of Main Street. I got a check from Henry Bristol for his store insurance and came home. George and Sarah came over again this evening. OCTOBER 22 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 38. In the morning, I drove over to Mill Plain to arrange for the renewal of Reuben Rockwell’s insurance. He not being at home, his wife promised to call tomorrow and let us know. I made a deposit in the bank before dinner. After dinner, Mrs. James Sullivan called to see about renting one of Mr. Pierans’ houses at 29 William Street. Later in the PM, I informed her that she could have the house. Later in the PM, Mrs. Hawley sent me to do the Sunday marketing. Brother George went on the one dollar excursion to Pittsfield and returned. I borrowed Mr. Beemans’s Accident and Health Insurance policy in the General Accident Insurance Company of Philadelphia and studied same. He called in the evening, when I returned it. George Walter called in the evening to get returned to him the $10.00 which he paid in advance on his life insurance. The Equitable told me that his application has been rejected on account of his family history. I returned his money. OCTOBER 23 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 38. Pleasant in the morning. Lowery in the PM with the appearance of rain in the evening. Received by mail today a returned receipt for registered letter to Daniel Dignan of Redding. Mr. and Mrs. Hawley took dinner with us today. I mailed as not taken to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company the Orlando Williams policy on his furniture. See letter dated October 22. Mrs. Hawley went with us to church on the evening. We called for a few minutes as we went on Brother George. OCTOBER 24 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 30. Pleasant. After breakfast, I rode over to Mill Plain to see Reuben Rockwell about the renewal of his insurance, but found no one at home. This PM, I received a letter from his wife that in view of some contemplated change, possibly to sell his property, he would for the present defer his insurance. By the noon delivery of mail, I received Mr. Dexter’s pension, that is, the certificate and voucher to be presented. We telephoned to her at Ridgefield and in the PM, she rode up and we made up the voucher at her daughter’s home at 10 Pleasant Street. Before going out to Mill Plain this morning, I went down to Plant’s block and told James Sullivan that the house on 29 Williams Street that I told him he could rent was by Mr. Pierans rented to another party who had previously applied. In answer to telephone, Mrs. Dexter came from Ridgefield and I made up her voucher at her daughter’s home at 10 Pleasant Street and mailed it in the evening to Boston. I also returned to W. B. Schiffer the W. D. Lane permit for quarterly premiums to be made semi-annual. George and Sarah came over in the evening and wrote a post for Mary to Clara Watkins to buy two hymn holders. OCTOBER 25 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 35. A beautiful day. George helped me patch the roof of the barn and office. It took us nearly all day. At about 4:30 PM, I drove with Mary up to Padanarum to arrange with Mrs. Heady to clean the sitting rooms tomorrow. George and Sarah came over again in the evening and spent the evening. OCTOBER 26 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 42. Cloudy most of the day with but little sunshine. After breakfast, Mr. Beeman rode up with me to Mrs. Brown’s on Franklin Street and arranged to renew her policy. From there we went down to Murphy’s Hat Shop to see Willis Hodge, mortgager on Rueben Rockwell’s on Mill Plain. We found that while they wrote me that they would drop the insurance, they lied to me in not doing so and gave it to Louis Reed. I also had a chat with Chester Wilson working in the same shop about his insurance which he and George got mixed on. After dinner, I went over to the Turner Machine Shop for the renewal of W. Conklin, the engineer. Before returning, I called on Pat McGrath and arranged to measure his store next week. George and Sarah came over again in the evening. Mrs. P. Jeffrey called in the evening and paid $37.00 for Elizabeth McDonald life insurance due on the 30th. Mrs. Heady helped Mary clean the house today. Charles Baldwin of Bethel called in the evening to talk life insurance. He is contemplating it as security for a loan to go through college in taking an agricultural course. I carried in my tax list today. OCTOBER 27 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 44. Pleasant. We cemented around the kitchen chimney this morning. Before dinner, I went over to the Turner Machine Company to ascertain whether W. Conklin now used the oil burner which the permit required. He does not. I delivered the policy. After dinner, I called at Mrs. Raymond’s to see Bill Harvey about insurance on the family dwelling on November 1st. I came home by way of Sunderland’s to make an inquiry regarding the Lucy Haines new house, etc. Mary went down to Dr. Oley’s in the PM for treatment. Before dinner, the Postman brought the pension checks for Mrs. Dexter’s $31.00 accrued pension on Mr. Dexter at the time of his death, less $10.00 fee due to J. B. Crabbe, being net to Mrs. Dexter, $31.00 for a total of $72.00. In the same mail was the bill of Mr. Crabbe for $3.00, his fee for the accrued pension. William Booth this PM, left with Mary, in my absence, the $77.00 annual premium due the 30th for his $2,000 life insurance in the Equitable. After supper, I walked up there and gave him my personal receipt for same until I can get returns with the Company’s official receipt. George and Sarah were over in the evening. OCTOBER 28 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 22. Pleasant. The coldest morning we have had thus far for the fall. I started the furnace fire for the first time this morning. In the forenoon, Mr. Beeman rode with me over to great Plain to inform Frank Moody that I had secured an extension for him on his life insurance premium. He was not at home but works at Charles Roman’s box shop where I saw him. After driving to Bethel to see and collect from Andrew and Laura Wildman. They were not at home. On our way home, we stopped and collected a dollar from Lottie Williams at Rocky Glenn. After dinner I made a $100 deposit in the bank and collected $3.00 on account from Frank Wilcox for the Union Trust Company. I received a letter from Charles Baldwin that he could not meet me tomorrow for examination for life insurance but will later inform me. I gathered my beets and carrots from the garden. George and Sarah called again in the evening. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came up this PM to stay overnight. Mandeville the peddler, took dinner with us and gave us a chicken. OCTOBER 29 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 26. Pleasant and cool. We put up the office stove this morning. I delivered Ida Richman’s policy and collected of James Fitzsimmons and driving to Fitzsimmons, took Lottie and Julia Hirsch with me for a ride. After dinner, I took Lottie and Julia over to Cleveland Street to see George Bouton about renewing his vegetable building, but he was not at home. I then left the children at the corner of Wildman and Chestnut Streets to go from there home. About 6 PM, Nellie Johnson called for the pension checks to take home to her mother, Mrs. Dexter, to sign and return next week for me to cash or get at the bank. John Murphy called in the PM and paid for his fire insurance policy on furniture and talked about life insurance. George Nelson also called and left his furniture policy to be transferred to Padanarum Avenue. Estelle White also called to have a piano insured for James Shelby at New Milford. George and Sarah spent the evening with us. George Nelson left his policy to be transferred to 27 Padanarum Avenue. C. L. Morgan brought 1 1/2 tons of coal just at dusk. OCTOBER 30 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 38. Pleasant. I received a life insurance receipt by mail from the Equitable for Elizabeth Donald. I mailed same to her in care of P. F. Jeffrey at 16 Town Hill Avenue. After dinner, I called to see John Bouton who is able to go out but not able to do any work. Mr. and Mrs. Hawley were with us to chicken pot pie dinner. Early in the evening, Mary and I went over to George’s and went from there to church at 7:30. OCTOBER 31 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 24. After George came from Bethel this morning, I drove over to Wildman Street and called at J. Murphy’s shop and settled the Chester Williams case of a furniture policy which George wrote for him when he moved from Bethel to King Street. There being a misunderstanding between them, he is to surrender the policy after paying a pro rata for the time it has been in force. From there, I went to 56 Maple Avenue to see Bart Hitchcock who is about to move there from Ball’s Pond which will require a transfer of his policy. After dinner, I went to get the two pension checks of Mrs. Dexter cashed at the bank. Nellie Johnson, her daughter, took them home with her Saturday night for her endorsement returning the same this morning. I gave Mrs. Johnson the money to take home with her, being a net of $49.00 after paying her attorney Mr. Crabbe and for my services. I made various business calls besides Dr. Meade about insuring his brother’s place at 80 Elm Street. George and Sarah spent the evening
1904-10
Horace Purdy Journal September 1904 Entry
9 pgs
SEPTEMBER 01 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 56. Letter by morning mail from John Watkins relative to accident insurance. He will try to come over on Saturday evening and stay over until Sunday when we can transact the business in contemplation. I wrote a reply and mailed it to Hartford. Received June renewal receipt from Clarence Morgan, the certificate of good health recently sent being satisfactory for renewal. Before dinner, I went up to Turnwell's on Terrace Place to inspect their pigeonary for insuring the same and their pigeons therein. I got an order from Jacob Hartz to write $2,000 on stock for the Spiro brothers. I delivered the same to him in the afternoon. Sidney True stopped and gave me $5.00 on account of what he owes us. He is contemplating a change of mortgage from Mr. Fairchild in Newtown to the Danbury Savings Bank. I, by his request, called at the bank and promised to make the policy payable to them as soon as it came to us for change. This was satisfactory to the bank. I drove up to 10 Henry Street to see about renewal for policy for Majik Garlick. Later in the PM, Mary rode with me down to Fannie’s and carried some tomatoes and beets. While we were at tea, Mrs. McKnight called to see about the rates for accident insurance for her nephew, Arthur Durgie. I also in the PM took Mrs. Melissa Griffith’s affidavit as to property, etc., and her means of support. George S. and his wife came over and spent the evening with us. SEPTEMBER 02 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Lowery in the morning with a doubtful outlook for a pleasant day. Wrote under date of yesterday and mailed a letter to Davis Knapp at King Street with a statement of policy written on the Silas Abbott place on Westville Avenue. Received a letter from Loomis & Nettleton in reply to mine of yesterday as to the insurance for Mrs. McKnight and her nephew A. Durgie in accident, same corroborating my opinion at to ordinary classification. About noon, I got a line from the Danbury National Bank informing me that my $200 note was due yesterday which I had overlooked. I was non-plussed as I had not provided for it. I at once called at the bank. The amount to my credit in the bank was not sufficient to meet it. I borrowed $100 of Mary Dean who withdrew it from the savings bank and got Robert Chambers to endorse a note for $100 and in this way took care of it. After going up to Clapboard Ridge and then nearly up to Vernon Ferry’s Cider Mill at Middle River (where he had gone with a load of cider apples) and met him to get his endorsement, I then drove out to Lucy Haines to see her new house, which today, W. W. Sunderland the builder gave me an order to write a builder’s risk on the same. On my way home, I met Mrs. Haines and had quite a talk with her about insuring the new house. She did not like the company cancelling the $600 remaining on the same when the house burned, though we paid her $100 for the house and furniture and as usual when over half the policy is burned to cancel the remainder. I promised that I would allow her the value of balance cancelled for the unexpired term, the same to be credited on the premium for her new house. This morning I went up to J. R. Fancher’s hat shop on West Street and took an application for Arthur Durgie for $1,000 accident insurance. SEPTEMBER 03 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 68; at noon- 78. Warmer. Before breakfast, I wrote the Reliance Insurance Company that we will in a few days send a check for the May balance. My horse Gypsy is sick; I think she overdid yesterday’s PM driving in the sultry weather up to Robert Chambers’ and up to Lucy Haines’ to see her new house for builder’s risk insurance. We wrote a policy on the carriage of George Northrop, also builder’s risk for W. Sunderland on Lucy Haines’ new house and delivered and collected premiums on both. Company C left this morning for Manassas where the state troops will encamp for the fall manoeuvres with others from other states with the regulars to rehearse the old battle of Bull Run, July 21, 1861 on the same battlefield. Arthur Durgie, who is a member of Company C, called this morning and paid $3.00 on account for premium of $7.50 for an accident policy applied for yesterday. His aunt, Mrs. Virginia McKnight called this noon and paid the $1.00 extra to have the doubling clause attached. After dinner, I wrote Loomis & Nettleton to attach the clause. Jacob Becker called in the PM and paid $12.00 premium on furniture insurance. George and Sarah Purdy with Mrs. Brooks and little son, Alton came over and spent the evening. John Watkins came over in the evening to talk over insurance, both life and accident. SEPTEMBER 04 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 70. Pleasant and warm. We had a late breakfast after which I harnessed and drove with John Watkins down to Dr. Frank Clark and had him examined for $1,500 life insurance on the 20 payment life plan. We then went up to Culp’s News Store for the Sunday Press and to the Post Office, then home. I wrote out the application for John which (he being a minor) will take home with him tomorrow morning for his Father’s signature for consent. After dinner, I took him over to the lake for a trolley ride. On our return, Mr. Brownlaw came in for an $8.00 check to send to his son Harry. Then came our neighbor James Andrew to hire my two seat carriage for tomorrow to go with his horse which he will hire out for the day to Hollis Holmes. SEPTEMBER 05 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 56. Labor Day. Pension Day. I put on underclothes yesterday and heavier clothes today. John Watkins took the 6 o’clock train to Hartford this morning with his application for life insurance for his father to sign as he is a minor (19 years old). I have had a very busy day with pensioners making their vouchers. It being Labor Day besides has made it a hard day’s work for me. About 10:30, the parade started out which attracted a large crowd. George, Lill and Charlie are all with us to dinner. In the PM, Mr. Beeman rode around with me to make vouchers for orphans and widows – Mc Millan, Bell, Merritt, the widows Courtney and Foley. SEPTEMBER 06 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 48. Cooler. Wrote in morning, delivered and collected for Mortimer Rogers, arranged for renewal tomorrow of Martin Repko, also Hartley Sherman for next Saturday, the 10th instant; also called at the Eagle Hat Company for a brown derby hat George had ordered for John Watkins which I sent to him at Hartford by brakeman VanGordon on the 11:37 Highland Division train. I took young Alton Brooks riding with me all the forenoon. James Martin called while I was out and had George make out his pension voucher. I came home before he went away. He borrowed $.25 of me with which the voucher fee makes $.50 due. Mrs. Sarah Keeler was with us to dinner. After dinner, I drove around to her house at Stevens Street and paid her the interest ($2.50) for six months from last November to May and endorsed the same on the note. Peter Hardwick called after dinner and had his pension voucher made out. In the evening, I wrote and sent John Davis’ policy in the Sun sent to him at 881 Stratford Avenue in Bridgeport after endorsing a reduction of same and enclosed a check for $3.20 return of premium for said reduction. Mr. Pierans was over today and directed me to tell Mrs. O’Connor to move. SEPTEMBER 07 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 42. After breakfast, I mended the spindle buggy by screwing the side of the body which had come loose to the frame. About 10 AM, I notified Mrs. Patrick O’Connor of 13 Williams Street that she must move, as directed by John Pierans. I sent a postal card to John Watkins that I yesterday sent his coffee brown hat by James VanGordon, baggage master, by the 11:37 Highland Division train. Also, on receipt this morning of a check from Royal Tomlinson, mailed the receipted bill to him at his residence at 1025 Lexington Avenue in New York. In the PM, I received John Watkins' application for life insurance from him with his father’s signature assenting to the transaction and a check for the first ¼ year’s premium, and an accompanying letter acknowledging his receipt of his new coffee brown hat which I sent to him yesterday. In the PM, I stopped at Dr. English’s office to see about a policy of insurance on his carriage which I wrote for Jacob Hartz. In the evening, I sent Watkins’ application to the Equitable and a letter to him acknowledging the receipt of application and the check for ¼ year’s premium. SEPTEMBER 08 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 54. Pleasant and warmer. In the forenoon, I made up and gave a joint affidavit with Clark Hickock in the matter of application for pension for Melissa Griffith, widow of Edwin Griffith, as to her being without any income or means of support, in consequence of which she is a dependent widow. Also our testimony as to her never being divorced and that they lived together as husband and wife until the tine of his death to which we made an oath and subscribed in the presence of George L. Purdy , Notary Public. After dinner, Mary rode with me to mail the papers to the Commissioner of Pensions in Washington. I received my pension check in the afternoon. I called at McLean’s store and made arrangement s to renew $2,500 on store stock on September 12. I delivered the policy and collected the premium of Cornelia Depew. We went up to Prospect Street to see John Ellegett to see about furniture insurance but they concluded to wait 2 or 3 weeks when they hoped to have more work to pay for it. I then drove to Foster Street and took a new case on furniture , $1,000 for three years, from Mrs. Jennie Bratton, widow of George Bratton, an old customer formerly of Danbury, who died recently in Brooklyn. We called on Emmaline Glover on Center Street and Mrs. Biddescombe on Stevens Street about making up a soap order from the Larkin Soap Company, when about 5 PM a heavy shower coming up completed us to return home. We reached home all dry but quite a little rain fell soon after with sharp lightning and heavy thunder. Mrs. Sarah Keeler came over and took dinner with us. Her brother called in the PM to say that he would come for her at her home in Stevens Street and take her with them for a week or more to Brewster. SEPTEMBER 09 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 56. Cloudy this morning though with but little rain last night. After breakfast, I drove up to Brookfield to see about the loss of Daniel Connell’s house which burned about 12:30 AM on September 4th. The Connecticut, through Treadwell & Co. had $400 on the house. I found H. Wildman and special agent William Hoyt of the L. L. Globe there with Ford Olmstead as appraiser. They were surprised to learn that I had $400 on same and I was equally surprised to learn that they were on for $800. I then went up to see J. Wesley Wells to collect from him but only got some good promises. Wildman and Special Agent Hoyt promised to call on me in the afternoon, but did not. I wanted a little more light in the case but reported the loss in the PM with the facts as known to me. I also explained about the Spiro brothers. Then I wrote the Reliance Insurance Company to change the daily report #129940 to change Hartley Sherman from a three year to a five year term. Mrs. Norman Kellogg called at noon for a short time. The day has been cloudy and cold with no sunshine at all. About 5 PM, Phil Owens the postman brought in the pension checks for Joel Bates and Charles and Frank Bevins. With the loss notice to the Connecticut this evening, I also wrote the Agricultural not to draw on us on the 12th instant as they advised us but to wait about a week when we will remit. SEPTEMBER 10 - SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 54. Cloudy and cool this morning. After breakfast I delivered a policy on furniture to Hartley Sherman on Garfield Avenue, then went down to the Union Savings Bank and drove to the old Beckerle shop to see Daniel Connell and said that we were not on his house that was burned last Sunday as we had supposed but on another small house on the old Sherman Turnpike; therefore, we are not in it. Before dinner, I made a deposit including the pension check of Joel Bates. He called at our office and I cashed it for him. At noon, Robert Jones from Brookfield called and paid me $11 on account of his insurance. Before dinner, I telegraphed to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company that we were not on the Connell loss, and after dinner, I wrote them explaining the matter. After which, Fanny being up here, I drove downtown with her to do some marketing and also for myself. Then I came home and took Mrs. Hawley downtown to do some marketing, then came home and took Mary over to Mrs. Harry Biddescombe to arrange some order matters about a soap order to Larkin’s Soap Company. George, Sarah, Mrs. Brooks and her son, Alton spent the evening with us. Mr. Biddescombe requested me to buy six bushels of potatoes for him for winter use. SEPTEMBER 11 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 58. Foggy in the morning. George S. came over in the AM with a mess of green corn for dinner. He helped me get my two seated wagon over from Mr. Pieran’s barn preparatory to taking Mrs. Brooks, Alton and Sarah out riding after dinner. I washed and greased the axles. After dinner, I took them as planned to the Starr Sanford Mountain House down Deer Hill, west to Main, White Street, Locust Avenue, Cleveland Street, the Hospital, and the Alms House where we had quite a visit with George Foote, the superintendent, and his wife, Ellen. Then through the cemetery to Balmforth Avenue, Patch Street, Main Street and home. After putting up the horse, we over to brother George’s and spent the evening as Mrs. Brooks and Alton start tomorrow morning for Philadelphia. SEPTEMBER 12 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60. After breakfast, George helped me draw my two seated wagon over to Mr. Pieran’s barn after using the same yesterday. I then drove up to Quien Street to see Sam Hathaway about renewal of his house insurance; also O. J. Williams and Walter Clifford. Then down to Mountainville to see Mrs. Chester Brush about the cancellation of her furniture policy; did not find her at Frank Harris’ but did so at 21 Montgomery Street where I paid her the return premium. James Martin, under the influence of drink, came to see if his pension check had arrived; as it had not, I lent him a dollar on account of the same which with other loans and voucher fees makes $2.00 due me. The fire bell struck 28 for a fire occasioned by a locomotive spark on the roof of a dwelling at 42 Maple Avenue about 2:10 PM; the damage was slight. I ascertained the facts at the Ives Street fire department house. I had a talk with John Stevens this PM about paying his August premium or dropping the policy of accident insurance. I called at the Targett & Siemon Laundry and referred again to the joint company partnership policy; Targett is thinking of the matter, but has not yet seriously conferred with Mr. Siemon. I received a letter from John Watkins; he thinks he will come over on September 23 and stay over on Sunday. SEPTEMBER 23 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 56. Cooler this morning following the shower last evening. I received a letter by the morning mail from the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company approving Spiro stock and thanking us for the prompt contradiction of the reported loss on Connell at Brookfield. George went with me up to Andrew Bell’s in the morning and made up his application for an increase in his pension under order 78 of the Commissioner of Pensions of March 15, 1094 on account of old age. I mailed the application in the evening. At noon, George served 10 days to-quit notice on Mrs. Patrick O’Conner. After dinner, I went up to Germantown to see Otto Mahler about a policy in Williamsburg City on his house which will expire Sept. 20.20. I was too late; Carol Ryder who had it for the Williamsburg City had renewed it. I then went over to Beaverbrook to renew the tobacco barn for Henry Starr. From there, I went up to the Pembroke District and arranged for the renewal of a $500 furniture policy for Isaac Havilland. I arranged for the same and raised the amount to $1,000. When I arrived home about 4:30 PM, James Martin was waiting for me to cash his pension check which I did. SEPTEMBER 14 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 58. Foggy with heavy dew in the morning. About 8 AM, it began to rain lightly. John Bouton, while working at the Fairgrounds yesterday, fell and was quite seriously hurt, the outcome of which is doubtful. Mrs. John Allen sent for me, she having papers from the Pension Department at Washington wanting more evidence about property holdings, financial position and means of support. After dinner, I made the August report to the Agricultural Insurance Company, made deposits in bank, delivered to Adolph Turnerville an agricultural insurance policy on his flock of pigeons and pigeonary. Before going to see Mrs. John Allen this morning, I went up to Quien Street and collected of Saul Hathaway a $9.00 premium on his house. In the evening, I made out the Standard accident report, also helped Mary Dean make up our order of soap and Parlor Oil Heater as premium of the Larkin Soap Company. A thunder shower during the evening. SEPTEMBER 15 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 48. It rained all last night and was still raining this morning. Mrs. Schappacane (?) came in the morning and paid the August rent. I at once made up the rent account to John Pierans, endorsing the check to make up the August rents and mailed the same to Mr. Pierans at Purdy’s Station , NY. Edgar Platt, tenant on the Silas Abbott place, paid me about 11:30 AM at the New Street school house, $6.00 for extra insurance on his store. In the PM, I went to Dr. Sunderland’s with a specimen of Mary Dean’s urine for examination; he pronounced it without fault. I delivered a furniture policy to Orlando Williams at Hadley Green’s factory and got a promise of insurance on furniture and possibly life insurance for his son. George came over in the evening for a check to send to Mrs. Kimball for $15.00. Mrs. O’Conner called in the evening to say that she had secured rooms in Rose Street. SEPTEMBER 16 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 40. Foggy in the morning, but soon came off clear and pleasant. I brought over from Mr. Roger’s garden the last of his corn stalks before breakfast, after which I pulled a few beets from the garden for pickling. I also took up a part of a Peona plant for Mrs. Couch (a white one) for transplanting. I sent the August account to the Sun and a letter about the July account. Also the Sun account with a letter regarding the allowance to Lucy Haines about the unburned part of the old policy to apply on the new policy. In the evening, I drove over to C. L. Morgan’s to see if he could let me have the money on his insurance which has been accumulating since last April. I found him cutting and hanging tobacco over to Beaverbrook. He promised to do something for me the first of next week. Just before supper, I went up to see how John Bouton was. I found him as reported this morning a little better than yesterday and holding his own, though not out of danger. From there I went up to No 5 Pleasant Street and arranged for the renewal of W. Tueple (?) on next Tuesday for which he had paid me. In the evening I made up and mailed the August report to the Reliance Insurance Company and also wrote to John Watkins and Manager VanFleet inquiring why the Watkins policy didn’t come along. SEPTEMBER 17 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 50. Pleasant and warmer than yesterday. After breakfast, I drove up to Pembroke and delivered a furniture policy to Isaac Havilland and collected the premium of $15.00. I called at the old W. Hamilton place to see Arthur Day whose wife, Minnie Day, owns the property to see about the renewal of the insurance on September 25. I saw Mrs. Day who will tell her husband to call on me when he is in town. O. H. Barnum brought me two bales of hay after dinner. Mrs. Josephine Stuart of Bethel called about 3 PM and paid the $5.00 balance on a note given June 11 for borrowed $10.00. I had my hair cut in the PM at Silvestri’s on White Street and did the marketing for Sunday. Mr. H. Stevens, brother of John Stevens, opened a market in Bell’s block at 270 Main Street today. My right testicle is giving me trouble again today. George and Sarah came over in the evening. SEPTEMBER 18 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 55. Pleasant. My trouble for which I took treatment on retiring last night had the desired effect and I am very much better this morning. While doing my morning barn work, Peter Hardwick called to see what I knew about Fred Comes’ place which he wants to sell as to the prospect of exchanging, etc. After returning from the Post Office at noon, I went over to see how John Bouton was. They try to think him better, but he is a dangerously sick man. I found George Hall there; he drove over from Brewster. After dinner, Mary went over to Will Dean’s on Balmforth Avenue. I went over to George’s for a short call, and then came home and did my barn work, after which I walked up to John Bouton’s to inquire after him. He seems to hold his own and may possibly recover, though he continues delirious. Mary returned home in time for evening church, but was too tired to go. SEPTEMBER 19 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Fairly pleasant, though indications of a coming storm. John Bouton is in some respects better in a small degree. In the forenoon, I drove over to Beaverbrook and arranged for the renewal of S. W. Bradley’s tobacco barn. I also collected 2 dozen eggs and $2.00 in cash on George Bradley’s account. After dinner, I called to see how John Bouton was getting on and found him slightly improved with more hopes for his recovery. From there, I called to see Arthur Durgie to see about the accident policy he took before going to Bull Run for the National Guard to maneuver as a repetition of the 1861 battle. From there, I called on Mrs. John Allen as to the calling on Carrol Ryder and Susan Hubble for affidavits as to her financial condition, etc. I took the car for home on White Street and rode to the end of Pleasant Street to see about the renewal of Charles Seymour’s furniture policy but did not find them home at 4 Pleasant Street, but a Mr. V. Floyd Akin living in the same house promised to see me soon for a policy. I walked home from there, calling at John Bouton’s as I came. An express package of supplies came this PM from the Agricultural Insurance Company. SEPTEMBER 20 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 58. The morning looked doubtful, but about 8 o’clock it cleared up with the appearance of a pleasant day. About noon, it became overcast and continued to gather more and more until about 3:30 when it commenced to rain. Before dinner, I went down and mailed my Oath of Allegiance made before George L. Purdy, Notary Public, the same being required by the U. S. Interior Department regulations to make me a pension attorney. Before returning, I got a check from Julius Stone for $36.50 in payment for a policy on his stock recently. In the PM, I rested until nearly 3 PM when I went to the bank for a deposit. The rain caught me on my return home, after which I busied myself preparing affidavits in the Sophia Allen pension case. Mrs. Nellie Schoonmaker called later in the PM and paid $1.80 balance on insurance. SEPTEMBER 21 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 46. Clear and cool. The line storm evidently clearing off cold. George called this morning on Thomas Gallagher on Houseman Street and arranged for $300 additional insurance on their furniture. After the morning work was over, George rode with me over to Starr Avenue to Eugene Wright’s to get Mrs. Ellen Thacker’s affidavit in the Sophia Allen pension case. She was not at home, but we found her at Mrs. Allen’s on Elm Street. After securing her affidavit, we went to 22 Lake Avenue for that of Andrew Bell, also making a joint affidavit on Mrs. Allen’ behalf. There being indications of frost tonight, we picked all the ripe Lima beans and covered the tomato vines. SEPTEMBER 22 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 32. This is the coldest morning we have had this season. We were touched with a light frost this morning. Policy for John Watkins from the Equitable Life Assurance Society, Policy No. 1.371.715 for $1,500 on a 20 payment life. By noon, I sent the postal notice to Mr. Watkins that the same has been received. Today in the Sophia Allen pension case, I sent to the Commissioner of Pensions the completed affidavits of Ellen Thacker and Andrew Bell, also the certificate of Carrol D. Ryder, Treasurer of the Union Savings Bank as to the mortgage interest on the Allen property, etc. After dinner, Mr. Beeman and I went over to Mr. Morgan’s to see about coal for himself and I to see about getting $50 on fire insurance which he promise next week, also that he would attend to his life insurance premium due the 29th instant. From there, we went over to Henry Starr’s and he paid $7.50 for insurance on his tobacco barn. We then went up to Robert Jones at the Iron Works and he promised to see me for some money on Saturday. On our return, I stopped to see D. Joyce about taking my mortgage. He was not sure about money coming in this fall sufficient to enable him to do it. Should it come in, he will see me. On our return, we went over to S. W. Bradley’s and delivered and collected of him $.25 for a policy on his tobacco barn. He gave us a sample of potatoes to try in anticipation of selling to us. Supplies received today from the Sun Insurance Company. SEPTEMBER 23 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 29; at noon – 60. After breakfast, Mr. Beeman went with me over to Hull’s Hill to collect $24.00 from Thomas and Mary Dunn for insurance in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. From there, we drove up to Westville to see if James Stevens had potatoes which he would let me have on account of his insurance; he had only enough for his own use. Moses Baxter, our neighbor, about 40 years of age, now of Binghamton, NY, being in town on a visit gave us a call this morning. Before starting to drive this morning, I sent a check to W. B. Schiffer for $5.93 for net premium for first ¼ premium on John Watkins policy. About 4 PM, I harnessed and Mary went with me over to Robinson’s Fur Factory to see Martin Repko about payment for his insurance. He had changed and now works for Hoyt Walthausen’s company; I found him at home there. I then left the harness neck strap at Blackman’s Harness Shop to be mended. Then, with Mary, did some marketing, called at the freight depot to see if Larkin’s soap box had come, and returned home. After tea, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s for Mr. Hawley, who is sick in bed with malaria. He gave me medicine to carry to him. Received this morning from Mrs. George Connell, an express package from Grandma Griswold’s effects - a quilt of her own making to be given to our Fannie, which when being made, was christened by Aunt Fanny, “A Grandma’s Whim”, also a silk handkerchief for myself and an ornamental plaque for Mary. Also received a letter explaining this. SEPTEMBER 24 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 60. Slight rain about 6 AM. After breakfast, I drove over to the New Machine Company to see Charles Fowler about insuring his tools and chest, cancelling same off his house policy at Mill Plain and writing a new policy on tools, after which arrangement, I met John Watkins on the 9:30 train; he came to visit over Sunday and receive his life insurance policy. After dinner, John and I rode over to the fairgrounds to see James Sherman about renewing his furniture policy expiring tomorrow. He having a business deal with another agent, gave him his insurance for another year. After our return, I did some office work and while John Watkins went downtown for a walk, Mrs. Hawley went with me for some business calls and some marketing. About noon, J. Wesley Wells called and paid the balance due on his insurance. Martin Repko, who was to call about 4 or 5 PM, met me downtown and proposed to call on me tomorrow after dinner. I called and saw John Bouton for the first time since he was hurt. I went downtown to buy alcohol and witch hazel for them. Mrs. Jennie Townsend called in the evening and paid $1.80 on her insurance. After supper, John went over to see Will Dean. George and Sarah came over and spent the evening with us. Arthur Durgie came over and paid the balance due on his accident insurance. SEPTEMBER 25 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 58; at noon – 78. Slight showers last night; very much warmer today. Martin Repko and son called and paid 17.00 on account of is insurance. After dinner, Watkins and I went to Bethel and gave George and Lil a visit returning about dusk. I left him on Main Street to make a call on Mr. VanGordon. In the PM, I answered Julia Connell’s letter received after sending an express package to us with mementos from grandma’s things, among which was bed quilt of her own handiwork for Fannie. SEPEMBER 26 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 58. We were up early to get breakfast for John Watkins that he could take the 6 AM Highland Division train to Hartford. A bright morn and starlight all night. After daybreak, it became foggy and lowery with but little sunshine. A light splatter of rain about 3 PM which was soon over and the sun shone after. After George came, I walked downtown to see L. K. Mansfield about George Franklin, an applicant for rent in one of Mr. Pierans' houses. From there, I went up to Thomas Duffy’s house at 16 Morris Street to get his address at Norwalk which is 16 Monroe Street, South Norwalk. From there, I went to Mrs. David’s regarding mortgage on the same. From there, I called on John Bouton. His wife sent by me to get a Post Office order and a pint of witch hazel. On our return home, Mr. Beeman and I drove over to Beaverbrook and ordered our potatoes of S. W. Bradley. On our return, we stopped at the freight depot to inquire about boxes of Larkin soap which we expected. One came for Beeman, but none for me. Stephen Pierans called at noon and wanted the key to 13 William Street where Mrs. Patrick Conner had moved out, but as all her things are not yet out, she still holds the key. I deposited in the bank in the PM. SEPTEMBER 27 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 50. Cloudy and sunshine intermingled. At 11:30 AM, I called on Orlando Williams at Hadley Green’s shop on River Street to explain stock and mutual fire insurance as he had lower rates in a mutual company offered him. After dinner, I spent the PM in the office and wrote letters and sent checks to the Agricultural and Connecticut Fire Insurance Companies. I also sent a check to Lena Knapp for interest due October 1 ad to the Equitable the life premiums for George and myself due on the 29th and ineptest due on October 3 on the note borrowed on the George policy. In the evening, I wrote the Arthur Durgie policy back to Loomis & Nettleton for correction of beneficiary. I also wrote to Judge A. B. Beers in Bridgeport for blanks to make application for James Martin and Joel Bates to enter the Soldiers’ Home at Noroton. SEPTEMBER 28 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 58. After breakfast and George’s arrival from Bethel, I took Moses Baxter (who over 30 years ago, used to be our neighbor across the way and was now making a visit to Danbury from Binghamton, NY) with me on a drive for business calls around town. In the PM, I drove to Bethel, calling as I went on Mrs. Lottie Williams at Rocky Glen for a $2.00 balance on insurance, but I did not get it. I also called at Mrs. S. S. Street’s to see about E. Frost taking out a life policy. On my return, I stopped at the iron clad house near Short’s Hat Factory and collected $5.00 on account of Andrew and Laura Wildman’s insurance. In the evening, brother George came over and brought my old black hat which he has turned and refinished and trimmed making a new hat of the same. In the evening, George Walter, a hostler for Benjamin C. Lynes met Dr. Clark at our office and was examined for life insurance. SEPTEMBER 29 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 50. After breakfast, George went with me over to B. C. Lynes to get a specimen of urine from his hired man, George Walters, to give to Dr. Clark for examination, after which I went to City Hall and delivered to the selectmen a $5,000 policy on the Alms House in the Sun Insurance Company, then drove over to the freight office and found that our Larkin Soap, along with the oil heater and costumer as a prize, had come but as yet had not been unloaded. On my return George went with me down to 7 Grand Street to see about the renewal of furniture insurance for Mrs. John Gallagher and not finding her at home, went around to Dr. Clark’s with the urine specimen, which was found to be all right. We returned just in time for dinner. Twice this afternoon, I drove over to the freight depot for our soap but the quantity of freight was so great on account of the Fair next week, that they had not gotten to the car in which it was and would not get to it until Friday. Fanny was with us to tea. SEPTEMBER 30 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60. Showers during last night but not thundershowers. After breakfast, George helped me level up the flagstones from the front steps of the house to the sidewalk. We then drove over to John W. Green’s (formerly Beckel’s old stiff shop) to see Mrs. John Gallagher about the renewal of her furniture insurance, the to the freight depot, but the car containing the Larkin soap and accompanying prizes had not been unloaded. We then went up to Morelock & Husk’s Machine Shop to see George A. Blackburn about his house insurance; he being up to the Merritt shop on a job, we drove up there and found him.
1904-09
Horace Purdy Journal August 1904 Entry
8 pgs
AUGUST 01 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 72. A very humid atmosphere this morning. “Dog Days” seem to have commenced in earnest. George went up to Mrs. Cornelia Depew’s after his arrival from Bethel this morning and had her execute proofs for her lightning loss on July 28 – Agricultural Insurance Company Policy 1703 - We then paid John Bouton $15.00 for repairs and her $.35 for oil cloth for a total loss of $15.35. For the first time in about a week, I rode into the street for some errands and over to Cleveland Street and collected $28.00 from Sarah Austin for insurance on her store and dwelling building on 234 White Street. A heavy thundershower in the afternoon, after which Clara Watkins and I rode over to 26 Spring Street and by word from George Barnum called on Mrs. Charles McClintock to try and insure their furniture. They did not, but gave encouragement for 2 or 3 weeks hence. From there, we went over to the Peoples’ Market on White Street and bought a brisket of corned beef. Hattie Mills died this morning. Funeral at 2 PM at George Osbourne’s at Bethel. In the evening, I walked up to Dr. Sunderland’s with his accident policy for July. George S. Purdy came over in the evening with pieces of steel armor from the battleship “Connecticut”. AUGUST 02 TUESDAY - Warm and muggy with a gentle rain. George went down to Steven’s Insurance office in the forenoon to ascertain about the facts of cow of Mary Jackson killed by lightning at King Street. After dinner, I went by trolley to Bethel with Fannie to attend the funeral of Hattie Mills at the residence of George Osbourne on Greenwood Avenue at 2 PM. On my return, I paid William Barber for a new shaft he put in my spindle last Thursday. I then laid in wait for Herbert Wildman to collect the $100 premium for a policy we wrote for him on Rundle & White Hat Factory on May 26th. I finally caught him and had a good talk with him. He promised to have the money for me in 2 or 3 days. AUGUST 03 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 66; at noon – 80. A beautiful morning. After breakfast, Hattie Watkins went with me to King Street to take the proof of loss for Mary Jackson for loss of cow killed by lightning about 11:30 PM on Thursday, July 28th under Connecticut Fire Insurance Company Policy #1974 brokered to George Stevens & Son, after which we returned home by way of Pandanarum Reservoir. When we arrived in town, I observed that a hind shoe was gone from the left hind foot of Gip. I left Hattie to walk home while I went to D. Gage’s shop and had another shoe put on before coming home myself. After dinner, George mailed the completed proofs, we retaining the duplicate receipt to attach to the policy which we did on the policy we brought home with us for that purpose. AUGUST 04 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Muggy and warm again today. Pawnee Bill’s Wild West Show came to Danbury. George and I drove up to Joseph Blissard’s on Park Avenue to deliver a Reliance policy on his furniture, etc., but did not find him at home. In the PM, I wrote and enclosed a Connecticut Fire Insurance to Jacob Backer at New Fairfield, same being on his furniture written June23rd. I walked into the street before dinner and came home tired out and stayed in the office in the PM. I received a check from Commercial Union for loss of Achille Canale in Niagara Insurance Company reinsurance. AUGUST 05 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 66. Muggy again. Received transfer endorsement from National of Hartford, reinsurers of Lafayette for Taggart & Siemon for their new building on Ives Street. I also received a check from the Connecticut Insurance Company for $20 to pay Mrs. Mary Jackson their half of the loss of the cow by lightning. I drove up to King Street and paid her, taking Clara Watkins with me for a ride. I rested awhile after dinner, then went downtown for a few business calls, among them Mrs. Holton at the School of Education for collection of balance due and Saul Clark on Moss Avenue. Neither was at home. Fire Box #61 struck about 4 PM on the corner of White Street and Locust Avenue. I went over. It was a dwelling at 13 Wildman Street near the railroad crossing. It not being our case, I took the trolley and came home. On my arrival, I found Priscilla Benedict and daughter at the office to pay the balance of their insurance premium. In the evening, Achille Canale came in and signed draft and receipt for $2.50 loss which occurred July 13th by gasoline stove in dwelling No. 2. I paid him the cash and then wrote Commercial Union, endorsing the duplicate receipt, the loss being under reinsured by Niagara policy #6312 by Greenwich Insurance Company who in their closing up, reinsured in Commercial Union. After writing, I went over to the Montgomery Street Box and mailed the letter and called a few minutes on George whose wife returned last night from New York bringing Mrs. Kimball with her. I shot our old mother cat this morning. She was sick so I buried the kittens. AUGUST 06 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 66. Pleasant. Clara Watkins rode with me in the morning to do some marketing over to Andrews’ store on West Wooster Street for meat and in the street for other things. I bought a new catheter at Kinner’s Drug Store. George, Sarah and Mrs. Kimball came over and spent the evening. AUGUST 07 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7AM – 66; at noon – 82. Picked fruit and ripe tomatoes, also our first mess of green corn for dinner. Mr. Rogers brought over an armful of corn stalks for the horse, the first mess for her this season. I went to the Post Office at noon and received a letter from Jacob Layton of South Norwalk containing a check for the Hoyt Walthausen policy. Just at night, I went trolley riding with Mary Dean and Hattie and Clara Watkins to Bethel and returned to North Street and home. George had the accounts made up for the Sun, Connecticut and Reliance. I put the finishing stroke on them and mailed them in the evening. We all went over to spend the evening with George, Sarah and Mrs. Kimball. AUGUST 08 MONDAY - Mercury about 60 in the morning. A short but hard thundershower about 5 this morning. We picked up all the crab apples under the tree this morning after breakfast, mowed the backyard and then threw the apples and grass on the manure heap. The day has been close, muggy and partly cloudy. I called at Rundle & White’s just before dinner and reported to Mr. Rundle that the worthless check that Herbert Wildman mentioned was not theirs, etc. After dinner, I rode up to Park Avenue and delivered a policy to Joseph Blissard. He not being home, I left it with his wife. I put up the horse and took the trolley to Bethel and arranged for additional insurance on the sheet iron dwelling of Laura Wildman, also for insurance on her new barn, horse wagon, etc., including hay and grain for her husband Andrew Wildman. I then called on O. B. Smith and F. M. Clarkson. George, Sarah and Louise Kimball came in and spent the evening. AUGUST 09 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 62. Cooler and pleasant. Very much like a fall day. Eli Smith came in this morning being very much vexed about his insurance on account a broken term occasioned by the cancellation of Niagara policy #6134 after it had run 2 years. We wrote $500 on the new brick steam laundry of Taggart & Siemon; also wrote in Reliance of Laura Wildman’s iron clad house and frame barn in Bethel in name also of her husband, Andrew Wildman. In the evening, I drove down to Daniel McNamara’s to arrange for the renewal of a policy on the 11th, but he was not at home. I then went up to Pandaranum to see the mortgagor, George Peck. He too was away at Fairfield Beach. I then rode up to Eli Smith’s to explain about his insurance, but he too was not at home. I left word for him to call on me when was downtown. I mailed a bill in the evening to Royal Tomlinson for insurance last April on the dwelling at 5 Ellsworth Avenue. AUGUST 10 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 56. It commenced raining about daylight returned by mail to Mrs. V. E. Patch of Brookfield the pension certificate and June voucher of Mrs. Edith Ball, her mother and the widow of George Ball, which was left with me to collect the accrued pension for the three months from March to the date of her death in May. On account of my health, I did not feel able to undertake the case for her. It continued raining most of the forenoon and lowery all day, except about 2 PM the sun broke through for a short time, but soon disappeared again. I went downtown in the PM and made a deposit in the bank. I went into Hamilton’s printing rooms and talked insurance with Harry Mead and another fellow printer. I talked with A. C. Ferry, the Hackman, about selling my 2-seat covered wagon. Hattie and Clara Watkins sent their trunk to the railroad station for the 11:37 AM train to Hartford, but it rained so hard that they deferred gong themselves until tomorrow. In the evening, I made and mailed our July account with a check for $131.38 for the April balance to the Agricultural Insurance Company. Before dinner, I went by trolley to see Daniel McNamara about renewing a policy, but he has not yet returned from North Salem. AUGUST 11 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 70. Pleasant. In the forenoon, I delivered a policy on dwelling and barn on 38 Coal Pit Hill to Daniel McNamara at his saloon. I also took Mary to the 11:37 train to see Hattie and Clara Watkins off to Hartford, returning home after a visit since July 15th. After the departure of the train, we drove downtown and as stated, delivered the McNamara policy. About 4PM, I harnessed and drove over to Beaverbrook and collected on account from Fuller and grocer who gave me sweet corn, squash and tomatoes to bring home. In the evening, I made a gasoline stove permit for Edmund Sauer. AUGUST 12 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 62. The day has been somewhat mixed as to sunshine and clouds. Before dinner, I drove over to deliver the gasoline stove permit to George Sauer and collected $2.00 due from Ira Post. I also ascertained from the town records that on Feb. 25, 1903, A. T. Bates, administrator for the estate of Taylor Bates, gave to Valentine Patch a quit claim deed on the property situated on the northwest corner of George and Orchard Street, known as 21 George Street, this ascertainment being necessary for us in renewing a policy on the same tomorrow. After dinner in looking over our books, I could find no entry of George Hill paying the premium as to an endorsed reduction of this policy dated April 4th on his insurance. I stared at 3:45 and drove up to his place on Huckleberry Hill to see him as to the payment and the date thereof, which I found to be the 2nd day of April, OK. In the evening, I wrote to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. I find that I had not charged for the rebate on this reduction. AUGUST 13 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 60. After breakfast and picking up crabapples under the tree, I went over to Chester Brush at 21 Montgomery Street to see her about the rebate on her furniture policy on October 1st, which her son, F. C. Bush, DDS of New York, wrote me about. I found that she is gone and is now at her son’s in New York. This PM, I wrote him relating to the matter. I also went up to Mallory’s factory to see William Phillips. He promised to come about 5 PM to pay the balance of his insurance; he did not come. In the PM, Mrs. Hawley and me went downtown and did our Sunday marketing. Orrin Smith from Bethel came in the PM and paid his fire insurance. Also about 7 o’clock in the evening, came A. L. Booth and paid. George and Sarah and Mrs. Kimball came over in the evening. George Blissard came in the evening and paid $4.00 on account. I gave George a pail of vinegar to take home with him. AUGUST 14 SUNDAY - Mercury at 8AM – 65. A gentle rain during the night; lowery all morning. I went down to the Post Office at noon for the mail and the Sunday New York Press. A letter of the 10th to Royal Tomlinson with a bill for insurance on the dwelling at 5 Ellsworth Avenue was returned to me unable to be delivered, due to the fact that he has moved. I remailed it to his new and correct address, 10265 Lexington Avenue, New York. I also mailed a letter and bill for insurance to Valentine Patch at Brookfield. After dinner, I took a specimen of my water up to Dr. Sunderland’s; he found no fault with it, but gave me some tablets. AUGUST 15 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 65; at 2PM - 80. A beautiful day. After breakfast, I drove down to Fannie’s with a mess of green corn and cucumbers. From there I drove by way of Triangle Street to Clarence Morgan’s and arranged for the renewal of his Highland Avenue bakery. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came up in the afternoon; Lottie to attend the funeral of Winifred Barry, who was drowned at New Haven while bathing last Friday. Steven Pierans called in the PM and I gave him a check for $48.06, the amount of the July rent collections. About 4 PM, I drove down to Clark’s Box Shop and arranged for renewal of policies for Eugene Bouton for which he paid me. Mrs. Hawley’s boarder, James Busby, was taken in a fit about 8:30 in the evening and I went for a doctor and got Dr. English. AUGUST 16 TUESDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 60. Pleasant. I spent most of the forenoon shaking and picking up crab apples. Just before dinner, I drove up to 26 Lake Avenue to see Carwell Higby about the renewal of the property, formerly Marcellus Voorhies, as to writing one policy on the whole instead of two policies as formerly. After dinner, I went to the city bank and had J. Beal’s’ check for $13.75 cashed. I then went to Bethel to see Mr. Higby who works at Higson’s, then made a call at French’s Dry Goods Store. Then I called on Andrew Wildman and delivered a policy and returned home by trolley after calling on W. Booth at Short’s shop. Mary went over to Montgomery Street in the evening to carry crab apples to Brother George. AUGUST 17 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60; at 2 PM – 80. Pleasant. Before dinner, I went down to see the new location where Frank Wilcox keeps his horse, etc. on Crosby Street to arrange a transfer of insurance but did not see hm. I also called on Stevens Street to see John Stevens about a policy on furniture, horses, etc. written last April; also an accident policy of August 6th. Fannie Hirsch was with me and did some trading after which I drove home with her and brought Lottie home with me to stay a few days. When I arrived, I found E. J. Couch waiting to see me. We had an afternoon visit and referred to his taking my mortgage which he was not able to do now but might do so later. On his departure at about 5 Pm, I opened a bottle of ginger ale. Before going out this morning, we shook off and gathered crabapples. Mr. Beeman with his artificial leg climbed where I could not and shook the tree. In the evening, I wrote to F. Bouton and enclosed a bill for insurance for Mary Turner. AUGUST 18 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 64. A pleasant day with a north wind which when out in the sun felt like a September day. I adjusted the Taggart & Siemon policy on the new laundry to conform to the newly promulgated rates and they paid for it. After dinner, Lottie Hirsch went with me about town looking after renewals, etc. Nellie Hamilton called on Mary this PM. Before supper, I also rode up to Lake Avenue and delivered a policy and bill for one left at the Danbury Savings Bank for Carwell Higby at 26 Lake Avenue; we then drove to the Post Office and mailed an accident report for July to Loomis & Nettleton and then came home. I was very tired. Mary and Lottie went over to Brother George’s on Montgomery Street in the evening. AUGUST 19 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 46. Joel Bates came over after breakfast to borrow money. I was compelled to refuse. I called on George Boughton about renewing his policy on furniture, etc. He is leaning toward the Danbury Mutual. I am to see him again. In the PM, I found John Stevens and he promised to look up my receipt for payment of premium on his insurance for furniture, etc., which he claims he paid and which I have no account of his doing so. I also delivered the Sun policy to Charles Dickens’ at Connett’s factory and had him sign the endorsement receipt on same for loss paid him under same. George, his wife and sister Mrs. Kimball came over in the evening. AUGUST 20 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60. Awoke and found it raining hard. It continued until after dinner when it ceased but did not clear up. At 2 PM, Lottie Hirsch rode with me over to Andrew’s store where I bought a pot roast of beef for Sunday dinner. On the way, I delivered a $1,000 furniture policy to W. H. Booth at 7 Division Street and collected for it. The right forward wheel to the wagon showed signs of collapsing. We feared to ride further and came home. I then walked into the street and did other marketing – fish for breakfast, etc. – and returned home. After supper, I went down for my laundry and stopped on my return at Dr. Sunderland’s and collected $2.65 for 5 lbs. of coffee for George Purdy. In the forenoon, I called on George Boughton and discussed the difference between a stock and mutual fire insurance company. I then went to Frank Wilcox and he consented to pay the increased rate for transfer of his insurance on horses, etc. Clear and starlight at 9 PM. Elmer Keeler called this PM when I was out and paid $25 on account of his insurance. AUGUST 21 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 65; at noon – 70. Pleasant. Before breakfast, I went over to Mr. Rogers’ garden and cut two armfuls of corn stalks for my horse. At 11:30, I went down to the Post Office and to Culp’s News Store for the New York Press. After dinner, I wrote to John Davis at Bridgeport to send his Sun policy with a more definite description of 881 Stratford Avenue for us to make the transfer. I also wrote to M. Thomas to give me a description of the property. I then wrote to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company for their views on the cancellation of policies after partial losses. About sundown, George S., his wife Sarah, and her sister, Louise Kimball came over for a short visit. I then paid George $2.65 for Dr. Sunderland for 5 lbs. of coffee recently ordered. In the evening, I went to the Sam Harris block to see James VanGordon, a brakeman on the Highland Division to Hartford to see if he will buy at Thompson’s store at Harford for me two bottles of cod liver oil, but they were not at home. From there, I went over to brother George’s and came home with Mary Dean who had gone there to spend the evening. AUGUST 22 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60; at noon – 78. Pleasant. As I went to the barn this morning, I found a large armful of cornstalks at the door for my horse brought over by Mr. Rogers before I was out. I took my spindle buggy down to W. Barber’s for repairs, after which I took Mrs. Louise Kimball to ride with me over to Beaverbrook for collections, etc. On our return, we came by way of the Allen house and through the cemetery arriving home just at noon. After dinner and a rest for myself in the office, I got Mr. Beeman to go with me. I collected premiums of Philo Bradley, took a trace to my harness to Blackman’s to be mended, went up to Mallory’s shop to see W. J. Phillips, returned for my harness and hitched behind my carriage the spindle buggy at barber’s Wagon Shop and brought it home. After supper, I took the trolley to Bethel to collect from Andrew Wildman, but I made a mistake. Next Saturday was the day he promised to pay. On my return, I stopped at James VanGordon’s and left $1.00 with his wife for him to buy two bottles of cod liver oil for me in Hartford. I was caught in a thundershower as I came home about 9 o’clock. I ran in the rain from West Street to the house and got quite wet. Mrs. Anna Merritt called in the PM and paid for her insurance to be written on the 24th. AUGUST 23 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Clear and cooler this morning after the thundershower last night. I went to Gage’s Blacksmith Shop and had a long shoe tightened on a horse; the Mr. Beeman and I started for Westville to see James Stevens for money but did not find him at home. We found him at Vernon Young’s at Middle River. We came home by way of King Street and partly arranged matters with David Knapp about the insurance for the Silas Abbott place on Westville Avenue, it being now used in part for a grocery store. We brought home a good bushel of apples from Mr. Knapp’s. In the PM, I drove up to 33 North Street and delivered a policy to Mrs. Anna Merritt and to Tamarack Street with a policy for James Devine. Mary rode with me. Coming from King Street this forenoon, I stopped for a few minutes at Chester Wilson’s. He was not at home. AUGUST 24 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 48; at noon – 70. Quite cool this morning. Before dinner, I delivered a policy to Julius Stone on his store. I called at James in the Harris block for two bottles of cod liver oil which he bought for me in Harford. On opening the package at home, we found that he had by some mistake, got half sizes instead of full sized bottles and paid 69 cents for each, being the price for full-sized bottles. I returned them to Mrs. VanGordon to be exchanged by Mr. VanGordon tomorrow when waiting between trains. Fannie came up in the PM and rose with me to the Railroad Station to see VanGordon on his train going out at 2:57. I then went to the Turner Machine Company and exhibited to Mr. Wildman, the bookkeeper, the policy made over to him by Robert McClean on the former John Parker place which he has recently bought. I then delivered it to Mr. McClean at the store; he holds the mortgage on the place. I then carried Fannie around to do some marketing after which I drove down with her. She came up again in the evening, bringing Julia to stay all night. George, Sarah and her sister Louise came in for the evening. I received a letter from Mary Turner of Duchess County in New York, stating that she had decided not to renew the policy on her Brookfield place. I called at the Savings Bank who holds the mortgage to take up the policy, but they requested me to leave it until they write her and insist on the policy being continued. Fannie came up with Julia in the evening. Julia will stay with us over night and go to a children’s party tomorrow at Mr. Higgins on Brushy Hill road. AUGUST 25 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Pleasant. I mowed a part of the yard next to the grapevine before breakfast. After breakfast, Ira Renfield called and took his furniture policy and paid for it. I went to Gage’s Blacksmith Shop and had Gip shod with new behind and forward shoes. While this was being done, I had Blackman, the harness maker mend a trace to the harness and also called on Mr. Wildman, bookkeeper at the Turner Machine Factory and got a promise of insurance on his furniture when he takes possession of the John parker house which he has recently bought. I wrote to Fred Lawton of Duchess County New York relating the insurance on the Mary Turner place in Brookfield which she wants to discontinue but the bank wants to keep it on. About 4 O’clock, I went over to Clarence Morgan’s to arrange for the restoration of his Equitable policy which lapsed for nonpayment when due on June 29th. He sent his check dated July 29th which was returned to him until he would send a statement of his good health, all of which I obtained and with the check enclosed, I forwarded to W. B. Schaffer, clerk at New Haven. AUGUST 26 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 66. I picked up crab apples for Mrs. Schepparance (?) after breakfast and before which I went over to Mr. Rogers’ garden and picked up an armful of cornstalks for the horse. Later and before dinner, I went down to Mr. VanGordon’s for my two bottles of cod liver oil which he was to get in exchange for small ones sent by mistake, but he had not yet got it. I went up in the PM to see Elmer Clark about furniture insurance; from there to the railroad station at 3 o’clock to meet Mr. VanGordon, the brakeman, about my cod liver oil, but he was not on the train. I receive Post Office orders from Mary Turner to pay for insurance on the Brookfield place. Mary went in the evening to see Dr. Sunderland and took little Julia Hirsch with her after which they visited George on Montgomery Street. I at the same time went to Orchard Street to collect on insurance of Mrs. Jennie Townsend. AUGUST 27 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM -46. Cold but pleasant this morning. Julia Hirsch rode with me nearly all morning. I called on Mr. VanGordon for my cod liver oil. I delivered a policy to Mrs. Popke at 96 Garfield Avenue, then went over to Andrew’s store and bought a veal chop for dinner. In the PM, Lottie came up and the little store girl with her, she having various parcels to carry home. I hitched the horse and took them down home. On my return, I took Mary downtown for some marketing. In the evening, George, his wife Sarah and her sister came over for a visit. AUGUST 28 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 50; art noon – 80. Pleasant. We had clam fritters for breakfast, after which I carried a fresh picked mess of corn, cucumbers and tomatoes over to brother George. I received letter from Mrs. Josephine Stout stating that she had been sick with the grippe which was the reason she had not paid the $5.00 balance of borrowed money and promising to pay the same next Saturday. Also a letter from the Sun Insurance Company for further explanation, maps, location, etc. of the Union Trust Company transfer. About 3:30 PM Mary went with Mrs. Hawley to Doctor Oley to have glasses fitted for her eyes. Mrs. Hawley sent over a dish of succotash and brother George brought in an apple pies for dinner. We spent the evening with George and visiting with Mrs. Kimball who returns to New York City tomorrow. AUGUST 29 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 56. Pleasant. After breakfast, I drove up to Westville Avenue to see Louis Bristol and his son-in-law, Edgar Platt who occupy the old Silas Abbott place and who are keeping a small grocery in the place and pursuant to arrangement with Davis Knapp, executor of the Abbott estate. I made arrangements with them to pay the difference in rates of insurance for the grocery feature of the risk. This they agreed to do. I collected on my drive home $5.00 on account from Edward Headley; also called on Mrs. Richtmyer at 75 Franklin Street about renewal of the Echo Lodge No. 30 Daughters of Rebecca policy. I then called on Mrs. Nellie Schoonmaker at 28 Starr Avenue. She promised to pay the balance due on next Saturday. Received from John Watkins of Hartford a letter asking about accident insurance. I answered it by return mail to Hartford today. Mrs. Emma Anni(?) called in the PM to get her furniture renewed at 27 Main Street where she is to move tomorrow. Also Mr. James VanGordon called to explain about the cod liver oil he did not get in Hartford. In the PM, I called at the New Street School to confer with Edgar Platt, who is the janitor of the school, regarding the insurance raised on account of the grocery store in the house, etc. I called for a few minutes at the office of the Turner Machine Factory and left some life insurance papers with the bookkeeper, Mr. Wildman. I commenced to make up an affidavit as to property, etc. for Melissa Griffith. In the evening, I wrote to J. H. Soule in Washington regarding pension blanks. AUGUST 30 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 52. Got a bundle of cornstalks for the horse from Mr. Rogers’ garden before breakfast, after which I drove down to Andrew Wildman’s near Short’s Hat Factory in Bethel and collected $6.00 for a $1,000 policy in the Agricultural Insurance Company on the dwelling. I called in the factory and took Eli Ferry’s application for one of the state’s honorary medals for the three month volunteers in 1861 in the War of the Southern Rebellion, he being a member of Company C in the Third Regiment Connecticut Volunteers. From there, I drove to Beaverbrook and collected from George Bradley on account $2.00 and two dozen eggs. After dinner, I went to the bank with a deposit, then to W. L. Wall’s Blacksmith Shop to try and collect from Howard Hall for a policy on furniture written April 19, 1904, but did not succeed. From there, I called on Taggart & Siemon and suggested a partnership life policy. In the evening, a Mrs. Virginia McKnight called about an accident policy for her nephew Arthur Francis Dugan. She is to call again tomorrow evening. When at Beaverbrook, I called on Albert Edwards who is an invalid. AUGUST 31 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 54. Charles Bevins came in the morning and borrowed $2.00 of me until next Monday, pension day. In the morning, I drove down to 23-25 Main Street and arranged with Adolph Jelenyik for renewal of his furniture policy on September 2. I then went up to Osborne Street and delivered the Echo Lodge daughters of Rebecca policy to Mrs. Stubbs. After dinner, I drove down to Bethel to Short’s Hat Shop for my fountain pen which I left there yesterday while taking Eli Ferry’s application for one of the state medals for the three month volunteers of 1861. After tea, Mrs. John Allen’s daughter came over to say that she had received a voucher for $2.80 to be executed for accrued pension for John Allen from Dec. 4, 1903 to the 10th of December – 6 days, with instructions to enclose with the same his old certificate for surrender. I went over with the daughter, Mrs. Waite, and fixed out the papers. I mailed the same to A. J. Hyatt, the U. S. pension agent at Boston. I also wrote and mailed a letter to Louis & Nettleton about accident insurance for Mrs. James McKnight and her nephew, Alfred Dugan. In the evening, Fannie called with Sarah Hirsch from New York who with her brother is stopping with Herman for a visit. In the evening, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Turnerville called to see about insuring about 200 Belgian Homing Pigeons. I sent a check to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company for $71.00, the amount of the June balance.
1904-08
Horace Purdy Journal July 1904 Entry
9 pgs
JULY 01 FRIDAY - Mercury 68. Warm and sultry but little sunshine. Showers in the PM and evening. George with Mr. Beeman took our Blue Flame Kerosene Oil stove in the buggy down to Taylor’s Tin Shop in the morning to have him stop the leak in the tank which he recently tried to do but failed. He succeeded better this time. Lottie Hirsch came up in the forenoon. After getting the oil stove home, I took the horse and with Lottie went again into the street and I went up to the corner of Main and North Streets and I collected from daughter the balance due from insurance on the house for Mrs. Anna Evans. After dinner Lottie went with me to D. Gage’s Blacksmith Shop and got Gip shod new all around, after which I carried Lottie down home. JULY 02 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60. Pleasant and cool. George helped me place a framework around my tomato plants this morning, after which I had Mr. Beeman go with me up to Orrin Knox’s to get his affidavit jointly with that of Edwin Rockwell as to the marriage of Leonard Dexter and his wife and that they lived together as man and wife until the death of Mr. Dexter. I made a deposit at the bank and drew brother George’s pay for him at the Eagle Hat Factory as to arrangement made yesterday, I having cashed his account prior to him going to New York yesterday. I called at the office of George Stevens’ and Son and got a check for a broker policy I wrote for them on John W. Green. I also received one by mail from J. M. Layton of Norwalk for the Walthousen policy. After dinner, I got Edwin Rockwell’s affidavit. I then went to the barber shop. JULY 03 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 60. A model day. No dust. Pleasant, cool and comfortable. After cleaning up, I went to the Post Office for my mail, and then went to Edwin Rockwell’s on Foster Street to get his age and also the age of Orrin Knox to insert in their affidavit given yesterday on behalf of Mrs. Dexter in the matter of her application for pension. I then took a car over to White Street to see John Bristol about his furniture insurance expiring today. We took dinner with Mrs. Hawley. A union patriotic service is to be held this evening at our church. Mary and Mrs. Hawley attended. I did not feel able to go myself. JULY 04 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 52. A delightful day; neither cold nor hot. After doing my morning work, care of the horse, etc. I ,at about 9 AM, got Mr. Beeman to ride with me over to the freight depot in response to a postal received yesterday from George S. Purdy in New York that he had shipped a package of crackers to me by freight. They proved to be a dozen bottles of Seely’s Ginger Ale. On arriving home, I gave Beeman one bottle. We then, Mary and I, got off by trolley as soon as possible to Bethel to George L. and the Becker’s for a clam bake and 4th of July dinner. We returned home about 7 PM and found Fannie and daughter Lottie at the house in the hammock waiting for us. There were present at the Becker’s besides the old Beckers and George and wife, George Becker, his wife and 4 children, Mr. John Rogers, wife and little girl from West Wooster Street, and Mr. Stevens, his wife and little girl, boarders of Mr. Becker. A photograph of the party was taken in two different groups. Fannie, after opening a bottle of Ginger Ale, goes home, leaving Lottie to stay the night with us. JULY 05 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 66. Warmer today. I drove to see about renewal of Dexter, Lyon, Small and Sarah Austin. Lottie, who stayed over with us, rode around with me and I finished up by taking her home about 11 o’clock with some things she had for their dinner. Her father had just left the trolley car to get his dinner when we got there. Fannie gave me a half loaf of new bread to bring home. When I arrived, Joseph Kroha was at the office with George reporting a fire last evening about 6 o’clock in a clothes closet, Ladies’ clothing chiefly burned. Joseph Kroha estimated the loss at about $50. After dinner, I drove up to see it, after which I reported the same to the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. The balance of the PM, I stayed home and attended to office work while Mary and Mrs. Hawley went into the street shopping. George came home from New York in the evening. JULY 06 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 65. A brief shower last night. After breakfast, I took the spindle buggy down to W. Hall’s Blacksmith Shop and carried a gallon of vinegar down to Fannie’s , then went down to Mr. Wixted’s to try and collect for insurance; he not being at home, I left word for him. In the PM, I collected from E. M. Buckley, treasurer for Sarah Taylor’s estate for the insurance on the old Sturdivant place at the White Street terminus of the trolley line. I called on J. Beal, but got nothing. I called at Steven’s insurance office to get forms for renewing Lee Hat Manufacturing Company on July 11. I consulted with the Stamp Clerk, A. H. Hawes about the rate for the Blacksmith Shop of Patrick Lynch at Beaverbrook. Before dinner, I called on Lynch in reference to insurance. I tried to collect from Arthur Grover, but could not, but got 2 dozen eggs and $2.00 from George Bradley. About 5 PM, I went to the blacksmith shop for my wagon. In the evening, Rebecca Dibble called to see about gasoline and kerosene oil stove permits on her insurance policies. Nellie Hamilton and her baby spent the PM and took tea with us. George came over in the evening. JULY 07 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 70. Light shower last night, which being cloudy gave us gentle showers in the forenoon. Clarence Morgan, about 10 AM, reported loss about one o’clock this morning in house at 4 Wildman Street, an accident with a lamp. I took the trolley and went over directly with him; the loss is about $350. I so reported to the Reliance Insurance Company which has the risk. We received short loss proof from the Connecticut Insurance Company this morning with instructions to adjust the same on Joseph Kroha on furniture policy No. 2003 located on 2nd Avenue. In the PM, I went there and adjusted the same at $45 and sent in proof of loss by mailing the same in the evening. Brother George came over and took tea with us. On my return from 2nd Avenue, I found Henry Hawthorne, brother of Halsey Hawthorne, waiting for me to have me mark his June pension voucher. He is the noted fellow who in England many years ago, saved a wealthy woman from drowning and who in her will left him a large fortune. JULY 08 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6AM -62; at noon-78. I t rained moderately about all of last night. Warm and muggy this morning. Before dinner, Mr. Beeman rode with me to deliver policies to John Bristol, Alice Mortimer, George Denton and Della Lyon. I delivered a life insurance receipt to R. C. Reid at the Turner Machine Company shop. I mailed Greenwich policies to the Commercial Union to approve endorsements on John Greely policy 214988 and Center School District policy 2120828. I bought 21 pounds of granulated sugar for $1.00 at the tea store and came home. Prior to this drive, however, I took a diagram of3 park Avenue for John Greeley transfer and left word at Byron Dexter’s to have his mother call as early as possible to sign papers in her pension claim. After dinner, I took a nap in the office. At 3 PM, special agent Knox of the Reliance appeared in a carriage to adjust the Clarence Morgan loss on Wildman Street. We immediately went there, but found him away in the hay field at Beaverbrook. We sent for him; after his arrival, we adjusted the loss without an appraisal for $237. We then took a trolley ride over to the lake and returned at 6 o’clock, just in time for my tea which was waiting with brother George to dine with us. After tea, George and Mary went over to Mrs. Biddescombe’s on Stevens Street to see about making up a Larkin Soap order. JULY 09 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 58; at noon-77. Pleasant. After breakfast, I hoed out my garden. Then I called on Olive Lake to satisfy her that her policy contained permits on kerosene oil and gasoline stores. I then, with Mr. Beeman, rode up to 2nd Avenue and paid Kroha $45 for his fire loss on July 4th. I delivered various policies. I ordered 100 pounds of bran from Barnum. I made a deposit and found brother George on the street and carried him up to his shop to get his pay and then came home to dinner. Mrs. Dexter called about 11 o’clock in reference to word sent her by telephone yesterday to sign an affidavit as to her marriage; the same being required in her claim for pension. Mrs. Lucy Harris called in the PM regarding her insurance and promised to pay next week. Mrs. Hawley rode with me to do the Sunday marketing. We drove down to Fannie’s but he was not at home. Frank Moody called in the evening and paid his life premium. JULY 10 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 65. As frank Moody’s life insurance premium was due yesterday and paid last evening, I made check this morning dated yesterday to send in payment of the same. Lowery with more or less light rain in the forenoon. Brother George being alone (his wife being in New York) came over to breakfast. He took dinner with us also, as did Mr. and Mrs. Hawley, our neighbors. After dinner, I made a check and mailed to W. B. Schiffer, cashier of Equitable Life at New Haven to pay Frank Moody’s premium due and paid to me last evening. I also completed the reliance Insurance Company’s June account and mailed it. McArthur and Mrs. Hawley went to hear deacon talk about his time in the Holy Land – Palestine. JULY 11 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 68; at noon – 72. Lowery, warm and muggy. John Rogers of West Wooster Street left $.70 to pay for Becker and Purdy group pictures which were taken on the Becker lawn, being two distinct grouped positioned groups, one at the table and the other grouped on the lawn. After breakfast, I went down to Charles Dickens to see the damage he had about 8 o’clock last night by explosion of a lamp. After viewing it, I drove up to Bennet’s Shop to see him about the matter before reporting it to the company (Sun Insurance office). After making up report of the same, I took James Martin (who had called at the office) with me and mailed the report. I then called at Rundle & White’s to have him get after Herbert Wildman to pay me the premium he received from Rundle & White for the premium for the $5,000 Sun policy I wrote on their factory. On my arrival home, I found Richard Lee, Jr., assistant special agent of the Sun waiting for me to go out on an inspection trip. After dinner, we hitched up Gip and George started with him. Soon thereafter, James Beckett, school committee member, of Middle River called to have their schoolhouse policy made over to the town of Danbury as now all districts have been consolidated. George and Mr. Lee returned about 6 PM. JULY 12 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 68; at noon, 82. Pleasant and warm, but considerable air stirring. Special Agent Lee of the Sun started again with George this morning to finish up his inspection list. We went to Plum Trees and Gallows Hill, so-called near West Redding depot in the morning. George hired a livery team today by request of agent Lee. They returned about 3 PM, having completed their inspection tour with a pretty satisfactory idea of this agency’s work. No cancellations ordered, but 2 or 3 suggestions for improvement. I went over the work by reference to duplicate D. R. with special agent Lee which took the remainder of the afternoon. Mary received a letter from Clara Watkins that they (she and her mother) expected to start for Danbury next Thursday noon. I sent a postal for Clara to add to our order for 2 Scott’s Emulsion, making it three. About 7 PM, a heavy thunder shower threatened which largely passed around us but a moderate rain about 8 o’clock. JULY 13 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM, 68. It rained after the shower last evening most of the night. Lowery early this morning but came off pleasant about 9 o’clock. Received a check for $237 from the Reliance Insurance Company for the Clarence Morgan loss on last Thursday morning. Before noon, I reported the same to him and got his signature to receipt of same then left it at the Savings Bank of Danbury to whom policy is made payable for mortgage. I also delivered a policy to Sarah Austin. Fannie called in the PM and after my dinner nap, I drove with her up to the cemetery. I then took up from the registered letter department of the Post Office the letter I wrote Herbert Wildman on June 21st, which he refused to receive after two notices to call for same. I then drove down home with Fannie leaving on my way at A. S. Arnold’s a policy for the Wooster Hose Company No. 5. Achille Canale reported small damage by gasoline stove this morning under Niagara policy 6312, re-issued in Norwich and re-re-issued in Commercial Union. I reported the same this evening to Commercial Union by way of Greenwich Insurance Company. JULY 14 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 52. Cool, but pleasant. The first snap shot pictures of our Bethel Becker 4th of July clambake, George brought up this morning and took them over to John Rogers on West Wooster Street. Before breakfast, I cleaned out the grass in the cracks of my boardwalks. I made out June accounts to Agricultural and Sun. I received from the Commercial Union the policies of John Greely and Locust Avenue School in Greenwich with the endorsement approved. I delivered the same to Charles Mason, then went over to Beaverbrook and directed Mrs. Fuller about the stove in the old shed attached to her dwelling occupied by a tenant. I requested her to tell her husband Mr. Fuller to pay the balance due on his mother‘s (Harriet Fuller) place. I collected $2.00 and one dozen eggs of George Bradley on account. I went over to the depot to meet Clara and Hattie Watkins coming from Hartford, but they did not come. They will probably come on the evening train. Mrs. Brownlow came on the train, however, so I brought her home. I went again to meet the 7:25 train only to be disappointed again. JULY 15 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM-60. After George arrived from Bethel this morning, I drove to Brookfield to look after Robert and Effie Jones’ insurance which expires on the 23rd instant. I also arranged for the renewal of Anna and Harriet Bronson which also expired on the same day. When I arrived home at noon, I found Hattie Watkins and daughter Clara who we expected yesterday from Hartford. They arrived this morning on the 9:15 train. They brought us as requested wicks for the Blue Flame kerosene stove, a bottle of Scott’s Emulsion Cod Liver Oil and a 10 cent package of Barber’s green Ink Powder. After dinner, I wrote to E. Crouch at Ridgefield, the mortgagee on the Jones place at Brookfield to send me by mail the New London County Mutual policy expiring the same date , July 23rd, that I may copy amount, etc. from it in making up the Jones policy. I stayed in the office in the PM and rested from my morning drive. I wrote and sent a bill in the evening to Herbert Wildman for the Rundle & White policy which he brokered for us. Herman came up and brought Georgie with him, for an evening call. JULY 16 SATURDAY - Mercury 65 at 6 AM; at noon -82. George brought up the Bethel Becker clambake 4th of July pictures (2 groups) this morning. Two thunder showers last night; the first about 11 o’clock, the second about 3 o’clock this morning. Clara Watkins rode with me this morning to do the Sunday marketing. I made a deposit before noon and had a word with T. C. Millard, the bank president about life insurance, i.e., the Equitable 5% Gold Bond, after which I drove up to Hoyt Wolthausen‘s factory to see if they had a gas machine with their plant; they had not. After dinner, Mrs. Michael Freeman called and applied and paid for a $500 insurance policy on furniture for 3 months in the Reliance Insurance Company. Charles Brush also ordered a policy for $150 on hay for one year in the John Brush barn. Later in the PM, I drove over for a diagram of the brush barn. Mrs. Hawley went with me. Also over to Durant Street for the freeman diagram, after which we both did some marketing for Sunday. In the evening, George Hawley with his mother came over for me to go security for his household goods bought on the installment plan and part paid for which they will not allow him to move to Norwalk without one to go security for them. I of course refused. JULY 17 SUNDAY - Mercury at 7 AM – 70; at noon – 84. Pleasant. After doing the morning work and taking my morning bath, I went to the Post Office and received a short proof of loss from Arthur Hatch to make up for loss of Charles Dickens’ under policy in the Sun which occurred last Sunday evening. On my way, I remailed to the stamp Clerk, Howes, the 4 months new company permit for Sterling Fanton which was returned to be amended, making same standard by being null and void if not in charge of a competent person. Brother George was with us with our visitors Hattie and Clara Watkins. Walter Tomlinson called while I was at the Post Office to see if I could go with him at 8 o’clock tomorrow morning to appraise the L. Hartwell property. Mary, with Clara and Hattie attended church in the evening to hear Deacon Mc Arthur tell of his trip to the Holy Land. JULY 18 MONDAY - Mercury 6 AM – 65; at noon-85. Rain during last night accompanied by a thunder shower. Cloudy this morning with doubtful appearance of it being a pleasant day. In the middle of the forenoon, it came off pleasant and W. Tomlinson and I went up to George Hartwell’s and appraised his property and returned before dinner. I arrange for Charles Dickens to come this evening to our office to adjust his loss which occurred a week ago yesterday. After dinner, I delivered a policy to Michael Freeman on Durant Street. I compared notes as to the insurance of automobile with stamp clerk A. H. Hawes and then took the trolley to Bethel and arranged for the renewal of O. B. Smith’s insurance tomorrow, after which I called on Mrs. Street to see why she did not last week come and pay $5.00 on her note as she promised. She now promises to come next Saturday. In the evening, Charles Dickens came to the office and I adjusted his fire loss of a week ago last Sunday for $30 in the same insurance office and before retiring, I mailed two proofs to Arthur Hatch, special agent at Boston. JULY 19 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6AM – 68; at noon – 90. After breakfast, I took the trolley to Bethel to get the decision of G. B. Smith as to the annual automobile permit or one with contemporaneous for 5 years the term of the policy. They decided the annual. George mowed the lawn. Hattie and Clara Watkins bought a lawn swing at the village store. Being pretty tired, I took a nap after dinner. Fannie called in the afternoon. Sent check for the May balance to the Sun. Called at Stamp Clerk Howe’s office and compared the April automobile permit with the standard permit. A slight change only was required to make it the G. B. Smith. George had omitted to write the $300 on the barn in the form thought he had included it in the totals. Fire alarm box No. 26 on North Street and Balmforth Avenue struck at 8:30 in the evening. JULY 20 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM - 70; at noon - 82. George took Clara Watkins up with him to Westville to try and collect from James Stevens and also to leave a policy with Chester Wilson at King Street. The wind changed into the north this morning which has given a little setback to the extreme heat. In the forenoon, I went into the street and left Etta Mason’s policy at the Union Savings Bank after exhibiting it to her husband Charles Mason, the register letter clerk at the Post Office. I also had David Hoyt sign an application for increase in pension at the railroad depot with George Chase and A. H. Reinhart as witnesses. In the PM, I ordered two bales of hay of C. W. Keeler, had a short talk with Arthur Cable on life insurance. Eugene Hyatt came in the Mind insured his furniture for $500 for 5 years at 36 Division Street. In the evening, Mr. and Mrs. Hawley came over and made 2 quarts of ice cream for us, which we finished to the last spoonful with help of Brother George who came over. JULY 21 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 64. The 43rd anniversary of the Battle of Bull Run. Mr. Jackson sent by us for Dr. McDonald to come and see Ida Jackson who is sick. George went with me up to see Barbara Moser at 7 Prince Street regarding renewal of her furniture policy which she let lapse. George as notary had David Hoyt and his witnesses acknowledge their signatures to his application for increase in pension. Having taken cold, I am feeling about sick today. After dinner, George rode up to Prince Street with me and delivered and collected on a policy for Barbara Moser; also called on Mr. Hyatt who recently bought out the grocery of S. W. Lathrop and solicited the insurance on their stock. Mary, with her sister Hattie and daughter Clara Watkins spent the afternoon over at the lake. I wrote again to the Commercial Union about the gasoline stove damage of Achille Canale. I sent to the Commissioner of Pensions the application of David Hoyt for increase from $6 to $8 under the old age ruling, he being over 65 years old. JULY 22 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Lowery in the morning. When George arrived from Bethel, we mended the spindle shaft which Gip broke at the hitch post in front of the office yesterday, after which I drove to Brookfield and delivered a policy to Harriet Bowman and arranged for renewing a policy for Robert Jones. On my return home at noon, I stopped and got another dozen eggs of George Bradley on account of his insurance. After dinner, we wrote the Jones policy. I then went down to A. T. Bates office to see about title to a policy in the Union Savings Bank being made to Valentine Patch, it being the place formerly owned by Sidney Morris on the corner of George and Orchard Streets. On my return from Brookfield as I was watering my horse at Wooster Square, I saw for the first time in several weeks Herbert Wildman at a short distance. Before I could get at him for the $100 he owes me, he ducked into the stairway leading to A. T. Bates office in Starr’s block. It continued lowery all day with period of light rain in the PM. JULY 23 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Lowery and cool. After breakfast, I took Mrs. Griffith’s affidavit as to no prior marriage to that of Edwin Griffith; also went over to Beaverbrook for Ezra Wildman’s affidavit to same and to Mill Plain to Clarissa Grey’s making a joint affidavit with E. G. Wildman. I mailed the documents in the PM to the Commissioner of Pension. George came over in the PM. JULY 24 SUNDAY - Mercury at 8 AM – 62. Still cloudy until 11 AM when it began to rain and continued moderately during the day. I went to the Post Office at noon. George Starr Purdy was with us to dinner, after which I wrote to Manager G. W. VanFleet of the Equitable giving reason (on account of ill health) why I have done no business with them this summer. Mary, with Hattie and Clara Watkins, attended church this morning. JULY 25 MONDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 62. Lowery all day but with no rain worth mentioning. I received a letter from Herbert Wildman about the $100 premium for the Rundle & White premium for the $5,000 Sun policy. He claimed to have received a check which was not good which was the reason why he had not paid me. He did not say it was the Rundle & White check; neither did he say it was not. He said it however in connection with the Rundle & White matter intending probably for me to think it without specifically saying it was their check. I showed it to Mr. Rundle and he read it in the same light that we did. The language was very adroit yet did not directly say that it was Rundle & White’s check. I hoped to see Wildman personally today but was not able to do so. I received from J. B. Cralle, Mrs. Dexter’s attorney in Washington, blanks for two affidavits from personal acquaintances stating that she has not remarried; also wanting the town clerk’s certificate of the record of Leonard Dexter’s death. This I secured this PM. Mary, Hattie and Clara Watkins spent this evening at Mr. Beeman’s. JULY 26 TUESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 65; at noon – 78. Sunshine and shadow intermingled; warm and sultry. Received by morning mail a short proof of loss from W. J. Furness, special agent of the Connecticut Union for use on the small damage on the Achille Canale house which occurred on the 13th of July by accident with a gasoline stove. Picked our first cucumbers this morning. I called at Herbert Wildman’s house to see about the Rundle & White $100 premium, but did not find him there or at his office. Also before dinner, I called on Target & Siemon about the new insurance on their laundry. After dinner, I drove up to Joseph Blissard’s on Park Avenue and took alien of $1,000 on his furniture and personal property in the barn. Mr. Beeman was with me and we drove to Morris Street to see Steven Stuckey about collection of premium; also to Starr Avenue to see Mrs. Schoonmaker. Chester C. Bush of 21 Montgomery Street died about 3 PM. Hattie and Clara Watkins went down with Mary to Fannie’s to spend the evening. George came over in the evening and took a derby hat that Herman gave me to change the curl. Mrs. Leonard Dexter called about 5 PM to inquire about her pension claim and gave me a dollar for two certificates (50 cents each) as to assessor’s statement of no property record of Leonard or Frances Dexter and town clerk as to the death of Leonard Dexter. JULY 27 WEDNESDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 65; at noon – 80. Pleasant. We pulled our first mess of beets this morning for our dinner. Mrs. Hawley called on her way to the shop and signed an affidavit as to her personal acquaintance with Mrs. Frances Dexter and her own knowledge as to her not being remarried, the same being in the matter of her application for a widow’s pension. We took the spindle buggy down to Mr. Barber’s in the morning for a new shaft, one being broken, after which Hattie Watkins rode up with me to Mr. Robert Jones to Brookfield to deliver a policy written in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. On our return I stopped to see Daniel Joyce to see if he would take the mortgage on our place. He was not at home. I left word with Mrs. Joyce. I stopped at Mr. Fuller’s on my return to try to collect balance due; he was not at home. I also stopped at the establishment of Patrick McManus to inspect the stove pipe in the woodhouse. I then called at George Bradley’s and got a dozen eggs on his account. We arrive home in time for dinner. I completed some papers in Mrs. Dexter’s pension case and mailed in the PM to J. B. Crabbe, her attorney in Washington. In the evening, I called over to Mrs. Jennie Townsend to collect on her insurance but could not. JULY 28 THURSDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 64. Lowery and foggy in the morning. Received by morning mail a draft from the Sun for $30 in payment of the C. H. Dickens loss which we immediately delivered to him at Connett’s Hat Factory. After taking his receipt and endorsement of the draft, I cashed it for him and deposited the same in the bank. I called at his home and as directed if no one was home, I took his policy from the writing desk in the dining room and brought home to endorse on it the amount of the loss. We then went to W. Barber’s wagon shop on Railroad Avenue and brought home the spindle which he repaired with a new shaft. I am again attacked with swollen and painful testicles as a result of mucus matter in the urethra from catarrh of the bladder. I commenced treatment again with an application of anti-phlogistine and after dinner, I sent George up to Dr. Sunderland’s for medicine. I remained quiet, lying down for the rest of the day. While on the lounge in the office about 3 PM, Joe Thomas called to try and make arrangements with me to get house rent Joel Bates owes him from his pension next September. I of course could do nothing about it, a soldier’s pension being a sacred matter with the U. S. and exempt from attachment or garnishing. JULY 29 FRIDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 64. A hard thundershower about midnight last night. Lightning struck Daniel Depew’s house, tore off part of the roof and knocked off a portion of the chimney and some other slight damage in the house. Myself being unable to look after it after Mr. Depew reported it, I had George and John W. Bouton go up and appraise the damage. I reported to the Agricultural Insurance Company and special agent George Shaw the amount of $20 as being the damage and for fear of another shower might strike and do more damage by water before the roof was repaired, I took the responsibility and told John Bouton to repair it today if possible. I am still at home with my bladder and testicle problem. Sam Hoyt and a Mrs. Grace Clark, his neighbor, were with us to dinner, they having come from Ridgefield to buy groceries, etc. JULY 30 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 60. Pleasant. George looked up the loss reported by George Stevens & Son of car owned by Mary Jackson (struck by lightning) insured by policy No. 1974 Connecticut Insurance Company for Stevens by Treadwell. We reported the same at once. I received by freight one dozen ginger ales from New York which George ordered for us. After dinner, young Achille Canale came in and I adjusted the loss by gasoline stove in their house No. 2 for $2.50 and sent the same forward to W. T. Furness, special agent of the Connecticut Union, who has the risk by reinsurance of Greenwich Insurance Company. JULY 31 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 74; at noon – 80. Muggy and warm. I had daughter Fannie take my key and go to the Post Office for my mail and the Sunday Press about 11 AM, and the proof of loss blank for adjustment of lightning damage under policy 7013 for Cornelia Depew with instructions to adjust and pay. While there has been considerable air stirring during the day, the humidity of the air has been about unbearable. After dinner about 4 o’clock, Mary and sister Hattie and daughter Clara went over to William Dean’s and stayed during the evening. They returned about 10 PM. George S. returned on the 8 PM train from New York City, having been down there with his wife at her sister’s (Louise)since last Wednesday, he not having any work last week at the shop. In the PM, I got Jesse Rogers to go over to John Bouton’s and have him come down and see me regarding the work he did in repairing the lightning damage to Cornelia Depew’s house for the Agricultural Insurance Company to aid me in making up the proof of loss blank which came by mail today.
1904-07
Horace Purdy Journal June 1904 Entry
6 pgs
JUNE 01 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 60. Mr. Beeman, about 9 AM, rode with me over to Frank Oetzel’s where I collected the balance due for his store insurance. Then I went over to Clarence Morgan’s to see about a ton of coal I ordered last week. He promised to bring it today. Then we went up to Pandaranum Avenue and arranged for the renewal of the furniture policy as they had just moved from Keeler Street. From there, we went to Abbott Avenue to see about Mary Hurlburt’s renewal. In the evening, I made a deposit, including a $200 note for discount. I met special agent Miller of the Equitable Life Insurance for a few minutes. After tea, I rode up to see Mrs. Hurlburt. It being about 7:30, I found her home, she having just arrived home from the factory. I arranged for the renewal of her insurance. JUNE 02 THURSDAY - Mercury 52. Cold and cloudy all day. I made up the Accident Standard accounts for May. Clarence Morgan brought me a ton of coal this morning. Before dinner, I called at Mr. Shepard’s to collect for insurance but got nothing. After dinner, I drove over to Hull’s Hill to collect from Mr. Dunn but got nothing. On my return I got $5.00 from Leroy Andrews. Mrs. Priscilla Benedict sent in $2.00. Mrs. Saul Stuart called from Bethel about insuring a piano then tried to borrow $15.00. I GUESS I DIDN’T DO IT. I wrote to Jacob Baker at New Fairfield about using his cased tobacco. JUNE 03 FRIDAY - Mercury 60. Cloudy until after dinner when it cleared off and the sun shone. About 8:30, I started for Stony Hill to see Hannah Clark about renewing insurance on dwelling at Germantown, i.e., North Osborne Street, it being the property designated for her son Frank Clark, but the title yet being in her name. On the way over, I saw Lena Knapp about the mortgage she holds on our place. On my return, I came by way of George Bradley’s and his wife paid me $2.00 on account of his insurance and half dozen eggs on the same account. While in the street on my way home, Saul Rundle informed me that they had just paid H. Wildman $100, the premium on a Sun policy I wrote for him on the Rundle & White factory and advised me to go to him and get my pay. After dinner, I called at the factory and Mr. Rundle said the check was given as he said before dinner. I then walked over to C. L. Morgan’s store and spoke for renewal of his store insurance. Received from Patrick Gorman at Branchville a postal order for $11.00 to balance his insurance. Also a request from J. M. Layton for another form of the Hoyt & Walthausen policy to be sent to him. Frank Fowler gave me $5.00 this PM on account of his insurance. George and Sarah came over in the evening. I paid George 48 cents for two pounds of coffee, we being out and he having a surplus until we can order more. Before retiring, I sent a receipt to Mr. Gorman and a bill to H. A. Wildman. JUNE 04 SATURDAY - Mercury 63. Pension Day. Pleasant and warmer as the sun has shone all day. Pension work has kept me busy. George and Mr. Beekman drove up to Saul Gregory’s after dinner to execute his voucher. Just at eight, Mrs. Hawley and I drove and did the marketing for Sunday. George and Sarah came over in the evening. I was about exhausted with the rush of pension voucher work today. JUNE 05 SUNDAY - Mercury 65 at 7 AM; 82 at noon. Warm. At 11 AM, I took the trolley to Bethel to have George as notaries make my pension voucher which was overlooked yesterday. He handed me O. B. Smith’s policy on which to attach a permit to keep an automobile in his barn. Sent postal to Charles Watkins that Barber’s scarlet ink powder was received OK. Mailed my pension voucher to Boston. We called at George’s about 7 PM and from there, went to church to hear Dr. Wilson preach about thumbs and great toes from Judges 1:6-7, but before he finished his sermon great thunder was heard and from fear of the congregation getting wet on the way home, he shortened the sermon and dismissed the congregation. The shower shifted its course however and no rain came. JUNE 06 MONDAY - Mercury 75 at 7 AM; 80 at noon. Clear and very warm. After breakfast, I planted over my lima beans where they rotted in the ground, after which George and I mowed the back yard. About 10 AM, Mr. Beeman and I rode uptown. On the way, I called at Rundle & White’s factory and ascertained that they gave Herbert Wildman a $100 check for the Sun Policy I furnished him. I then delivered a policy to Mrs. Mary Quinn on Padaranum Avenue. I also arranged with Frank Clark, the colorman at Mallory’s Factory for the renewal of the policy on his house at Germantown, so-called, and increased it $500 on his furniture. I then got diagrams for 77 Rowan Street for transfer to W. H. Light and delivered policy to Frank Holmes on Balmforth Avenue. In the PM, I took the trolley to Bethel to return to Mrs. Emily benedict the $10 she advanced on her place until Cornelius Sturgis should purchase the property. I did so and took her receipt therefore. After supper, George and Sarah came over and with his help, I removed the iron rod form the trunk of the wisteria vine which had nearly killed it by embedding itself into the wood of the tree as it grew. It was alright when the vine was young and needed supporting, but now it was, so to speak, strangling the vine. JUNE 07 TUESDAY - Mercury 60. A thunder shower during last night. Lowery during the forenoon. I cleaned up the Blue Flame Kerosene Stove after breakfast. I went downtown after dinner and saw Mrs. Ward regarding assistance for Mrs. Hawley. She requested Mrs. Hawley to come and see her. After dinner, I went into the street again to see if Lottie Stock wanted her insurance rewritten at 96 White Street to where she has moved. She consulted Frank Wilcox who advised her not to do so at the high rate of premium but to insure the piano only. I called on Samuel Newman, but succeeded in getting nothing. We were threatened with a heavy shower about 6 PM which passed off with but little rain here, before which our pastor Dr. Wilson called. After tea and it was clear that we were not to have a shower, Mary went over to George’s at 19 Montgomery Street to see Sarah who goes to New York by an early train tomorrow morning. JUNE 08 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 70. Slight showers last night. Just before dinner, I went downtown and mailed two letters and called at 96 White Street and arranged with Lottie Stock for change to her insurance from $1,000 to $500. JUNE 09 THURSDAY - Rainy all day. IN the forenoon I went down to lawyer William H. Cable’s office and had two affidavits typewritten for the town and city assessors, respectively to make as to no taxable property owned by Leonard Dexter or his widow, Frances Dexter, the same called for by the pension department at Washington in application for widow’s pension. In the PM, the city assessors, E. S. Fairchild and Mr. F. Vores, signed for the city. Jack Bates called me this morning and urged me to advance $2.00 more on his pension, which I did. He came again in the afternoon for more, but I hid away from him. JUNE 10 FRIDAY - Mercury 45. Cold this morning. I mowed my dooryard this morning with a scythe it being too long for a lawn mower, which I will use to smooth up tomorrow morning. I used the scythe to get warm before going into the office. After George came from Bethel about 8 o’clock, I drove over to Mr. Dunn’s beyond Hull’s Hill and collected $8.00 on account of their insurance. After my return, I took Mr. Beekman and went over to Clarence Morgan to see about his store insurance and his barn at Beaverbrook, then went over there and collected one dollar and a dozen eggs on account of George Bradley. After dinner, I rested and slept until about 3 o’clock, then I mended a bridle, harnessed Gyp and with James Morton, who called to see if his pension check had arrived, I went uptown, leaving him at Franklin Street, then to see John Haslett at Vinson’s Hat Factory (he being the foreman over their sizing room) about signing an affidavit as one of the town assessors as to their being no property on the town books accredited to Mrs. Frances Dexter. I had quite a life insurance talk with him. I then drove down to South Street to arrange for renewal of fire insurance on the tenant dwelling of Thomas Brigham. After tea, I drove up to Highland Avenue to see Mrs. Mary Williams about her taking our mortgage, but she being away, ascertained nothing. On my return, I drove down Franklin Street and saw the town clerk, E. M. Bulkley as to renewing policy on dwelling at 190 Triangle Street for the estate of Sarah Taylor. JUNE 11 SATURDAY - Mercury 60. Pleasant and warmer. I hoed out a part of my garden before breakfast. We wrote and I delivered an agricultural policy to Thomas Brigham after breakfast. James Martin called in the forenoon to get his pension check which comes from Washington, but it did not arrive as expected. I advanced him $2.00 on it so he could clean up and attend a meeting at Starr’s plain tomorrow. He is trying to reform and lead a new life, and I felt like helping him to attend the meeting tomorrow. In the PM, Mrs. Samuel Street from Bethel called and insisted that I should loan her $15.00 for two months. I was unable to get rid of her without letting her have $10.00. I called on Dr. Sunderland to have my water examined; he found it alright, but gave me some medicines to correct involuntary emissions from seminal and sexual organs. JUNE 12 SUNDAY - Mercury this morning 60. Pleasant but only moderately warm. I am feeling very weak and can scarcely drag around. I went to the Post Office at noon and after dinner went again to see Dr. Sunderland and arranged for insurance on his horses, etc. and a renewal on furniture to get a mixed policy and thereby a better rate for him. JUNE 13 MONDAY - Pleasant but cool. I have felt very weak and badly today. We wrote extra insurance ($400) for one month for Harry Bristol and gave a permit for keeping fireworks. I tried to see George Brush about delivery of his father’s insurance on River Street but failed to find him. I called again to see Mrs. Mary Williams about taking our mortgage, but she had decided to take no more mortgages. Nathan Hay called at non with Alexander Lee as affidavit as to the knowledge of his brother’s claim for the state amount for the reimbursement of funeral expenses. I took his affidavit. JUNE 14 TUESDAY - Mercury 56. Received by the morning mail a P.O. order from Carrie Nichols for $5.50 balance of insurance due since February 1st. We delivered the Sun policy to George brush and mother Mary Brush on River Street, it having for many years past with T. Jones, agent, now deceased and now comes to us. Mrs. E. M. Griffith brought me a blank from the pension office to be certified to by the clerk of the Superior Court as to my authority as Notary Public to be kept on file at Washington. Still feeling miserable I stayed in the house on the lounge all the PM. George S. Purdy took tea with us. He made a clam stew for me which I relished. He helped me do the barn work after tea. Mr. Daragan gave me a check for $20.00 dated the 16th in payment for insurance on his brick block. George Starr was with us in the evening. I felt so badly that I had him go up and have Dr. Sunderland come to see me which he did and left medicine for me. William Rich’s house was burned to the ground early this morning out at Mill Plain. JUNE 15 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 60. A little warmer. I have kept quiet today. My left testicle is feeling quite sore. I fear a recurrence of past time trouble with them. At 4 PM, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s and he gave me another remedy for the last trouble named. I grew warm during the day. JUNE 16 THURSDAY - Still warmer and pleasant. George took his wife and drove to Beaverbrook to see the two Bradley’s – George M. and his father, Tomas C. – but did not find them. From there they went to New Fairfield to see Jack Baker about insuring cased tobacco, but they had not decided to do so because another party intended had to be consulted. I am so much worse, that immediately on his arrival, I sent him for Dr. Sunderland. He came about 4 PM and prescribed for me. JUNE 17 FRIDAY - Another warm day. I had a restless night up to midnight when I took another pain powder and slept fairly well until this morning. Doctor came this forenoon. George and Mr. Beeman will look after the business this morning. They left N. C. Hoyt’s policy at the Union Savings Bank. Saw W. E. Lewis about the transfer of his policy to Beaverbrook in the Paul Shortland house for which he has traded his Patch Street property. I have kept quiet today. I am holding my own, I think, but no great improvement. Mrs. Hawley stayed with Mary last night to assist in case I should need any special care. JUNE 18 SATURDAY - Mercury 60. Pleasant and warm. Am neither better today, nor I think worse. Dr. Sunderland called at the noon hour and changed my medicine, giving me something stronger to move my bowels. It did not act as positively as desired. I could eat nothing to speak of. I ate no supper at all. Mrs. Hawley did our marketing for us for Sunday. George S. came over and did our barn work. Mrs. Charles Fowler called in the PM and paid balance of insurance. Also did Arthur Dibble, paying $5.00 on account of his bill. JUNE 19 SUNDAY - Warmer. I am feeling very much better. Medicine for moving my bowels given yesterday by Dr. Sunderland commenced operations about 1 o’clock last night and kept me busy until morning. George S. came over in the morning and took care of the horse, Gip, and did the other barn work. After breakfast, I cleaned up and dressed my swollen testicles with a new dressing of Antiphlogistine.(Note: In the early 20th century, Antiphlogistine was one of the old remedies for boils, poison ivy and chest congestion, first used in 1893 and created by Denver Chemical of New York. The initial trademark application reads :(EXPIRED) IC 005. US 006. G & S: MEDICINAL PREPARATION POSSESSING CURATIVE PROPERTIES AND BEING A CURATIVE REMEDY FOR INJURIES AND ACUTE AND CHRONIC INFLAMMATORY AFFECTIONS. FIRST USE: 18931001. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 1893).George S. brought the mail at noon and stayed to dinner. Mr. Beeman called while we were at dinner, just before which Dr. Sunderland called and immediately pronounced me better. About 5 PM, George S. fed the horse and made her bed, then went over home to water his plants and write to Sarah who is in New York with Louise, leaving him alone. We received postal this noon from Mr. Wodzilowski to call and look after a small loss on his furniture. JUNE 20 MONDAY - Mercury 74. Pleasant. After breakfast, I sent George up to Dr. Sunderland’s with a sample of my water for examination as to kidney trouble. He pronounced it alright. George this forenoon went to 84 Balmforth Avenue to see about a small loss for Mr. Wodzilowski, which occurred Saturday morning the 18th, the loss being damage to clothing only from a lamp in a clothes closet. Dr. Sunderland called at noon. He says that I am better which in an all-round way of speaking is true. I am compelled to keep off my feet as much as possible. John Bouton called a few minutes in the PM. George S. took tea with us, and then fed the horse for me. Fannie and Ida Stone called in the evening. JUNE 21 FRIDAY - Mercury 68. I am feeling very much better this morning. George with Mr. Beeman took our kerosene blue flame stove to be soldered as it leaked too badly when last used to continue use until the leak can be stopped. I wrote a sharp letter to H. A. Wildman to pay the Rundle & White premium which he has collected on the same policy – premium $100. I ate well at dinner. After dinner, Adele l. Clark called to see about renewing the insurance formerly Cornelius Dibble’s property, as she is now living there herself and it is not a strictly tenant farm. I reduced the rate from $2.25 to $1.50. I wrote the policy though expiring on the 24th and at 5PM she called and paid for it. Mr. Peirans and son Frank are over today to place a new water pipe from house No. 11 to the water main in William Street. I settled and gave to them a check for May rents. Mr. Beeman came over and did my barn work feeding the horse, etc. at about 6 PM. In the evening, Mrs. Hawley came over and gave Mary a shampoo. JUNE 22 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 76. Very warm and muggy. I am holding my own and feeling as well or better than yesterday. The doctor did not call yesterday, my condition not requiring him. He called on me about 10 AM today without charge to see how I am getting along. He said I am doing well and require very little medicine now. A plenty of air stirring which makes the day quite comfortable if out in the sun. George with Mr. Beeman accompanying went over to Beaverbrook this morning to see George Bradley and collect the $3.00 balance of his insurance. He only got $2.00 and from George Bradley he got one dozen eggs on account of his insurance. He called on Mr. Grover but he was away. After George returned, he carried Mr. Beeman to the depot to go to Thomaston to attend the funeral of a brother. Just before dinner, we had a lively shower without thunder which lasted about 5 minutes. Fannie called a few minutes in the PM. JUNE 23 THURSDAY - Mercury 60 at 6 AM; 78 at noon. Pleasant and cool. I hoed out part of my garden before breakfast. George took the horse and went down to W. Taylor’s Plumbing Shop for our Blue Flame Kerosene Stove which has been there for two days past, but it had not yet been mended. In the PM, Jacob Becker from New Fairfield came over to have $800 insurance on furniture. He is having a lawsuit on the same to recover from the Westchester Insurance Company. I secured the job and wrote the policy. He will call for it and pay the next time he comes to town. George Starr came over and helped me do the barn work at night. JUNE 24 FRIDAY - Mercury at 60. Pleasant. I finished hoeing out my garden before breakfast. After breakfast, I went up to consult Dr. Sunderland. Mary Foley called to have notary work on an application for change in beneficiary on Alice Doyle’s policy in the Metropolitan. George drove up to the Alms House to get her signature. While he was away, O. E. Cook from Bridgeport came to adjust the Wodzilowski loss. After dinner, George went to meet him to attend to the matter. When George returned in the morning, he brought the kerosene stove mending for leak from W. H. Taylor. JUNE 25 SATURDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 65; at noon, 90. Pleasant. Very warm. George went to the bank and made a deposit before dinner. I walked over to Mr. Morrell’s store on Orchard Street and delivered a policy on his stock, this being the farthest I have walked in a week. I kept the office door closed to keep out the heat and stayed inside all the PM. After sundown, I hoed over the veranda flower bed. While doing so, Mr. MacArthur, who recently went on an excursion to Jerusalem and Palestine, came over and we had an interesting talk about his trip. Mrs. Hawley just at night did our Sunday marketing for us. George came over in the evening and brought ice cream to cool and regale us with. JUNE 26 SUNDAY - Mercury at 6 AM – 74; at noon, 94. Very much cooler this morning. George mowed the dooryard this morning, after which he went with me riding up to Byron Dexter’s to talk about him taking over our mortgage. There is nothing certain yet. From there we went over to the City Hall. George Wakeman’s signature as one the town assessors that Frances L. Dexter had no property as shown by the assessors’ books. I also got the signature of the two other assessors, Frank Benedict and John Hassett. From there, I had John Booth, as clerk of the Superior Court make a Certificate of Notary’s Authority for file at the Pension Department at Washington. I then called and collected $3.00 on account of insurance of Lottie Stock. I secured Dr. Parmalee’s signature as executor of the estate of Susan Beard making assignment of policies over to Carwell Higby. I was quite tired with my forenoon’s work and ay on the lounge most of the PM. JUNE 28 TUESDAY - Mercury 54. Cooler and not entirely clear in the morning. Before dinner, Mr. Beeman rode with me to Mallory’s Shop to see Mr. Brown of Hawleyville about insurance on his furniture. We then arranged with James Scott and Nellie Schumacher for renewal of their house and furniture on Starr Avenue for July 2nd. Then I called on Mrs. Frank Klopp on Maple Avenue and took up her policy as she intends to break up and go to California to be with her husband who is there. Just at night, William H. Smith of Bethel and William Humphries of Danbury, both comrades of George S. Purdy came with George to my office and made affidavits on his behalf as to bladder trouble contracted in the army in the matter of his application for pension. The day has been a good one to guess on lowery with an occasional sprinkle but not enough to lay the dust. JUNE 29 WEDNESDAY - Rain during last night and this morning and somewhat warmer than yesterday. It cleared away about noon. After dinner, Mr. Beeman going with me, I drove over to Mr. Dunn’s beyond Hull’s Hill to collect on insurance but did not succeed. We then went up to Morris Street to arrange for renewal of Stephen Stuckey’s dwelling and barn and from there to Padaranum Avenue to collect form Mrs. Quinn. She promised for next Saturday. Then to Osborne Street and Locust Avenue to see John Mazzia who is sick. He cannot pay and will be obliged to cancel. It was warm and muggy in the PM. JUNE 30 THURSDAY - Mercury 65. Lowery and muggy. George brought from the Post Office this morning a draft of $45.00 from George Shaw, special agent of the Agricultural Insurance Company, in payment of the Wodzilowski loss, which occurred on June 18th. Fannie called in the PM. I made up the cancellation of Rufus Rice’s policy on furniture, No. 996398 in the Greenwich Insurance Company and forwarded by mail to the Commercial Union Assurance Company, reinsurers of the Greenwich Insurance Company. About 7PM, Morris Wodzilowski called in response to a postal sent him this morning for a draft in the payment of his loss. I took his application as to name, age, and place of birth for a policy of life insurance which he promises to take in 4 weeks or sooner. Rufus Reed came in the evening and paid his life insurance premium due today, ad before I closed the office, I wrote a check to send to William Schiffler, the cashier of the Equitable Life Insurance Company at New Haven to pay the same. I have felt comfortable but am still very weak. I have not been off the premises today, attended to office only.
1904-06
Horace Purdy Journal April 1904 Entry
7 pgs
APRIL 01 FRIDAY- No entry
SATURDAY APRIL 02- It cleared off in the night and before morning the moon shone beautifully, but today the sun shone at intervals. This morning, I delivered to George Williams at the Danbury National Bank a policy of $2,500 in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company on the Dragan block, same payable in case of loss to the estate of Roger Averill. I then called on Thaddeus Hollister and daughter, Mrs. Tumerelle, about renewing their furniture policy. I received the death proof blanks from the Equitable for use in the Edwin Griffith case. I had Mrs. Griffith make up and sign her statement before dinner. Mrs. Lucy A. Haines called at noon to see about insuring her barn after the settlement of the loss of her house and furniture. After dinner, I got the undertaker, Mr. W. F. Tomlinson, and the friend Azerial Fuller to make up their statement and make oath to same. In the evening, I got the attending physician, Dr. Sunderland, to make and swear his statement. After tea I went over to Mrs. Clara Selleck and delivered to her the Catherine Connor policy and then called on Elijah Morris about payment of Mrs. Mayhew's policy on her Boughton Street house. From there, I took a trolley car to North Street and delivered a furniture policy to Anne Whittlesey. I then called at Eugene Boughton to deliver a policy but the house was shut. I found him waiting at my office on my return. He took the policy and paid for it. While at North Street, I called to notify Mrs. Hattie Beardsley that an adjuster will be here next week to settle for smoke damage to her Summit Street tenant house. Frank Stone's younger brother called in the evening and paid for a 3 year policy for furniture to be renewed on April 10.
APRIL 03 SUNDAY- Mercury 32 above. Cool and windy but not cold. I mailed this morning the death proof in the Edwin Griffith case to manager, G. W. VanFleet at New haven. We attended church in the morning to hear Dr. Wilson's Easter sermon. Jackie Erwin made an appeal to the congregation after the sermon for $980 to make up the deficiency in current expenses which has been accumulating during the last three years. Mr. & Mrs. Hawley took dinner with us. Julia and Lottie came from Sunday School and ate dinner with us. After dinner I walked over to 23 Griffing Avenue to see George Hawley and got his estimate for painting and papering one room at No. 19 Summit Street owned by Hattie Beardsley. In the evening, we attended the Sunday School Easter entertainment.
APRIL 04 SUNDAY- Mercury 26 above. A beautiful day. I went to the Danbury Savings bank in the morning and attached an endorsement for reduction in amount on George Hill's policy in the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company. Also an endorsed reduction in rate on W. A. White's policy. I called at Hoyt's shop and complimented Henry Hoyt for so successful an entertainment last evening at the church. I then went to Mallory's Shop to see William Mallory about my measure, also Mr. Underhill about furniture insurance. I then went to Terrace Place for Thaddeus Hollister and Mrs. Tumerelle to get their decision as to one or two years to write their furniture policy. After dinner, Mrs. Bliven rode about town with me and over to Beaverbrook.
APRIL 05 TUESDAY- Mercury 40 above. Pleasant. I deposited just before dinner. Expecting Mr. Furness, special agent of Commercial Union to adjust the Hattie Beardsley smoke damage at 19 Summit Street, we stayed at the office. He did not come however. I waited until 3:30P.M. and the drove up to Westville to see about renewing the Abbott policies. I am not inclined to do so. I had a talk with T. C. Benedict near there about insuring his property. George and Sarah came over and spent the evening with us.
APRIL 06 WEDNESDAY- Mercury 30 above. George and Mr. Beeman went to Hawleyville this forenoon to see Thomas Power about insurance. After dinner, I went over to Dr. Sunderland's to get an application from his man, William Sedor about accident insurance. I got it subject to approval of the debt. I raked off my south front yard in the P.M. Mr. W. Furness, special agent of Commercial Union called to settle the small smoke damage to the house at 19 Summit Street. I harnessed and drove up there with him to Mrs. Hattie Beardsley, the owner living on North Street. We settled for $6.00. Mr. Furness gave a sight draft and I cashed it for Mrs. Beardsley. Mr. Furness thinks favorably of giving us the appointment of agent. He will talk with the company and let us know later. After supper I went over to Mr. Underhill's on Orchard Street to try and insure his furniture. He being out for the evening, I failed to connect. I went upstairs and made a short call on Mrs. Townsend whom I also insure.
APRIL 07 THURSDAY - Mercury 45 above. Lowery in the morning and very spring like. An extremely heavy dew or light shower last night, just enough to lay the dust. Check from Equitable received this morning for $1,182.93 in payment of the death claim of Edwin Griffith, for which Mrs. Griffith signed receipt of same and policy forwarded toW. B. Schiffer, cashier at New Haven. I called over to Clarence Morgan's store before dinner. Frank Moody paid his premium on life insurance due APRIL 9. Frank Wilcox, the Carman, introduced me to Mrs. Lottie Stock for furniture. He also has just moved in to 91 White Street. From there, I called on young Mead, the painter, at Hamilton's, then on Fred Kirkley, and Phil Sunderland and at Henry Biddiscombe. I then went home, harnessed the horse and drove up to Oak Street and arranged for renewal for Mrs. Mary Betts. In the evening, I called on Mr. Sands Underhill at 22 Orchard Street for insurance on furniture.
APRIL 08 FRIDAY- Mercury 38 above. A pleasant spring day. After dinner, I went over to an auction on the Granville Ambler place, thinking to buy a carpet for the office. I did not do so. I wrote a policy in the Sun Insurance Company for Anson Eggleston for $300 of cased tobacco in John Vail's barn in Stony Hill. I called at 91 White Street to give the rate on insurance for furniture to Lottie Stock. Just at night before tea, I left the equitable check for $1,182.67 life insurance with Mrs. E. Griffith. It came yesterday. I borrowed it to show a few friends. W. Mead came in before tea and paid his Yz annual life insurance premium and before retiring, I mailed the check toW. B. Schiffer and to Frank Moody also. In the evening, Charles Perkins called to have his furniture policy transformed, he having moved. John Pierson was her today from North Salem.
APRIL 09 SATURDAY- Mercury 45 above. In the morning, I drove over to Clarence Morgan's and delivered the Equitable renewal receipt to Frank Moody, took a diagram for transfer of Charles Perkins from Locust Avenue to Cole Street, then drove down to Fannie's to see Mrs. John Stone
who lives on the same house to see about furniture insurance. I called also and got William Mead's policy for transfer. I got a pair of heel plates put on my shoes at Mr. Daragan's, then came home and made up a deposit for the bank. John Morris got out 2 loads of manure this forenoon and paid $2.00 for it. I received an accident policy from the Standard Insurance Company for William Sedor, who cares for horses and drives for Dr. Paul Sunderland. In the P.M., I drove with Mrs. Hawley to do our Sunday marketing. In the evening, Harrison Waterman's son came in and paid $21.00 on account for fire insurance.
APRIL 10 SUNDAY Mercury 46 above. I felt badly this morning and took a specimen of urine to Dr. Sunderland's to be examined. He found a little trouble indicated with the kidneys . My head felt badly also. I renewed some headache tablets he previously gave me and felt better in the P.M. After dinner, at which Julia Hirsch was with us, I hitched up Gypsy and we drove up to Panadarum and engaged Mrs. Hadley to come and help at housecleaning on next Wednesday. From there, we drove down to Fannie's for a short call. I delivered Mrs. Stone's furniture policy at the same time. After our return home, I went up to Dr. Sunderland's with Mary and he prescribed for both of us and sent some medicine also to Mrs. Hawley.
APRIL 11 MONDAY- Mercury 44 above. A light sprinkle of rain in the morning which was soon over. George helped me dig a hole at a low place near the crabapple tree at the back door to fill with surplus ashes from the driveway and thus raise a low spot in the yard which we top dressed with material we dug from the hole. This took us until noon. After dinner, I drove up to the Sprague place on Ellsworth Avenue to see if Henry Selleck was using the building in the rear of dwelling for carpenter work. If so, it would affect the insurance for William Weed, our customer living there. I then called on Lottie Stock at 91 White Street to arrange for her insurance on furniture. Lottie Hirsch came up about 4 P.M. and I took her with me down to Rocky Glen to arrange the insurance on her furniture- Mrs. Lottie Williams. On my way down, E. B. Harris stopped me and paid the $15.00 balance on his insurance. George and Sarah came over and spent the evening.
APRIL 12 TUESDAY- Mercury 40 above. The weather was a little doubtful in the morning. It however cleared up in the middle of the day. In the morning, I drove down to 172 South Street to arrange for the renewal of William Deakin's furniture insurance policy. About noon, Charles Abbott came to notify us that his house burned down last night. This was brokered by us by Frank Benedict in the Pacific (Insurance Company). After dinner, I went over to John Stevens' to take up his claim to the Standard Accident Insurance Company. From there, I attended the insurance board meeting at Olmstead & Crowe's office but few were present. They adjourned for one week. After which, I went to Dr. Lemmer's office to obtain his statement as attending physician to John Stevens.
APRIL 13 WEDNESDAY- Mercury 35 above. Cooler and pleasant. In the morning, I drove down to William Deakin's for the amount he wishes is furniture policy to be written for, the drove up to North Street and collected from Mary Monroe. In the P.M., I called on Miss Manthey (at Julia Stone's) daughter of Anton Manthey in reference to their furniture insurance. I delivered a policy to Lottie Stock at 91 White Street; also called on Mrs. Klopp on Maple Avenue for the amount of additional premium for transfer to Liberty Street. Carried a chair to Holly Green's shop for Mrs. Hattie Hawley to use at work. We took up and cleaned the parlor carpet and emptied the room preparatory to papering and painting. George and Sarah came over in the evening.
APRIL 14 THURSDAY- Mercury 33 above. Cool; it commenced snowing about 7 o'clock this morning and continued about an hour. It all disappeared however before the day was over. I did some walking about town. Called to see if Mrs. Frank Klopp could pay balance due on insurance for furniture transferred to Liberty Street, but did not succeed. I also called at one of the old Tweedy factories to see Rufus Rice, Jr. as to paying his balance. He promised to bring in his policy this evening for cancellation but did not. I finished up making John Stevens' claim for accidental injuries received on March 4 from falling down cellar. I completed making up his own statement, also his wife, Ida Stevens as eye witness and mailed them before closing my office about 9 P.M. George Hawley was here this forenoon painting the parlor prior to papering the same.
APRIL 15 FRIDAY- In the forenoon, I drove to lake Avenue and arranged for the renewal of Andrew Bell's horse and barn. Also George Barker on house and furniture. I then drove up to Frank Post's and found no one at home. From there, I drove over to lee's hat factory where I found him. After dinner, about 1 P.M., he called at the office and paid for the insurance to be renewed tomorrow. George Hawley came in the P.M. and papered the parlor I gave William Stillman $2.00 towards defraying running expenses of the church on which it was in arrears. I also went to F. Austin's and paid $3.75 for a commode which Mary recently bought. George Hawley came in the afternoon and papered the parlor.
APRIL16 SATURDAY- Mercury 38 above. Cloudy, wind squalls and sunshine. Mrs. Hawley rode with me in the forenoon about town delivering policies, etc. And then we did our marketing for Sunday. George Hawley came in the morning and put up the picture molding in the parlor which was left undone last night. In the afternoon, Charles Hopkins came for me to go and take the signature as notary public of Fred Decklyn as surety for his sample case of jewelry as traveling agent for a jewelry firm. Michael Hewitt who
APRIL 21 THURSDAY Mercury 38 above. Pleasant all day. I received by the morning mail blank from Equitable Life, death proof for leroy Smith which I have handed over to his son-inlaw, T. C. Millard to be made up. In the P.M., we received a check from the Standard Accident for John Stevens for 6 weeks total disability of $150.00, deducting for the last X's premium due August 06 of $7.50 leaving $142.50.
APRIL 22 FRIDAY- Mercury 30 above. A beautiful day. I drove in the forenoon about town arranging some five insurance renewals. 0. E. Cook, insurance agent from Bridgeport, came by direction of George Shaw to adjust loss of Dennis Cunningham of Grassy Plain, he arriving about 11 AM and George went with him. In the PM, I went with John Stevens to the bank to get a draft of $142.50 cashed, same being for the Standard Life and Accident Insurance Company of Detroit Michigan. Also while in the street, Mr. T. C. Willard, president of Danbury National Bank, called me to fill in the agent's blank in proof of the death loss of leroy Smith of $600.00., paid up in Equitable. I did so and later went to County Clerk Booth's office for his certificate of Jabez Amesbury as notary in the case. After which I mailed the proofs to George VanFleet at New Haven. In the evening, I went up to Ira Ames as notary and took the acknowledgement of his and wife's signature in assignment of the Travelers Insurance Company policy to the said company for a loan to them of $75.00. Fanny came up in the evening, bringing lottie and the baby Georgie. George and Sarah were also over and spent the evening.
APRIL 23 SATURDAY- Mercury 35 above. Pleasant. We washed both wagons this morning. Frank Bennett called about 11 o'clock and arranged and paid for insurance on their place at 10 Pleasant Street. J. Wesley Wells called while I was in the street before dinner and promised to pay on his insurance next Saturday. After dinner, Mrs. Hawley rode with me on a few business calls and we both did some marketing for Sunday. Among them, I drove over to Beaverbrook and got Arthur Grove's policy to make same payable to Howard Hoyt.
APRIL 24 SUNDAY Mercury 52 above. Pleasant and getting to be very dry. After dinner, Mary and I drove up to Mrs. Healy's at Pandaranum to engage her for next Thursday to help at housecleaning. From there, we went down to Fannie's and carried a bundle from Aunt Sarah to her. In the evening, we went to Dir. Sunderland's for Mary to consult him.
APRIL 25 MONDAY- Mercury 60 above. Pleasant and warmer. A slight shower last night. Mist enough to lay the dust. George and I mended the boardwalk near the privy after breakfast. Lillian, his wife, came up and after the morning work was done, she and George took the carriage and started for an outing down to Redding and that locality looking after collections. Etc. I helped Mary empty her room and whipped the carpet, after which and before dinner, I went into the street and ordered 1/2 ton of coal at John McCarthy's for Mrs. Hattie Hawley. After dinner, John Bouton came in and had papers executed in application for an increase in pension. I then went toW. H. Cable's office and let his boy type write an affidavit for Patrick Cunningham and Henry Taylor, city assessors, to execute as to the assessed value of her real estate in the matter of increased pension for her. I then went up to Mallory's Hat Factory and Charles Taylor put a new band on my summer hat and also flanged it for me. In the evening, I called at his house at Stevens Street and we talked over the matter of getting his policy in the Equitable changed from his wife as beneficiary who is insane to his daughter or his legal representative.
APRIL 26 TUESDAY- Mercury 48 above. A slight shower last night and cooler. The greater part of the day, however, has been pleasant. George put down the carpet in the small bedroom this morning, after which, I drove up to Bolton's shop to get Henry Taylor, one of the city assessors, to make a joint affidavit with the other assessor, Patrick Cunningham, as to the assessed value of Sophia Allen's property in the matter of her application for a widow's pension. He assented, but I afterword ascertained that Mr. Cunningham was out of town and the matter is deferred. Mrs. Hawley helped Mary this afternoon in housecleaning work and she took dinner with us. We this forenoon received a draft of $275.00 from George Shaw, special agent for the Agricultural Insurance Company in payment of the Dennis Cunningham loss on furniture. After dinner, George went down and delivered the same to him in settlement. Cunningham came directly up town to get it cashed, but before he could do so, Mr. Williams the cashier at the Danbury National Bank wanted my endorsement on the same which I did and he returned to the bank to get his money.
APRIL 27 WEDNESDAY- Mercury 45 above. It rained a little towards morning. About 8 AM, it settled in and continued rainy all day. Received Equitable check for $600.00 toT. C. Millard for death claim on the life of Leroy Smith. Before dinner, I delivered the same to Mr. Millard, taking up his policy and the receipt for same, and in the PM, mailed the same toW. Schaffer, the cashier, at New Haven. Of the several policies on the life of Mr. Smith, Ours is the first to the front for payment. In the forenoon, I called on Lottie Stock, regarding her insurance covering her piano, also in the interest of the dealer, Joseph Wright. Before coming to dinner I also called on Sophia Allen and gave instructions about getting from the rector of St. John's Protestant Episcopal Church in Yonkers, an affidavit under oath as to the record of her marriage. After dinner, I took a nap and at 3:30, I attended the funeral of the wife of Mr. Frank Hull on Cherry Street. In the evening, Mrs. Allen's daughter called to see if I would go to Yonkers to get an affidavit from the Rector of St. Johns Protestant Episcopal Church as to record in the church books as to the marriage of John Allen and Sophia Bell. After her departure, I wrote to the rector as to his willingness to look up the matter and write an affidavit.
APRIL 28 THURSDAY- Mercury 42 above. Stormy all day. In the morning, I wrote to VanFleet, the Equitable manager in New Haven regarding Charles Taylor's changing beneficiary from his wife to his daughter or to his legal representative or assigns on account of his wife being mentally deranged. I also called to see Frank Wilcox about the piano insurance for Lottie Stock. After dinner, I went to see Manny Forbush to see about insurance on his house and barn at Germantown; also Robert Haskins about his renewal. At 5 PM, Mrs. Mary Couch and daughter Hattie Hollister cane to make an affidavit as to their bill to the estate of Mrs. Arthur Reed. After tea, I called a moment on Mrs. E. Griffith to get information necessary in her application for a pension; after which Mary and I called on Laverne and Hattie Rogers on the corner of George and Orchard Street.
APRIL 29 FRIDAY- Mercury 50 above. Lowery in the morning but no rain. It cleared away in the afternoon and grew warmer. Before dinner, I went up to Robert Haskins to see further about his insurance. After dinner, I drove over to C. L. Morgan's to get the price I am to credit him for the last ton of coal he bought me. I then came home and took Mr. John Peivans and went to City Hall with him and paid his town taxes and also my own. We then returned to my office and I settled with him for March rents collected. I then went to City Hall to search the records of the marriage of Edwin Griffin to Melissa Segar, but it was not to be found. By some oversight, it was doubtless never recorded. I then called on Dr. W. Wilson of theM. E. Church and he agreed to look up the church records for it. The fact and record of it is necessary to aid her in obtaining a widow's pension. I left the matter with Dr. Wilson to look up tomorrow. George Hoddinott came in the evening with George Purdy to our office to make up some papers. Before tea, I called on Mrs. Griffith to look over some family papers for the facts of her marriage.
APRIL 30 SATURDAY- Mercury 52 above. After breakfast, I took the trolley to Bethel to see the building near Short's Hat Factory which Mrs. Laura Wildman recently bought and is repairing for dwelling purposes. They not being there, I returned home. I then with Mr. Beeman drove over to No.5 Moss Avenue (the old lves greenhouse property) and arranged for the transfer of Saul Clark's policy by cancelling same and re-writing. After dinner, Fred Kirby called to get his policy on his market cancelled as he has gone out of business. Then Mrs. Hawley went with me to Bethel again where I met Mr. and Mrs. Wildman at the house I called to see in the morning. While out, a thunder shower came up and we hastened home to escape getting wet. However, it rained but little here. We did our Sunday marketing when we returned. I bought our first quart of strawberries for the season for 15 cents which we had for tea. George and Sarah came over in the eveningn.
1904-04
Horace Purdy Journal March 1904 Entry
7 pgs
MARCH 01 TUESDAY - Mercury 32 above. Awoke this morning and found about 1 ½ inches of snow on the ground and cloudy still with a little snow in the air though not hard storming. I went over to John Parslow’s in the morning to arrange for renewal of his store policy; the increase of rate since a year ago of course was objected but he however had it renewed. In the PM, I wrote it up and in the evening, I delivered it. He not being in, I left it with his wife. In the PPM, William Popke called for me to sign a petition for a new hose carriage for the Jefferson Avenue Hose Company which I did. I found $8.00 in my old brown overcoat pocket and am puzzled to remember who put it there and who paid it to me. We have pretty much concluded that it is the house rent paid me on the 12th of February by A. Scheppeassi occupying No. 11 William Street as it was paid at their house on that day that she paid me and I was wearing that coat. MARCH 02 TUESDAY - Mercury 30 above. Lowery in the morning. Pleasant during the day and lowery again in the evening. I went downtown in the forenoon for the first time since last Saturday. I left two counterpanes at Targett & Simmons laundry and solicited insurance on their new laundry building which they are contemplating building. I saw our stamp clerk, Clark Howes regarding the high rate on Morlock & Husk and ascertained what must be done about the boiler and smokestack to get the rate reduced. I then called on them and we talked the matter over. They gave me a check for the policy recently written for them. At 2 P.M., I attended the funeral of Captain E. E. Wildman. On my return, I called at the D. G. Lowe factory to see Mr. ___ regarding the policy on the house of Louise ____ which she has just purchased. I received a check from S. E. Downs, treasurer of the Methodist Church Society for the policy on the parsonage and furniture. MARCH 03 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 35 above. I t began raining about daylight and continued more or less moderately during the day which had been warm and foggy. I have felt quite badly with the grippe and stayed in. I wrote and sent by mail a renewal policy to Caroline Gorman and Helen Purcell at new Fairfield. We made up the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company February report and mailed it. George took money and the bank book to make a deposit after dinner. MARCH 04 FRIDAY - Mercury 18 above. Pleasant and cool. Pension Day. The first old veteran to appear early this morning was Sheridan Morris. George drove up to Saul Gregory’s immediately after dinner and made his pension voucher. I had a scrap with Henry Veats because I would not advance him on his pension. He being already under the influence of drink, I would not give him money to become more intoxicated. He requested his pension certificate which I gave him and he left. While George was up to Saul Gregory’s I went over to 109 Liberty Street to Make Mrs. Foley’s voucher and then to 78 Town Hill Avenue to make Bridget Rooney’s. On my return home, I went to John Parslow’s and to James McCullum’s and to Rachel Dikeman at the home of Charles Johnson on 31 New Street. In response to a notice sent to her at Brookfield Center, Mrs. Hannah Weld called to see about her insurance. Received a check for Byron Dexter and J. Higson & Co.in payment for loss in amount of $12.41 which occurred January 18, 1904. MARCH 05 SATURDAY - Pleasant. George and Mr. Beeman started about 9 A.M. to go down to Cousin Edwin Mills to arrange for renewal of their fire insurance. Frank Sherwood called a few minutes after they started. On their return, they reported that they would write to Edith at Waterbury and wait for her reply. Before dinner, I went up to North Street and secured an $800 furniture policy for James Durbin. James Martin called in the P.M. and had his pension voucher made. In the forenoon, I bought a chicken at Marsioch’s market. Mary pronounced it spoiled and I returned it. George and Sarah came over in the evening. MARCH 06 SUNDAY - Mercury 30 above. Cloudy all day. Misty and at times a few flying flakes of snow but no real storm of either rain or snow. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came from Sunday School and took dinner with us. We stayed at home all day, but went over to Brother George’s in the evening. MARCH 07 MONDAY - Mercury 38 above. Warmer, misty and almost rain in the morning. It came near clearing away about 10 A.M. and I harnessed and drove over Wildman Street to see about collecting for insurance written last December for the East Danbury Progressive Club. I found William Lynch at Van Gall’s factory (he being headman of the club) and he said that they had concluded not to insure this year and not knowing that it was necessary to return the policy sent to them, they had retained it. He said that he would bring the matter up at their next meeting and possibly they would keep and pay for the policy. MARCH 08 TUESDAY - Mercury 38 above at 7 AM, 48 at noon. Pleasant. Edgar L. Wildman made an affidavit as to his lost pension voucher and requested a duplicate. Just before dinner, I went up to 10 Pleasant Street to get Mrs. Louise Dexter’s to sign an application for accrued pension and also for a widow’s pension. After dinner, I returned for two witnesses to sign where it was omitted but they were not in. I arranged for them to call at my office tomorrow morning. On my return, I found special agent Knox of the reliance waiting for me. After he left, Laura Boughey called for a statement regarding John Norris’ life insurance and Byron Dexter’s interest in the same. I went with her to Lawyer Davis’ office where the case was being investigated and made a statement regarding $400 paid by Mr. Dexter what was supposed to be for deferred premiums. I cleared up the matter by stating that the payment was to pay off a loan to John Norris by the American Loan and Deposit Company for which the policy was assigned to secure. This was done to clear the policy of all claims against it that it might be assigned clean to Byron Dexter which it was. MARCH 09 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 36 above. George and Mr. Beeman went to King Street this morning to see about renewing Philo Mead in the old George Wilkes place. He succeeded in doing so. Herbert Wildman called after dinner for forms to renew Edmund and Hannah Weld at Brookfield. He spent part of the PM with me. Mary and I spent the evening at Joe Merritt’s with Mr. and Mrs. Rogers. Mr. Rogers paid for furniture insurance. MARCH 10 THURSDAY - Mercury 18 above. George drove with me to take the train to go to Brookfield Junction at 9:05 A.M. and to leave the horse at D. Gage’s shop to be shod. I got left by the train. I returned to the blacksmith’s shop and got the horse after she was shod. Charles and Fred Bevans called and got their pension checks. Also Henry Veats; his had not yet arrived. Before dinner, I went with Mrs. John Germanetti (?) to show her (a prospective buyer) Edgar Wildman’s house on 43 Washington Avenue. After dinner, George took the bank book and made a deposit. I drove up to Lee Heights and arranged for the renewal of Mrs. Catherine Ryan and Clark Ferguson. I took Mrs. Fred Rogers with me and left her at Leon Rogers at 23 Willis Street. I then went down to William Hall’s blacksmith shop for my spindle buggy left there to have an axle mended. MARCH 11 FRIDAY - Mercury 30 above. Cloudy and about 9 A.M., it commenced raining gently and froze as it came making it very icy and dangerous getting about. I took the 9:15 train to Brookfield Junction to see Mrs. Wordin living near the station about the insurance of her property on Apr 4th, it being now insured in the Middlesex Mutual. I stayed in the office in the P.M. and did up some writing. Clarence Morgan came in and we looked up some accounts which had been running for about 3 years. Surprising as it may seem, we found while I was at Brookfield in the forenoon, Orrin Knox called to make an affidavit as to the marriage of Leonard Dexter to Frances Cosse on December 18, 1853, the same being necessary in Mrs. Dexter’s efforts in getting a pension. MARCH 12 SATURDAY - Mercury 20 above. Pleasant and cooler. A light flurry of snow last night which covered and disguised the ice making walking a very careful thing to do. Before noon, however, the ice gave way to the sun and the walking was quite sloppy. Mr. Johnson, so-in-law to Mrs. Dexter, called in the morning to see if I could go down to their farm and meet Mr. George Dexter who would also make an affidavit as to Mr. Dexter’s marriage. We could not today. After dinner I went to the Adams Express office with Policies # 2268107 to #2268149, inclusive, the same being 43 in number to be returned to the Greenwich Insurance Company, they having gone out of business by reinsuring in the Commercial Union of England. Sherwood Fanton called and paid for his insurance. William Phillips also called in the evening and paid $8.00 on account. Edgar Wildman called in the P.M. to see what I had done about selling his house on Washington Avenue; also as to receiving a duplicate pension voucher in lieu of one lost for his March pension. Soon after his departure, the postman, Mr. Owns called and left the duplicate voucher we were waiting for from Boston. MARCH 13 SUNDAY - Mercury 25 above. Pleasant and cool. E. W. Griffith called this morning with his pension voucher returned for correction of an error in not giving the residence of the Notary Public. H. H. Johnson called in the A.M. to see if George had come from Bethel to drive with him down to Dexter’s farm to take an affidavit of Leonard Dexter as to being present and witnessing the marriage of Leonard Dexter and France Cosse. George did not appear. Mary attended church in the morning. Lottie and Julia Hirsch came from Sunday School and took dinner with us. Mrs. Anne Miller, occupying the Pieran’s house at No. 9, died this morning at 3 o’clock. MARCH 14 MONDAY - Mercury 42 above. Pleasant in the morning. Edgar Wildman called this morning and had his pension voucher made out which I a few days ago received from Boston in lieu of one he lost. I went downtown in the forenoon and gave William Stillman a check for the church seat rent to April 1st and arranged to renew the same for another year. In the P.M., I went to the office of William Cable and had him type write two affidavit forms for me to be executed by Orrin Knox of this town and George Dexter of North Salem, New York, evidence of the marriage of Leonard Dexter and Frances Cosse in the matter of getting a widow’s pension for Mrs. Dexter. I called in the A.M. at William Stillman’s business office and delivered a furniture policy to Mrs. Lillian Pritchard. MARCH 15 TUESDAY - Mercury 30 above. About 2 inches of snow fell last night. It ceased about 8 A.M. Rufus Rice came in this morning and signed papers applying for an increase in pension. Just before dinner, I went over to see E. S. Fairchild to show him options under his ordinary life insurance policy of $3,000 at the expiration of 20 years on the 25th of this month but did not find him at home. I called down to Van Gall’s factory to see about renewal of Henry Borman’s policy which comes tomorrow, also to ascertain what the East Danbury Progressive Club had concluded to do about keeping up their insurance. They had concluded to drop it for the present, so said their treasure, W. H. Lynch. After dinner, I went up to Mrs. Leonard Dexter’s with an affidavit to be executed at North Salem, New York by George Dexter as a witness to Leonard Dexter’s marriage. They are to see that he properly executes the same and returns to me to be forwarded with other papers in Mrs. Dexter’s application for a widow’s pension. MARCH 16 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 32 above. A pleasant day. In the morning, I took a trolley car and went over to E. S. Fairchild’s and gave him a statement from the Equitable Life naming options at his disposal to select from in adjustment of his life policy at the expiration of 20 years. I then ordered coal of C. L. Morgan and came home by trolley and found Orrin Knox waiting to sign a new drawn up affidavit for him to sign in proof as an eyewitness of the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Dexter. In the P.M., I made a deposit at the bank, made some purchases for the house and returned home. The city today has been mending a water break on the main water pipe at the corner of William and George Streets. I repaired the lock to the lower door for Mrs. Clark who occupies upstairs at No. 9 William Street. MARCH 17 THURSDAY - Mercury 16 above. Cool and pleasant. St. Patrick’s Day. Edgar Wildman called this morning for his pension check which came yesterday. He also took his certificate as he expects to go to the Soldiers’ Home at Noroton. In the P.M., I drove with Mr. Beeman and at Morlock & Husk’s Machine Shop had a part of Mrs. Clark’s lock repaired. We then drove to Grandview Avenue to collect of Mrs. McDonough but failed to do so. After which, I called on Mrs. John Allen to see if she had heard anything from her pension papers. She had not. I then came home and finished repairs to the lock. In the evening, I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s with Mary. MARCH 18 FRIDAY - Mercury 32 above. I awoke this morning to find it snowing. It continued to do so moderately with mingled rain until about noon. Later in the afternoon, it cleared away. I took the trolley car up to North Street to transfer Mrs. Sarah J. Bouton’s furniture policy to No. 66 North Street. After my return about 4:30 P.M., Mr. George Van Fleet from New Haven, agent from the Equitable, called on me. After a short visit, I went with him by trolley over to E. S. Fairchild’s as he is considering which option of several at his disposal he will select on his $3,000 policy. We had a pleasant call and suggested to him a continuous installment policy. As he is not contemplating any more life insurance at present, we left the matter for the present. Mr. Van Fleet left on the Highland Division train east and I returned home. The children of Mrs. Ann Miller moved her furniture, etc. out from No. 9 William Street this P.M. and in the evening they left the key at our office. George Dickens died last night at 12:30. MARCH 19 SATURDAY - Mercury 30 above. A bright morning. I drove over to Mrs. Woods and collected premium for insurance written Feb. 1st. From there, I went over to George Bradley’s at Beaverbrook and collected $1.50 from him and $2.00 from his father on a policy turned over to us by L. Treadwell. Then I drove up to see Mr. Fuller at James Jennings’s place but got nothing from him but partly arranged for some hay. I returned home in time for dinner. I broke my harness while at Mr. Fuller’s. I remained home in the P.M. and among other things done, I mended the broken harness. About 5 P.M., I gave Abram Tosi the key to No. 9 William Street which 1st floor apartment he has rented from April 1st. MARCH 20 SUNDAY - mercury 42 above. Warm and pleasant and somewhat windy. I went to the Post Office at noon from which I went and called on J. H. Ives to give him $.59, a return premium for cancellation of his Reliance Insurance policy on his store which he has given up. After dinner, I completed the Reliance report for February and enclosed the Ives policy also with the one not taken for the east Danbury progressive Club. Fanny and little George Martin, her baby came up and was with us to dinner. Before evening meeting, we went over and called on George and Sara who are still combatting their Grippe colds. We attended church in the evening. Dr. Wilson preached well to a small congregation. MARCH 21 MONDAY - mercury 30 above. Pleasant in the morning and until noon. Cloudy in the afternoon with threatening rain. I attended the funeral of George Dickens on Stevens Street at 1 P.M. where I met Frank Crofut of Boston who has been in Danbury recently taking care of his brother-in-law, Joel Foster. After the funeral, I went up to stamp clerk, A. H. Howe’s office to see about the rate of a plumber shop in Bethel which George contemplates insuring. Also to switch the Abram Tosi premium in the Turner building on Orchard Street taken by Reed for 1% when I wanted 1 ¼ % as per last known rate. I went over to W. H. Cable’s office and got $5.00 cash from him, the balance (less $.35) of his life insurance premium nearly two years ago. I then called on Frank Hartwell looking to get a business suit of clothes provided he will take some life insurance. We had a talk over it but did no business. I found to my surprise that he is carrying no life insurance at all. In the evening, I wrote to A. J. Hunt, U. S. business agent in Boston making an inquiry why Mrs. Bridget Rooney did not get her pension check for voucher used and forwarded on March 4th. I paid a $200.00 Note due today at the Danbury National Bank. In the evening, I called on Dr. Sunderland to get the name of the name of the person who told him he was a fool to pay a full year’s premium for Life insurance, but he would not inform me. Mrs. George Hartwell called in the P.M. while I was attending George Dickens’ funeral and paid $68.95 on account of insurance on mill inventory, etc. MARCH 22 TUESDAY - Mercury 34 above. Foggy with light rain at times during the day. We wrote the Edwin Mills policy today as covering from the 17th of March, Francis Lowny came in and had the $200 furniture policy cancelled as he is moving to New Jersey. We also cancelled the three month occupancy permit recently put on as he has rented the place to a tenant I went to the bank with a $150 deposit this P.M. I also went over to the R.R, Depot to see David Hoyt about the date of the death of his second wife. We hoisted the sleigh up in the barn this morning. MARCH 23 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 50 above. Pleasant and warm. I arranged for the renewal of Ada Sperry’s insurance this morning. I called at Mallory’s shop and saw Clifton Underhill about insurance. He had recently taken an endowment (?). He promised me to insure furniture. Davis Hoyt called at noon with some facts to finish hi papers ready to send to the Pension office. I received an affidavit from George Dexter at North Salem as to being a witness to the marriage of Leonard Dexter. A Mr. Miller, a special agent of the Equitable called in the P.M. We went over to Mr. Beeman’s in the evening to hear music by Mr. Tompkins on violin and Harley Beeman with banjo and Mrs. Beeman on piano. MARCH 24 THURSDAY - Mercury 50 above. A beautiful day. Before diner, I drove over Hull’s Hill with L. P. Treadwell to make the acquaintance of Thomas and Mary Dunn insured in the Conn. Fire Insurance Co. to be renewed on May 2. Also to enable Mr. Treadwell to collect a balance due, all of which we accomplished. I made another pension voucher for Bridget Rooney. The one made on MARCH 4 got lost at the Boston Post Office and another was sent. I also got the remaining facts from Byron Dexter as to the age of his mother as required in her pension claim and sent first application and affidavit for same to her attorney J. P. Crabbe & Co. at Washington, D. C. In the evening, I delivered a policy to Mrs. Ada Sperry, and then spent the evening at Edwin Rockwell’s at 24 Foster Street where George came with his talking machine to entertain them. MARCH 25 FRIDAY - Mercury 38 above. In response to orders from the Lafayette Fire Insurance Co., we this morning packed up for shipment by express all renewed policies and other supplies required in closing this agency on account of reinsuring in the national of Hartford made necessary by losses in the recent Baltimore fire. I walked considerably in the forenoon and became very tired, in consequence of which I stayed in the office in the P.M. Edith A. Mills from Waterbury, on her way home stopped at 4:30 and took a paid policy on their place in Starrs Plain. Peter M. Osborne also called and paid for policy issued last December on his furniture at Long Ridge. I felt so badly that I sent for Dr. Sunderland in the evening. MARCH 26 SATURDAY - Mercury 60 above. Warm and lowery but no rain to amount to anything. Notice came by Elmer Karl’s’ boy about 9 A.M. that the house of Lucy Harris just over the state line on the road to Brewster was burned this morning at 5:30. Total loss on the house and looks like the same for the furniture. George immediately took Mr. Beeman and drove over to look at the same. We mailed notice to the Connecticut Insurance Company this P.M. I have stayed in today. Mary and Mrs. Hawley did the Sunday marketing in the P.M. MARCH 27 SUNDAY - Mercury 30 above. Colder with feeling and appearance of snow in the morning. While it did not storm, there was but little sunshine. Lottie and Julia as usual came after Sunday school to dinner. After dinner, I went to Dr. Sunderland’s to get word as to examination of my water. He found an indication of a slight kidney affliction and gave me medicine for it. Later in the afternoon, I went over to Stevens Street to see how John Stevens was getting along with his accidental hurt for which I have him insured. After dinner, Mary went over to Balmforth Avenue to see Mrs. Raymond to see how old Grandma Bevins is who is not expected to live. Mary returned before meeting time and we with Mrs. Hawley went to hear Dr. R. S. Pardington of Bethel deliver a discourse or lecture on Mormonism. MARCH 28 MONDAY - Mercury 30 above. Little sunshine though not stormy. We wrote a furniture policy this morning for ___ Tosi at No. 9 William Street. Today being election in City for election of expiring number of Common Council only. I bought 10 bushels of oats of Mr. Barnum. The fire got out in the furnace and I had to kindle it in the P.M. Edwin Griffin died suddenly in his chair this evening. MARCH 29 TUESDAY - Mercury 22 above. I made a check this morning under date of yesterday and mailed it to the Equitable Life for premium on George’s and my own policies due today. Mr. G. Fitch, adjuster for The Connecticut Insurance Company came from Hartford, arriving on the 9:15 A.M. train and George drove him out to Elmer Keeler’s to settle with Mrs. Lucy Haines for the loss of her house which they did and he took the 11:37 train back to Hartford. While they were adjusting the loss, I went up to 19 Summit Street to see a small damage requiring paint and papering to one room. In the P.M., H. A. Wildman called and I gave him a check for the balance of the brokerage business for February. In the P.M. about 4 o’clock, I drove over to Germantown to arrange for the renewal of Adelaide Holton. She said she would call tomorrow afternoon and let me know. From there, I went over to Edgar Benedict’s and to Celia Purdy’s and arranged for the renewal of both. I then went up to Knapp’s Lane and took a diagram of the house where Joe Merritt has moved. Livio Tosi called in the evening and paid for his insurance on furniture; also for his April rent in advance. In the P.M., Elmer Keeler called with Mrs. Lucy Haines, thinking that Mr. Fitch, the Connecticut Insurance Company adjuster had taken advantage of them in settling for $300 on furniture when the policy called for $500 on their items. They were mistaken in the amount, $300 being correct. They went away satisfied. William F. Bradley came in the evening and had the mortgage interest in his policy changed from Elizabeth S. Benedict, now deceased changed to Mary S. Bradley. I sat up and worked in the office until nearly midnight making up endorsements on Greenwich policy, now Commercial Union by re-insurance for Joe Merritt and mailed the same to the Greenwich to have Commercial union sign the transfer, also notifying them of small smoke damage to Mrs. Hattie Bradley’s house on Summit Street. MARCH 30 WEDNESDAY - Mercury 30 above. A beautiful day. I did some about town driving and took Mrs. Bliven with me. Robert Chambers informed me that his Pleasant and Pearl Street house was sold to Emerson Ballard thus disappointing Thomas Scofield who thought to buy it. I took Edwin Griffith’s life Insurance policy in the Equitable and wrote the company notice of his death and requested death proof blanks to be sent to me. MARCH 31 THURSDAY - Mercury 35 above. Lowery this morning. I drove top Brookfield to see if the policy of Robert and Effie Jones in the New London County Mutual expires tomorrow. I ascertained that it expires on July 28. They paid me $5.58 for a policy written last September by the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company, same to expire in July when the one in New London is promised me to write under one policy, A little snow began to fly as I stared about 9 A.M. I returned about 11:30 in time for dinner. On my way home the storm became mixed with rain and fine hail. It increased and continued all afternoon. I attended the funeral of Edwin Griffith in the P.M., after which I went up to Dr. Sunderland’s office with a specimen of urine made by George Purdy to ascertain if he has kidney trouble. None however was indicated. The doctor spoke to me about an accident policy for his driver, Mr. Snyder. From there I went down to Mr. Daragan’s store to see about a policy on his block expiring tomorrow. After tea, Rufus Reed called and paid his life insurance premium which was due yesterday; also for one for his tools written last December.
1904-03