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 October 1865 Entry
9pgs
10/01 SUNDAY - Pleasant. I cooked my own breakfast this morning and while clearing away the dishes turned over a quart of milk. I attended church all day. Brother Hill preached in the morning. A Hungarian preached in the P.M. upon the persecutions of Protestants in Hungary. A collection was taken to enable him to send his mother and sister back to Hungary who have been pardoned as all of them have been banished for the sake of their religion. I got my tea after which John Brayman came over and we hitched George's horse and rode up to the cemetery. After putting up the horse and feeding him, I went up home to see George and John went to the depot to send word home by the milk train. I went rather late to church in the evening. Brother Hill preached. George and Bell came home with me after meeting to see John. I paid the balance of my seat rent today for the year. Also what Mrs. Bradley owed - $6.00. 10/02 MONDAY - Election day. I went with George to buy hay up to L. E. Bartram's. We borrowed his hay cutter. The hay came in the P.M. I helped George stow it away in Father Griswold's barn. George got his wagon repaired up to Chase's shop. I bought 2 barrels of charcoal for 60 cents a barrel. George went to Starrs Plain in the evening on an errand to Uncle Edwin. I went to market in the evening. The town election went republican but the amendment to the Constitution allowing the Negro to vote was rejected by votes. John Brayman came this evening to stay with me for the first time. 10/03 TUESDAY - Cool and pleasant. I went to the shop today for the first time since a week ago Saturday. We raise our prices 2 % (?) on a dozen all round today. I worked until dark. Hatters' Meeting in the evening but I did not go on account of hearing that cousin Anna Heinman was very low and going up to see her. John Brayman went with me. I went to market in the evening. Bought beefsteak, sugar, matches and a ream of notepaper. George went to Ridgefield today and entered one of his sifters for a premium. He returned in the evening. A letter from Gussie in the evening. I wrote an answer before retiring. 10/04 WEDNESDAY - Cool and cloudy with a sprinkling of rain in the morning. I picked apples for Father Griswold in the forenoon in the tops of the trees where he could not climb. He gave me half for picking or rather, gleaning. I made a barrel for myself which is worth $4.00. I drew $10.00 for Gussie out of the Savings Bank in place of what I gave her to go to Canton with. I went to the shop at 3 o'clock and found the journeymen in an uproar about foul shops; as at the trade meeting last evening, they voted to stop working for a man who had both a fair and foul shop in the same locality. There was a meeting called for this evening to take into consideration the case of foul shops. I attended. The meeting finally adjourned until 2 o'clock tomorrow P.M. I picked my dwarf pears before dinner. I mailed the letter this evening which I wrote to Gussie last night. 10/05 THURSDAY - Cold and raw. The difficulty about foul shops not being settled, we could not go to work today. John Cosier and I went hunting. George went to Ridgefield to get his sifter at the fair and to bring Bell home. In the evening I borrowed $25.00 of Mr. Judd for John Brayman to go to Norwalk and pay grocery bill. 10/06 FRIDAY - Pleasant. John Brayman went to Norwalk this morning. In order to get away, we were up early. In a Hatters' Meeting yesterday afternoon, the trouble about foul shops so far as Mr. Crofut's shop went was settled and today we are all at work while William Tweedy and Edmund Tweedy's shops are still doing nothing. They threatened to make them foul and not employ any more fair men. John came home on the freight train and brought some oysters, a bushel for Mr. Brockett and a half bushel for me. We got them in the evening at Raymond's store where he left them when he arrived. O. A. G. Todd got a beating last night at Oscar Serine's house. He had been to see a widow woman who lives upstairs and a man went and called him out and before he was down the stairs, he (attacked) him. Todd cried murder to the top of his voice and alarmed all the neighbors. 10/07 SATURDAY - Pleasant and warmer. I worked late in the shop. Mr. Thompson came in while we were drinking tea, after which we all walked downtown together. I borrowed $25.00 of Andrew Knox to pay A. Judd what I borrowed for John Brayman on Thursday evening. 10/09 SUNDAY - Pleasant and warmer. I went to church all day. Sunday School Prayer Meeting at noon and communion in the P.M. After tea, John and I harnessed George's horse and too a little ride to limber old Jim's legs and settle our suppers. We rode on the hill west of Col. White's Pond, across from there to near Colby Bartram's on the road to the bogs, and then on the Mill Plain road as far as the old Elbert Segar place and then across to the Miry Brook road and home. I wrote to Carleton & Porter ordering 65 Sunday School Advocates and 26 Sunday School Journals for another year, also 4 sheets of tickets for the infant class. The bill according to the catalog will be $29.20. I enclosed $30.00 for the amount; over to stand to my credit. I mailed it as I went to meeting in the evening. 10/09 MONDAY - John Brayman and I went to the shop as usual after getting our breakfast and washing the dishes. John went to Norwalk this afternoon as he was not to have any work tomorrow. A special Hatters' Meeting in the evening to take into consideration the case of apprentices in the shop lately declared foul and to do any other business proper to be done. I could not attend on account of a Sunday School Teachers' Meeting at the church. I being secretary and having the books was obliged to attend. After the meeting I went to the Jeffersonian Office and got 50 large cards for the sellers of Tilden's Flour Sifters to hang in their stores. I got them for George, he having ordered them. 10/10 TUESDAY - John being in Norwalk, I had to get my breakfast alone. I was in consequence late at the shop. George came before I got away and carried my dirty clothes over to Alex Pine's and carried me as far as Concert hall on my way to work. John came home on the morning train and was here again to tea. George went to Stebbins' store to see about their underselling his sifters; he had some words with Amos about them but finally arranged the matter. I attended a Hatters' Meeting in the evening (a special) but the object to rescind the vote previously taken to not work for a boss who has a Fair and a Foul shop in the same locality was not gained. 10/11 WEDNESDAY - I earned $8.12 today, the largest I ever earned in one day. John Brayman not having any work went hunting in the afternoon, but got nothing. I went to class in the evening. 10/12 THURSDAY - Windy and cool. I went to the shop immediately after breakfast, leaving Cousin John to wash the dishes as he had plenty of time not having any work. He and George went to Norwalk selling sifters as they went or rather started; they are to return tomorrow or the next day. We had but one dozen hats today. I finished mine about 11 o'clock. My last ton of coal came in the P.M. I busied myself around the house until just at night when I took my gun down to Charles Hull to have a new tube put in but finally remedied the difficulty with the old one (there was leakage around the tube). I then went to the Wooster House and got shaved and my hair cut bought a loaf of bread, a pound of coffee and came home and got my tea. I took a letter from the Office for Gussie as I came home from work at noon. The postmark was so indistinct I could not tell where it came from. I opened it and found it to be from Edwin's wife. I carried it up to Father Griswold's for the family to read. I went up home in the forepart of the evening to see Bell who is very sick with lung fever. From there I went to the Post Office and home. 10/13 FRIDAY - Cool. I worked as usual in the shop. While I was getting my tea, Father came in to borrow our syringe. I looked all around for it and then went up to Father Griswold's and Fanny said that Gussie took it with her to Canton, thinking that the baby might require its use. After tea, I went to market and at the same time carried a lamp to Joseph Ives to have the top fastened on. As I came from work, I took a letter from the Office from New Haven for George, he not being home. I shall keep it until he returns from Norwalk. Before retiring, I washed myself all over in a tub. 10/14 SATURDAY - Very cold for the season last night and in fact today. There was ice on a water pail outside this morning of considerable thickness, the first I have seen this fall. I have felt rather poorly today, not really sick but a used up languid feeling. When I came home from work at night, I put on my underclothes. Just as I was about to eat supper, George and Cousin John Brayman drove up having come from Norwalk. I helped John unharness after giving George two cups of jelly for bell (who is sick). John and I took tea, after which we went into the street to do some marketing, etc. I took three letters from the Post Office for George, two of them from St. Augustine and one from his lady correspondent while he was in the army directed to Willie Franklin. As I came home from work in the P.M., I got a letter from Gussie who is in Bloomfield. She wants me to come for her next week. 10/15 SUNDAY - Rain last night and storm and wind today. Sunday School was thinly attended. The presiding elder was with us in the P.M. at the prayer meeting and preached in the evening. After tea, John and I harnessed Jim and rode up home to see bell and down to see Beatty to have him come to Father Griswold's tomorrow morning and carry Miss Sutherland to the depot. We stayed at home in the evening. George called as he came from evening meeting. 10/16 MONDAY - Started for Bloomfield this morning. I had the company of Peter Starr; he was going to Boston. I met Father Griswold at Norwalk. The trains were delayed about an hour on account of the burning of the Cos Cob bridge in the town of Greenwich. While waiting at Norwalk, Father Griswold and myself visited Seymour's Nursery. While waiting in New Haven, Peter with me called on Elisha Dickerson, druggist in Chapel Street. We took dinner in the depot building (a branch of the Merchant's Hotel). I took stage at 3 P.M. from Hartford to Bloomfield Center. From there I walked to Uncle Lorenzo's and arrived about sundown where I found wife and baby. George Wilson, known as Nicodemus, called in the evening. 10/17 TUESDAY - Picked corn with Uncle Lorenzo a part of the forenoon until Alfred Humphrey called at the house on his way to Hartford and Gussie sent Willie Dean to the field for me. Alfred made arrangements with Hiram Barber of Canton to carry us to Canton in the P.M. if we wished to go. Fearing that tomorrow would be stormy we concluded to go on the baby's account. So about 3 o'clock Mr. Barber came along and we started. Arrived at Alfred's at dark. I paid Barber $1.50 for the job; he thought himself well paid. We were met with the usual hearty welcome and good cheer. 10/18 WEDNESDAY - Cloudy with a little rain. I rode with Alfred to the mill in the morning, after which Lydia and Gussie rode with us up to Mrs. Foot's. I husked corn in the barn in the P.M. and milked a cow for Alfred at night. Boiled chestnuts, put stamps on 3 dozen Salves and told stories in the evening. 10/19 THURSDAY - Stormy all last night and this morning; the sun finally came out and in the P.M. we all went up to Lucien Case's and stayed to tea. Windy and colder towards night. Starlight and rain squalls in the evening. Alfred made salve in the forenoon, as I wanted a gross to take home with me for George to peddle. 10/20 FRIDAY - Went up to Lucien Case's in the morning and borrowed a gun to hunt partridges. I got no partridges, it being too windy but found a fine lot of chestnuts. I went for chestnuts again in the P.M. with Anna, Gussie and the children. We returned in time to visit with Lucien's folks who came down and stayed to tea. 10/21 SATURDAY - We rose about 5 o'clock. Alfred started with us to Collinsville about before 7 o'clock. The train left 20 minutes before 8 o'clock. We arrived in New Haven about 10 o'clock. Our trunk was checked through to Norwalk. My carpet bag I deposited in the Merchant's Hotel and then we went up Chapel Street and called on Elisha Dickerson; from there we went over to Cousin Charles Bradley's in Hubbard Street near the hospital and took dinner. After dinner I went with Mr. Bradley to the carriage factory, his place of business. I returned and in about an hour we left there and called at Mr. Chauncey Dickerman's in York Street, but he and his wife were away so we went to Elisha's and stayed a while. From there we went to the depot where Gussie got a beefsteak. It was tiresome waiting for the train in the crowd. We arrive home at 9 o'clock in the evening, an hour behind time on account of the difficulty of changing trains at the Cos Cob Bridge. Mother Griswold had tea for us when we arrived. John Brayman went to Norwalk today with George with the horse. George intends spending a week or more in that vicinity with his sifters. I brought home a gross of salve for him to sell. 10/22 - SUNDAY - We feel rather tired today. I went to Sunday School at noon and then returned home again. Gussie did not go to church, only in the evening when I stayed with Georgie. After tea, I went up home to see Bell who has had the lung fever. I wrote to Carleton & Porter in the evening ordering additional copies of Sunday School papers 5 S.S.A.'s and 4 S.S.J.'s. I enclosed the money for them - $2.90 and Gussie mailed it when she went to church in the evening. 10/23 MONDAY - The milk train from here last evening had a collision on the N.Y & N.H. Railroad between Stamford and Greenwich. The train form here was chartered by the N.Y. & N.H. Railroad to run as far on that road as the Cos Cob Bridge to carry the milk but was run by an engineer of that road. A man by name of Horace Wildman was killed. Conductor Parsons of this road had a leg broken. Engineer George Stevens was badly injured but not dangerously hurt. I worked all day in the shop. I expected Joe Kyle to bring some butter to Judd's store this evening for Oscar Serine and myself, but he did not. I got a letter firm the Office for George tonight and with one that came on Saturday, I mailed them to him at Norwalk where he is now with his sifters. I saw A. Knox in the street about the $25.00 I borrowed of him for John Brayman which should be paid this evening. John could not pay him; I am to see him again tomorrow evening when John expects to have the money. Bought 62 lbs. of bar soap of Mr. Judd this evening for 16 cents per pound. He is to bring it tomorrow. I am to pay him as soon as I can. John Brayman came home from Norwalk this morning on the train. The dead body of Wildman and the wounded from the railroad accident came by the same train. John is to board with us until he moves his family which will be in about a week. 01/24 TUESDAY - Cold; ice was on a water pail at the back door this morning. After tea, I went to market. I saw Andrew Knox in the street and paid him $11.00 which John Brayman gave me last evening toward the $25.00 I borrowed for him over two weeks ago. I went to the depot when the train came with Clark Beers to see if the tea and coffee which he bought for me in New York came but it did not. There was a letter in the mail for George from his sieve manufacturer, Mr. E. C. Andrews of New Haven. I mailed it to George at Norwalk. Mr. Judd brought the soap today which I bought last evening. 10/25 WEDNESDAY - Quite cold again this morning. I worked until noon in the shop and then came home with a headache. I felt so much better out of doors than I did in the house. I took my gun and with Henry Blair's dog, Bird, I went out a short distance to get a bird for Bell as she is now much better of her fever. I got one quail and two chipmunks. I went to bed early and left Cousin John Brayman to rock the cradle while Gussie and Louise went up home to see our folks and to carry the bird to Bell. 10/26 THURSDAY - The baby sick; John went for the milk this morning while I held Georgie to let Gussie get the breakfast. As I went to the shop, I stopped and left word on Dr. Bulkeley's slate at his office for him to come and see the baby. He came about 9 o'clock. He could not tell exactly what to call the disease but feared both Scarlet Fever and Diphtheria. I brought home a Blk. Spring Brim hat with me at night that I got up from a damaged body. John and I went to market in the evening. I called on Dr. Bulkeley to see about the baby. Mr. Pond gave us about a peck of quinces this morning. A brakeman on the freight train was killed today at Norwalk while coupling cars together. He was jammed between the cars and died soon after. 01/27 FRIDAY - A little rain in the morning; cloudy all day with the appearance of rain every hour. The baby a little better today. George F. Bailey's circus exhibited here this day and evening. After tea, John Brayman and I went to market. The train came in this evening about the usual time as the detentions at Cos Bob Bridge are at an end, they having it now so far rebuilt that the trains run over it. Before retiring, I wrote out a card for George for publishing (subject to his approval) in reply to Edwin Gilbert in reply to one previously written by George. 10/28 SATURDAY - Stormy last night and this morning; it cleared off after dinner. We had but one dozen hats today. I came home at noon and went over to Mallory's shop to see Theo Lyon about getting the Russell Strawberry plants which I engaged to him. He was not at the shop so I returned and let Alban Hurd have some of them. Gussie made quince jelly and preserved some of the quinces today. John Brayman went home on the afternoon train. I went into the street in the evening and received a letter form Alfred Humphrey about the flour he was to buy for us. He was disappointed in not getting it, the parties having sold out all of that brand which they had on hand. I also received a bill from Carleton & Porter for Sunday School Advocates and Sunday School Journals which I supposed I sent the money for when I ordered them. I intended to do so and was surprised to learn there was no money in the letter accompanying the order. George arrived home from a peddling trip of 1 week this evening. 10/29 SUNDAY - It was nearly 8 o'clock when we rose this morning. I had Sunday School Advocates to mark off this morning and in consequence of that and late rising, I did not go to church in the morning. I went down to Sunday School after which I came home to let Gussie go to the Union Sunday School Concert at the 1st Church, which took the place of the usual afternoon service. George came down in the afternoon to curry his horse. William Warren came with him and called a few minutes. While they were here, Henry Blair's dog, Bird scratched at the door. I opened the door and let him in. He having hunted with me, he came around I suppose to give me a call and see if I would take my gun and go with him not knowing the difference between Sunday and any other day. He stayed with me until about two o'clock and then left. Gussie stayed with the baby and I went to church in the evening. Brother Hill preached. Fido came in church and stayed until meeting was out and then climbed over the seats to get to Fanny. 10/30 MONDAY - Cloudy, but no rain; the sun shone however just before it went down. After tea, Louise came down to stay with the baby to let Gussie go into the street with John and myself. While in Benedict & Nichols, George came in and Gussie and I took his horse which was standing in front to f the store and rode over to Theo Lyons' to see if he wanted to take the Russell Strawberry plants this fall which I engaged to him as Alban Hurd wants them if he does not. When we came back, we papered up the cups of jelly (quince) which she made on Saturday. 10/31 TUESDAY - Appearance of storm in the morning. It commenced raining after dinner and rained hard all the afternoon. It broke away in a measure about 7 o'clock in the evening so that the moon shone a little. George helped Gussie and Mrs. Stone clean the bedroom and pantry today and harnessed the horse and came to the shop for me a little before 5 o'clock. We took Oscar Serine in and carried him home as we came home. There was a special Hatter's Meeting this evening held over Harris' Clothing Store. It was to take measures to prevent foul shops and diminish foul men; also to rescind a resolution previously passed regarding pouncing (?) I attended the meeting.
1865-10
Western Connecticut State University