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Lucretia Carter Sibley correspondence

Title
Lucretia Carter Sibley correspondence, 1841-1876 [electronic resource].
Published
Alexandria, Va. : Alexander Street, 2011.
Physical Description
1 online resource.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Online collection includes 394 images of documents.
Title from HTML t.p. (viewed June 29, 2015).
Original copies held by the American Antiquarian Society, 185 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA, USA.
English.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Lucretia Carter Sibley (1798- ), the daughter of Ezbon Carter (1765-1803) and Rhoda Cargill Carter (1771-1806), was born in Dudley, Massachusetts, on 23 August 1798. She married, in Uxbridge, Massachusetts, on 28 October 1819, Royal Sibley (1793-1822). They had two children: George Henry Sibley (1821- ) and Anna Maria Sibley Hovey (1822-1865), who married Rev. George Lewis Hovey (1810-c.1878), a Congregational missionary. This collection of approximately one hundred letters from the period 1841 to 1876 were written to Lucretia Carter Sibley and her daughter, primarily by cousins Mary Ann Cutler Waterman (1800-1863) of Clear Branch, Virginia, and Samary McClanathan Stedman Sherman (1805-1898) of Sterling Bottom, Ohio, and their children who settled in various parts of Kansas, Illinois, and Missouri. The letters contain family news and vital records, comments on the weather and crops, religious verses, land and housing policies, recipes, and cures for various diseases, including consumption. There are also rich descriptions of the Sherman and Waterman children's "pioneering" in Kansas and Illinois, including Indian troubles and crop failures, and references to temperance, the coming of the railroads, and the "necessity" for the anti-Roman Catholic movement. Of special note are the many allusions throughout the letters from Northern and Southern cousins to the crisis of the Civil War era, including Mary Ann Waterman's frequent defense of slavery, her reading of Uncle Tom's Cabin, and her belief in the South's need for better roads and schools; Lucretia Carter Sibley's sending of abolitionist tracts to her cousin; descriptions of slave beatings and slave rentals; and references to Harper's Ferry, Lincoln's election, the outbreak of war, secession troubles in St. Joseph, Missouri, and enlistments of family members.
Variant and related titles
Manuscript Women's Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society.
Format
Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
October 13, 2015
Citation

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