Heavy rain at night
& we got wet Sprinkled in our tent our boys are mostly well
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 89
Heavy rain at night
& we got wet Sprinkled in our tent our boys are mostly well
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 89
We drilled some are
mostly well
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 89
We reported Thos
Stanton to the hospital he is quite poorly I am suffering with a boil under my
right arm. Had part of the Company examined & 6 of the Number rejected
night attended Preaching by a United Brethren & exorted after him in the
Camp of the 36th Reg.
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 89
Finished up the
examination of the Company & had 7 more rejected but leaves us a full com
they had to be stripped naked & thurroughly examined all over by a Seargeon
those that were rejected started home on the cars at noon. my boil is verry bad
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 89
I rested none last
night with my boil & feel bad. We drilled some evening MH Hare preached to
our Reg at our Rendesvouse I closed by Prayer after Service a man in the 30th
Reg was shot in the thy by a small pistol catrige & person that commited
not yet found 9 Oc I went to mr Pecks & set on a chair all night bile bad
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 89-90
I had to remain at
tent all day to attend to matters there I had the Co drilled by an old soldier
my boil is painfull evening I went in the Citty of Keokuk & staid all night
with Cozen M J Kelley
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
I came into camp
suffering with my Boil 10 Oc Elder M H Hare preached text fight the good fight
of faith candle lighting he preached again in Camp text the Lord hath Magnified
man
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
I am suffering verry
much with my boil 8 Oc we went out to drill & drilled untill ½ past 10 Oc
then we commenced mesuring our men evening went out & drilled 2½ hours
again night I went down in the citty saw our Cornal Lieut Col & Mager
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
Variable &
Pleasant 7 Oc I took the cars went to Madison then the packet Kate Cassel for
Devenport
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
7¼ Oc got to
Davenport attended to some buisiness with the Adgt Gen'l got my Commission as
2nd Lieut & was mustered in by HB Hendershot 1 Oc started in the steam
packet Kate Cassel for Keokuk my boil broke
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
6½ Oc I arrived at
Keokuk went to Coz M J Kelleys & took breakfast little Cozen Louis Kelley
is quite sick I went to Camp & assisted in fixing mustering rolls &c
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
Forenoon we drilled
12 Oc seen the 30th reg in Battallion drill afternoon fixed up some affidavits.
4 Oc attended dress perade of the 30th reg 5½ Oc the 23rd Reg also had dress
perade on main street they had their arms and the seen was beautifull. evening
I went to see Cozen Louey
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
We read the articles
of war to the Company and are all ready & did expect to have been mustered
into the Reg this day evening Mr Murdock & I called & spent an hour
pleasantly at my Cozen MJ Kelleys the boy is better we staid the night at Mrs
Rachael Kendles
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
8 Oc Mr. Murdock
& I came into camp 5 Oc we had our 1st Dress perade in this 36th Reg the
Col said it was well performed night we went down to Negro meeting had a good
sermon text Mathew 27th 36 & 9th inclusive
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
We drilled fore
& afternoon & at 5 Oc we ware on Dress perade evening I attended
meeting in Capt Gedney's Barracks by one Judd & it was a complete failure I
do not know what he was but think he was Campbellite
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90
An unusual heavy
rain forenoon heavy thunder & lightning Struck one of the tents in our Reg.
Capt Joy Co. B It knocked down several men but none seariously injoured.
afternoon we drilled untill the rain drove us in. evening K P Morrison preached
in the camp of the 30th Reg text for we know if the earthly house &c I
exorted & closed there was good attention Our first Lieutenant arrived the
1st he has been with us since elected
SOURCE: Edgar R.
Harlan, Currator, Annals of Iowa, 3rd Series, Vol. 15, No. 2,
October 1925, p. 90-1
ASHLAND, April 15, 1849.
DEAR SIR,—Your favor
of the 27th ultimo, addressed to me at New Orleans, followed and found me here.
I am very grateful
and thankful for the friendly sentiments toward me which your partiality has
prompted you to express. You do me too much honor in instituting any comparison
between me and the renowned men of antiquity. I am in one respect better off
than Moses. He died in sight of, without reaching, the promised land. I occupy
as good a farm as any that he would have found, if he had reached it; and it
has been acquired, not by hereditary descent, but by my own labor.
As to public honors
and public offices, I have perhaps had more than my share of them. At all
events I am contented, and now seek for better, if not higher offices and
honors, in a better world. That we may both meet there, if we never do here, is
the sincere prayer of your friend and obedient servant.
SOURCE: Calvin
Colton, Editor, The Private Correspondence of Henry Clay, p. 587
ASHLAND, June 21, 1849.
MY DEAR SIR,—I
received your favors of the 1st and 4th instant. I regret extremely that many
of the appointments of the Executive are so unsatisfactory to the public; and
still more that there should be just occasion for it. I fear that the President
confides that matter too much to the Secretaries, and that they have selfish
and ulterior views in the selections which they make. It is undeniable that the
public patronage has been too exclusively confined to the original supporters
of General Taylor, without sufficient regard to the merits and just claims of
the great body of the Whig party. This is both wrong and impolitic.
You tell me that it
will be difficult to repress an expression of the Whig dissatisfaction, prior
to the meeting of Congress. I should be very sorry if this was done so early,
if it should become necessary (I hope it may not) to do it at all. I think
there ought not to be any denunciation of the Administration, unless it is
rendered proper for its plans of public policy. If before these are developed,
the Administration should be arraigned, it would be ascribed to disappointment
as to the distribution of the patronage of Government. It will be different,
if, contrary to what we have a right to hope and expect, the Administration
should fail to support and recommend the great measures of the Whig party.
As to myself, I need
not say to you, that I shall go to Washington, if I am spared, with a firm
determination to oppose or support measures according to my deliberate sense of
their effects upon the interests of our country.
SOURCE: Calvin
Colton, Editor, The Private Correspondence of Henry Clay, p. 587-8
ASHLAND, October 2, 1849.
MY DEAR JAMES,—I
returned home this day fortnight, in improved health, which, with the exception
of my cough, continues good. Levi again left me at Buffalo, and has again
returned to Louisville, on his way home, having reported himself there to Mr.
Smith.
I received your
letter dated at sea, after you had been two days out, and I was sorry to learn
that there was so much seasickness in your party. I calculated that you arrived
at Liverpool about the time I got home. I found all well here.
Colonel Brand died
with cholera about four weeks ago. Johnson, the saddler, has purchased at
private sale the whole of Mr. Hunt's land, of upward of eleven hundred acres,
at sixty dollars per acre. I think it would have commanded more at public
auction, land being on the rise.
You will have seen
that Secretary Clayton has got into a difficulty with the French minister. I am
sorry for it, and I think that with judgment and discretion it might have been
avoided. But your course should be to defend the act of the Executive, if you
can conscientiously; and if not to remain silent. The papers will also inform
you that the Secretary has also a difficulty with the British Chargé about the
Mosquito Coast. I hope it is not so serious as to threaten war.
My crops of hemp and
corn are uncommonly fine, and the influx of gold from California, and the
general prosperity of the country are giving an upward tendency to prices.
Hemp, I fear, will, however, be an exception next year, owing to its abundance.
I suppose you will
hear from Louisville. I have heard nothing to the contrary, and therefore
presume all are well there.
I inclose a ticket
which I received for you inclosed in a circular, similar to one addressed to
me, from the American Institute.
Our love to Susan,
and kiss dear Lucy and the other children for me.
SOURCE: Calvin
Colton, Editor, The Private Correspondence of Henry Clay, p. 588-9
ASHLAND, October 15, 1849.
MY DEAR SON,—I
received your letter dated at Liverpool the 27th ultimo, and was very glad that
you had all safely arrived, with so little inconvenience from sea-sickness. I
hope that your excursion to Paris proved agreeable, and that you were not
tempted by its many attractions to run into any extravagant expenditures.
The elections in
Ohio and Pennsylvania have gone against the Administration, and, judging from
present prospects, I do not see how it is to be sustained. If, therefore, you
do not come home sooner, you may prepare to return on the expiration of its
term. I understand indirectly that it is counting much on my exertions at the
approaching session of Congress; but I fear that it is counting without any
sufficient ground. I intend to leave home the first of November, but not to go
to Washington until about the opening of Congress. I expect to pass two or
three weeks in Philadelphia.
I suppose that you
and Susan hear regularly from Louisville, from which I have heard nothing of
any interest. Here we are all in health, and things move on in their ordinary
channels. Yesterday (Sunday) Thomas and Mary dined with us as usual. He goes
down in a few weeks to his famous saw mill, from which he calculates to make a
great deal.
We expect H. Hart
and his family here to-morrow or next day to make their farewell visit,
preparatory to their going to St. Louis, for which he has made most of his
arrangements.
Give our love to
Susan and your children and to Henry Clay, and kiss dear Lucy for your
affectionate father.
SOURCE: Calvin
Colton, Editor, The Private Correspondence of Henry Clay, p. 589-90