Lemuel Colton to Andrew and Ruth Fletcher, 1845 June 25
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I now embrace the opportunity of writing a few lines to you to inform you of our
health which is verry good at present and hope these few lines will find you and
your family enjoying the same blessing I received your letter a short time since
and was sorry to hear that you had lost your youngest child but sickness and
death awaits us all and we shall all be soon numbered with the dead and if we
are prepared we shall meet them in a better world than this where
sickness pain and Death are felt and feared no more
although it is hard to part with children and friends yet it is not as hard to
part with them when small as it is when older for we have a sure hope that they
have gone to rest in the arms of theire Saviour and what is your loss is your
childs gain strive to live in such a manner as that you can meet your little one
in heaven Mother sends her love to you and says that she should be verry glad to
see you but she says that she does not expect to ever see you again unless that
you should come out here and see her her health is as good as would be expected
at her advanced age her arm has never got well she hurt about three years ago
she wants that Lydia should come out here and live with her if she can - she
says that she should be verry glad likewise to have you come out
here
and live but we suppose that you are so attached to Vermont that you think that
there is no place equal to it but I have no wish to spend the rest of my days in
that cold frozen region I would inform you that we moved out here to Indiana
last Oct we have one hundred and twenty acres of land here and we have since we
moved here and cleared and planted about six acres of land to
Corn Potatoes Beans and other things and our Crops look well for the season of
year some of our Corn is waist high now we have between four and five Acres of
Corn and Wheat crops around us look verry promising wheat harvest will commence
next week we have paid for our land into about forty dollars and Brother Shepard
is gone out to work this summer to get the money to pay the rest of it i expect
that he is at Buffalo New York for he started for there and he will not be home
before fall we received a letter from Zebina this spring he wrote that his
health was poor and that there was no prospect of his paying for his land and
that he had some idea of coming out here and I wrote back to him that I thought
he could do better here than he could where he was or in Vermont I do not think
he would better himself any by going back to Vermont for it is a hard place for
poor folks and if he should move out here I should be verry glad to have Lydia
come out with them if she thought it best if she is with you tell her to write
to us Mother sends her love to Mary and the rest of the children and was glad
that she had a few lines from her Verona and Lyman send there love to you and
there Counsins and wish to see you verry much Carseldana has parted with her
husband he took her off to Illinois last summer and after
he got her
off there he abused her so much that she could not live with him he proved to be
a worthless character and she is left them with strangers we receive a letter
from her about a fortnight since her Father does not know it as yet for he was
gone before she wrote to us and he will not be back before fall if Lydia should
think of coming and Zebinas folks should not if she should come to Buffalo this
fall she could come from there with Shepard so you see it is a world of trouble
and trials and disappointments and I can say for one that I do not wish to have
my portion here in this world for I look for my promised inheritance in the
world to come Oh Brother and Sisters seek for eternal life in the world to come
give my love to Lydia and Mary and the rest of the children and tell them that I
should be verry glad to see them I suppose that you would like to know something
about the country here and the price of land land is two dollars and fifty cents
per acre and the soil is verry good and the winters are verry mild here we did
not have more than one inch and a half of snow at any one time last winter but
we have had a wild backward spring this last spring it is not so uncomfortable
here in the winter as it is with you please write in your next letter respecting
Aunt Sally and family and if you should see any of them give our love to them we
would be glad to know about Sally how she is and likewise write about the rest
of the folks give my respects to your Fathers family and to all enquiring
friends there is many things that I could write to you more but you see that I
have about used up my paper so I must Draw to a close please direct your letters
to Otsego Stuben County Indiana to be left at Enterprise post office I have no
more to write so I must Draw to a close by subscribing myself
your affectionate BrotherLemuel Colton
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Mr Andrew FletcherWaterville County VermontHamilton IndJune 30 1845