Descripción
On offer is an archive of nine (9) letters that tell the story of a young Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania man s life from 1884 through 1912, when he is 19 through 47 years of age. All but one letter is addressed to Walter Peter Cole (1865-1948) of Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania. The final letter is addressed to his wife. Cole was born in Wallsville, PA. He raised his family in Dalton. Walter worked as a dairy farmer and salesman. He was married to Minnie Louise (Corey) Cole. They had two sons. Walter died at the age of 83. While Walter and his immediate family live in Lackawanna County, PA, his extended family lives in Ortonville, Big Stone, Minnesota and surrounding areas. In 1886, at age 21, Walter visits his Minnesota family. The first six letters center around this trip. He is urged to visit by cousin A.O. Bailey to visit before it s too late: Stick to it Walter…Come west before you get married because if you get married before you come here there will be no hopes for you then… [Dec 1884-Jan 1884, Cousin A.O. Bailey, Ortonville, MN] In March of 1886, at age 21, Walter makes the trip to Big Stone with his cousin, George. While he is away he receives letters from back home in Pennsylvania: Your father and mother was here since you went west they seem to be more reconciled…they was a little worried for fear some thing might happen to you and George… [Aunt A.J. Clark, March 29, 1886, Clarks Summit, PA]. I tell you what it is Walter it is tough. I have lost 20 pounds of meat…Jay Seamans is to work to Scranton for $38 a month he drives a one horse star wagon. Grace…is very sick not expected to live. [W.D. Van Fleet, April 30, 1886, Pennsylvania]. By the end of May, 1886 Walter is back in Pennsylvania and his family from Minnesota is fast to write: .It seems awful lone some to me since you left. We all miss you very much wish I lived where I could visit my own people once in a while… [Aunt Mira, May 30, 1886, Almond Township, Big Stone, MN] Ma red [sic] what you sed [sic] about grandma it makes her feel pretty bad I think if she had the money to go with she would go out there after my school is out. [Cousin Clara, June 14, 1886, Ortonville, Big Stone, MN] I don t think I can start the store again for I lost too much by the fire… I think I will buy a farm again and go to farming again for a while… [Cousin A.O.Bailey Sept 18, 1886]. Years later, Walter is living and working in Pennsylvania and courting Minnie Corey. The remaining letters are dated to when Walter was older, building a career and a life in Pennsylvania. In 1892, Minnie wrote him in Walsville from Waverly, PA Friend Walter…My cousins think you might took me out said they wanted to get acquainted with you. I did not tell them anything though. The lake looks so pretty to day. I would like to have a boat ride… [April 27, 1892]. In May, 1895 Walter is hired as a deliveryman for C.W. Stuart & Co, delivering seeds in his community. He receives a typed letter from the company acknowledging his letter of receipt of inventory. The letter provides instructions as to how to deliver orders and collect and remit payments to the company. The final letter is addressed to Minnie Cole in Dalton. Minnie s sister writes to update the Coles on her husband s serious workplace injury: It was a bad job but might have been worse from what I ve heard. I heard he jumped just in time to save himself from a blast…Every one thinks they will strike April 1st. It will be a long time before he can get around . [Clara Corey Van Fleet, March, 1912] For a historian or genealogist who studies Lackawanna County, these letters are gold. They help to draw cross-state connections between extended family in Minnesota. These letters are also a window into the daily lives of a farming family and the lower middle class at the turn of the century. All letters are in good condition. Minor age toning. No significant rips or tears. Most have accompanying envelopes. G+. N° de ref. del artículo 0012032
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