Fayette County, Alabama
~ Letter from David
Berry to J.H. Berry ~
(1873)
page 1
David BERRY to JH BERRY Oct
26" 73
Dear son & Daughtor / I after
so long atime gladly imbrace the
oppertunity of writing you afew lines this sabath Evening to inform you
all that we are all well at the presant time so fare as I [k]now /
hoping these few lines may reach you and find you all [---] same
like blessings / JH I have not [---] you in along time and I
think it [---] I will git one when I go to town [---] receved
a lampasses news papor prin[ted] on the 9 of Oct 73 / we do not [k]now
who
it is but we guess it to be our loving son and Brother JH }} we had [a]
good
Meeting at Ebenezer / Brother Livingston is our preacher this yeare /
he
has only one more round / 18 or 19 joind at our protracted meeting } at
the baptist church they had a good joyafull time at the head of the
Tanyard branch named Sardes church / corn crops is short in Fayette Co.
/ corn is worth one Dollar per bushel from the heap / WS made agood
crop
of corn / RBF made a good crop of cotten & corn / him and Puss
rushed ahead
this yeare / me & HK made the old crib but half full and one bail
of
cotten & afine chanch of potatoes / I shall have to sell one of my
mules or morgan and Dolly if I can and by corn / I cant winter 5 head /
AW
Did not make much of [a] crop but has money to by with / we had an
Election
for the removel of the court house / the location was between me and WS
/ East side the rockey branch and the West side of Newriver / beat us
and
we cant move it } my son I shed tears to think of you all much more
when
I rite to you all / I had to quit and go off awhile } turn
over
[page 2]
Well JH I will say some thing
about the Granger Meeting for I
dont know much a bout em / but they had ameeting last wensday up here
at Sardes Church and organised abody there / ther
is 5 they say in Fayette Co granger lodges and it is said to be the
best institution that has ever bin for the laboring class the farmers
it is said / to put down speculation Each member makes out his bill of
articles such as he wants and makes up his purse of money to pay for
them and one man goes to wheare they are manufactred and by them / put
them on the [train] cars and come with them to the nearest point / I
beleave I will join them / it take $5
Dollars to on for the anisa ation fee }
I understand old unke Billey is
agoing to come back / times is verry hard here / Rashens scarse /
cotton 12½ cts per pound / coffey 2½ lbs to the dollar
and cant be had at that
/ it is so darke I cant see the lines }} November 1 the day on Saturday
/ a very Big frost this morning / John H your aunt Polley BOX Died in
September last / I Reseved your letter last Evening and was very glad
to
here of you getting happy in the lord for ablessing is worth every
thing
else to our immortal souls / and I pray god that he will bestow
abless-ing on you as long as you live in this unfrindley world / To Wm
L
LONG / your Mother receved aletter from you last evening and w_her of
grate overflow at Lampasses / JH I would like to have bin at your house
and talked with you & EC and ate watter millions / I must close for
this
time / write soon and oftain / David & FE BERRY
To JH & EC BERRY good by
Transcriber's
Notes:
David BERRY of Fayette County
wrote this letter to his son, John H.
BERRY, and his wife, Eliza Catherine DENNIS, who were then living in
Burnet County, Texas. The letter was folded into thirds, but a
portion of the middle section on the first page (four lines; three or
four words per line) is missing. This area is denoted by
brackets: [---]. Writing with a steady hand, Mr. BERRY made
several references to his other sons: Alfred (AW), Robert (RBF) and
Henry (HK). He was very liberal in his spelling but extremely
conservative with punctuation. The town
of Lampasas, Texas, was just north of the Burnet-Lampasas county
line.
William L. LONG was the son of David BERRY's second wife.
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Co., AL
03 Sep
2005 | 03 Sep 2005