Kansas Historical Quarterly
Letters of a Kansas Pioneer
1855-1860
Thomas C. Wells
May 1936 (Vol. 5, No. 2), pages 143 to 179
Transcribed by Marilyn Dell Brady, Don Dowdey, Dr. Lynn H. Nelson,and Dick Taylor;
digitized with permission of the Kansas Historical Society.
Waites Hotel Prov. Mar. 12, 1855.
My Dear Father
I HARDLY know what to write you or what to do. I met James at the depot in Providence and he had found the tickets at the Express Office. I must say I had
really hoped that he would not get them and that would furnish a reason for returning home, -- not that I shrink from any hardships real or imaginary
which I might be called to endure in Kansas but I do find it hard to leave you and Mother & sister, Herbert, &c at home.
I say again I do not know what to do, I have prayed that I might be guided in the right way, and I trust that I shall be thus guided. James seems to
be as eager to go as ever. I shall probably go on to Boston tomorrow, at least, and shall have a plain talk with him and tell him just what I think about it. I may yet see it best to return and not go at all, but if I do go I may not stay -- or but a short
time at any rate. I certainly will not stay -- (and would not go did I know that you felt so) if you feel the need of me greatly at home, and if you think that I ought to come back or that you cannot get along comfortably without me (I did not think that I was so important) I do hope that you will write me so and I will gladly return and be contented and not only contented but esteem it a priviledge to remain with you and mother and try to be a comfort to you as long as you or I shall live.
1
Thomas Clarke Wells, the son of Thomas Potter Wells and Sarah
Elizabeth Clarke, was the eighth and last Thomas Wells born in
direct line, descendants of Nathaniel Wells who emigrated to this
country in 1629 from Essex County, England. His mother died in 1834
and his father made two subsequent marriages, the first to Clarissa
Sherman in 1836, who died in 1846, and the second to Julia Esther
Johnson in 1848. Two children were born of each marriage. They
were: (1st) Thomas Clarke, 1832, and Frances Elizabeth, 1834; (2nd)
George Henry, 1837, and Theodore Backus, 1840; (3rd) Herbert
Johnson, 1850, and Helen May, 1861.
Mr. Wells was born April 26, 1832, in Hopkinton, R.I., spent his
early life in Kingston and Wakefield and at the academy of East
Greenwich, and as a young man planned to enter his father's bank.
Ill health, however, forced him to leave the Atlantic coast and in
1855 he came West, taking a claim near Juanita, and subsequently
one near Manhattan. On October 30, 1856, he was married to Miss
Eleanor Bemis of Holliston, Mass., who lived on a near-by claim. As
the accompanying letters, written to his father, stepmother, and
half brothers show, Mr. Wells was a Free-State man, on one
occassion joining a party which started to the defense of Lawrence,
and was active in the affairs of his community, particularly in the
work of the Congregational church in Manhattan where he was a
charter member. He died in Manhattan, January 9, 1907.
The originals of the letters published here are preserved in the
Manuscript division of the Kansas Historical Society. They
were presented by Elizabeth J. and Emily P. Wells, of Kingston,
R.I., nieces of Herbert J. Wells, who is mentioned in the letters.
Included in the series are several letters written by Eleanor Bemis
Wells to her new relatives. Spelling and punctuation as contained
in the original letters have been followed throughout.
144 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
But if you find it easier to get along without me
than you thought at first then it may be best for
me to stay a year or two in Kanzas if I should
ever reach that country.
James says that he has learned of two printers who
he thinks might suit you and they will probably
write you soon.
But I must bid you goodnight Do not be troubled on
my account -- I doubt but that all will in the end
be for the best though what the end may be I am
sure I cannot now tell.
Yours affectionately in haste
T. C. Wells
Dear Father
I have just been to wash my face &c and when I
came back I found James just directing a letter to
you, and I will add two or three words and more
soon.
We have been on the railroad all night stuck fast
for three or four hours in a snow bank on Mount
Holly in Vermont. A strange way to get to Albany
through Fitchburg Mass., Keen, N. H., Bellows
Falls, and Rutland Ver., but we shall have a
chance to see the country, for the last hour we
have been going [through] the Mountain hills -- this
is the most broken roughest country I have ever
seen. I should think there were as many as three
hundred on their way to Kanzas with us, some thirty
or forty women some whole families. We expect to
arrive at Albany at about six (6) this evening or
rather we arrive three or four hours before that
and start from there at six. If you wish to write
before I get in Kanzas you may direct to the care
of Samuel C. Pomeroy, Esq.,2 Kanzas City, Mo. and I
shall get them as soon as they can be forwarded. If
it should be necessary you can communicate with me
by telegraph directing to the care of same person
in Kanzas City as there is a telegraph there. Yours
affectionately,
Will write more soon as can.
T. C. Wells.
Detroit Michigan
Mar. 16-55
Dear Father,
Here we are in Detroit Start for Chicago at 1/4 to
nine this eve'g. We arrived at Albany at about
seven Thursday evening, and a mean dirty place it
is -- around the depot at least -- if I am any judge.
We left Albany at 1/2 past eleven at night for
Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls where we arrived at about 1/2 past
four yesterday
2
Samuel C. Pomeroy was United States senator from Kansas, from
1861 to 1873. For a biographical sketch see Kansas Historical
Collections, v. VIII, p. 278.
145 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
afternoon; we took a walk up to the falls on the Canada side. I
will not attempted to describe them, the pictures which I have
seen of them give them as good an idea as you could expect to get
on paper. The river below the falls is quite narrow but deep and
rushes along furiously under the suspension bridge, two or three
hundred feet below the carriage path. Two or three of us went down a long
flight of steps and clambered down the bank of the
river, clear to the water's edge and drank of the
river directly under the bridge. Those standing on
the edge of the bank, which was almost
perpendicular, looked like mere monkeys in size.
The Susp. Bridge is most as great an artificial
wonder and curiosity as the Falls is a natural.
We left Niagara at 11 1/2 o'clock last night and
arrived in Detroit at about 2 o'clock this
afternoon. It seems to be a fixed fact that we
travel nights and "lay by" if we lay by at all, in
the day time.
My health is as good as it has been at any time for
a year past, but I shall be glad when we get to
Kanzas or somewhere where one can "stretch his
weary limbs" once more, for though I am not very
tired, yet sleeping for three or four successive
nights in the cars is not the most comfortable way
of resting, especially when cramped up with two on
a seat all night. I cannot write many particulars
now as I have hardly time and am crowded up in
"Johnson's Hotel," about 75 or 100 men talking all
around me.
We have great times with our baggage, hunting for
it every time we change cars, and generally, as it
has happened, in the dark. I keep a little miniature
sort of a journal as we go along, and will write
more fully of our journey when I get a chance.
Have you found a printer yet? I hope I shall find a
letter from home at Kanzas City when I get there. I
might go and back again while we are going, we
might as [well] sail around Cape Horn as to go this
way. I send a copy of today's Tribune.
Yours in haste,
T. C. Wells.
Steamer Lonora Missouri River
Saturday March 24, 1855
My dear father,
It is several days since I sent a letter to you and
I suppose you would like to hear from us once more
At about noon last Tuesday we left St. Louis on the
"Steamer Lonora" with about 300 passengers on
board, and when you know that the steamers this way
are flat bottom and those of the larger size among
which our boat may be
146 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
ranked, are only about one hundred feet long, you
will not imagine but know that we are rather
short for room and accommodations. This
steamboating up the Missouri, where the water is
as low as it is now, in a crowded boat is just the
meanest way of getting along that ever I tried. By
far the greater portion of us have to sleep on
mattresses on the floor, and I believe that we
should be more comfortable and less liable to catch
cold if we slept out of doors. As it is I do not
believe there are a dozen on board who have not
taken a severe cold and I have not escaped. For two
or three days it made me most or quite sick and
that is the reason why I have not written before
since I have been on the river. I am much better
now, however, and feel about well today.
If we have good luck and don't get stuck in a sand
bar we shall get to Kansas City a little after noon
today. The Missouri is a strange river, at least it
seems so to us Eastern people. Every few minutes we
run against a snag which one would think would
knock a hole through the bottom of the boat, and
every day, and sometimes several times a day we are
delayed from half an hour to three or four hours on
a sand bar. Yesterday we remained stationary for
full half a day on this account and after all had
been done that the captain thought best he sent
about 250 of us ashore, most of us without our
dinner, and we had to [walk] five or six miles
around to a point while the steamer worked her way
across the bar. We got our dinner and supper
together. Our Yankees say that they expected to
meet with some hardships in Kanzas and have
prepared for it, but such hard times in the cars and
on the boat is something that they had no reason to
expect. They did not bargain or pay for it, and I
assure you they do not like it. We have formed an
association among ourselves and shall probably,
quite a large number of us, settle together. We
expect to hear from Mr. Goodnow3 in Kansas City and
can then tell perhaps about where we shall go. The
Missourians, some of them, are making a tremendous
row about the "pauper Yankees," as they call them,
coming out to make Kanzas a free state; but some of
them talk very reasonable on the subject. I think
there is more danger of being frightened than
hurt by them. How do you all do? I want to hear
from you very much, and hope I shall when I get to
K. C.
It is most time for dinner and the servants, not
slaves, will want the tables and chairs, and I
must stop writing. We have just been
3
For a biographical sketch of Issac T. Goodnow, one of the
founders of Bluemont College, see Kansas Historical
Collections, v. VII, p. 170.
147 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
walking over a bad bar on "stilts," I call them,
two long, strong, pieces of timber by means of
which they walk over sand bars, sticking one end in
the sand, and with rope and tackle raising the boat
up while the paddle wheels drive the boat along. I
will try to write to mother soon and give a sort of
history of my journey. Love to all.
Yours affectionately in haste,
T. C. Wells
Kansas City, Mo. Sunday
March 25, 1855.
Dear Mother,
We did not arrive at this place until after dusk
last evening, owing to snags, etc. in the river.
indeed we have been behind time and had to wait for
trains and boat at almost every station so that
instead of coming here in eight days as we ought to
and as many do when the trains connect we have been
twelve days tossed about with night and day without
decent accommodations, and without stoping a single
night to rest ones weary bones, even on the boat we
had to sleep on the floor, and I doubt not but that
I should have felt better and stronger had I
remained in a chair by the stove, as, indeed, I did
one night. Last night for the first time, more
fortunate than some of the company, I obtained a
good bed on a bedstead with only three other
persons in the room, and I assure you I enjoyed it.
It is a luxury which those only know how to value
who have been for some days deprived of it. My cold
has not entirely left me, I cough a little, but
hope soon to be well. But enough of the blue in the
past, now for a word on the prospects of the
future. We have not heard definitely from Mr.
Goodnow, but know that he has gone up the river
toward Fort Riley, and the company have good reason
to expect to see him in Lawrence, about fifty miles
from here, for which place most of them expect to
start tomorrow, though I am sorry to say that quite
a large number started today. We have a goodly
number of very fine men, and women too, but we have
also a large number of such as I have no desire to
associate with, many of whom I expect and hope will
separate from the company and some go back home. I
am not yet decided whether to go with the company
toward Fort Riley or independent of them start for
Council City. Am strongly inclined to the latter
place. It is highly spoken of by all who have been
there, both as to the character of the people and
its situation. It is on an elevated prairie country
at a distance from the river, and the low bottom
lands having wells of the best water in the
territory, and on either side is a stream of clear
148 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
running water, and there is a good opportunity for
selecting a good claim and a city lot by paying
five dollars for a share of the company's stock. I
did [not] hear anything from home here. Perhaps you
have not received a letter from me, though I have
sent three before these and a paper.
I feel rather tired and sleepy and fear that I
shall not be able to secure a bed unless I occupy
it soon "Squatter Law," or rather grab law is
supreme in this part of the country and has been
with us ever since we started from Boston.
I hope that the next time that I write I shall be
able to inform you where to direct letters to
your humble servant and affectionate son, T. C.
Wells
Remember me kindly to friends, and tell some of
them that I shall try to write to them when I can
find an opportunity to do so.
T. C. W.
According to directions I send a feather from the
banks of the Missouri and a piece of the inside
bark of a tree near the far famed Kansas river.
Hope all are well. Please Write direct Topeka
Kanzas Ter. (and I will find your letters)
Topeka, K. T., April 1, 55.
My Dear Mother.
Here I am in the far famed Kanzas Territory, we
left Kanzas City on Monday last at about noon, and
passing through Westport, a large Missourian town,
we soon came upon the Indian reserve (belonging to
the Shawnee's) which extends for thirty miles up
the Kanzas or Kaw river. We went as far as Mill
Creek the first day, called about twenty miles from
Kanzas, and there we hired for the night an old log
cabin of the Indians, made a good fire in the old
fireplace, made some coffee, which we drank with
our crackers and gingerbread, and then we all seven
in number, spread down our blankets etc., pulled
off our boots and overcoats, and, tried to go to
sleep. 'Twas a pretty cold night, the wind whistled
through the holes in the old cabin, which was
thoroughly ventilated, as we could put both hands
between most any of the logs, but we fastened our
tent up on the windy side, and slept quite
comfortably. The next morning we started for
Lawrence City about thirty miles further up the
river. We found the ground frozen in the morning,
but it grew warmer as soon as the sun was well up,
and we had quite a good day for traveling. We found
no settlements on the road,
149 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
except once in a while an Indian cabin, but we saw
a plenty of rich rolling prairie, with here and
there a ravine skirted with timber, and generally a
spring or brook at the bottom. We traveled nearly
all day among a large party of Missourians, number
about 200, who were going to Lawrence to vote and a
pretty rough looking set they were, some on
horseback, some in covered wagons, and others on
foot, all hardy, sunburnt, frontier men, and all
well armed with guns, revolvers and bowie knives.
We were often asked what county (in Missouri) we
came from, and when they learned that we were from
the East we had the pleasure of being called
"damned Yankees," etc., but they did not succeed in
frightening us or in driving us back, though they
assured us that they could fire some twenty shots
each, and that they had a six pounder with them.
The thing which I was most afraid of was a barrel
of whisky which we discovered in one of their
wagons. They all stoped at the Wakarusha, where we
pased their camp toward Lawrence about five mile
distant but I can tell you those five miles were
long ones, for although we hired a team to carry
our luggage we had to walk ourselves, and thirty
miles is something of a walk for a beginer
especially when we had come twenty miles the
afternoon before. However we arrived at L. at near
sunset, a little after and put up at Page's Hotel,
the best in the City but poor enough at that. For
breakfast, dinner, and supper we had fried pork,
and very poor bread, biscuit and cornbread, a
little miserable butter, and molasses. We were not
able to procure a team to carry us further on our
journey, and were therefore obliged to remain
several days in L.
I will describe L. to you in my next if nothing
prevents. We came here (Topeka) yesterday, and
start for Big Blue, where Mr. Goodnow is, tomorrow.
We are both well. James has gone to sleep.
Yours affectionately in haste,
T. C. Wells
Cedar Creek, May 28, 1855.
Dear Father
In my letter to mother a few days ago I expressed a
wish for you to send me some money and suggested
that you send it in your letters to me in fifty
dollar notes on Wa[kefield] Bank. But as letters
come so irregularly here I do not think it will be
safe to send money thus, and I do not know as you
can send to me at all unless you can procure a
check, payable to my order, on some banking house
in St. Louis. I suppose I can get along without the
money,
150 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
but I am and shall be pretty short of funds until I
either raise something on my claim to sell, or else
sell the "claim" itself.
As to the last I have thought that I should not try
very much to do it until toward fall, as it is
hardly safe to go down the river now on account of
cholera, and I think it will be much easier to find
a purchaser in three or four months from now than
at present.
I like the country here very much, it is beautiful
now that every thing is green; but I do not like
the idea much more the reality of having no letters
or communication from home, neither do I like to
think that you may be sick and have no one to
assist you.
For these reasons I feel often that I ought to come
home though if it were not for these I could get
along very well here for two or three years, but I
should want very much to see you all before the end
of that time.
I have no doubt but that letters have been mailed
to me from home often but I have received but one
as yet -- that dated March 22.
I have also written home about once a week ever
since I came here, I do not know whether you
receive them regularly or not.
Three deer ran by the cabin a few days ago, I have
seen quite a number since I have been here, but not
near enough to get a shot at them.
I shot a turtle in the creek last Saturday which
weighed twenty one lbs. I should like to get
another of the "Narragansett Times," I heard while
down to Mr. Dyer's4 to meeting yesterday that there
was a paper there for me, but it could not be found
then, perhaps I may get it today. We have preaching
somewhere within a dozen miles twice each Sabbath
and a Sunday School has just been started at Mr.
Dyer's. But we have no prayer meetings here and I
miss them very much more than almost any thing
else. We are so much scattered here that it is
hardly possible to get together more than once in a
week, and that of course is on the Sabbath.
Does the interest continue in the meetings at
Wakefield? And
4
Samuel D. Dyer, a native of Tennessee, came to Kansas in 1843,
settling at Fort Scott, where he worked for the government as a
mechanic. In 1853 he was transferred to Juniata to operater a
ferry across the Blue river on the military road between Fort
Levenworth and Fort Riley, and he later collected toll on the
bridge that replaced the ferry. He had served as a major in the
Black Hawk war and was already an old man when he came to what is
now Pottawatomie county.
Mr. Dyer homesteaded land at the mouth of Cedar creek where old
Juniata was located. His house served for several years as a
voting precinct and also as a preaching place for ministers of all
denominations. The first county jail was the cellar under a little
store kept by him. He was noted for his generosity and his place
was designated as a free hotel. Politically he was a Free-State
Democrat. He was elected justice of the peace in 1858 and held
this office for a number of years. Mr. and Mrs. Dyer were the
parents of eleven children. He lived on his farm until his death
February 1, 1875. For another biographical sketch of Mr. Dyer, see
The Kansas Historical Quarterly, v. III, pp. 120-123.
151 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
how is the state of religious feeling in Kingston?
I wish that they might have a real genuine revival
there.
James has not left me yet and he may not for some
time but if he should I do not know but I should be
obliged to give up keeping house as it would be
rather lonely for often we do not see another
person for several days, sometimes for more than a
week, unless we happen off three or four miles to
look for them.
Love to all friends, and hoping that you and yours
are well I am yours affectionately,
T. C. Wells
Cedar Creek, June 11/55
My dear Mother,
I found at Mr. Dyer's yesterday, when I went down
to meeting, a letter from you, and three papers all
"Narragansett Times." I assure you I was not at all
sorry to get them all but especially glad was I to
get the letter.
James was down to Dyer's this morning and brought
me a letter from Lizzie which had lodged for
sometime in the P. O. at the Catholic Mission5 and
would have remained in those comfortable, quarters,
no-one knows how long, if an acquaintance of mine
had not passed through there and spying it out
brought it up to me. The Mission is about thirty
miles from here and why in the name of reason the
[letter] should stop there I cannot tell, for it
was plainly directed to the care of S. D. Dyer, &c.
I was glad to get a letter from Lizzie too and will
try to answer it soon. Yesterday was the second
time that I have received either letter or paper
since I left home and "good news from a far
country" is worth having I can tell you. James,
too, has been favoured with letters, he received
three from Prov. yesterday which were very
acceptable though he would have prefered one from
home.
A man from Topeka says that there are two or three
letters there for me which the P. M. would not let
him have as he did not remember my whole name. I am
going to start after them tomorrow if nothing
happens to prevent. What would you think in the
East of going over fifty miles after one or two
letters and that on horse back? but we do not think
so much of riding fifty miles here as you eastern
people would of going two, provided we both have
the same mode of conveyance. James has heard that
there is a letter for him at the Mission and I can
stop and get it for him.
. . . You tell me in your letter of a number of things
that you
5
Doubtless St Mary's mission, established in 1848.
152 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
"want to know" and I will try to inform you
though perhaps, I have already given some of the
desired information in previous letters that you
have not yet received. But to the point. I do cook
myself sometimes James cooks but I generally do
that part of the business. We make wheat bread,
biscuit griddle cakes, (flapjacks west) puddings,
etc., soups out of turtles and squirels, boil duck,
snipe and other birds and sometimes ham and also
eggs, and we fry ham and fish. Of course I have a
good cook stove. We have made nothing but what we
could eat and tasted good; have not had sour bread
once, neither have we burnt it up, had nothing to
throw away because 'twas not good. Can you beat
that? We do most of our own washing also though we
carry some of our shirts, pants, etc., which need
starching and ironing about a mile over the bluffs
where we get them "done up" for us at $1 a doz. as
for coats and vests they remain in our trunks the
most of the time walk out perhaps once a week or
so, that's all. I have a very good garden, but more
than that I did not get ploughed as the man whom I
engaged to "break up" for me disappointed me; he
could not make it go. We do have meeting once a day
on the Sabbath at Mr. Dyer's also an interesting S.
School both conducted by Methodists. There are
meetings held in other places in the neighborhood
but too far off for us to attend as we should have
to go nine or ten miles each way and that takes too
long Sunday afternoon. I am glad you and father had
an opportunity to take the air while Henry was at
home. Every one says that I look much better than
when I came here. Indeed, I know that I am better,
am not sick at all now. The country agrees with me
well, and all the people here to whom I have spoken
of leaving say that they don't want me to go, and
that I ought not to leave the country but I think I
shall come home before Spring. Yours aff--
T. C. Wells
Cedar Creek July 21/55 Juniata Kansas Ter.
Mrs. Thos. P. Wells,
My Dear Mother,
I received two letters last Tuesday morning, one from you and one from Henry both of the same date
June 18. May 11th was the date of the last letter
which I had received, it was from Lizzie. It seemed
a long time since I had heard from home more than
nine weeks. I am glad you all had so nice a visit
in East Lynne and hope grandfather will soon get
well.
So I have two new cousins, have I? That is good but
I am sorry
153 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
to hear that aunts E. and L. are so sick, hope to
hear that they are better in the next letter.
Thus it is joy and sorrow are mingled here below,
but even while sad we may yet be really happy and
looking beyond above these present sorrows expect a
life of eternal joy. May we not only expect but
receive that life.
I have received every number of the "Times" as far
as June 23rd. No. 8 and they are very welcome
visitors, especially when one lives alone. A family
moved in above me yesterday, consisting of a
father, mother, and four daughters; they are three
fourths of a mile from my cabin and out of sight
behind the bluffs.
My horse was found a few days after he was lost,
about thirty miles down the river. He was not just
such a horse as I wanted and I traded him off
together with my wagon for a pair of steers and
another horse. In less than an hour afterwards I
sold the steers for more than the horse was worth,
and I can sell the horse that I
have now for all that I could have got for the
wagon; he is worth more to me than the one that I
had before.
I do not like to have father so closely confined
and feel badly every time I think about him; but it
does not seem to me best to return home quite yet.
Even if it was perfectly safe going down the
Missouri, I fear that my ill health might return if
I should go east now and then I should be of little
use to any one, but I am so well here that I hope
if I remain until cold weather I shall have so
entirely recovered that my health will not be
affected by the Atlantic fogs. The Missourians are
circulating all kinds of evil reports about Kanzas,
to discourage northern imigration, but they are not
founded in fact. We feel in no danger whatever from
hostile indians or cholera. It is very healthy
here, and, in this section at least, the crops look
finely and promise a plentiful harvest. I hope the
South Kingston people will succeed in establishing
a good public Library and erect a suitable
building.
I am obliged to Joanna for her kind wishes. Tell
her that I get along nicely cooking for myself and
dog which is my only companion now. I did cook the
turtle I shot and it was very good. Tell father
that, Providence permitting, I will come home as
soon as I well can and take [care] of the printing
office, paper, or bank, and, if possible, all
together for a while and let him rest a little.
Tell Lizzie if it does not happen before
Thanksgiving I will try to be there.
154 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
I am glad father did not send any money. I wrote
for him not to send it in another letter
immediately afterward. Did he not get it.
We have had a real rainy day just such as we have
in the east, here the rain usually comes in thunder
showers and rains very hard. Love to all, not
forgetting Fanny Burdick. She sent love to me in
one of your former letters and I neglected to
acknowledge the receipt of it, so I send a double
portion now to make up.
Yours affectionately T. C. Wells
Juniata, Kanzas T., Aug. 9, 1855.
Mrs. Thos. P Wells,
Dear Mother,
I am happy to say that I get your letters quite
regularly now; the last reached me in less than a
month after it was written.
It would have given me much pleasure to have made
one of your picnic party on the fourth no doubt
you all had a very fine time. I am sorry, on
father's account that I shall not be able to settle
up my affairs so as to go home before the middle or
last of November.
I still sleep in my log cabin, but take my meals in
Mr. Hanna's family, three quarters of a mile up the
creek.
I began to get quite lonely and after my cow was
gone I decided not to keep house for myself any
longer for the present.
I received a very good offer for my horse and cow,
and thought best to sell as I might not again get
so good an opportunity.
I "reckon" $45 dollars is a good price to get for
a cow and calf in Kanzas when you can buy as many
as you please for from $15, to $25. in Missouri but
mine was a little extra.
The cholera has been raging terribly at Fort
Reiley, chiefly among the soldiers who were in the
habit of drinking large quantities of whiskey. Some
forty five or fifty persons died there last week. I
believe there have been no cases since Sunday.
There is but little sickness in this part of the
territory--no cholera.
We have not had a "wet" season but have been
favored with sufficient rain to make the corn
fields look finely.
I picked a ripe tomato in my garden today, the
first I have seen this season, I shall have plenty
of them soon. I have no lack of garden vegetables,
except beans which don't do very well here this
season, and I turn them in, in part pay for my
board.
You ask -- How long it takes me to go fifty miles. It
is about fifty five miles from Topeka here, and I
rode home on a very hard riding horse, in a day and
half, with an easy riding horse it would not take
as long.
155 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
I had an invitation to go on a grape hunt last
Monday, with about a dozen young people of both
sexes and had a nice time. I may tell you more
about it some other time. They were the smallest
grapes I ever saw, not much larger than our
whortleberries, but when ripe are quite good.
Wild plums grow about here, I have found some plum
bushes up the creek that hang very full indeed but
they are not yet ripe.
Our Missouri Legislature has adjourned without
accomplishing anything. The governor would not
recognize them as a legal body while at the Shawnee
Mission, and the people will not trouble themselves
to obey any laws passed by such a sham Legislature.
The truth is many of the members were Missourians,
elected by fraud and mob force, and some of [them]
now live in Missouri.
Yours affectionately
T. C. Wells
Juniata, Kanzas T.,
Aug. 29/55
Mrs. Thomas P. Wells,
My Dear Mother,
I have neglected writing to you for some time past,
waiting to receive a letter from you first, but it
does not come and I will put off writing no longer.
It is eight weeks tomorrow since your last letter
was written and the mail will not be here again
under ten days or a fortnight.
I soon became tired of sleeping alone in my cabin
and taking my meals, so far away, and so I
determined to move up to Mr. Hanna's altogether and
for the last three weeks have been "camping out"
with them.
I am now in the little tent that I brought from
home, it has been quite useful both to me and
others. If I should tell you how we live here you
would think we had rather a hard time -- you could not
bear it, -- 'twould kill you, etc., but I like it very
well especially in pleasant weather 'tis not quite
so pleasant when it storms. The cooking is all done
over the fire out of doors, something as yould cook
at a picnic in the east. We set our table under a
large oak tree and under it's shade we sit and talk
or read when we have nothing else to do. We had a
wedding here last week out of doors! one of Mr.
Hanna's daughters was married to a Mr. Dyer who
lives at Juniata about four miles from here, he is
a son of the old man Dyer who is spoken of in
Boynton's "Journey through Kanzas," which you saw
while I was at home. The knot was tied at four
o'clock last Thursday evening.
156 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
Everything was prepared before hand as well as
could be done under the circumstances. A long table
was set under the trees, loaded with cake of
various kinds, tarts made from native grapes,
which by the way are much smaller than the wild
grapes of the east, custards, preserves etc., while
at a side table was roast pork, mutton and chicken
in abundance. At about three o'clock the bridegroom
and his friends with the "preacher" came a part in
two large two horse wagons and others on horse-
back. The bridegroom was dressed in black coat and
pants with white vest and the bride in pure white
with a head dress also of white. At the appointed
hour the relations and friends formed a semicircle;
the bride and bridegroom stood up alone in front
and the minister before them. After they had
promised to love, respect, obey, etc., as long as
they both should live they were pronounced man and
wife. The minister then made a prayer commending
them and their friends to the care of God and
asking his blessing upon them. Then all the party
were invited to partake of the refreshments
prepared for them. Two young men were selected to
carve the meat etc., for the first table. When they
were through others who could not find room at
first together with the carvers took their places
and were waited on in turn. After dinner all were
invited to the "infare" or second wedding at the
house of Mr. Dyer on the morrow.
After a little while most of the friends went home,
but the bride and bridegroom with one of his
sisters and two or three others remained all night.
On the next morning I had the pleasure of riding
down with them to the infare where we remained
until nearly night. This time the table was set in
a large log house, a story and a half high,
containing four rooms with a kitchen built on one
side, this is a first class house in Kansas.
We were supplied with a greater variety of nice
things than we had the day before. More than fifty
persons were there to take dinner with them.
After dinner some of the company took a walk to
the water melon patch, eat as many as they wished
and went back loaded with melons for those that
they had left behind. We had no dancing, no
instrumental music but considerable time was spent
in singing sacred songs. So you have a brief
description of a wedding in Kanzas.
They say that there will be a number of weddings
more in a short
157 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
time, as all of the young men have become tired of
keeping batchelor's hall.
A number of [us] went a plumming yesterday, I have
been once before. We had a pleasant time and came
home loaded with as many plums as we could bring.
They grow on bushes not much larger than our
current bushes, they would grow larger, but the
prairie fires keep them down. The plums were very
thick and so ripe that we could scarcely touch the
bushes without shaking them to the ground. These
plums are of a yellowish red when ripe, are nearly
as large as our tame plums and are very sweet and
good. I have saved some of the seed to carry east.
I have had about six acres of prairie broken and shall probably
have ten or twelve in all, which will make quite a good start for
some one next spring. It may possibly be me for if my
health should not continue good in the east this winter I
do not know what I can do better than return here and go to
farming in earnest. I have spoken with two or three
physicians and they together with all the old people who have
lived in different parts of the country, say that I am very
foolish to think of returning east to live and that
the first cold I catch there will bring on my
former sickness as bad or worse than ever. I intend
however to go home this fall, and try it next
winter, though I do not expect to be as well in the
east. I have made up my mind not to sell my claim
this fall unless I am offered a very good price but
leave it in the care of some friend until spring
and then if I remain in the east I can get them to
sell it for me or if I decide to come back it will
be ready for me. If I should return here again I
wish you and father, etc, would come too. It would
be much better for father's health and I think you
could all be happy. It will not cost much to live
out here after the first year, and it may be good
for your health too. There have been one hundred
and thirty or forty deaths of cholera at Fort
Reilly but in this part of the country it has
continued quite healthy. The cholera has not
appeared at all here I believe.
I hope to hear from you soon.
My health continues good and I expect to be on my
way home in a little more than two months. I have
written to Amos [?] but have not yet heard from
him. Love to all,
Yours affectionately
T. C. Wells
158 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
Juniata, Kansas Territory
Oct. 12th, 1855. Thos. P. Wells Esq.,
My dear Father,
I was very glad to receive a letter from you about
ten days ago, the first you have written me since I
have been in Kansas.
I received five or six other letters at the same
time and as many papers. I have not been well for a
part of the time since having had two pretty severe
attacks of fever and ague, I have also had to
spend considerable time in my garden, gathering beans,
fixing fence etc., and have not had an opportunity
to answer your letter before now.
I have got over the ague entirely I hope for there
is nothing pleasant about it.
A lot of unruly oxen broke into my garden and
destroyed some thirty dollars worth of things -- most
too bad!
Your paper takes so much of your time that I am
almost sorry that you ever commenced publishing it
for even if it paid well your health is worth much
more to you than money.
Had I known two months before how you felt about my
remaining here I would have made arrangements to
stay here a year or two at least for although I
have been much better here than I was in the east
yet I do not feel that I have entirely recovered,
and to tell the truth I am almost afraid to return
home. I intend to start next month however and
spend the winter with you if I am able but I think
I will have to return here in the spring. We will
talk about this when we see each other if we are
permitted to meet again.
You ask about Mr. Goodnow; -- he and his wife live
about ten miles from me, but I see them
occasionally, they both have been sick for
sometime past. Mr. G. has got pretty well but his
wife is very poorly yet. Three claims have been
taken on our creek since I first settled here -- two
above me and one on a small branch half a mile
southeast of my claim.
The emigration comes in rather slowly this fall as
yet, owing to our political troubles, the doings
of our sham legislature and the border ruffians
under Atchison and Stringfellow, but people need
not fear to come to Kanzas the Missouri laws are
a dead letter to Kanzas freemen, their hirelings
dare not enforce them There are eight free state
men to two who are in favor of slavery in the
territory and the ratio is constantly increasing in
favor of freedom Kanzas must and will be free.
Nearly every one who comes here
159 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
wants a claim and so houses are seldom built nearer than half a
mile of each other, but at Manhattan,
ten miles from me, there are fifteen or eighteen
houses and there is a good prospect of soon having
quite a town there.
There are but two or three families very near Mr.
Dyer's but he has a fine situation for trading and
probably others will build near him. He lives 2 1/2
or 3 miles from me. Nearly all our meal and flour
is ground in the States 110 to 130 miles from
here, but there are mills at Lawrence, 80 miles,
and at Topeka 55 miles, and we shall have mills
here this fall. There are persons who make a
business of going to the States after provisions,
of course we purchase here
Cattle will sometimes get there [sic] living here
without feeding, but it is best to allow them
about a ton of hay to the head, which is quite
sufficient for them to winter on. We can cut plenty
of hay here on the prairies. Do not direct any more
letters to me at this place, as I shall not be here
when they arrive. I hope to write mother soon. I
have also unanswered letters from Henry, Amos, and
Theodore which I will try to remember soon.
Yours Affectionately
Thomas C. Wells
Juniata, Kanzas Ter.
Oct. 26/54. [1855]
Mrs. Thos. P. Wells,
My Dear Mother
If you had ever spent a month or two "camping out"
in tents you would excuse me for not being more
regular in writing home of late.
But beside living in tents I have had two or three
touches of fever and ague within a few weeks and
have not felt much like writing or doing much of
anything else for a good part of the time.
I have now three unanswered letters of yours before
me, but have received none since I wrote father a
few days ago. The last letter I have had was from
Henry, dated Sept 11.
We have just moved into a house, that is a pile of
logs with a roof on the top of them. The spaces
between the logs are not filled up yet, but we have
a tent cloth, wagon cover, quilts, comforters, etc
hung up around the sides to keep off the wind for
the present, and have, also, a tent set up inside
of the house; we have no chimney but build our
fires on the ground in one corner of the house. Of
course we have no cellar or second story, and old
mother earth serves us for a floor. But this is a
great improvement on "camping out" as we have done
Now we are quite comfortable although we
160 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
have some cold, frosty, weather. I suppose however,
that if you could look in upon us and see just how
we live, you would think that you could not
endure it for a week, " 'twould kill you."
. . . My letter will not be very well connected this
time for I read your letters and then write down
whatever thought they suggest in the same order
that they come into my head.
You say I have written nothing about the flowers in
this country. We have some that are very pretty,
and I have saved seeds of as many as I could so
that if nothing happens to prevent you may yet see
some of the Kanzas flowers in the east. I intend,
also, to bring with me some garden seeds. . . .
You and Henry and Theodore keep wishing me to
write for the "Times", but really that is out of
my line of business. I know not what I could write
that would be interesting to the people, the
newspapers are all so full about Kanzas that I
could hardly write anything new on that subject,
and I conclude that the "Times" has correspondents
enough without me. . . .
The two Kansas elections have just come off, the
pro-slavery election, called by the sham
Legislature occurred one week before the free state
election which was called by the people assembled
in convention.
We did not have pro-slavery men enough in our
precinct to hold an election, but there were
seventy nine Free State votes east.
In the whole territory the pro-slavery people
report 1,800 votes cast for Gen. Whitefield [John
W. Whitfield] and probably half of them were
foreign votes.
Gov. Reeder the free state candidate received more
than 4,000 votes! I think congress will hardly
refuse to receive him as delegate from Kanzas, if
they do there will be a fuss.
You may not get any more letters from me, as I
shall probably start for the east in a few days,
and shall be able to travel as fast as a letter. I
may be delayed on the way, however, and you need
not expect to see me much before the first of Dec. I
shall not bring home but a few of my things as I
shall expect to come back in the Spring even if I
remain here only through another summer.
Yours affectionately
Thomas C. Wells.
161 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
Johnston's Hotel,
Detroit Mich,
2 l/2 o'clock Mar 27/56
Mrs Thomas P. Wells
My Dear Mother,
We arrived here at about half past one this P. M.
four hours behind our time owing to the immense
length of our train. I think we had on fourteen
cars.
We crossed Susp bridge at about midnight and last
night, we did not have time to go to the falls but
caught a glimpse of them as we crossed the bridge a
little before dark. I made a mistake in saying
above that we crossed at midnight that was the time
that we started for Detroit.
We were behind on the Hudson River R. R. and have
been behind ever since, so that we have to lay by
and wait for trains in the day time and travel
nights in order to reach St Louis before Sunday
which we wish to do if possible.
Theodore gets so excited at what he sees sometimes
that he can hardly control himself; coming through
western Canada this morning he almost jumped up and
down at the sight of the prairie we were passing
through, I don't know what he will do with himself
when he sees the immense prairies of Illinois, the
Missisipi and Missouri rivers etc. etc.
Detroit is a beautiful city in my opinion, it is
regularly laid out in straight, wide streets, well
paved and good side walks, and contains several
very fine churches, and hotels. I hope I shall get
a letter from you as soon as I reach Juniata and
would like very much to receive letters from
father, Henry, and others in Wakefield whom I might
mention Write me what father is going to do about
the Times as soon as he decides.
Do you feel any better than when we left? -- you were
most sick then I hope all are well.
We are not sick, but are rather tired of traveling
night and day in the cars; we shall finish that
business, however, for the present, in two or three
days.
Theodore is so full of seeing that he thought he
could not write now. There is a great deal of snow
in western N. Y. and in Canada, and I am afraid
that we are too early to drive stock up into the
territory if so we shall go right along and attend
to something else first and come down to the States
again in a few weeks to get our cows oxen etc
Yours truly, in haste
I enclose a few spring flowers
Thomas C. Wells
162 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
Apr 3, 1856,
Steamer Jas H Lucas
Missouri River.
My dear Mother
I believe my last letter home was written from
Detroit Mich. but Theodore has written you since.
We left the beautiful city of Detroit one week ago
to-day, at six o'clock P. M. and arrived in
Chicago, the "Garden City of the West," at about
eight o'clock the next morning.
As we had two or three hours to ourselves before
the train started for St. Louis, we went to the
American Hotel and took breakfast. Theodore and
myself then started up State St to find our old
friend Benj Watson while, our companion Mr Wilson
went in another part of the city to hunt up an old
acquaintance of his.
We found Ben at the store door and as may be
imagined somewhat surprised to see us; for though
he had heard that we were coming and had expected
us two or three weeks before he had, I think, quite
given us up, thinking that we [had] gone some other
rout or passed through the city without seeing him.
After talking a few minutes he started with us for
the Depot which is about a mile from his store, and
there he introduced us to one of his partners, the
younger Mr. Otis, who happened to be on the spot.
I received a much more favorable impression of
Chicago this time than -- at either of my previous
visits -- the mud was all frozen up and I had a better
opportunity to run around.
At half past nine we started on the Chicago, Alton,
and St Louis R. R. for St Louis and were
accompanied for thirty or forty miles by Mr Otis
who had business in a little village at that
distance from Chicago. We found him very sociable
and agreeable.
We arrived among the one hundred and forty thousand
inhabitants of St Louis at a little before three
o'clock A. M. and immediately proceeded to the
Missouri Hotel, went to bed and slept soundly until
late breakfast time. This was the first time we had
enjoyed a bed since we left the Commodore's berths
in L Island sound.
On Saturday we spent the time in hunting up a
Missouri River boat, and doing some of our
shopping. Sunday was quite unpleasant, cloudy damp,
and in the afternoon it snowed hard for two or
three hours, accompanied by considerable thunder
and lightening, a new thing in my
experience -- thunder and lightening in a snow
163 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
storm. I did not feel at all well, having taken a
very bad cold, on my journey, and did not go to
meeting in the day time, but was persuaded [to go
to] Dr. Rice's church in the evening by a young man
who had heard the Dr. preach in the morning and was
very much pleased with him. I was disappointed in
not hearing him as a stranger preached in the
evening.
We went on board the Steamer J. H. Lucas on Monday
Morning and engaged passage for Kansas City. The
Lucas is a very fine boat, the fastest on the
river, has a very gentlemanly Master and clerk and
good accomodations. We were so fortunate as to
obtain good State rooms, many of the passengers
have to sleep on mattresses on the floor. As the[y]
did not advertise to start until Tuesday at 4
o'clk, we had plenty of time to walk about St
Louis, spend as much money as we chose at the
stores and hear more swaring and profane talking
than we could in the same time in any other city
with which I am acquainted.
An immense quantity of business is done in St L. I
can liken the appearance of the levee to nothing
than B. Way in N. Y. in a very busy time, only
instead being enclosed by two rows of buildings, it
is bounded of one side by a long line of splendid
Steamers on the Missisippi river.
St L. is a good market, anything can be purchased
there for money, though sometimes a good deal of
that useful article is required.
We live finely on board the boat. The table is set
nearly the whole length of the cabin, and at
dinner time is loaded with almost every thing in
the eatable sort. Beef, pork, ham, veal, turky,
chicken duck fish etc cooked in every style, pies
of apple, peach, plums, prunes, blackberries,
cranberries, etc various kinds of puddings tarts,
fruit, nuts, etc. Today we had fresh greens,
yesterday lettuce, you would enjoy it I know
especially as you would not be seasick on the
river.
Quite a number of people are on board from South
Carolina and Georgia going to Kansas. What think
you of that? I will tell you what I think. Nine
tenths of them will return home, or at least leave
Kansas before they have been there three months.
They have left their old homes in beautiful
Springtime, all nature looking green and
luxuriant -- their warm and suny homes in the South,
for the windy plains of Kansas, as yet brown with
the frosts of winter. They have taken the wrong time
to emigrate and the new country will not suit them.
164 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
And of those who do remain, nine out of ten will
before long turn free state men. They will find it for
their interest to do so, and when their interest
decides against slavery they will both see and
acknowledge that the whole system is entirely
wrong. We anticipate no trouble from them. And
indeed we expect that the worst trouble is over and
that we shall be left comparatively to ourselves,
at least we hope so.
The free state people must eventually conquer -- the
South cannot compete with the North in sending
emigrants, and -- very few of the small number who
come from the South dare to bring Slaves with them
Theodore is not very well but is better than he has
been.
Remember me to inquiring friends, I shall try to
write some of them when I get to the end of my
journey, and should in the mean time be very happy
to have about a dozen of them write me. The jarring
of the boat makes it quite difficult to write
distinctly and I have written considerably in haste
in order to finish before supper time
Yours affect'ly
Juniata Kansas Ter.
Apr 13th.
I expected to have sent this letter long
ago, and you will doubtless wonder before you get
it why I do not write.
The mail leaves here tomorrow and I will just write
a little more, and send this and write again some
other day and give more particulars. We landed at
Leavenworth City, instead of Lexington or Kansas.
Leavenworth is 50 miles further up the river than
Kansas City, and is 15 or 20 miles nearer the Blue
than K. The road is also much better, it being the
Government road from Fort L. to Fort Reiley. I was
quite sick at Leavenworth had a little touch of the
chills and a pretty high fever, together with a
very bad cold and cough which I caught in the ears.
I felt so miserably that I did not undertake to
write or even send this letter which I had already
partly written on the boat. Theodore was not much
better off. I wrote you that he was not very well, and he was
[missing] care of himself while at Leavenworth but
he is getting better now quite fast. I did not buy
any cows or oxen in Missouri as the grass was not
high enough to keep them.
I bought a waggon in St Louis and also a plow,
harrow, cultivator etc and at Weston Missouri I
purchased two very good horses which brought us and
a part of our things up from Leavenworth. I have
got to go down to L again in a few days and get the
rest of our things. There has been more trouble in
Kansas this winter than I
165 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
had supposed; the wrongs of the free state people
have not been exaggerated in the papers. The
Lawrence people especially have suffered immensely.
For a long time no one could go to or from Kansas
City without having his baggage searched, and even
now the Missourians frequently break open heavy
trunks or boxes to search for Sharps rifles of
which they stand in great fear. I think they must
feel rather cheap at times, however, when the[y]
find what the contents of the boxes really are. One
which they opened in Kansas contained a piano, and
a chest which they had opened at Leavenworth while
we were there was full of books, surveyor's
instruments and a few articles of clothing, and
this was done at the request of the mayor and
marshall of the city -- shame on such proceedings.
When we arrived at Juniata we found the Government
bridge across the Blue had been carried away by the
ice. We have to cross on a ferry boat now which is
rather expensive and not very pleasant business.
Mr. Dyer has turned strong pro slavery and they
have got a pro slavery minister there of the
Methodist Church South, who says "he would as leave
sell a nigger as an ox." They have organized a
church under pro slavery influence and intend to do
all they can to bring slaves into Kansas and drive
out the yankees "for," they say, "they do not want
eastern men to rule the territory."
They may do their best however, and they will not
succeed, they have a class of people to deal with
that are not frightened at trifles, and not
withstanding their threats and their struggles
Kansas will be a free state and and [sic] the
territory will be ruled by eastern men.
I do not consider my claim half as valuable as I
did last fall and I think I shall sell out and take
one on the other side of the blue.
The claim is really an excellent one but the
society is not such as I would choose it being
mostly composed of western and Southern people,
some of them very good neighbors in their way, and
others pretty strongly tinctured with pro slavery
notions, while the greater part of the settlers on
the west side of the Blue are eastern men.
I have an excellent opportunity to get a claim
little way from Mr. Goodnow's with eleven acres
plowed land and a good spring on it. There is no
wood on it, but in a few years if it is not
already it will be more valuable than my old
claim.
I shall be much nearer churches -- schools, stores,
Post Office etc than if I remained on my old claim.
I have written much more than I intended to when I
commenced, but I have hard work to write
166 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
any thing straight. I must either be thick-headed
today or my mind if full of something else, in
either case I had better stop. I hope I shall get
another letter from you soon.
Yours truly
T. C. Wells
Juniata, K. T.
Monday, May 5th 1856.
Mrs Thos. P. Wells
My dear Mother,
I commenced to write a letter home last Friday noon
but had to leave to go to plowing and have had no
opportunity to finish it until now, so I concluded
to begin again and write a new letter. It rained
nearly all night so that the ground is too wet to
work today and I am going to improve the time in
writing two or three letters
I believe I wrote that I was going to sell my old
claim and take another on the prairie. My new claim
is situated about three miles west of, or rather
south-west of, the ferry across the Big Blue at
Juniata and about one or one and one half miles
NN.W. of Manhattan which in all probability will
be much the largest town any where in this
vicinity. There are at present not more than twenty
five homes in Manhattan, including two stores, and
one very good saw-mill with grist-mill attached
which work very well. Quite a large number of
houses are going up very soon, some of them will be
built of stone, and another saw mill is going up
within two miles of the "city". We expect that a
Cong. Church will be built in Manhattan during the
summer.
I did not remain here but two or three days after I
first arrived before I again returned to the
"States" to get the rest of my things which I left
at Leavenworth City.
The distance from Juniata each way is about 110
miles and I assure you it is no small undertaking
to make such a journey in a two horse wagon,
putting up nights at any little cabin you may chance
to find on the road, making your supper and
breakfast of corn-bread and bacon, with strong
coffee to wash them down and eating crackers and
cheese, by the roadside, for your dinner. We
generally have good appetites, however, and can
make a hearty meal out of the plainest fare and are
tired enough at [night] to sleep well on the
hardest beds even though we should be obliged to
roll ourselves up in a blanket or buffalo skin and
lay on the floor. Mr. Wilson went down to L with me
and bought four yoke of oxen, which we took turns in
driving up, and I assure you we were both
167 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
pretty well tired out by the time we got back to
the Blue, one week ago last Friday evening. I had a
hard chill next day, and a worse one Sunday. Monday
I got some quinine etc had only a very light chill
and have had none since.
I hope I shall not be troubled with the chills any
more, I enjoy better health now than I have done
before for two months at least.
I was very glad to find some letters waiting for me
when I returned from L one each, from you
(enclosing one from Mr Goodnow -- Did you attempt to
read his hieroglyphics? -- and a sort of one from
Henry for which I enclose a one cent stamp -- please
deliver it,) Lissie, and N. A. Reed, Jun. I am
sorry you have been so unwell and hope that now you
have got better you will continue to improve You
seem to have poor luck in getting help. Have you
found no one to suit you yet?
We have received two copies of the "Times," the
last first, and also two copies of the "Puritan Recorder"
We were surprised to see a notice of Mr Reynolds'
death in one of the "Times." You ask about Mr
Wilsons family, they did not come out with him and
he will return east again in the fall.
I shall not get much if any more for my old claim
than I shall have to give for my new one. There are
no improvements on my new claim except eleven acres
of broken land which I intend to plant mostly in
corn this season. I want to get twenty-five or
thirty acres more broken this summer and sow a part
of it in wheat in the fall. I want to put a good
fence around the whole which will cost me from two
hundred and fifty to three hundred dollars; and I
must put me up a little house which will cost me as
much more. The house will be small (good size for
this country) only 16x24 and a story and a half
high, but it costs a sight to build here where poor
lumber is worth $40. a thousand and carpenter's
wages are $2.50 per day. I must also build a small
stable ln the fall, large enough to shelter two
horses and one or two cows.
I believe I wrote that I bought a wagon and
harnesses at St Louis and two horses in Weston Mo.
My whole team costing me nearly $400. so you see
that it costs something to start even in this
country I find that I shall come short of cash and
I wish father would sell ten shares of my stock in
Landholders Bank as soon as he can and send the
proceeds out by Amos if he concludes to come this
way, in bills of Wakefield Bank if he chooses and I
will give it as good a circulation as I can. If he
can not send it by Amos he may send it by letter in
hundred dollar cheeks on Hanover Bank N. Y. and I
can get them cashed here.
168 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
We are boarding for the present, and until my house
is finished, which will be ten or twelve weeks
perhaps, with a young couple by the name of
Browning from Fitchburg Mass. We like them very
much they are both members of the Cong Church
organized here a few weeks ago and have family
prayers morning and evening. They live in a stone
house on the claim just east of mine, belonging to
Mr. Wilson Mr. B. will not be able to get. a house
up on his own claim, which is a little further
north, before fall.
We have to pay three dollars, each, per week for
board and get pretty plain fair at that, but Mr. B.
expects to get a cow in a few days and then we
shall live somewhat better. We could board
ourselves for half the expense if we had a place to
live in.
The season is much more forward than it was last
year; the trees have put out their leaves and the
prairies are covered with the green grass and
flowers. Changing claims and going a second time to
the states has made me late with my garden. I have
planted nothing as yet except a few seeds in a box,
but as we are boarding we shall have no need for a
very early garden. I intend to commence planting
tomorrow. Mr & Mrs Browning and Theodore have all
gone six or seven miles up the Wild Cat Creek today
to get some seed corn and potatoes. The corn costs
$1.50 and the potatoes only $4.00 per bushel.
I will stop now and write to some one else, but as
this letter cannot go until next Monday I shall
probably add a few lines before I send it.
Sunday, May 11th, I have been so busy plowing and
planting my garden, and drawing lumber for my
house, that I have not been able to add anything to
this letter until now, and as it is Sunday and we
have about two miles to go to meeting this morning
I shall write but little today. Our mail goes out
Monday mornings and comes Friday afternoon.
I recd another letter from Henry yesterday morning
and quite a good one too which I will answer as
soon as I can get time. I'll send no stamp now.
Theodore seems to really like the country and he is
very well. I think I am getting stronger and in
better health every day.
I do not remember whether I wrote you that I had
had a private surveyor run the lines on my claim. I
do not suppose that they will correspond exactly
with the government lines, but they will not
probably vary more than a few rods, so that I may
be pretty sure to get all the improvements which I
make before the regular survey on
169 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
my own claim. There is a prayer meeting at Mr
Blood's this afternoon and a church meeting of the
Congregational Church. A Mrs Flagg is coming
before the church as a candidate for admission. She
has experienced religion within a few weeks. I
expect to unite with the church (by letter) at the
same time.
Yours truly, in haste
Thomas C Wells
Juniata, K. T.
June 21/56
Dear Brother,
I received a letter from you a long time ago, and
it should have been answered long ere this, but my
time has been very much occupied and besides your
letter has been mislaid and I cannot find it.
Perhaps you laugh because I make want of time an
excuse for not writing and say that there are odd
times enough when I might write if I chose to
write a little at a time even if I could not finish
a letter at once.
All that will do very well to talk and, indeed, I
frequently have to improve such odd times or write
Sundays, which I do not like to do, if I write at
all, but I find very few leisure hours when I have
nothing else to do but write letters.
But enough of such talk no doubt you would like to
hear how we get along and the Kansas news.
Just now we are getting along finely Both of us
enjoy excellent health, you would hardly know
either of us. We are strong and hearty, in good
flesh and burnt as black as Indians. Our corn field
and garden looks well except that the grasshoppers
have eaten up some things that we planted in the
beds. Although every thing was planted very late,
we already begin to get things from the garden --
shall have peas fit to pick in a week or ten ds.
Shall commence to build my house next week -- will not
finish it off very nicely at present -- will move into
it as soon as 'tis done which will probably be in a
month at most after it is commenced.
We have had pretty hard times in our territory
since we have been here. The "border ruffians"
accompanied by a large number of Southerners have
been over here with the intention of either driving
the Yankees home or making them submit to the laws
of the bogus legislature neither of which they
have been able to do. Gov. Shannon has enrolled the
names of these mob-ocrats as part of the Kansas
militia -- some 500 of them, though they do not claim
to be citizens of this territory.
170 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
1700 of them according to there own reports, but
probably not quite so many, have been for a long
time encamped in the vicinity, commiting all sorts
of depredations, stealing cattle, robbing private
houses, and searching, and taking whatever they
wished from, every wagon or individual that
attempted to pass by them, and they killed several
men and took others prisoners. About the middle of
May they threatened to destroy the city of Lawrance
and drive the inhabitants from the territory, and
we received a call from the Lawrance people for
help. Although it was a very busy time for farmers
and it seemed almost impossible for any one to
leave, about forty of us from this vicinity took
what arms we could muster and started for Lawrance.
After we reached Topeka 55 miles from here and
within 25 of L we heard that the Missourians had
done nothing more than threaten the destruction of
the town etc and probably would not as Col Sumner
at the head of a large number of U. S. troops had
threatened to fire upon the party that made the
first attack.
This prevented an open fight and as we could not
afford to remain a long time at Topeka for nothing
we returned home, but the Missourians were
permitted to remain where they were committing
every kind of outrage upon the free state people.
But not content with robbing the emigrant and
baggage wagons that passed along the road, and the
private homes near them, and taking prisoners whom
they chose of the passers by, they got five men (?)
Shannon, Atchison, the U. S. Marshall, Gen
Stringfellow, and the bogus Sheriff Jones to lead
them on, marched upon Lawrence, and demanded the
public and private arms of the people and the
privilege of making what arrests they desired. The
U. S. Marshall was premitted to make arrests and
the public arms were given up, but the people
refused to give up their private arms.
So these five men (?) with these foreign highway
men to back them destroyed the free state hotel,
worth with its furniture which was also destroyed
$28,000., the two printing offices and the House of
Dr. Robinson with all its contents, and ransacked
and robbed private dwellings.
There has been some small skirmishing, but nothing
of much consequence has occurred within two or
three weeks that I have heard of We hear various
reports -- that Shannon has been removed, that Col.
Sumner is at the head of affairs, and that the
Territory is now under Marshall law, but do not
know what to believe.
As yet all is peaceable where we are, but we know
not how long it will remain so, yet it seems that
the present state of things
171 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
cannot last long or if it does there will be civil
war between the whole North and South and then we
shall be as well off here as elsewhere.
We can but hope however that these troubles will
soon ease, and we trust that Christians in the
east will unite their prayers with ours to the
great Ruler of the Universe for a return of peace
and prosperity to this part of our country and for
the removal from our midst of that great evil which
has caused so much disturbance -- American Slavery.
The prairies look beautifully now, and you do not
know how I wish father could come out here and
spend two or three weeks, at least, with us. It
would do him good, and I really believe he would
want to move out here immediately.
I wonder if he has sent the money that I sent for
on the first of May? The letter may have been
miscarried. I wanted him to sell half my stock in
Landholders bank and send me the proceeds either in
Wakefield bills, or drafts payable to my order on
Hanover bank, N. Y., I am expecting the money every
week and need it very much. It costs considerable
to start the first year, but if father should come
out here it need not cost him half what it has me
for obvious reasons.
Our last letter from home was mailed May 28th. We
were very sorry to hear that Mr Burdick was so
dangerously ill -- is he no better?
Our letters and papers are sometimes unaccountably
delayed but we have no reason to believe that the
mail has ever been robbed.
Give my love to inquiring friends and tell them
that when I get over my hurry (poor prospect at
present) I intent to write lots of letters
Please write again soon
To G. H. Wells
Wakefield, R. I.
Your truly
T.C. Wells
Sunday morning, Juniata
My dear Mother,
K. T. July 27th 1856
I used to think it wrong to write letters of any
kind on the Sabbath day, but I have somewhat
changed my opinion of late, and although I would
not spend Sunday in writing business letters, I do
not think it wrong to spend an hour or two in
writing letters to your friends any more than it
would be to spend the same time in talking with
them.
172 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
We recd a letter from you a week ago last Friday
written just after your return from a visit to
Lynne; also a note from Henry enclosed. We are glad
you had a good visit. I should love to look in upon
you and have a little talk with you all. I could
tell you more in half an hour than I could write in
all day.
Sorry the Kanzas flower seed did not come up -- will
try to send more this fall. I am glad you think
that ambrotype so good. I wish that you and father
and Herbert would have yours taken all together and
send to me in the mail; it would cost but little
and I should be very glad of it indeed. Theodore
likes the country as well as ever, talks a little
about going home once in a while, but generally
sets the time as far off as a year from next fall.
We recd a letter from bro Samuel and Lissie last
Friday, also one from father, both which we were
very glad to get and I will try to answer them
soon. Father's letter contained a draft on N. Y.
for $1329 97/100 which I very much needed just then. I
wish father would write oftener.
The cabins or houses here are so small generally
that we frequently have our meeting on the Sabbath
under a tree in the woods when pleasant weather and
find it much more agreeable than to be shut up in a
small room. Last Sabbath the Methodists held their
quarterly meeting in a grove two or three miles
from here, and as there was no other preaching a
great many were there. They had a "love feast,"
preaching by their presiding elder, (very good)
administered the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper and
invited all members in good standing of every
evangelical church to partake, and then another
sermon by the Rev. Mr. Lovejoy who has just
returned from a tour to the east to raise money to
build churches for his denomination in Kansas The
day was pleasant and the services very interesting.
We are enjoying a time of comparative peace and
quiet, though the Missourians, Georgians, etc seem
to hold a grudge against Manhattan and threaten to
destroy the town and arrest those who went down to
Topeka, but we do not feel much in fear of them.
Our field and garden look nicely and we get along
with our house very well but slowly.
What do you think of what I wrote father in my last
letter home? I do not think I shall keep batch a
great while in my new house think it will be much
pleasanter having a home, and so does--somebody
else. The more I know her the better I like her. I be-
173 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
lieve she is truly a good Christian and think that
you and father would both love her if you knew her.
I hope you will write often, we expect a letter
from home every week.
Love to Herbert and tell him he must write once in
a while to his brothers in Kansas.
Mrs. Thomas P. Wells
Yours truly
Thomas C. Wells
Juniata, Kanzas T.
Aug 2d 1856
Dear Father,
I was very glad to get a letter from you last week,
glad both for what was written and for the dft
enclosed.
You speak of your garden and say that you do not
see that we have vegetables any earlier than you
do. Our garden was planted very late, some of our
neighbors had vegetables three or four weeks
earlier than we. I plant in all this season about
eleven acres; nine of it in western field corn, and
an acre and a half is a garden planted with
potatoes, sweet corn, beans, vines, etc, etc and
Browning has about half an acre in one corner for a
garden I keep no other stock at present than two
horses, 1 cow and calf some hens and a dog which
last is almost indispensable here to keep off the
prairie wolves from the chickens etc.
We board not more than quarter of a mile from the
eastern line of my claim.
I hope Henry will be successful in finding
business, and when he gets a good situation I hope
he will stick to it long enough to do him some good
Please remember me to Morton Sweet Much obliged for
the papers that you sent.
I find that it costs a great deal more to get
started here than I supposed, and I shall have to
raise yet more money than I have heretofore sent
for. You may think that I could get along with
less, but I will mention some of the principal
items of expense which I have had and shall have to
meet and then you may judge for yourself whether I
can well get along with less.
First our fare out here cost me full.................$100
1 two horse wagon and harnesses in St Louis........... 100
2 horses in Weston M 0 ............................... 300
Plow, harrow, cultivator, rifle, & necessary sundries stove,
corn planter, crockery, corn for horses etc ........... 200
Second trip to Leavenworth for bal of things........... 40
board since we have been here $6.00 per week........... 75
It will cost me to finish my house at least........... 500
174 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
for my claim, due next Month............................ 150
must have a well dug and stoned up...................... 60
must build a barn this fall............................ 250
must pay for rails, stapes, etc to fence field......... 100
must buy provisions some furniture etc, etc.... 1,875
etc. etc. etc.
to commence keeping house the amt of which I cannot estimate
exactly but we shall be very prudent and get along
with as little as possible until we have more means
to do with. I have mentioned only some of the chief things for
which I have to pay money and have not estimated largely in any
case; everything costs more, here than in the east, except what
we can raise ourselves, and be as prudent and careful as you will
it must cost a good deal to make a fair start and
live. In the east the young man just begining life for
himself finds very many things already done for him by those who
have gone before him; but here the land alone is given to us we
have every thing to do to make a home. I started from home with
about $1050. and recd a dft from you for $132.97, I shall have to
take pay for my old claim mostly in breaking prairie which I
shall want done for another year. I suppose I shall receive from
you when that stock is sold dfts to the amt of about $550. I
suppose, also, that my stock in Prov has been sold and the
proceeds applied to my note at Landholders Bank, if so, I would
like to have you sell the remainder of my stock in L Bank and
send me the proceeds, after paying the balance of my not[e]
there. With that I can, I think, get along very comfortably, I
hope to raise enough corn this season to pay for my land when it
comes into market and together with what we can earn by our
work support us comfortably until we can gather another crop.
I would love dearly to see you out here and talk
over my plans with you and would love to have you
make us a visit -- I might say mother and Herbert
too -- but suppose it would be useless to think of
their coming.
A very fine man living in our vicinity formerly
from Wonsocket, R. I. is going east in a week or
two after his wife and sister and will return as
soon as possible. I think he would be perfectly
willing to take charge of any dfts that you may
want to send me and I would like to have you go up
there and see him if you can, as he could give you
more information about Kansas affairs and how I am
geting along etc in an hour or two than I could by
writing a week. I will write you when he is
expecting to reach R. I. or give him a letter to
you to drop in the P. O. when he gets there so that
you may know when to go. His name is Ambrose Todd.
175 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
I have written in much haste, you will please
excuse the unsightly appearance of the letter.
Love to Mother, Herbert, and friends.
Thos. P. Wells, esq.
Wakefield, R. I.
Yours truly
Thomas C. Wells
Juniata, Aug last, 1856
My dear Mother
We were so glad to receive a letter from you last
Friday, dated Aug 10th. We received one from Henry
a week or two ago and have not answered it yet -- we
do not know where to direct.
I feel almost ashamed to date most all of my
letters to you on Sunday, but I get very little
time to write during the week, and am obliged to
remain at home half the day each Sabbath because,
for fear of the cattle we dare not leave the corn,
therefore I frequently take that time to write.
So you think it "surprising news," do you, that I
am "really engaged" to be married? Did you think
that I was going to remain a bachelor all my days,
and live and improve my claim alone among these
western wilds? If you did you are much mistaken,
why I never thought of such a thing.
To be sure I tried that way of living last summer,
but 'twas only an experiment and an experiment
tried of necessity and the result proved, to my
mind at least, that "it is not good for man to be
alone."
Were I in different circumstances I might, perhaps,
have chosen a wife among my acquaintance in the
east, but one who would have made a very pleasant
companion for a man in an eastern village, in the
midst of schools and churches and the comforts and
conveniences of civilization, might be poorly
suited to endure the hardships and privations
incident to a border life and illcontented withal.
And now I suppose you would like to have me write
you a "full description" of my lady -- I will try and
do the best I can, and first I will endeavor to
answer your questions.
She is the youngest of quite a large family of
children, all of whom with the exception of herself
continue to life, either married or single, near
their native place not far from the centre of old
Massachusetts.
Her father is still living but she lost her mother
when only eleven years of age I think her father
and her brothers and sisters are in comfortable
circumstances though not wealthy -- I have not asked
176 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
and do not know the business of any of them. She is
nearly as tall as myself and well proportioned
neither very light nor very dark complexion, and
according to my notion very good looking. Her name
is Eleanor S. Bemis. Your questions are answered.
At an early age she lost her mother as I have
informed you, her health was very poor until
sixteen and for four years from that time she was
employed in keeping house for her father
consequently her advantages for obtaining an
education have been very limited in comparison with
those of most young Ladies in New England, though I
believe they have been well improved. She is a
woman of good sense and good temper and I doubt not
a Christian. She is a member of the Methodist E.
Church
She has no relations in Kansas but many friends. I
can write no more about her at present as 'tis
about time for me to go to church, and send this
letter to the P. O.
We both are in good health. Theo. says he does not
care much whether he goes home this fall or not but
I think he would be much disappointed if he should
be obliged to remain here though it may be best
that he should.
My love to all the friends and please write where
Henry is, and write often as you can. Yours truly
in haste
T. C. Wells
Juniata, K. T.
Sept 14/56
Dear parents
We were very glad to get a letter from you last
Friday, and to hear that you were well etc.
We are and ought to be thankful that the mail
continues to come quite regularly in these
troublous times. I have no reason to think that we
have not recd every letter that has been sent to
us from home as yet -- I have recd but one, however,
from N. A. Reed, Jr. and no papers, and but one
from Amos, both of which I have answered but it is
probable that Amos left the west before his letter
arrived at Hastings Min. the place to which it was
directed.
I will endeavor to write Nathan again soon and
would write to Amos too did I know where to direct.
Where is Henry now? We had a letter from him a week
ago Friday written while he was in Beloit, Wis.
You must not think too much of the newspaper accts
of what the pro-slavery people are going to do in
Kansas, or of what either party have done or are
doing here very many of them have little foundation
in fact; for instance, in the last N. Y. Tribune we
saw
177 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
it stated that a large party of Southerners had
been up in this part of Kansas, had a battle with
the people of Reilley County near, Manhattan, were
defeated, driven back, etc etc all of which is
false, except that a party of armed Southerners did
march up the Blue a few weeks ago and have returned
without doing any damage that I have heard of.
There have been several battles down below between
the free State and pro slavery parties in which I
believe the free State parties usually if not
always came off conquerors, but our news from below
is rather indefinite at present and we do not know
exactly what is the state of things. It is said
that our new Governor has come and is intending to
enforce the bogus laws, which [he] or any other man
cannot do, the people will not acknowledge them as
binding on them and they will remain a dead letter
do what they may. We that is Ella and myself
are
not prepared to leave Kansas yet. we still live in
hope and believe that we shall soon see the end of
these troubles -- as soon as we get another President
at least if not before; but should this state of
[uncertainty?] continue still longer we would
endeavor to seek some more peaceable though we
would not expect to find a more healthy or fertile,
country. Really I did not think of being uncle to
any body quite so soon, but I suppose it is so.
I am afraid it will be quite a long time before
little Susan will see her uncle Thomas, but she
may see uncle Theodore this fall. Theodore is very
impatient to hear your decision with respect to his
coming home this fall.
He ought to be somewhere -- where he will be under
authority! we get along pretty well together,
generally, but once in a while he will get some
foolish notion into his head which I can neither
coax or reason out of him. for he is of just that,
age when young lads think that they know a little
more about every thing than any one can tell them;
but after all T. is a pretty good boy.
You complain that I have written very little about
my lady Ella, but really I was not aware that I had
been so very silent, yet I should doubtless have
written more if I had not had so much else to
attend to and consequently but little time to
write, and I would want considerable time to give a
full description of her. But really I do not know
what to write, I answered a lot of your questions
about her a while ago and wrote much more besides.
What shall I say now?
Do not think that I have lost all my common sense
(I trust I had a little though none to boast of.)
since I have been in Kansas: and
178 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
that in my haste to get a wife I have engaged myself to
one unworthy of me or of whom after longer
acquaintance I am ashamed Truly such is not the fact.
The more I know of Ella -- the better I become acquainted with
her -- the better I like her, yes the more I love her and
am satisfied that she is just the woman to make me happy -- to be,
indeed, a help to me both in a temporal and
spiritual sense. I surely have no reason to regret my choice and
trust that I shall never have. I only wish that you could see her
and get acquainted with her. I believe you both would love her
and the more the better you knew her. I do not suppose that
every one would like her, and I doubt not many would think
me a foolish young man to choose a young lady for a wife
without property or even a finished education, but
I beg leave to be my own judge in such matters, and shall be
satisfied if every body is not suited, so long as I believe that
we are suited to each other. If Ella has not wealth, she
has what is better an affectionate heart and
good sound sense; and if her school education has
been somewhat deficient, she has an independent and
energetic mind that knows how to think for
itself and turn to good advantage the knowledge
it does possess, and she has a home education that few of
our eastern girls possess.
Did father go to Wonsocket and see Mr. Todd? I really hope
he did for he is well acquainted with Ella and has seen her folks
in Mass. which I have not, and could give him more information in
a conversation of a few minutes than I could in a dozen letters.
He could tell also just how I am situated. I would rather give
ten dollars than that father should not see him. It is strange
that aunt Marian did not get her letter before I wrote her about
affairs in particular at about the same time that I wrote
you.
In seeking some business by which he can pay his own way Henry
has done just as I would have done myself, only I think I should
never have attempted any other way at first. I really hope he
will be successful.
It is very dry here now, we have had but very little rain for a
long time I have just had a well dug and stoned up near my
house -- an excellent time now it has been so long dry -- and have
seven feet of very good water in it. I think it
will not dry up very soon. This the worst month for sickness
here, in the whole year very many have bilious fevers and fever
and ague in various forms. Theodore continues well, and I am well
too. I had a little chill about ten days ago, but my health has
been very good throughout the whole summer.
179 WELLS: LETTERS OF A KANSAS PIONEER
Excuse the blots on the first page I do not know how they came
there.
Mr. Thomas P. Wells
Wakefield. R. I.
Yours truly
Thomas C Wells
I send you two flowers that Ella pressed; the larger one
is called the "devil's shoe string" on acc't of its long tough
roots which are troublesome in plowing
Home | Kansas Historical Quarterly List of Articles, 1931-1977
|