Jump to Navigation

Facet Browse

Environment -- Weather (Remove)
Collections -- Manuscript (Remove)
Places -- Counties (Remove)
Government and Politics (Remove)
People -- Notable Kansans (Remove)
Business and Industry -- Occupations/Professions -- Lawyers (Remove)
Page 1 of 1, showing 2 records out of 2 total, starting on record 1, ending on 2

<< previous| | next >>

Title | Creator | Date Made Visible | None

John James Ingalls to Elias T. Ingalls

Ingalls, John James, 1833-1900

Much of this interesting letter, dated November 21, 1858, from Sumner, Kansas Territory, describes the Ingalls law practice and the nature of a "frontier" court proceedings that often attracted "nearly all the population." According to Ingalls, "the chief difficulty arising [in the courts came] from the conflict of the two Codes, adopted by two hostile legislatures, each of which had adherents who call the other 'bogus.'" Ingalls also discussed the business of land sales, as something many others successfully combined with the practice of law.

previewthumb

John James Ingalls to Elias T. Ingalls

Ingalls, John James, 1833-1900

The biggest share of this 8-page letter is devoted to comments on the weather and the environment, in and around Atchison, where Ingalls now had a law practice (for a time, he continued to live in Sumner). He missed some aspects of "Massachusetts weather," but overall he thought Kansas superior: "I have not had a cold in six months and but one or two since I came here . . . [and] The attacks of melancholy and despondency to which I was once a prey have also almost entirely disappeared." Ingalls also wrote of two arson fires--"a large grocery house" and "the steamer Hesperian," and the expected fate of the suspect then in custody.

previewthumb
<< previous| | next >>