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Correspondance of an Emigrant
Newhope, November 23 1842 |
Dear Sirs,
According to promise I now write to give you an account of my travels and
trials in America. When we landed in Quebec I went to the steamboat office
and took passage for the family and sailed that night so that we scarcely
saw the place. In Montreal we were only one night and never stopped till
we were in Hamilton which took 8 days when my change grew scarce and I
thought it was time to think of stopping so I left the family and came up
here and took a house and John Drue and Robert Campbell came with there
waggons and brought up. I only had one dollar when I landed in Newhope and
25 pound of oatmeal, that was all I had in the world so that you see I had
but small beginning, no loom, only one reed that would answer but my
spirits was always up. I always let on that I had plenty of money so that
I was always looked upon as a rich man. Offers of land and houses for sale
was given me every day but I managed so that they never found out that I
was poor and they pronounced me a cautious Scotch man. I went to the
sawmill and bought about half a dollars worth of wood for a loom expecting
that he would not have change for the rest of my dollar and it just
answered so that he credited me so that I went to the mill and bought
flour for the family, 25 pounds and two pound of butter, one bushel of
potatoes so that we had something to eat the next day. I went and bought
as much wood as I wanted without paying anything and commenced making my
loom, lay, pirn, wheel, shuttles and shafts which surprised my beighbours
very much and they pronounced me a first rate weaver and carpenter. Square
Fea in a Scotch man gave me the first web and paid me the price of it and
another web the price to be paid in trade, that is flour, beef or pork,
sugar or butter or anything but money, likewise he told me that I could
not do without a cow so we went to a vandoo or roup and bought one at 15
months credit. He was my cashier. Work I had plenty so that Magdalene
thought this was the America that she wanted not the one she expected. The
next thing was the cold winter. I could not weave without a stove. I went
and bought one with an oven in it at eleven dollars, four months credit,
so that we can keep our house very warm in the coldest days in winter and
Magdalene fires her loaves and pies for it is very different here. My
family would look very blue to be set down to a Paisley table now for
every meal here is like a wedding supper for variety. Magdalene had to
learn the cooking for she knew nothing of making pies, puddings, sauces,
cakes and I have got my cow and stove paid. It is very different here. In
Paisley I was owing everybody, nobody owning me but here it is everybody
me. You want to know how far we are from Hamilton. It is 25 miles or
rather 30 miles. We are four miles from Galt, a fine village all Scotch
about 500 inhabitants, three miles from Preston about 300 inhabitants
mostly Germans, 12 miles from Guelph about 600 inhabitants mostly Irish.
The village of Newhope is a small place like the Sleats. The village of
Newhope is a small place like Sleats. The inhabitants is all Dutch but
seven, two English, two Paisley bodys, their name is McKarcie, three
Irish. There is a sawmill and shisky distillery, four weavers and a
blacksmith. The village is on the bans of the river Speed. My place is one
mile west of the village. I have one acre of land with the house and 18
acres more for Magdalene's washing the proprietors shirts. We are on the
road between Newhope and Preston so that we get too many visitors in
summer for drinks and in winter to get warmed. Instead of being dull we
have more visitors than ever we had. The two Johns and I was up at out
land and built a shanty to sleep and cook in. It is 13 by 16, just in the
shape of peatstraws buildings. We have 10 acres underbrushed, that is all
the small treas cut and piled for burning and we go up in January to cut
the large ones and clear it for spring ctop. Mary will like to know if
there is any wild beasts. Serpants is very plenty, the garter snake is
very pretty, yellow and black stiped, the milk snake is rather ugly, it is
a faw colour with blotches, the black sname is all black with a yellow
ring round the neck. We killed them every day in summer but we never knew
any person bit altho' I have seen a man catch one with his hand. Wolves is
not vert plenty altho' we have seen them. Little John met one and thought
it was a large dog. We never seen bears yet. Good night. We are just as
well as you would wish. Give our kind compliments to our dear and beloved
mother and brother and sisters, nieces and all friends.
No more at present but remains
Yours, James S. Good. |
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