Resurrecting the First American West

Pages That Mention Smithland, Kentucky

Letter from Green Clay to Sally Clay, 8 January 1820

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Jany. 8th. 1820

My Dear Salley, I am now at Mr. Janetts on the banks of the Tennessee River where I arrived the 17th ulto. I sent Jeff last Saturday to Smithland for letters if any were in the post Office for me, & gave him two Dollars to buy linnen for a bag to carry corn meal in to the woods, and pay the postage on my letters: he came home Drunk at night: with four bottles of whiskey along altho I had sent for none, my money all gone, & a bill from the Merchant with an account against me for a ballance due for bottles & Whiskey. I was so provocated I did not know what to do. He had a great big Irishman mounted up on [fox?] behind him, for he had broake down his horse, so that he will not be fit to ride this winter. [Fox?] was sweating & [smoaking?] cold as the weather was: he had waisted all the day drinking in town: got [lost?] & [road?] hard with his man behind him, to keep from lying in the woods all night. I started Sunday for the woods with two bushels of sifted meal & a midling of [pork?], the 3d. time to go round the 17,000 acres on Clarks River: The surveyor failed to meet me: Monday Jeff hobbled our horses in the [corner?] on monday night and I have not seen nor heard of them since: I sent Jeff tuesday after them, he returned back Drunk, went to the first house where there was whiskey & no further: I started him Wednesday another course he went out of sight & then turned round through the woods to the same house (5 miles off) where he got drunk the day before, & stayed out all night, I went myself the same day where I thought it was likely I might hear of the horses: but got no tidings of them: thursday & friday I traced up about 5 miles & a half of my lines found one corner: it began to rain; & I came back here; the nearest house to my work, I lodged at when I did not lie in the woods all night: and strange to tell the man with a wife & 5 or 6 children had not one ounce of meet of any kind nor a grain of corn or meal nor a drop of milk nor a cow; they had some turkey meet when I first arrived; They lived on my provisions while I stayed there & with comers & goers eat up my provisions: this is the 3d. time I have been out & not finished the first survey: and here I am a foot.

Last edit 8 months ago by MKMcCabe
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as soon as you receive this letter send to Dan Stevens & tell him not to make a gallery on the Top of the Dwelling house, if he has began it to stop & do no more at it. git all the money you can from Edmond Johnson at [Hones?] ferry send to him every week or two set all the money in writing you receive & the day of the month. I hire a man to take this letter to Smithland & bring me letters if any from the Office.

I wish you could keep the boys at school dont enter them for more than a quarter at a time.

There is a misserable set of people in this country. I have wrote everything I have to write from here I am greatly destress in my mind & I cant tell when I shall be relieved from it

Give my love to all the Children and accept my best wishes for your wellfare and Happyness in this & the next world

Green Clay

Sunday Morning Jany 9th Tuesday morning the man I hired to go with Jeff to hunt my horses has returned & no news of them at all The men were [steeting?] on the Ohio at Smithland last cold weather in Gangs - a man was taken sick

Tell Cassius there is one John Derro making shoes at this house, who says he and another man gathered in the Ohio lowgrounds in six days 65 Bushels of Pecon nuts The weather is as cold again as ever felt nearly Jany 11th 1820. farewell again: Green Clay

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