Abstract of Watts Letter written about 1826-1830 in Vigo Co IN by
Moses Watts to his father Moses and Brothers Thomas and Lyman in Peacham Vt.
Prairie Creek Township, Vigo County Indiana.
Honored Father and Respected Brothers.
I take this opportunity to inform you that we are all well at
present hoping these few lines will find you all well.
I received a letter from Lyman last week with great pleasure and land if it
is in the United States do not buy it. If it
is the Canadian Locations buy as many as you can and bring them before the twenty-fifth of
September next. They must or can be laid
before the sails for they are valuable if they are lawful ones. Take care that your title is good and the Lawyers
or some suitable person and be sure of your title for there is some counterfeit. You want to know what Labor is worth here. Timber is worth one dollar per day farming fifteen
dollars per month. Labor in still house twenty five dollars per month and grain house 25
dollars per month and grain is very cheep. Corn
25 cents per bushel. Wheat fifty cents per
bushel. Oats twenty cents per bushel. Whiskey
fifty cents per gallon.
In fall of the year corn is bought here for 12 1/2 cents per
bushel in money. The timber has been uncommon
hard the snow was six inches deep here. I
have been all threw this country. I been to
Orleans. I have been up the Missouri to Boons
Lick and all threw this western country I find this part to be as healthy a part as any in
this country. It is something of an
undertaking to come here. I want you to be
careful how you start with money. See that it
is good and what company you get into for you will find sharpers on the road. Your road will be to come to Albany New York. From there to Kinston in Pennsylvania to Reading
and then to Harrisburg from there to Wheeling on the Ohio River from there to Zionsville
in Ohio, from there to Columbus and from there to Little Darby and there you will find
Polly and Peggy and from there to the seat of Government in Indiana and from there to Fort
Harrison on the Wabash. I have seen hard
times. I have had a great deal of sickness in
my family but at present I am doing very well by the blessing of my maker. Three years November coming my wife left me with
four little children and one but a few days old. I
was married on the second day of March last and we are in good spirits hoping to see Lyman
the first of September next. My children are
to boys and two girls. Three is with me, the
oldest Lucinda and Willard and Thomas. The
second girly Polly is living about three miles from me.
I follow hewing and framing for a livelihood. I built a house last summer for one hundred and
fifty dollars. I have another job on hand. I can have work enough and more than I can do. I have a good still and a good stock of cattle. Our prairie here is able to raise great stocks of
cattle. A man may have as many hogs and
cattle as he is a mind to have (prairie here is all sides from five miles to one hundred
in magnitude. We have only to plow and fence
our ground from which we raise great crops as any in the world. It is said by credible men that one of my
neighbors had one hundred bushes of corn per acre - but our common yields is from fifty to
eighty bushes per acre. One man and two
Horses can tend forty or fifty acres of corn - find farming. Lumber plenty joining the prairies.
I you can buy the Canadian title of land and lawful ones buy as many
as you can for they will be worth more than you think for and bring them on before the
sales in September the 26th. If
you do not come so soon it wont make me ?? get them ?? you can lay them any time.
Digital copy of Letter provided by John and Beryl Amann.
Submitted by Kay Diekemper