Letter to John Butler from William Butler

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Western Oregon University Digital Commons@WOU Butler Family Letters (Transcripts) Butler Family Letters 8-21-1859 Letter to John Butler from William Butler William Butler Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/butlertranscripts Recommended Citation Butler, William, "Letter to John Butler from William Butler" (1859). Butler Family Letters (Transcripts). 60. https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/butlertranscripts/60 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Butler Family Letters at Digital Commons@WOU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Butler Family Letters (Transcripts) by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@WOU. For more information, please contact digitalcommons@wou.edu.

Butler Family Letters Digital Collection Western Oregon University Archives Hamersly Library 345 N. Monmouth Ave. Monmouth, OR 97361 For permission to use, copy, and/or distribute the materials in the Butler Family Letters Digital Collection or for more information regarding this collection, please contact University Archives at libarchives@wou.edu or (503) 838-8899. Title: Letter to Brother fom William C. Butler (Breckenridge City, Lousiana Territory) Date: August 21, 1859 Transcription: Breckenridge Cty. K.T. August 21st 1859 Dear Brother, I should have written to you long since but I did not have time until I got sick then I was not able but I am now able to sit and write though my nerves are so unsteady that I can hardly write yet. We had no more hinderance on the road of consequence after I last wrote to you fan had a colt which hindered us about 1 day we then halled the colt in the wagon two days it then traveled the balance of the way we traveled through [word missing] verry good country in Mo. better than I had expected to see in that country and land cheap when we struck Kansas we traveled through a verry fine country until we reached the place where we are now. we landed here on the 22nd day of July we found Br. Joseph and family Geo. Rainwater and Robinett here they had been here about three weeks Smith and Minerva did not come. June and Emaline were both sick when we got here June has another daughter they have all been sick but are well and mending we had been here but few days until John and Willie both took the chills we then took it one by one until we have all had it but we are all now on the mend except Geo. & viola they still have chills we have no house yet we are still living in a tent, a hard way of living especially when people are sick the sickness in this country appears to be almost entirely confined to the new comers the old settlers appear to enjoy good health. I like this country verry well with one exception there is not enough timber the soil is verry good I think full as good as the soil in Warren Cty. Ills. the water is first rate. the timber is good but consists principally of Bur Oak and Black Walnut there is some Cottonwood Syccamore, Mulberry, white Hickory red bud elm and base elder and grape vines in abundance and some honey locus the timber is confined entirely to the creeks and rivers which are verry plentiful in this part of the territory travel east and west from where we live there is a creek or river about every four miles the streams are clear pure spring water generally running over rock or gravel bottoms the face of the country is more handsom than any country I ever saw it is a high dry rolling country I do not know of one [?] square of wet land anywhere in this country either on the prairie or in the creek bottoms and at the same time I do not know of one qr. sec. of land that is too broken to cultivate pleasantly I see no local cause for sickness the

general face of the country has a more healthy appearance than any country I ever was in and still the chills seem to be verry prevalent among the new coming I have made a claim on Allen Creek the creek runs through one corner of my claim I have some 2 or 3 acres of timber on it and have bought a piece of timber adjoining for which I paid 10 dollars per acres I sold my [word missing] for 85 dollars to obtain this timber the [word missing] of my claim is as hansome prairie as a man need want there is a stone quarry on it of the nicest limestone I ever saw except in this country the road from 142 to [Americus] the County Seat of this country runs through my claim 10 miles from 142 and 3 miles from [Americus?] Americus was laid out just two years ago in this month it now contains 18 houses one stone one blacksmith shop one [?] office and one tavern that would be no disgrace to Monmouth and a number of other built on the way there is a printing press now in town but have not commenced printing yet there are also two [words missing in town my claim is on the Indian land belonging to the [Caw] indians there are plenty of good prairie claims to be taken here yet the timber is all claimed but there is plenty of timber now that can be bought at from 10 to 20 dollars per acre the country is settling verry rapidly I think it will be but few years until this will be a thick settled country flower is worth four dollars and 50 cts per hund here corn meal $1.00 bacon there is more in the country and but few hogs. I am tired writing and you will probably be tired reading such scribling I want you to write to me as soon as you get this and give me the news I am verry anxious to hear from you Yours with due respect Wm C. Butler