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Title: John Collins, Saint Louis, to "Dear father"
ID677
CollectionIrish Emigration Database
FileCollins, John/13
Year1849
SenderCollins, John
Sender Gendermale
Sender Occupationunknown
Sender Religionunknown
OriginSaint Louis, Missouri, USA
DestinationIreland
Recipientunknown
Recipient Gendermale
Relationshipson-father
SourceT.2834/1/1. Presented By Dr M. McGeown
ArchiveThe Public Record Office, Belfast
Doc. No.9406192
Date09/04/1849
Partial Date
Doc. TypeEMG
LogDocument added by LT, 10:06:1994.
Word Count1462
Genre
Note
TranscriptLouis ---- Saint Louis Easter Monday April the 9th 1849

Dear father
I now take the favourable opportunity of writing these few
lines to you hopeing [hoping?] to find you and my Mother brothers
and Sisters all in good health likeways my friends and neighbours as
I am in the enjoyment of the very best of health at present thank
God Dear father I wrote you a letter on the 12th of January last to
which I was Expecting an answer every day this last month and have
got none as yet I was a little uneasy to hear from you until I heard
a letter from Mr. McDonald ^he^ mentioned in his letter for to be
remembered to me and to let me me know that he was at my fathers for
six days and that he never got such friend ship shown him by
strangers before and indeed it was a satisfaction to me untill
[until?] able for to hear the same for Mr. McDonalds is a home for
me any time I wish to stop I was liveing [living?] at his house when
he sailed from New York for home Dear father I can tell you with the
greatest contentment that I have had ^the^ pleasure of being in
conversation with Mr. Reavy of Portadown he is in St [Saint?] Louis
about ten days I have been in company with him two or three times
since I spent the afternoon with him yesterday and took supper with
him he says he thinks more of this place than any other part of
America that he has saw yet I think that he will be apt to stop here
but still he is not sure as yet I will be able to give you a true
account in my next letter whether or not Mr. William Chapman was in
this City this two months past I never saw him Mr. Reavy was telling
me that he was for going to California but he told me yesterday that
he believes that he is not ^gone^ as yet Dear father I gave you
Alittle [a little?] knowledge of the sort of a place St [Saint?]
Louis was in my last letter of it reached you but any hour its
useless for me to be takeing [taking?] up paper saying anything more
of any consequence about it now for I know that Mr. McDonald have
gave you a more satisfying account of it in every way than I could
do Dear father religion is carried on here to a great extent I never
of I was in Ireland for 100 years would see what I saw this last
week

{James Magee and family is in good health I was talking to James on
Thursday last and he said he was going to move that is to flit to
another house from where he was on that day}

I stated to you in my last letter that there was twenty one Churches
in this city including all and there is nine of them Catholic but at
all events there are religion of all kinds here that wer [were?] was
mentioned and Churches of all sorts accordingly there is an
opportunity here for all that wants to attend their religion to do
so in every manner that is religious and good I now want to let you
know a little about how Markets rates potatoes from fifty to ninety
cents per bushel, Indian corn thirty five cents per Do oats thirty
cents per Do beef from five to eight cents per lb mutton 6 cents per
lb pork this winter was from three dollars to three and one haf
[half?] per cwt of 100 lb butter ten cents per lb eggs from six to
seven cents per dozen flour from five ^dollars^ upwards per barrell
[barrel?] but for Oatmeal there is no such thing in question
excepting in a druggists store & you will get there just the same as
any other medicine you call on I also mentioned about James Conley
you said he would like an advice from me whether I would advise him
to Marry before coming to this country or not but I couldent
[couldn't?] advise him to Marry before coming to this Country or
not but I couldent [couldn't?] do that with judgement there is one
thing I can say that there is a liveing [living?] here for every
person married or single there is one thing to be observed to in the
difference in a young man coming Married or single here a young man
may come here single and have money and spend the last dime before
he earns one Dollar he may have scarce any money coming here and
soon have plenty its all just according as he settles down or falls
in but anyhow if he has got married he will be more steady in one
place so therefore I will advise no person but I know that any young
man that is coming out to America and has come to the years that a
man should marry and at his inclination is to marry he can never
meet with the pasture in America to satisfaction like what he can do
at home I read a letter on Thursday last that come from New York to
[------?] McCanna from Hugh Donnelly and they are all well James is
dead I rimember [remember?] the day of the month he died on he went
to his supper in good health and was dead before he got finishing it
he died of apoplexy or overflow of blood on the brain Bridget and
Rosey are both well and at service he said that times were hard on
labouring men there this Winter and would like to come to Saint
Louis if he got incouragement encouragement?] I was glad to hear of
the people haveing [having?] the heart to marry in the old Country
yet and I respect Alice McConwell for just letting the young fellows
see that she wasent [wasn't?] depending on them (I say good on her
head)
how is Mr. and Mrs. Woodhouse Mr. and Mrs. Tate
ANDREW DANIEL Saint Louis Easter monday April the 9th 1849
Dear father [d----?] take in the Conivincement [Convincement?] I
hope its for good luck I now take the favourable opportunity of
writing these few lines to
you}
/ Dear father I think you have a very good
idea of St Louis now by what you have heard from Mr. McDonald I know
that he gave you more satisfaction about this country than I was
writing to you for years every month and all I can do now is to give
you a view of it and I have got that in the plainest and Cleanest
[Clearest?] views I believe that this is one of the best and
improvingest either in the States of america and after all of the
people in Ireland was to be ^as^ anxious and industrious as they are
here they would be comfortable and contented in a pleasant healthy
and fertile soil by degrees than ever they can be themselves here so
I can give no more satisfaction of [--- ------ ----?] at present so
Dear father I want to hear how all my friends is in [--?] at the and
how they are doing and all my ^old^ neighbours in like manner how my
Uncle Billay [Billy?] is my Uncle Peter and my Aunt Nancy is ^how^ my Cousins Francis John and Peter Pattrick [Patrick?] and Mary [Devlin?] is How my Uncle Felix and aunt Betty and family is how James McConville and my aunt Lucy and children is how John Mackle the two marys and family is how
Pattrick Fearon and Molly and family is how Gregory Fearon Betty and
family is how Bernard Fearon Peggy and family is how Roger Fearon
and family is how Terrance Mackle and family is and how All---
[Allice?] ODonnel is or of these is no word of her getting married
and how Felix Conley and family let me know how if Widow Joseph
Mackle and family is and how Tom Tigh Charles and family is
Tailoring does well here let me know how Widow Mathers and family is
how Thomas Mathers and family is and when they got a letter from
here or how is he or if Maria have got married yet and how aunt
Rosey is doing and Uncle John and family how aunt Catherines hand is
and how [--?] Fearon is or of ever he inquires for me in his letter
/ wrote this with a pen that Mr. Reavy gave me on yesterday/ To Dear
father no more at present but concludes with sending my love to you
and Mother Daniel Andrew Anne and Rosey and remains your
affectionate son to death John Collins