My Dear H.
Chicago, Ill. July 9th, 1834
To give you a minute description of all
passing events as they occur only for the space of one week, would
make a small volume. In a letter I can only mention a few.
I have a thousand ideas and at the time I am determined to communicate
them to you, but when I sit down to write, I forget them -- however
I do have one that I do remember. Mr. Douglas and myself started
a week ago tomorrow for Fox River with the stage with the idea of
being about three days. We left our baggage at the Hotel at Chicago
and I remember of having a very dirty shirt when I returned today.
I am very much pleased with the land about Capt. Naper's settlement,
28 miles west of Chicago and with the whole country, after going
twelve miles west of the place. I am highly pleased with Michigan,
but I am delighted with Illinois. Mr. Steven's account I think is
not exaggerated. The first view of a Michigan Prairie is delightful
after passing the oak openings and thick forest, but the first view
of a Illinois prairie is sublime. I may almost say awfully
grand, as a person needs a compass to keep their course, but the
more I travel over them the more I like them. There is a great
variety of flowers now on the prairies, but they tell me in a month
from this time they will be prettier. I have sent you
a few of them with Mr. Douglas which will be all faded by the time
you get them, but they will be interesting to you as you will be
sure they were picked from the prairies of Illinois. There
is a number of other kinds on the dry prairies, some
resemble sweet williams, some pinks, sunflowers and almost every
variety that grow in our gardens. In crossing the prairie
about two miles out of Chicago this morning we started a dear little
gazelle, but the little thing hid itself in the long grass, and
we could not find it.
I wrote Mr. Russel yesterday by mail from
Capt. Naper's settlement on the River Du Page. That letter
and the accounts Mr. Douglas will give you -- will show you how
we spent out last week. Mr. Douglas has made a purchase on
the Du Page River joining Capt. Naper's, and I have the refusal of
the place adjoining. Should I conclude to take it before I leave
this country. It is a beautiful place, well timbered and watered,
it has one of the best springs close to a beautiful building spot
imaginable, and the Du Page River is a small but pretty stream,
runs near the door. It has now on it a double log house and
fifty or sixty acres of wheat, corn and oats. It looks like
an old farm as does the whole country around it. It likewise
has on it the fort and block houses used in the late Indian war.
They are
now used for a barn yard. I suppose on this place there is
from 150 to 200 acres inclosed and a chance to inclose 500 acres
more of as good land as ever laid out doors. This pre-emption
I can get for $1,000. I suppose the improvements have cost
six or seven hundred. None of the land has come in market
yet nor will it under two or three years. It is not surveyed, but
the pre-emption law has passed, which gives the person that occupied
the
land, up to the 13th day of June last, the right to take 160 acres
of land at $1.25 per acre. This they take where there is timber,
and a good building spot, and good springs and plenty of stock water.
This place has all those advantages spot, and good springs and plenty
of stock water. This place has all those advantages. The prairie
adjoining such places
they suppose can be got yet for some time after the land comes in
market for $1.25 per acre. This is the best country I have
ever seen for a poor man or a rich one, an industrious man or a
lazy one. I see no kind of business but looks promising, and
I believe the country is perfectly healthy. I do not know
nor see what can make it otherwise. The place I
mentioned above has but one disadvantage -- it is 28 miles to Chicago
and 40 miles to Ottawa. The proposed canal will run from Chicago
to Ottawa, the head water of Illinois, and the place lays eight
or nine miles from the west of the canal. It has the advantage
of grist mills and saw mills, within half a mile, also a store and
tavern and a thick settled
neighborhood. As people build in the groves you cannot see
many of your neighbors -- I will not say houses yet, but cabins.
In a few years I think I can say Mansions.
It is astonishing with what ease and dispatch
these prairies are converted into farms. I believe if every
settler that has come in this country had persued the same course
of farming that Mr. Douglas has, that a stranger passing through
would say the country had been settled 20 years. Mr. Douglas has
the credit, and I think deservedly, of being the best
farmer and the most industrious man in the country. I have
heard that Mr. D. was not liked by the settlement, and I now see
why it is so. He takes a straight forward course and attends
to his own business and does not mix much with the first settlers,
who spend much of their time in idleness and dissipation.
The first settlers are also very strong Jackson men. Mr. D. is
opposite. Those men cannot stand civilizatiion. They are selling
off their claims to Eastern people, and making claims farther north
and west. It is astounding to see what beautiful springs of
water, of purest kind are found bursting out on the prairies on
almost every claim that is made, that before the prairie was worked
they concealed.
I yesterday contracted with a man to cut
and spit 5000 rails and I shall also contract to have a house put
up on my claim, out from the village. My property here is
as in all other places of the country where I have any, becoming
valuable. Too much so to live so far from it. With good
luck three or four more years will make me as well off for property as
I desire to be. My property in this county would not be appraised
at this present time for less than $5,000. Which is almost
as much again as I thought it was worth before I left home.
I should think seriously of moving to this country yet this fall,
if the work I have now put out could be accomplished in season for
the undertaking, but I fear it will be too
late to do so after I return.
I am now going out in company with Mr. Douglas
to view my claim and pick out a spot to set my farm house.
My mansion will set near the village on Cottage Green, the name
they have given my property in the village. They think they will
get another county and have the county seat, if so the public square
will come on my property. Tell the little ones I shall be
home as soon as possible. I expect to find more letters when
I return to Chicago.
My Dear H.
Chicago, July 17th, 1836, Sunday 11 o'clock
I told Mr. Russel in my last letter, that
I should perhaps tell you something in my next that might interest
you. I think it will interest you, for I believe you all know
that I had given up all idea of ever moving to Illinois. So
I had, so far as talking or setting time or making date, but in
my own mind no longer than I could procure the place that suited me,
and in case you all remain willing to move. I will undertake
to tell you that I have bought the place that suits me better than
any other I have ever seen. It is no more no less than the
one occupied by Mr. Douglas. I suppose you know that I owned
the front of it before. I bought that part of him last year.
He has a frame house on it 40 feet front and 32 feet
back with a cellar 18 X 40 -- it is all enclosed and very complete,
but nothing entirely finished inside. It is all sided and
shingled with pine and lath, lime and stone on the lot for finishing
a part of it this Fall, which Mr. Douglas has done for me.
He will remain on it still Spring. I sold him the claim I
bought of Captain Naper, with the exception of the
village lots. They are in front of the hotel or Pre-Emption
House and all the claim I made myself on the big prairie.
The place I get of Mr. Douglas will make, with what I had before,
about 400 acres all in a body and about 200 acres broke and about
125 acres now under crop. 20 acres more in all I want broke
and that is fenced. $200, will now fence every foot of the balance.
‘Tis then capable of raising grain and cutting hay enough to keep
2000 sheep or any quantity of cattle or raising grain to any extent.
I think it is one of the best farms in the northern part of Illinois.
It is believed that the crop on it now is worth $2,000. Mr.
Douglas reserves them. I have made arrangements with Mr. D.
to put in for me a pretty large piece of wheat, as I thought it
would not be possible for us to come on
till Spring. I suppose there is on the place 20,000 young
locust trees. I worked part of the day trimming them but it
wants a man to work three or four days at them. They are from
2 to 4 feet high. They stand quite thick, altho Mr. D. has
transplanted a great many. The house which now stands in a
beautiful place near the road and an excellent spring of water.
Will answer our purpose well for as long a time as we may
wish. Or until we can build our palace on the spot that I
have pitched on and is now by the villagers called "Cottage Green."
It is now under a beautiful crop of Spring wheat. Everybody
in the neighborhood appears delighted that I am coming. They
have had some doubts as I wrote Mr. Douglas last winter to sell
part of my claim. But those doubts are all removed. My dear
H., do
not think that because I speak so confidently about moving here,
that I will do so, moving here whether or no, the choice for coming,
now is and always will remain, yours. You shall not come here
to live unless you choose it.
I have what I suppose is now considered a large price for it, as it is yet only a claim, or it is as near a pre-emption as anything, for I believe it will be considered so at the next sale. There is nobody here, or at Chicago, but is confident I will get it at government price. I am willing to run my risk.
I find everything I have done in the country
is doing admirably, and everything I do here is sure, and besides
I can do more business in this country in one week than in Hyde
Park in two years. My property is a fortune already, and only
look at the time it has making. One year and two months since
I left home before. With the same luck, two or three years
more, I shall have as much as I desire. My goods are all sold
with the exception of three or four barrels of oil. I yesterday
exchanged some for 80 acres of land within four miles of the 160
acres I owned before west of the Aplain River. This is deeded
land. They say I have made an excellent bargain. I am
better pleased with the Western World now than ever.
Mr. Douglas and daughter all send their
love. Mrs. D. says she thinks now you will come -- she is
now perfectly reconciled to stay and does not need to return only
on a visit. They are all as healthy as pigs. I could not
purchase Mr. Douglas' place without her consent. She is very partial
to it, but likes the claim Mr. D. bought of me very well. They
have timber out for another house and will put it up yet this season.
Mr. D. has a
team and will go on with it. There is already nearly 30 acres
broke.
N. B. I will write to the children separately and enclose this.
Yours dear H.
M. S.
Taken from Naperville Centennial, 1831-1931, Copyright 1931, Fort Payne Chapter - Daughters of the American Revolution, Naperville, Illinois. Transcribed with permission by Diane Bauer.
Back to DuPage County Diaries and Letters Back to DuPage County Illinois History