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George Holcomb

The Life Of George Holcomb – Life At Uncle Levi Pease’ Farm

November 18, 2011 By eastwickpress

by Alex Brooks

When the last chapter ended, Holcomb had just left home to avoid the draft after the outbreak of the war of 1812.  He is now living and working on the farm of his uncle Levi Pease in Shrewsbury, Mass., outside of Boston.  It is his first extended period away from Stephentown.
Through the fall there are the usual fall chores involving gathering and storing the food for winter.  In January and February, almost all the daily entries about his work involve cutting, hauling, splitting, and stacking firewood.  This is the winter of 1813.  On Feb 16 he “flung a stick of wood” on his arm, and had trouble working for a week and a half.  He went to a doctor and got some “ointment” for his arm, and by Feb 19 it was “much better.”  On Feb 25 he received a letter from home with disturbing news of severe illness of his eldest sister and eldest brother, and his parents not well either.  “all of which gives me such a feeling, I took but little repose this night.”
On March 4  he took a trip to Boston, where he stayed with relatives and was shown around the town.  The view from the State House Cupola he pronounced “very sitely.”  He visited “the museum in Tremont St., and bought a lottery ticket from the J. Kidders Lottery  Office.  He tried to get a job from a Mr. Peter Brooks, who was looking for a gardener, but was unable to secure the post.  He made several other attempts to get a job, but was unsuccessful, and returned to his uncle’s farm on March 11, returning to his regular round of chores, wood-chopping, etc.
On March 20 he began to feel ill, and by March 26 he was violently ill with fever and a bad pain in his “breast and side.”  He was much troubled by stomach and intestinal disorders for weeks after that, and did not regain his health until the end of April, when he again began to search for work.
April 28, 1813:  “Wednesday this morning early I went to Colonel Wyman’s to see if he wanted to hire help, but he could not tell…Uncle Levi Pease and I reckoned to see how our accounts stood.  The time I left off was March 25, 1813, and ten days lost out of the time.  He told me when I came home with him that if I wanted to go to work he would employ me, I likewise went to work, some time after he called to me to know what I should ask him a month.  I made this reply – I wanted what other hired men had, I understood that they had ten or twelve dollars a month at this time of the year.  He said that 8 dollars was about enough.  I then told him I should out where I could have more wages, and he might keep Moses Johnson.  He then wished me to stay for he said he had rather have me, and then there was no more said.  A while after I was agoing to Worcester with him and I told him I was uneasy about my wages that I was to have and he told me not to be uneasy, for he would allow me 10 dollars a month or satisfy me.”

Filed Under: George Holcomb

The Life Of George Holcomb – War Comes To Stephentown

November 11, 2011 By eastwickpress

September 1, 1812: Tuesday in the afternoon I rode with Lyman Spring to Abner Bull’s to a meeting that this town had, to know the minds of the people, whether they are for war or not – we called to Nilses.
[Read more…] about The Life Of George Holcomb – War Comes To Stephentown

Filed Under: George Holcomb

The Life Of George Holcomb – Military Service

November 4, 2011 By eastwickpress

George’s first military service, was a military training event for two days in the fall of 1809, when he was 18. He trained again on Monday, September 3, but the following Saturday he went up to Captain Bull’s to see if he could help “clear me from training.” Two days later he went to Dr. William Scott, who gave him a “Stificate” (certificate?) from military duty, and Capt. Abner Bull signed the “stificate.”
[Read more…] about The Life Of George Holcomb – Military Service

Filed Under: George Holcomb

The Life Of George Holcomb – Injury & Illness

October 28, 2011 By eastwickpress

Working on a farm in 1810 is a hard life, subject to accidents and illness with limited medical remedies available. George is 20 years old at this time.
August, 24, 1811: Saturday I helped draw a load of wood, mowed weeds, cut and laid up cider cheese. A horse stepped on my instep and cut a hole in by foot and lamed me bad.
Monday: I was not able to do nothing, my foot is so lame.
[Read more…] about The Life Of George Holcomb – Injury & Illness

Filed Under: George Holcomb

The Life Of George Holcomb

October 21, 2011 By eastwickpress

with comments by Alex Brooks

At the age of 16 the short entries of his first few years begin to get a little more lengthy and complicated. His main subject, at first, for these longer entries, was various financial transactions that he engaged in. In October 1810 he went on a trip to sell onions in Lanesborough, Dalton and Hinsdale. He carried Mr. Moore ten bushels of apples, which finished paying for the hat he bought two weeks earlier. In November of 1810 he went to Sand Lake, to sell onions and apples, where he also bought ten yards of cotton cloth and a week later took a load of onions, apples, turkeys and pickles, all of which he sold successfully. The complexity of the trading grows:
[Read more…] about The Life Of George Holcomb

Filed Under: George Holcomb

George Holcomb’s House

October 14, 2011 By eastwickpress

by Alex Brooks
This is the beginning of a series about the life of George Holcomb, a Stephentown farmer of the early Eighteenth Century. He kept a journal of his activities which ultimately filled over 11,000 pages. It is a fascinating document, but the trouble is, the antique script is extremely difficult to read. This problem is solved by a typescript that, incredibly, was the work of only one woman. Betty McClave worked long hours every day for a year and a quarter, typing the journal and recording references to people in the Stephentown Historical Society’s cemetery list. It was her hard work which makes possible this series of articles on Holcomb’s life.
[Read more…] about George Holcomb’s House

Filed Under: Front Page, George Holcomb

To Readers Of The Life Of George Holcomb

July 29, 2011 By eastwickpress

After thirteen and a half years we have come to the end of the life of George Holcomb. When I put together the first excerpt from the diary of George Holcomb in the early winter of 1998, when my son was 4½ years old, it never occurred to me that I might be still at it a month before he heads off to college or that it would take around 550 weekly columns to finish telling the story of George’s life. George wrote 11,450 pages over the course of over half a century. The material that I have presented is perhaps a tenth of the volume of the whole. Most of this material was put together on deadline, in the middle of the night.
In the coming weeks I will be gathering this material together with a view to presenting it again, but not exactly as it appeared the first time. I will seek to add maps and pictures, perhaps some historical context and some new editing. Stay tuned – Holcomb will return, in a new and improved version. In the meantime, we will offer some other historical features in this space.
-Alex Brooks

Filed Under: George Holcomb

George Holcomb’s Life Comes To An End

July 22, 2011 By eastwickpress

Tuesday, January 22, 1856: This evening John F. took his two horse sleigh and carried his sister Sarah A. and others  to the widow of Joseph Brown to a party, tonight I had a very restless night and shaking.
Wednesday: I am quite unwell and John F. unwell. This morning Appollas Rollo had a cow beef of John at six dollars and fifty cts per hundred.
[Read more…] about George Holcomb’s Life Comes To An End

Filed Under: Front Page, George Holcomb

George Gives Rodgers Farm To John F.

July 15, 2011 By eastwickpress

Tuesday, December 25, 1855: I and my wife continue unwell. This day I sold my son John F. what is called my James Rodgers farm, John F. pays all my debts up to this date and gives me up a note he holds against me. James M. Glass wrote the deed for me, which I give to John F.
[Read more…] about George Gives Rodgers Farm To John F.

Filed Under: George Holcomb

George And Family Are Not Well

July 1, 2011 By eastwickpress

Wednesday, December 5, 1855: I am not very well
Thursday: This forenoon John F. helped James M. Glass to butcher three hogs. I am not very well.
Sunday: I am not so well. tonight I am very restless. Quite rainy.
Tuesday: I am feeble.
[Read more…] about George And Family Are Not Well

Filed Under: George Holcomb

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