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1846 September 13 . Timothy Rockwell ALS to Chester Rockwell; Pike, [New York].

4 pages

Box 2
Describes his long confinement due to a broken leg and a doctor's treatment of the injury. Notes the doctor pulling and straightening the leg for two weeks. "... it finally grew together after a long time altho it is quite crooked it is a pretty good leg." Comments on family health, including their mother who continues to suffer from impaired "reason memory & judgement." Family news, including a number of people who have moved to Wisconsin, those working in a woolen factory and wanting to move west, and marriages. Notes a family who has returned from Wisconsin when they were unable to purchase suitable land and found the region sickly. "... he could not buy to suit him government lan[d] is principally taken up that is worth having and speculators ask high for it second handed there is some government land far back from market but that is becoming jammed full of foriners of the lowest grade." Mentions people suffering from bilous fever and ague.
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1847 February 28 - 1847 April 21 . J[ane] D[ale] F[auntleroy] ALS to Miss Goldsmid; New Harmony, [Indiana], Cincinnati, [Ohio], & Louisville, [Kentucky].

7 pages

Box 2
Mr. Fauntleroy is gone most of the year tending to the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. Discusses Robert Dale Owen, regent of the Smithsonian, and the difficult work of getting the Institution running. Has begun her journey by steamboat to visit her husband, being accompanied by Alexander Dallas Bache, head of the Coast Survey. Hopes to write a book of "moral sentiments" for her children, and requests information on Syrian Jews, India, its caste system, and its relationship to England.
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1847 March 2 . C. Haven ALS to A[mariah] Brigham; Evansville [Currently Evans Mills, New York].

1 page

Box 2
Letter addressed to the superintendent of the State Asylum in Utica, New York, regarding Mr. W[illia]m Bennett, an approximately 40-year-old farmer. "No earthly cause can be assigned for his present derangement – it is about two months since allarming [sic.] symptoms were discovered." Bennett was imagining his property being wasted, his family being "reduced to wretchedness," and that his neighbors despised him. Bennett attempted suicide twice – the first time with a knife and the second time by trying to drown in a spring. "The Derangement in the sistem [sic.] is manifest by witnessing now & then a spasm producing involuntary motion of the body & limbs – (his mother has been Deranged for 20 years)." Requesting that Bennett be admitted to the Utica asylum.
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1847 September 13 . J. P. Huntting ALS to W[illia]m Herrick; North Hancock, [Maine].

2 pages

Box 2
Responding to news of Herrick's wife suffering with breast cancer. Acknowledges that this is a serious and deadly illness, but that there is still hope. "If your wife’s health is not altogether fallen beneath the giant ill that is preparing to drain her very life, there is ground for strong hope." Relays information from Mr. John Lord of Bangor relating to a missionary who claims to be able to cure cancer "without the use of the knife." Highlights the accomplishments of Doct. Springall of Piscataquis County, "the best surgical physician of that region." Describes the removal of an advanced cancer from a woman named Mrs. Wood's breast, leading to improvement in her health. Springall's office had moved to Bangor, and Huntting describes visiting and seeing tumors preserved in alcohol.
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1847 October 2 . J[oseph] B[reck] ALS to Samuel Breck; Chelsea, [Massachusetts].

1 page

Box 2
Relaying information regarding the physical and mental health of various family members. Their Aunt Lapham attempted to commit suicide after being supposedly recovered from “insanity” at the Worcester Insane Asylum. Aunt Stodder had fallen and broken her hip. “She has been completely broken in her mind for sometime and now utterly helpless in body.” Describes visiting Aunt Stodder and being confused for her late husband. “Every person she ever knew is as much alive to her as those who are always about her.” Briefly mentions the declining health of William Henry, but states that it is not currently serious although “his days are probably numbered.”
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1847 December 28 . Thad[eus] B[arnes?] ALS to Mr. Pardee; New Haven, [Connecticut].

2 pages

Box 2
Responding to Pardee's request for information "concerning the treatment received from Doct Fitch for consumption," possibly in reference to Samuel Sheldon Fitch (1801-1876). Notes the use of an "inhaling tube and cold water bath," as well as various medicines for bleeding lungs, back braces, and breathing exercises.