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The Western America collection is a group of miscellaneous individual items relating to the settlement of the western United States, including present-day Wisconsin, California, Oregon, and Missouri.

The Western America collection contains miscellaneous individual items relating to the settlement of the western part of the United States, including present-day Wisconsin, Missouri, Oregon, California, Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, North Dakota, and Wyoming. The items span 1797 to ca. 1898, with the bulk of materials concentrated around the 1840s and 1850s. They pertain to numerous topics related to western expansion, and include descriptions of growing towns, discussions of economic opportunities and hardships, references to social customs and mores on the frontier, and scattered mentions of relations with Native Americans.

A few items of note include:
  • A letter of May 20, 1832, discussing the Black Hawk War, murder by a prostitute and community backlash against her, and the tarring and feathering of an African American man.
  • A description of the Oregon Territory by a recent female settler [ca. 1838].
  • A frustrated miner's description of his bad luck in Placerville, California [ca. 1851].
  • A letter from Santa Clara, California, concerning the love affair of a miner's wife, and the husband's subsequent abandonment of her and their child with the remark that "such is life in Cal." (June 26-28, 1854)
  • A July 15, 1876, description of Geneva, Minnesota, including its ethnic mix, farming prospects, and food.
  • A May 21, 1889, letter from a woman to her husband describing the cable-cars and schools of San Francisco, California.
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1797 March 13 . John Brown ALS to Zebulon Pike; Banks of Ohio.

3 pages

Box 1
Written to Pike, serving as the Commandant of Fort Massac, Illinois. Arrival was delayed by the frost, causing him to stay among "our old acquaintance in Jersey" who have unfortunately experienced "a great change… in their Political Principle's thousands who we once esteemed as friends to America are the most Infernal Torys I almost hate the People." News of family, land settlements, deeds, money scarcity, and conflict with the French. "I cou'd get no land from Dayton he has been Tolerable clever in Settlement he gave me Six hundred acres for Price in Milatary Warrants you shall have Six hundred acres as soon as the land is Surveyed…" Comments on relevant "Law of Congress" relating to land and military bounties.