Puyallup Lee
New in Town
- Messages
- 35
- Location
- Puyallup, Washington
Hi,
To start with, i am a guy. For a little background I have been tracing my family history for about 50 years, since I was 16. Many years ago I was visiting with my sister-in-law's family and the subject turned to Genealogy. Jim, her husband, said he had a copy of an old diary one of his relatives wrote during the Civil War and wanted to know if I would like to copy it. Of course I said yes. I have since re-typed the whole diary and now it is in digital format and I can share it with everyone.
I had it up on a web site for a few years, but I changed hosts and it never did get put back up.
If you would like to really know what life was like for the girls and women during that War, I will post it for you in sections. There are 70 different pages. I will post page one so you can see if it is something you would like to read.
This is a manuscript of Lavina Kelley Delzell, a young bride in 1859 living in Missouri. Her husband went to fight for the South in the Civil War. The manuscript was madeup from her diary in 1932 by one of Lavina and John's children. There are 16 sections to the manuscript.
Section I, page 1/3
WHEN NORTH WAS WEDDED TO SOUTH
I am sure that my parents were not a bit superstitious about thirteen, or perhaps they had never heard of such nonsense. For on the 13th day of Oct. 1859, they stood in the presence of their
families and a few friends, and joined hands and took the solemn vows that made them, man and wife. As the Minister said, amid the hushed silence of the room, "Do you take this man whose right-hand you hold to be your lawful wedded husband? Will you Love, Honor and Obey him, cling to him in sickness, and health, and keep yourself to him, and to him only, until Death to you part?"
Lavina Kelley with equal dignity and seriously, answered, "I do."
Vows that were solemnly made and faithfully kept, but at what a price.
After the wedding supper, and a night at the bride's home, John Delzell took his bride on horse-back from her home at Ash Grove, Missouri, to his father's home near Bolivar, Missouri, where she was welcomed by his parents and friends.
When a short visit was over, they went to the little rented house they my father had been preparing. It was only rented to be sure, and the house was made of logs. Much laughter and many jokes were passed as father and his brothers and boy friends built it. Many were the prophesies concerning the future, and the future of it's coming occupants. But little did any of them dream what it's real future would be, and well they could not. For soon was all this comradeship and brotherly love to be shattered, and years would have to pass wherein hate and violence, death and destruction would hold sway over the better impulses of mankind.
So at last the house was finished, a small bit of a field was cleared and plowed. A little field of wheat was gleaming in the Autumn sun and it seemed that day as if every little bird was singing. "The bride is coming, the bride is coming." John and Lavina's hearts sang with them as the wagon jolted over the new rough roads. Ribbon and Dan, the horses even seemed to step proudly as they carefully picked their way over the rocks and small ditches, and tossed their heads proudly, as if to say, "at least we too are going to our new home."
John quickly built a fire in the big fireplace, and when the flames were dancing merrily, they began to unload the wagon. First off was the chickens, that Lavina's mother had given her, and were deposited in a small hen house with lively squalls and cackles. Boxes of dishes and bags of dried fruit, rolls of bedding, some home made chairs of white oak, and a beautiful drop-leaf table of walnut with turned legs, and then the chief ornament of the house, a real factory built rocking chair, the gift of the bride's parents. The high poster beds were corded together and placed in opposite corners of the room, with straw ticks placed first, and next a 2 fluff-feather-beds, and then sheets, quilts and pillows, the then Lavina turned to a small box, looked at John, who had just come in, and smilingly said, "Now I have a surprise for you. Do you remember the day you came to Pa's and ask for me, and I was so slow about coming into the room? Well, I had to change my dress and get my hands cleaned a bit, as I was busy dying the yarn for these, and I was blue all over."
She took from the box two handsome coverlets of blue and white, woven in the "True Lover's Knot" design, and put one on each bed.
While John stood looking proudly on knowing in his heart that he had gained the love of the sweetest, best girl in the world. But there was much to be done before nightfall. So with a hurried kiss and a laugh, John wanted to know "how long till supper."
"How like a man, always thinking of something to eat." And with a friendly spank, she sent him out to do the chores. Lavina removed all her dishes from the boxes and placed them in the little cupboard in the corner.
Section I, page 2/3
WHEN NORTH WAS WEDDED TO SOUTH
Also a small supply of foodstuff and prepared to cook the evening meal. Dear reader don't ask about the cook stove. It wasn't there yet. But a Dutch Oven was. Lavina soon had biscuits, coffee, eggs and with some butter and preserves added, it was an inviting picture.
When a bit later, John came in with a foaming bucket of milk. "Well, I have got all my work done and, I see a delicious reward is waiting for me."
While Lavina took the biscuits and eggs from the warm skillets on the hearth, John washed his hands, brushed his hair, standing before the small mirror which hung on the wall, and placed two chairs at the table, then both sat down and Lavina looked across the table and said, "John, will you give thanks?"
Thus began the first meal in the log-house of dreams. After supper they did the rest of the placing of things about, and twilight descended and the room grew darker, Lavina found a box of candles that all thrifty house wives keep molded and two on the mantle along with a volume of Moody's Sermons, and the family Bible, a gift of John's father.
John stirred up the fire, and they sat and dreamed and planned for the future, as countless of thousands of brides and grooms do, and will continue to do for Love Is Always The Same.
No carpets on the cottage floor, but Lavina kept its white ash boards scrubbed as clean as the chambers of her own true heart which she had given into God's keeping at sixteen years of age, and as John looked at the little curtains which were hung at the only window the room possessed; thread spun and woven cloth by Lavina's own hands. This one log became a royal chamber. His heart the throne whereon sat Lavina and Lavina only as his queen now and forever.
Oh Rosy Dawn! What the day bring? Many a day has a Rosy Dawn, a storm at mid-day and a peaceful sunset. Oh, little Log-house of Dreams will you stand amid the storms.
After much planning and when the fire had begun to burn low, John took down the Bible from the mantle, read the Psalm which ends with this, "For this God is our God forever and forever. He will be our Guide even unto death." (Psalm 48).
Lavina folded up the coverlet. John covered up the fire in the fireplace, and the lights were out in the Log-house of dreams.
Next morning up with the first streak of dawn, for there was not much to do. As yet no field of ground for corn had been cleared. So with his ax across his shoulder, John left for the woods and Lavina waved her hand from the door, and turned to wash the dishes.
At ten o'clock she put on her bonnet and with a pail of water, and a little lunch, she started for the clearing. When she reached it, John and she sat on a log and talked while he ate and rested. When John began work again, Lavina piled the brush in huge piles that would be burned when dry. Thus the corn field came in to existence. Later Lavina went back to the house with an apron full on chips to burn and to have dinner ready at noon.
St the Autumn days went by, except a few days when Lavina went home to help her mother spin and weave. Lavina was the eldest daughter, and John had promised that she might come home and help prepare the winter clothing and would help spin yarn for the children's stockings. But aside from these two or three weeks which were lonely enough for Lavina and Doubly for John.
Christmas found them eagerly waiting its holidays, for that meant trips to friends and neighbors and home, dinners and sleighing parties, small gifts and a general rest. But after holidays were over they were glad to come back to the Log-house, and Spring found them ready with plough and seed to plant the cornfield and garden.
During the winter John had split some pickets and had fenced in a small garden. Lavina found that her little chicks had no regard for picket fences whatever, and also the mother hen would occasionally fly over and join her chicks in their revels.
So between the planting, tending and watching her garden and preparing her meals she was kept busy. But as John came whistling in from the fields, the vexing chickens were forgotten, and his smile that she was always expecting was always there.
Section I, 3/3
WHEN NORTH WAS WEDDED TO SOUTH
Dinner was always ready and waiting, and so the days passed by full of work, and with much planning for the future. And as Autumn drew near came invitations to husking bee's, quilting parties, merry hours of apple cutting where all the neighbors met and helped each other. Lavina and John did not attend all of them, for they had a wonderful secret. As Lavina sat and stitched dainty little stitches in some white lawn and dainty prints, John sat and read aloud to her.
As November and the Fall election drew near the papers were filled with speeches of politicians and office seekers. John read some of the items with troubled brow, and at times would sigh, and sometimes Lavina would ask the reason for his actions.
One night he had been reading a rather heated address of a noted Virginian, they were discussing the speech, John said, "I don't like it of course, I hate to think of those negroes being slaves. But as it is, they are the property of the southern people and their money is tied up in them. I can't see why if one of them runs away and gets into a free state that his master should not be allowed to come and take him back again, same as any other property. As long as we let slavery exist, why is the Government so unjust, and why say a man can't move from one state to another. He must set his slaves free, it's not fair. Of course I wish they could find some way to settle things. But as things are going now, I see trouble ahead."
"Well," said Lavina, "Maybe its all talk and when the election is over it will all be hushed up."
"That's the trouble," said John, "Missouri was admitted as a slave state in 1821, with a slave population of 3011, which has increased by birth and immigration to 10,222. Now these southern people with their slaves have helped to make this state, but we are expecting to take in some of this territory west of us, and these people that have helped, to settle and improve it can't stay if it comes in as a free state. John Scott, our territorial delegate, says he is sorry that slavery is the issue of the day, but he feels that each state should decide for itself. That religious sect, called the Mormons, are talking to the slaves, exciting them to riots and violence and some slaves have revolted and killed their masters, all because of these speeches.
Father, brother Will, and myself were talking it over the other day, and father says, he wishes the election was over. I don't see how the politicians are going to solve the question. Seems like as Abe Lincoln said, in his speech with Douglas, we had better begin to educate and fit them to be free and to plan for a gradual emancipation for if they were all free tomorrow - What do they know of government or taking care of themselves either?
One thing is certain if things go on as they are now there is serious trouble ahead."
Yes, those at the little Log-house of Dreams could see the cloud. But little did they think how Dark and Destructive it was really going to be.
Well, There you have the first section. I will check in tomorrow and see if you would like the next section.
Lee
To start with, i am a guy. For a little background I have been tracing my family history for about 50 years, since I was 16. Many years ago I was visiting with my sister-in-law's family and the subject turned to Genealogy. Jim, her husband, said he had a copy of an old diary one of his relatives wrote during the Civil War and wanted to know if I would like to copy it. Of course I said yes. I have since re-typed the whole diary and now it is in digital format and I can share it with everyone.
I had it up on a web site for a few years, but I changed hosts and it never did get put back up.
If you would like to really know what life was like for the girls and women during that War, I will post it for you in sections. There are 70 different pages. I will post page one so you can see if it is something you would like to read.
This is a manuscript of Lavina Kelley Delzell, a young bride in 1859 living in Missouri. Her husband went to fight for the South in the Civil War. The manuscript was madeup from her diary in 1932 by one of Lavina and John's children. There are 16 sections to the manuscript.
Section I, page 1/3
WHEN NORTH WAS WEDDED TO SOUTH
I am sure that my parents were not a bit superstitious about thirteen, or perhaps they had never heard of such nonsense. For on the 13th day of Oct. 1859, they stood in the presence of their
families and a few friends, and joined hands and took the solemn vows that made them, man and wife. As the Minister said, amid the hushed silence of the room, "Do you take this man whose right-hand you hold to be your lawful wedded husband? Will you Love, Honor and Obey him, cling to him in sickness, and health, and keep yourself to him, and to him only, until Death to you part?"
Lavina Kelley with equal dignity and seriously, answered, "I do."
Vows that were solemnly made and faithfully kept, but at what a price.
After the wedding supper, and a night at the bride's home, John Delzell took his bride on horse-back from her home at Ash Grove, Missouri, to his father's home near Bolivar, Missouri, where she was welcomed by his parents and friends.
When a short visit was over, they went to the little rented house they my father had been preparing. It was only rented to be sure, and the house was made of logs. Much laughter and many jokes were passed as father and his brothers and boy friends built it. Many were the prophesies concerning the future, and the future of it's coming occupants. But little did any of them dream what it's real future would be, and well they could not. For soon was all this comradeship and brotherly love to be shattered, and years would have to pass wherein hate and violence, death and destruction would hold sway over the better impulses of mankind.
So at last the house was finished, a small bit of a field was cleared and plowed. A little field of wheat was gleaming in the Autumn sun and it seemed that day as if every little bird was singing. "The bride is coming, the bride is coming." John and Lavina's hearts sang with them as the wagon jolted over the new rough roads. Ribbon and Dan, the horses even seemed to step proudly as they carefully picked their way over the rocks and small ditches, and tossed their heads proudly, as if to say, "at least we too are going to our new home."
John quickly built a fire in the big fireplace, and when the flames were dancing merrily, they began to unload the wagon. First off was the chickens, that Lavina's mother had given her, and were deposited in a small hen house with lively squalls and cackles. Boxes of dishes and bags of dried fruit, rolls of bedding, some home made chairs of white oak, and a beautiful drop-leaf table of walnut with turned legs, and then the chief ornament of the house, a real factory built rocking chair, the gift of the bride's parents. The high poster beds were corded together and placed in opposite corners of the room, with straw ticks placed first, and next a 2 fluff-feather-beds, and then sheets, quilts and pillows, the then Lavina turned to a small box, looked at John, who had just come in, and smilingly said, "Now I have a surprise for you. Do you remember the day you came to Pa's and ask for me, and I was so slow about coming into the room? Well, I had to change my dress and get my hands cleaned a bit, as I was busy dying the yarn for these, and I was blue all over."
She took from the box two handsome coverlets of blue and white, woven in the "True Lover's Knot" design, and put one on each bed.
While John stood looking proudly on knowing in his heart that he had gained the love of the sweetest, best girl in the world. But there was much to be done before nightfall. So with a hurried kiss and a laugh, John wanted to know "how long till supper."
"How like a man, always thinking of something to eat." And with a friendly spank, she sent him out to do the chores. Lavina removed all her dishes from the boxes and placed them in the little cupboard in the corner.
Section I, page 2/3
WHEN NORTH WAS WEDDED TO SOUTH
Also a small supply of foodstuff and prepared to cook the evening meal. Dear reader don't ask about the cook stove. It wasn't there yet. But a Dutch Oven was. Lavina soon had biscuits, coffee, eggs and with some butter and preserves added, it was an inviting picture.
When a bit later, John came in with a foaming bucket of milk. "Well, I have got all my work done and, I see a delicious reward is waiting for me."
While Lavina took the biscuits and eggs from the warm skillets on the hearth, John washed his hands, brushed his hair, standing before the small mirror which hung on the wall, and placed two chairs at the table, then both sat down and Lavina looked across the table and said, "John, will you give thanks?"
Thus began the first meal in the log-house of dreams. After supper they did the rest of the placing of things about, and twilight descended and the room grew darker, Lavina found a box of candles that all thrifty house wives keep molded and two on the mantle along with a volume of Moody's Sermons, and the family Bible, a gift of John's father.
John stirred up the fire, and they sat and dreamed and planned for the future, as countless of thousands of brides and grooms do, and will continue to do for Love Is Always The Same.
No carpets on the cottage floor, but Lavina kept its white ash boards scrubbed as clean as the chambers of her own true heart which she had given into God's keeping at sixteen years of age, and as John looked at the little curtains which were hung at the only window the room possessed; thread spun and woven cloth by Lavina's own hands. This one log became a royal chamber. His heart the throne whereon sat Lavina and Lavina only as his queen now and forever.
Oh Rosy Dawn! What the day bring? Many a day has a Rosy Dawn, a storm at mid-day and a peaceful sunset. Oh, little Log-house of Dreams will you stand amid the storms.
After much planning and when the fire had begun to burn low, John took down the Bible from the mantle, read the Psalm which ends with this, "For this God is our God forever and forever. He will be our Guide even unto death." (Psalm 48).
Lavina folded up the coverlet. John covered up the fire in the fireplace, and the lights were out in the Log-house of dreams.
Next morning up with the first streak of dawn, for there was not much to do. As yet no field of ground for corn had been cleared. So with his ax across his shoulder, John left for the woods and Lavina waved her hand from the door, and turned to wash the dishes.
At ten o'clock she put on her bonnet and with a pail of water, and a little lunch, she started for the clearing. When she reached it, John and she sat on a log and talked while he ate and rested. When John began work again, Lavina piled the brush in huge piles that would be burned when dry. Thus the corn field came in to existence. Later Lavina went back to the house with an apron full on chips to burn and to have dinner ready at noon.
St the Autumn days went by, except a few days when Lavina went home to help her mother spin and weave. Lavina was the eldest daughter, and John had promised that she might come home and help prepare the winter clothing and would help spin yarn for the children's stockings. But aside from these two or three weeks which were lonely enough for Lavina and Doubly for John.
Christmas found them eagerly waiting its holidays, for that meant trips to friends and neighbors and home, dinners and sleighing parties, small gifts and a general rest. But after holidays were over they were glad to come back to the Log-house, and Spring found them ready with plough and seed to plant the cornfield and garden.
During the winter John had split some pickets and had fenced in a small garden. Lavina found that her little chicks had no regard for picket fences whatever, and also the mother hen would occasionally fly over and join her chicks in their revels.
So between the planting, tending and watching her garden and preparing her meals she was kept busy. But as John came whistling in from the fields, the vexing chickens were forgotten, and his smile that she was always expecting was always there.
Section I, 3/3
WHEN NORTH WAS WEDDED TO SOUTH
Dinner was always ready and waiting, and so the days passed by full of work, and with much planning for the future. And as Autumn drew near came invitations to husking bee's, quilting parties, merry hours of apple cutting where all the neighbors met and helped each other. Lavina and John did not attend all of them, for they had a wonderful secret. As Lavina sat and stitched dainty little stitches in some white lawn and dainty prints, John sat and read aloud to her.
As November and the Fall election drew near the papers were filled with speeches of politicians and office seekers. John read some of the items with troubled brow, and at times would sigh, and sometimes Lavina would ask the reason for his actions.
One night he had been reading a rather heated address of a noted Virginian, they were discussing the speech, John said, "I don't like it of course, I hate to think of those negroes being slaves. But as it is, they are the property of the southern people and their money is tied up in them. I can't see why if one of them runs away and gets into a free state that his master should not be allowed to come and take him back again, same as any other property. As long as we let slavery exist, why is the Government so unjust, and why say a man can't move from one state to another. He must set his slaves free, it's not fair. Of course I wish they could find some way to settle things. But as things are going now, I see trouble ahead."
"Well," said Lavina, "Maybe its all talk and when the election is over it will all be hushed up."
"That's the trouble," said John, "Missouri was admitted as a slave state in 1821, with a slave population of 3011, which has increased by birth and immigration to 10,222. Now these southern people with their slaves have helped to make this state, but we are expecting to take in some of this territory west of us, and these people that have helped, to settle and improve it can't stay if it comes in as a free state. John Scott, our territorial delegate, says he is sorry that slavery is the issue of the day, but he feels that each state should decide for itself. That religious sect, called the Mormons, are talking to the slaves, exciting them to riots and violence and some slaves have revolted and killed their masters, all because of these speeches.
Father, brother Will, and myself were talking it over the other day, and father says, he wishes the election was over. I don't see how the politicians are going to solve the question. Seems like as Abe Lincoln said, in his speech with Douglas, we had better begin to educate and fit them to be free and to plan for a gradual emancipation for if they were all free tomorrow - What do they know of government or taking care of themselves either?
One thing is certain if things go on as they are now there is serious trouble ahead."
Yes, those at the little Log-house of Dreams could see the cloud. But little did they think how Dark and Destructive it was really going to be.
Well, There you have the first section. I will check in tomorrow and see if you would like the next section.
Lee