Following the American Civil War Sesquicentennial with day by day writings of the time, currently 1863.

August 2006

1856

Tuesday New York 19 Aug

W F M Arny

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Dear Sir,

I succeeded yesterday in getting our Tabernacle Committee to pass Resolution paying over the Funds to the Chicago Com. I have sent Winchell to Hartford for 50 Sharpe’s Rifles & are negotiating here for 2 or $3,000 worth of side arms. Col Topliff is here in consultation with me & I think he must be with us at Saratoga on the 27th. The moment you rec this please call your com: together & have them authorize me to receive the Tabernacle Fund. I shall be drawn on for the Sharps Rifles probably at 10 days light.

I am arranging to have an earnest call made for Funds for the Chicago Committee. I am writing to Gov Reeder in reference to a public meeting here for 1st week in September.

Let Mr. Dole telegraph as follows:

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“To Thaddeus Hyatt.

120 West Broadway N. Y.

Thaddeus Hyatt is authorized by the Chicago Committee to receive the Tabernacle Funds”

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As I shall leave for Saratoga on the 25th probably, unless I am telegraphed & shall not receive Mr Doles authority for the N. Y. funds in time to meet my obligations.

The arms will be all forwarded to Chicago & be under the Supervision of the Committee.

I hope to secure the Tribune Fund likewise but this most likely will not be until after our Saratoga meeting. We must then adopt such an appeal as cannot fail to arouse the North. I am anxious for our meeting then.

In Haste

Yours truly

Thaddeus Hyatt.

Sunday, August. — Rev. Anson D. Eddy preached this morning. His text was from the sixth chapter of John, 44th verse. “No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me, draw him.” He is Tom Eddy’s father, and very good-looking and smart too. He used to be one of the ministers of our church before Mr Daggett came. He wrote a book in our Sunday School library, about Old Black Jacob, and Grandmother loves to read it. We had a nice dinner to-day, green peas, lemonade and gooseberry pie. We had cold roast lamb too, because Grandmother never has any meat cooked on Sunday.

Sunday. — Mr Noah T. Clarke is superintendent of our Sunday School now, and this morning he asked, “What is prayer?” No once answered, so I stood up and gave the definition from the catechism. He seemed pleased and so was Grandmother when I told her. Anna said she supposes she was glad that “her labor was not in vain in the Lord.” I think she is trying to see if she can say Bible verses, like grown-up people do.

Grandfather said that I did better than the little boy he read about who, when a visitor asked the Sunday School children what was the ostensible object of Sabbath School instruction, waited till the question was repeated three times and then stood up and said, “Yes, sir.”

Wednesday.—We could not go to prayer meeting to-night because it rained, so Grandmother said we could go into the kitchen and stand by the window and hear the Methodists. We could hear every word that old Father Thompson said, and every hymn they sung, but Mr Jervis used such big words we could not understand him at all.

Sunday. — Grandmother says she loves to look at the beautiful white heads of Mr Francis Granger and General Granger as they sit in their pews in church. She says that is what it means in the twelfth chapter of Ecclesiastes where it says, “And the almond tree shall flourish.” I don’t know exactly why it means them, but I suppose she does. We have got a beautiful almond tree in our front yard covered with flowers, but the blossoms are pink. Probably they had white ones in Jerusalem, where Solomon lived.

Monday.—Mr Alex. Jeffrey has come from Lexington, Ky., and brought Mrs Ross and his three daughters, Julia, Shaddie and Bessie Jeffrey. Mrs Ross knows Grandmother and came to call and brought the girls. They are very pretty and General Granger’s granddaughters. I think they are going to stay all summer.