A Year's Residence, in the United States of America, Part 3Sherwood, Neely and Jones, 1819 - Agriculture |
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Page 322
... rivers Alleghany and Monongabela , at the point where they meet and begin the Ohio , and is laid -out in a triangular form , so that two sides of it lie contiguous to the water . Called upon Mr. BAKE- WELL , to whom we were introduced ...
... rivers Alleghany and Monongabela , at the point where they meet and begin the Ohio , and is laid -out in a triangular form , so that two sides of it lie contiguous to the water . Called upon Mr. BAKE- WELL , to whom we were introduced ...
Page 323
... river , and brought from thence and laid down in any part of the town for seven cents the bushel , weighing , perhaps , eighty pounds . Better coals I never saw . A bridge is now building over the river , by which they will most ...
... river , and brought from thence and laid down in any part of the town for seven cents the bushel , weighing , perhaps , eighty pounds . Better coals I never saw . A bridge is now building over the river , by which they will most ...
Page 324
... river : that of the Alleghany is clear and transparent , that of the Monongahela thick and muddy ; and it is not for a considerable distance that they entirely unite . The sides of the river are beautiful ; there are always rich bottom ...
... river : that of the Alleghany is clear and transparent , that of the Monongahela thick and muddy ; and it is not for a considerable distance that they entirely unite . The sides of the river are beautiful ; there are always rich bottom ...
Page 325
... River . It is , however , like many other towns on the Ohio , built on too low ground and is subject to inunda- tions . Here I observed a contrivance of great in- genuity . There is a strong rope put across the mouth of the river ...
... River . It is , however , like many other towns on the Ohio , built on too low ground and is subject to inunda- tions . Here I observed a contrivance of great in- genuity . There is a strong rope put across the mouth of the river ...
Page 326
... River . A sort of village , con- taining a hundred or two of houses . Not worthy of any particular remark . 493. June 13th . - Arrived at Cincinnati about midnight . Tied our ark to a large log at the side of the river , and went to ...
... River . A sort of village , con- taining a hundred or two of houses . Not worthy of any particular remark . 493. June 13th . - Arrived at Cincinnati about midnight . Tied our ark to a large log at the side of the river , and went to ...
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A Year's Residence in the United States of America; Treating of the Face of ... William Cobbett No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
acres wheat America amongst barn barrel beautiful Birkbeck's Boroughmongers Broom-Corn bushel called cents Chillicothe Cobbett cost Creek crop cultivation dear Sir dollars dred emigrate England English Farmer Englishman expenses farm feel feet fencing fifty dollars flour four French Lick friends George Rapp glish half happy horses HULME hundred acres hundred dollars Illinois Illinois Territory Indian corn journey July June Kentucky river labour Lancashire land lars letter live miles mill mind neighbours never New-York North Hempstead Ohio person Pittsburgh plant plough pounds sterling pounds weight Prairies Priest produce Quaker RACTER Rapp reeds rich river road Scioto River seed settled settlers Shippingport side society sort sterling Steubenville tavern thatch thing thousand five hundred thousand pounds tion town travelling twenty tyrants Wabash Western Countries Wheeling whole WILLIAM COBBETT woods Zanesville
Popular passages
Page 304 - District Clerk's Office. BE IT REMEMBERED, that on the tenth day of August, AD 1829, in the fifty-fourth year of the Independence of the United States of America, JP Dabney, of the said district, has deposited in this office the title of a book, the right whereof he claims as author, in the words following, to wit...
Page 340 - And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul: neither said any of them that aught of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things common.
Page 337 - We went to hear the lecture, or, rather, to see the performance, for, it being all performed in German, we could understand not a word. The people were all collected in a twinkling, the men at one end of the Church and the women at the other; it looked something like a Quaker Meeting, except that there was not a single little child in the place. Here they were kept by their Pastor a couple of hours, after which they returned home to bed. This is the quantum of Church-service they perform during the...
Page 370 - every-day evil" that they have to bear. For an English Farmer, and, more especially, an English Farmer's wife, after crossing the sea and travelling to the Illinois, with the consciousness of having expended a third of their substance, to purchase, as yet, nothing but sufferings; for such persons to boil their pot in the gipsy-fashion, to have a mere board to eat on, to drink...
Page 332 - Birkbeck's settlement is situated between [281] the two Wabashes, and is about ten miles from the nearest navigable water; we arrived there about sunset and met with a welcome which amply repaid us for our day's toil. We found that gentleman with his two sons perfectly healthy and in high spirits: his daughters were at Henderson (a town in Kentucky, on the Ohio) on a visit.
Page 312 - Men were seized, dragged to prison, treated like convicts, many transported and put to death, without having committed any thing, which the law of the land deems a crime.
Page 304 - Congress of the United States, entitled "an act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the time therein mentioned." And also to an act entitled "an act supplementary to an act entitled an act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned, and extending the benefits thereof to the...
Page 334 - I very much admire Mr. Birkbeck's mode of fencing. He makes a ditch 4 feet wide at top, sloping to 1 foot wide at bottom, and 4 feet deep. With the earth that comes out of the ditch he makes a bank on one side, which is turfed towards the ditch. Then a long pole is put up from the bottom of the ditch to 2 feet above the bank; this is crossed by a short pole from the other side, and then a rail is laid along between the forks. The banks were growing beautifully, and looked altogether very neat as...
Page 333 - Few settlers had as yet joined Mr. Birkbeck ; that is to say, settlers likely to become " society " ; he has labourers enough near him, either in his own houses or on land of their own joining his estate. He was in daily expectation of his friends Mr. Flower's family, however, with a large party besides ; they had just landed at Shawnee Town, about 20 miles distant, Mr. Birkbeck informs me he has made entry of a large tract of land, lying, part of it, all the way from his residence to the great Wabash...
Page 335 - We soon lost all appearance of the track, however, and of the "blazing" of the trees, as they call it; but, as it was useless to go back again for another guide, our only way was to keep straight on in the same direction, bring us where it would. Having no compass, this nearly cost us our sight, for it was just mid-day, and we had to gaze at the sun a long time before we discovered what was our course. After this we soon, to our great joy, found ourselves in a large corn field; rode round it, and...