Letter offers glimpse of 1831 journey to Quincy

The Quincy post office was established in March 1826.
The earliest letter known to this collector with a Quincy postmark is from 1831. It has manuscript markings of "Quincy Ill Aug 16" and a "25."
The date in the letter is "August 15, 1831," clearly establishing the year of posting.
The letter was sent from Quincy to Aaron B. Jones of Manchester, Conn. The cost of mailing a single-sheet letter at that time was 25 cents for distances over 400 miles.
Because Manchester is clearly more than 400 miles from Quincy, the manuscript "25" is the rate of postage.
During the first half of the 19th century, letters could be prepaid at the time of mailing or the postage could be paid when the recipient claimed the letter.
There are no paid markings of any kind on the cover, so if Aaron Jones wanted to read the letter from his friend, he would have needed to pay the postage.
Since the letter survived, he obviously paid the 25 cents. The letter is from George W. Brown to a friend (or possibly a relative) in Manchester, Conn., a state he had left earlier that year. Although there are some discrepancies, census records indicate that he was born about 1814 in Connecticut. Consequently, he could have been as young as 17 when he wrote the letter.
At the time of the letter, the Quincy post office was in its sixth year of operation and Robert Tillson was postmaster. The net amount of postage (after the commission to the postmaster) at Quincy from April 1, 1831, to March 31, 1832, was $254.29, a 33 percent growth from the previous year.
Quincy was growing.
The letter also has a fairly detailed description of the journey starting with the comment: "I arrived here July the 18th, completing a very pleasant journey of 3,500 miles, and will endeavor to give you short history of it -- left Glastonbury May 13th … ." His trip went from Glastonbury, Conn., to New York to New Orleans and then up the Mississippi to Quincy. The journey took a little over two months.
New Orleans is described by Brown as "a large but not handsome City, there are but few handsome buildings and the streets are narrow and dirty … but it is a place of business the harbor is filled with shipping, which carries away a vast amount of Cotton & Sugar -- there are said to be 100 Steam Boats running from N.O. up & down the river."
Since George Brown's final destination was on a primary waterway, his entire journey was accomplished with relative comfort and ease as compared with an arduous overland passage in the days of primitive roads and trails. In addition, it depicts life in the new Illinois settlement of Quincy, where the writer was clerking in a store.
"Quincy is 150 miles above St. Louis, situated 150 or 200 feet above the water on an arm of a Prairie. There is in Q. about 100 dwelling Houses, & a Court House, built principally of Logs. The place is growing fast. It contains about 500 inhabitants & I find this as well as other places in the west filled with Doctors, Lawyers, and Merchants. There are here 6 Doctors, 6 Lawyers, & 11 Merchants. The land about Q. is probably as good as any in the State. One Yankee will cultivate 30 acres of Corn easily -- it requires but little labor, and yields 35 & 40 bus. Per acre, and will pay for the Land in one year." In his letter he states: "We occupy one half of a Store, but the merchant that occupies the other part will move soon. Dry Goods sell here about 70 pr ct above cost including the expense of getting them here."
Brown was associated with Stephen and Samuel Holmes in the mercantile business. Brown was a brother-in-law of Stephen Holmes. The store at one time was at the southwest corner of Fifth and Maine. Brown's letter discusses the construction of a steam mill by J.T. Holmes, who was a brother of Stephen and Samuel Holmes.
"Mr. Holmes will have the Mill built as soon as possible -- has now 30 men employed, has contracted for the Engine which is building at St. Louis. He has now gone to St. Louis for the man that he engaged to frame the building, and put the Saw Mill in operation."
Although the letter mentions a sawmill, actually J.T. Holmes and N. Pitkin started the first steam flour mill in Quincy at the foot of Ohio Street, which opened in 1832.
On Dec. 30, 1834, a little over three years after he arrived in Quincy, Brown married Lucy Rose, the first child resident of the county who had come into the area when she was about 5 years old. They were married by the Rev. Asa Turner, one of the first members of the clergy in Quincy. Turner was one of the seven men known as the "Yale Band" who came to the wild, untamed country of Illinois to convert and serve as ministers. A member of the American Missionary Society, Turner arrived in Quincy with his wife, Martha, in November 1830.
The letter indicates that Brown boarded with Turner because the letter states, "We are boarding with your cousins Mr. & Mrs. Turner which seems like home again."
Jack Hilbing is a retired U.S. Air Force officer. With a Ph.D from Stanford, he has worked with computers in military, industry and academia. He has collected the postal history of Quincy and Adams County for 40 years.
Sources
Collins, William H. and Perry, Cicero, Past and Present of the City of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois, Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905, 46-47. 205-206
Duncan, Wilbur H., "List of Post Offices and Postmasters of the Area of Present Day Illinois for the Period 1800-1830," unpublished typed list of five pages, on file at Illinois Historical Survey, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Vertical File Number ILL-384-5. (Copy held by author)
Hilbing, Jack (compiler), "Net Amount of Postage: 1831-1835", Illinois Postal Historian, Vol. 6, No. 3 (August 1985), p. 9.
Illinois State Archives, Illinois Statewide Marriage Index, 1763-1900, Accessed October 21, 2015, www.ilsos.gov/isavital/marriagesrch.jsp
(George W. Brown and Lucy Rose) National Archives and Records Administration, U.S. Appointment of U. S. Postmasters, 1832-1971, Volume 12B, NARA Microfilm Publications M841, Record Group 38, Washington, D.C. (Copy of microfilm held by author)
Redmond, Pat H., History of Quincy and Its Men of Mark, Quincy: Heirs & Russell, 1869, p. 13-14, 169-170.
The History of Adams County, Illinois, Chicago IL: Murray, Williamson & Phelps, 1879, 260, 952.





