Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Mother Paterson Part III

It has been a month since I wrote Mother Paterson Part II, so I thought I'd better get to Part III:
The scan here, Page 1 of the Jane Eliza Neilsen letter of 31 Dec. 1837, seems to have a problem w/ light-dark, but it may be seen better by an adjustment w/ Picasa, which I really like, maybe because it has most of the bells and whistles that a really expensive program has, although I have never had the pleasure of playing around w/ a really expensive program, primarily because they are really expensive.

Anyway, I want to focus on the contents of the letter here, because, well, because Mother is pretty darn interesting. She predicted the Civil War well before it took place- some 23 years.
"Predicted" is used w/  license here. She actually warned that it would occur if the opposing political parties involved, Whigs and Democrats, tried to force the issue. The issue, of course, was slavery. But while it looks as if Mother had some wonderful attribute like clairvoyance or an impeccable understanding of national politics, it might be simply that her "vision" of the future was being talked about all the time by well-read people, and had been talked about w/ regularity since 1788, the year of  her birth, and the year The Federalist Papers were taking shape in the national press. Since 1833, especially in South Carolina, it was probably something that people were discussing at dinner every other night- if the dinner table was of the class of Mother's table.

Jane E. Neilsen was from New York State, with property on the Hudson up stream from New York City. She was a Rensselaer, one of the most wealthy and powerful families of New York City at the time. It appears, but more research is needed, that the family had a home in Pocotaligo, SC, a town just outside of Charleston. The name of the property was "Spottsylvania." This name is written on the byline of her letters from Pocotaligo, but so far, no reference to this place can found in any other work, paper or map, but there is a State of South Carolina battle marker at the edge of a busy highway. The area residents had been hostile to Union forces in a battle in 1862 in which Union forces were ambushed by the Confederates. In his campaign, Sherman used Pocotaligo as a base in Jan. 1865, and U.S. Grant paid a visit during that time. Sherman may have done his part to depopulate the town. It appears to have never recovered from the war, and its post office closed in 1890.

More, more, more soon.