
Hoit family papers, 1803-1918 (majority within 1803-1873)
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Hoit family
- Abstract:
- The Hoit Family Papers are made up of correspondence, diaries, documents, financial papers, photographs, and other items related to the family of New Hampshire state legislator Daniel Hoit (1778-1859) and Sally Hoit (1786-1837); their children Julia Maria, Eliza Flanders, portrait painter and artist Albert Gallatin, and Reverend William Henry Harrison Hoit; and their children-in-law Ira A. Bean, Susan Ann Hanson Hoit, and Enoch P. Sherman. The family was based in Sandwich, New Hampshire.
- Extent:
- 2 linear feet
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Cheney J. Schopieray, October 2019
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Hoit Family Papers are made up of 965 letters; 21 diaries, account books, and notebooks; 11 speeches, poems, and other writings; 49 documents and financial papers; six photographs, and other items related to New Hampshire state legislator Daniel Hoit (1778-1859) and Sally Hoit (1786-1837); their children Julia Maria, Eliza Flanders, portrait painter and artist Albert Gallatin, and Reverend William Henry Harrison Hoit; and their children-in-law Ira A. Bean, Susan Ann Hanson Hoit, and Enoch P. Sherman. The family lived primarily in Sandwich, New Hampshire.
The Correspondence Series contains 965 letters, including 39 by Sarah "Sally" Flanders / Sarah "Sally" Flanders Hoit, dating between December 3, 1803, and January 30, 1837. She wrote largely from Loudon and Sandwich, New Hampshire. In her courtship letters to Daniel Hoit, she offered her thoughts on marriage, the state of their relationship, the future, virtue, and remarks on living a good life. After their marriage, the topics of her correspondence turned to the health and welfare of their family. To her daughters Eliza and Julia she gave motherly advice while they attended a female academy in Concord, New Hampshire (beginning in 1822).
Sally Flanders's husband Daniel Hoit authored around 300 letters from June 6, 1808, to June 19, 1859. He sent over half of them to his wife, Sally Hoit (between 1808 and 1835), and his daughters Julia Hoit Sherman (between 1821 and 1859) and Eliza Hoit Bean (between 1822 and 1856). In them, he showed concern for the education and welfare of his children and family, and advised his wife on home and financial matters. Daniel appears to have had a close relationship with his daughter, Julia. In over 70 letters to her, he reflected on the importance of parenthood and morality; discussed politics, his speeches, elections, and other business matters; and praised her for her academic prowess. To Eliza, he sent 37 letters on the health and welfare of family members and friends. Many of these were co-authored by other Hoit family members. Daniel Hoit's letters include content respecting the state legislature and a small number of items during and after the War of 1812 pertain to recruiting. He remarked twice on local extramarital relationships (June 18, 1815, and June 20, 1830) and attended public Shaker worship in Concord, New Hampshire (June 20, 1814).
The Hoit's oldest child, Eliza Flanders Hoit / Eliza Flanders Hoit Bean, sent 22 letters between April 27, 1822, and September 16, 1859. She wrote the first six letters to her mother and sister while attending school in Concord, New Hampshire, from April to September 1822. The remainder of the letters date from 1836 to 1859, mostly from Urbana, Ohio. These letters focus on the health of friends and family, housework, and her spiritual life. She wrote several travel letters to her father from Ohio, New York, and Pennsylvania. Her husband Ira A. Bean wrote 30 letters, December 30, 1828-December 30, 1863, regarding his business and political endeavors, largely to his father-in-law, Daniel Hoit.
Julia Maria Hoit / Julia Maria Hoit Sherman sent around 110 letters to her mother, father, siblings, and other family members between February 3, 1827, and March 24, 1876. The majority of them originated from Sandwich, New Hampshire. In her often-lengthy correspondence, she discussed fashion, gossip about friends and family, weddings, marriages, clothing, and current events. She was independent and highly opinionated about the social behaviors of those around her. Particularly notable is her criticism of the fashion and diet of the women in Boston (1829). The Hoit Family Papers also contain around 50 political, financial, and property-related letters of her husband, Enoch P. Sherman, dating between June 9, 1828, and February 6, 1843, and around 10 from their son, Daniel H. Sherman between 1849 and 1873.
The Hoit's oldest son Albert Gallatin Hoit / Albert Gallatin Hoyt wrote approximately 110 letters between November 27, 1820, and October 21, 1853. His earliest correspondence, largely to his parents and sisters, covers his time at Effingham Academy, Wolfeborough & Tuftonborough Academy (1825), and Dartmouth College (1826-1829). In 1829, he established a school at Newport, Connecticut, but quickly found himself in debt. Struggling to remedy his plight, he took a trip to Rochester, New York, in 1830, where he decided to embark on a career as a portrait painter. He then wrote from Portland and Bangor, Maine, until 1839 when he settled in Boston with his wife Susan. His letters regard his everyday life, education, career, and relationship with his father. Susan A. Hanson Hoyt, originally of Conway, New Hampshire, wrote approximately 40 letters between March 28, 1837, and February 11, 1873. They focus on health and her daily routine, anxieties about her husband Albert's career as an artist, the art scene in Boston in the early 1840s, and the activities of her husband. Albert traveled a great deal, and stayed in Europe from 1842 to 1844 to paint. Susan also wrote about her stillborn children (i.e. March 30, 1845), concerns over the presidential election of 1844, sewing, dressmaking, and her efforts to learn how to draw. By 1853, she moved to Roxbury, Massachusetts, with her husband. In a series of letters from there, she wrote about the sickness and death of Albert in 1856. She then returned to Conway. In early 1872, she traveled to Minneapolis where she apparently remained.
William Henry Harrison Hoit / William Henry Hoyt's approximately 70 letters date from May 13, 1826, to November 15, 1882. Beginning at around age 11 with letters from school at Wolfborough & Tuftonborough Academy (where he studied along with his brother Albert), informed his parents about his studies and asked them to send books and educational advice. He then wrote to his parents, sisters, and brother-in-law while studying at Dartmouth College (1827-1831). From 1835 to 1836, he sent letters from the Episcopal Theological Seminary in New York, and, by 1838, he settled in to his parish at St. Alban's, Vermont. His conversion from the Episcopal Church to Catholicism in the later 1840s is the subject of a portion of his correspondence. The collection includes three letters by William Hoyt's wife, Anne Deming Hoyt, dated October 6, 1838; March 30, 1856; and July 11, 1867.
The collection's remaining 190 or letters are from almost as many correspondents. They are addressed to members of the Hoit family, particularly Sally, Daniel, Eliza, and Julia, from various members of their extended family and business associates. Updates on deaths, marriages, health, education, and children predominate in the letters by women. Of interest are letters pertinent to Albert Hoyt's debt in the early 1830s and five letters from Julia's niece, Frances Prescott, a teacher in Ellenburg, New York. She briefly remarked on her school and wages (late 1850s).
The Diaries, Account Books, and Notebooks Series includes 10 daily diaries and account books of Daniel Hoit (1814-1817, 1851-1859), one diary by Sally Flanders Hoit (1823, 1830), two diaries of Ira A. Bean (1829-1859), one volume of notes and accounts of Enoch P. Sherman's estate (1843-1849), three sparse diaries and two notebooks by Daniel H. Sherman (1870, 1873, 1878, 1900, and 1918), and one daily diary of Julia M. Hoit Sherman (1884).
The Speeches, Poems, and Other Writings Series includes a poem by William Burleigh to Mr. and Mrs. Hoit (March 4, 1812) a fragment of a verse by Sarah F. Hoit (undated), three essays by Albert G. Hoit (two from his school days and one entitled "Early Recollections" (undated), and a written renewal of vows to God by Julia M. Hoit on her 24th birthday (November 15, 1831). Also present are a temperance address by Ira A. Bean (October 1823), an incomplete address to the Franklin Society (November 1, 1824), and a 4th of July 1834 temperance speech by Daniel Hoit.
The Hoit Family Papers contain 49 Documents, Accounts, and Receipts, dating from [1809?] to 1863. The various financial papers include good documentation of the Hoit children's educational expenses and Albert G. Hoit's expenditures and debts of the later 1820s and early 1830s. Among the documents are Enoch P. Sherman's June 11, 1840, resignation from a colonelcy in the 19th Regiment New Hampshire Militia.
The Photographs Series is made up of seven carte-de-visite photographs, all bearing Civil War era tax stamps. Identified individuals include "Mrs. E. G. Weaver" and "A. J. Church & wife & daughter."
The collection includes two Maps:
- Rand Avery Supply Co. Map of Lake Winnipesaukee and Surroundings issued by Passenger Dept. Concord & Montreal R.R. [Boston]: Concord & Montreal R.R., 1891.
- [Tamworth Township, Carroll County, New Hampshire], 1870s.
The collection also contains 14 Printed Items, among which are The Dairyman’s Daughter (religious tract, 1831), a copy of a bill to extend an 1838 act to grant half-pay and pensions to certain widows (1841), Final Notes on Witchcraft in Massachusetts by George H. Moore (1885), a program for the Semi-Centennial celebration of the New Hampshire Conference Seminary and Female College (1895), The Shepherd of Salisbury Plain, by Mrs. Hannah More, and a children's book Jocko and Minette (1846). See the box and folder listing below for a complete list of the printed materials.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
Daniel Hoit was born in Sandwich, New Hampshire, on October 26, 1778, to parents Joseph Hoyt (1751-1788) and Betsey Folsom Hoyt (1744-1834). He served as General of the New Hampshire state militia and for 15 terms in the state legislature. Sarah Flanders (1786-1837) married Daniel Hoit on January 20, 1805, in Loudon, New Hampshire. The two had five children, including Eliza Flanders (1806-1893), Julia Maria (1807-1884), Albert Gallatin (1809-1856), Otis Gray (1811-1811), and William Henry Harrison (1813-1883). Daniel Hoit died on August 11, 1859, in Center Sandwich, New Hampshire.
The Hoits' oldest daughter Eliza Flanders Hoit married lawyer Ira A. Bean on March 9, 1826, and the couple moved to Urbana, Ohio. By 1860, they returned to Sandwich, New Hampshire.
Julia Maria Hoit was born on November 15, 1807. She married Enoch Wood Piper Sherman (1810-1843) on September 17, 1832. They had at least five children, including Daniel H. Sherman (1840-1910), before Enoch's death on September 28, 1843. Julia and her children moved back into her father's home in Sandwich until 1856, when she opened a boarding school for young ladies in Hanover, New Hampshire. Her twin daughters Eliza Hoit and Julia Hoit Sherman, both graduates of Troy Female Seminary, taught at the Hanover school.
Albert Gallatin Hoit/Hoyt was born on December 13, 1809. Albert spelled his surname Hoyt. He attended Effingham Academy, Wolfborough & Tuftonborough Academy, and Dartmouth College. Following his graduation from Dartmouth in 1829, he found himself in considerable debt. Struggling to remedy his plight, he took a trip to Rochester, New York, in 1830, where he decided to embark on a career as a portrait painter. He established himself in Portland and Bangor, Maine, before settling in Boston in 1839. His successful career as a painter included a commission to paint General William Henry Harrison's portrait in Ohio in 1840. Albert Gallatin Hoyt married Susan Hanson on October 16, 1838, and the couple had two children. Hoyt died at his home in West Roxbury, Massachusetts, December 18, 1856.
William Henry Harrison Hoit/Hoyt was born on January 8, 1813, Later in life, William dropped Harrison from his name and, like his brother Albert, changed the spelling of his surname to Hoyt. Also like his brother, William attended Wolfborough & Tuftonborough Academy and graduated from Dartmouth College (grad. 1831). He then studied at Andover Theological Seminary and the New York General Theological Seminary, becoming an Episcopal minister in 1836. He married Anne Deming on August 21, 1838, and the couple had 11 children, including Charles Albert Hoyt (1839-1903). William Hoyt served as rector of St. Luke's Episcopal Church in St. Albans, Vermont, from 1838 to 1846. He then converted to Catholicism and studied law. He became a Roman Catholic priest in 1877. William Henry Hoyt died on December 12, 1883.
- Acquisition Information:
- 1986. M-2293, M-2308 .
- Arrangement:
-
The Hoit Family Papers are made up of the following series:
- Correspondence
- Diaries, Account Books, and Notebooks
- Speeches, Poems, and Other Writings
- Documents, Accounts, and Receipts
- Photographs
- Maps
- Printed Items
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Alternate Locations
Twelve printed books and pamphlets are located in the Clements Library's Book Division. See the box and folder listing above for titles and links to their individual catalog records.
Bibliography
Cutter, William Richard. New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial... New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1913: 54-55.
Hoyt, David Webster. A Genealogical History of the Hoyt, Haight, and Hight Families. Providence: Printed for the author by the Providence Press Co., 1871: 91-92.
Fairbanks, Mary Mason, ed. Emma Willard and Her Pupils... New York: Mrs. R. Sage,1898: 589.
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Brothers and sisters--New Hampshire.
Catholics.
Clergy--United States.
Courtship--New Hampshire.
Education--Costs.
Episcopalians.
Fathers and daughters.
Fathers and sons.
Lawyers--Ohio--Urbana.
Mothers and daughters.
Mothers and sons.
Portrait painters--Correspondence.
Teachers--New Hampshire.
Women--New Hampshire.
Women--Ohio--Urbana. - Formats:
-
Account books.
Accounts.
Books.
Cartes-de-visite (card photographs)
Diaries.
Essays.
Legal documents.
Letters (correspondence)
Maps (documents)
Photographs.
Poems.
Receipts (financial records) - Names:
-
Dartmouth College.
New Hampshire. General Court. House of Representatives.
Wolfeboro & Tuftonboro Academy.
Bean, Eliza Flanders Hoit, 1806-1893.
Bean, Ira A.
Cass, Betsey S.
Hoit, Albert Gallatin, 1809-1856.
Hoit, Anne Deming, 1819-1875.
Hoit, Betsey Emerson, 1789-1856.
Hoit, Daniel, 1778-1859.
Hoit, Daniel H., 1840-1910.
Hoit, Sarah Flanders, 1786-1837.
Hoit, Susan Ann Hanson, 1814-1875.
Hoit, William Henry Harrison, 1813-1883.
Hoyt family.
Hoyt, Charles Albert, 1839-1903.
Prescott family.
Prescott, Albert H.
Prescott, Brackett L.
Sherman, Daniel H., 1840-1900.
Sherman, Enoch Wood Piper, 1810-1843.
Sherman, Julia Maria Hoit, 1807-1884. - Places:
-
Boston (Mass.)--Social life and customs.
Burlington (Vt.)
Claremont (N.H.)
Concord (N.H.)
Conway (N.H.)
Portland (Me.)
Roxbury (Mass.)
Saint Albans (Vt.)
Sandwich (N.H.)--Social life and customs.
Urbana (Ohio)
Wolfeboro (N.H.)
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Hoit Family Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan