Elsie Cree diary, 1900-1908
100 pages
Elsie Cree began her diary on January 5, 1900, although her last journal had ended July 6 (presumably of 1899). She noted that she was too poor to buy one herself, so waited for "Helen" to give her one for Christmas (page 1).
She wrote extensively about the Cree family--their deaths, sicknesses, weddings, etc., as to Cree, "Weddings and funerals go hand in hand" (page 16)--or such events as the Crees' purchase of a telephone in 1903 (page 58). Many entries contain observations regarding the people she interacted with, like the language quirk of a woman named Harriet who "puts 'en' on the end of words--milken, toasten & yea-yea for yes" (page 3).
Cree remarked on sewing she accomplished (ex. pages 13 and 14), or social events she helped to organize. A dancing party with 35 couples featured five or six of the mothers to "lend dignity to the occasion" and "attend to the refreshments" (page 71).
Additional entries include trips and visits Cree took, such as one to Chautauqua, New York (page 23), and sightseeing in Boston (page 30).
Enclosed are several letters, including a postscript regarding the Hatch coat of arms and from whom it could be furnished in a print suitable for framing; a letter dated February 20, 1928, to "Aunt Lucy" enclosing a typescript (present in the volume) that "father" wrote to General Logan in 1884, apparently from O. M. Hatch; and an eight page description of a "California trip" of June 25, 1914.
The diary's final date is in 1908.