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Collection

Christopher Ripley collection, 1801-1851

0.25 linear feet

The Christopher Ripley collection is made up of four manuscript notebooks, which include diary entries, financial records, writings, and other entries about many subjects, including Ripley's life in Hartford, Connecticut, and Ogdensburg, New York.

The Christopher Ripley collection is made up of four manuscript notebooks (around 210 pages total) which include diary entries, financial records, writings, and other entries many numerous subjects.

Volume I (106 pages) largely consists of diary and journal entries dated 1802-1808. The earlier entries are predominantly philosophical musings, and later entries consist mostly of brief notes about sermons he heard from "Mr. Flint" in Hartford, Connecticut. The diary is followed by financial accounts, including some made at Ogdensburg, New York, in 1831. The volume has one page of notes about Kenyon College. Volume II (45 pages) is an account book with financial records related to travel in northern New York and personal finances (1841-1845). Volumes III and IV (about 100 pages and 35 pages, respectively) are commonplace books and collections of miscellany, including notes about religion, the California Gold Rush, the Mexican War, U.S. and international politics, steamboats, personal health, and other topics. They also contain poems, recipes for health remedies, genealogical notes, and lecture notes about "Blairs Rhetoric." Several blank sheets of lined and colored paper are enclosed in volume IV.

Collection

Rebecca Fish Root diary, 1804-1823

1 volume

This diary contains the religious and personal reflections of Rebecca Fish Root, of Hartford, Connecticut. Root wrote about personal hardships, her Christian faith, and family news in the early 19th century.

This diary (18 pages) contains religious and personal reflections written by Rebecca Fish Root of Hartford, Connecticut, from May 1804-February 1823. Most of Root's entries pertain to her religious beliefs and faith, particularly during times of personal difficulties such as the deaths of family members or financial insolvency. In several entries, Root discussed death, bereavement, and the role of her faith after the deaths of her father (1804) and her eldest daughter (1820). She also mentioned church services by preachers including "Doct. Strong," "Mr. Hawes" and "Mr. [Lyman] Beecher from Litchfield." Root visited towns such as New Haven, Bethlehem, Norwich, Lyme, and Coventry. In later entries, she remarked on her feelings of social isolation.

Her diary contains references to the Root family's financial difficulties throughout the 1810s and early 1820s; the Roots were forced to move out of the Fish family home to a neighborhood three miles outside of town. Root also mentioned events such as her son's return from eight months of imprisonment in England during the War of 1812 (December 1813) and the deaths of twelve neighborhood children in March 1815.