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Mary C. Brown diary, 1877.

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Kislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Ms. Coll. 1087
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Format:
Book
Manuscript
Author/Creator:
Brown, Mary C. (Mary Cornelia), 1847-
Contributor:
James Howard Weiss Memorial Fund.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
American diaries--19th century--Specimens.
American diaries.
American diaries--Women authors--19th century.
American diaries--Women authors.
Chenango County (N.Y.)--Social life and customs--19th century.
Chenango County (N.Y.).
Genre:
Diaries.
Recipes.
Manuscripts, American.
Specimens.
Penn Provenance:
Sold by Michael Brown Rare Books (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), 2015.
Physical Description:
1 volume
Place of Publication:
1877.
Biography/History:
Mary Cornelia was one of at least five children born to Mary Caroline Browning Brown (1830-1881) and Charles Dennison Brown (born 1822) at Pharsalia, Chenango, New York. Siblings of Mary Cornelia included Orcelia Frances born in 1848, Charles L. born in 1851, Truman H. born in 1855, and Frank born in 1856. The family owned and worked on their farm in Pharsalia. Mary Cornelia is the aunt of Frank and Bessie Minerva Brown's daughter Grace Mae born in 1886 who died at the hands of Chester Gillette in 1906. Grace Mae was the murder victim fictionalized in Theodore Dreiser's novel American tragedy.
Summary:
A calendar entitled "Excelsior diary for 1877," with printed front matter bound in brown leather. Each page is ruled and divided into two days. Mary Cornelia Brown kept faithful daily entries and recorded the day-to-day life of the Brown family farm in Pharsalia, New York. In 1877 Mary was the only child still living at home with her parents, Charles and Mary. Each day begins with a record of the weather followed by the daily arrivals of family and friends from adjacent farms. Most of the visitors are her brothers and sisters, chiefly Truman referred to as True, Frank, and Orcelia. Frank sometimes arrives with the new baby and his wife Minerva. Mary's Uncle Rob and her grandmother are also frequent guests. Entries record the chores performed that day, trips to post office, and to Norwich. Mary noted her thirtieth birthday on June 18. She discussed the work her brothers perform with their father such as chopping wood, bagging potatoes, and drawing hay. Mary recorded her chores in the house, cooking, cleaning, and sewing and mentions her exhaustion in the evening. Mary often writes of loneliness and sometimes sadness. At the end of some days Mary writes "I wish I could see my boy," possibly referring to a boyfriend. At the end of the volume are eighteen leaves of recipes. A majority of them are for cakes. The back cover is lacking.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the James Howard Weiss Memorial Fund.
OCLC:
910885060

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