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Letters from America: 1865-1911

 

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Letters Introduction

List of Letters

1-a: Jan 1865

1-b: Jun 1865

2: Nov 1865

3-a: Oct 1867

3-b: Oct 1867

4: Jan 1868

5: Jun 1868

6: Apr 1869

7: Jun 1870

8-a: Aug 1870

8-b: Aug 1870

9: Sep 1870

10: Nov 1871

11: Dec 1872

12: Feb 1873

12-a: Feb 1873

13: Jun 1873

14: Oct 1873

14-a: Oct 1873

15: Jun 1874

16: Jun 1875

17: Mar 1876

18: Aug 1877

19: Jul 1878

20: Apr 1881

21: Jun 1881

22: Jan 1882

23: Feb 1882

24: May 1882

25: Jan 1883

26: Apr 1883

27: Aug 1883

28: Feb 1886

28-a: Feb 1886

29: Mar 1888

30: Oct 1891

31: Oct 1892

32: Apr 1894

33: Apr 1895

34: Dec 1903

35: May 1911

 

 

Letter 8-b

Date:         22 August 1870

Sender:     Harmen Jan te Selle

Addressee:   Derk Willem te Selle 


Brother Derk Willem, you have written me a letter which I have given a lot of consideration, and yet I have not come to a conclusion to advise you one way or the other. Therefore, I'll leave it to you. Yet I should say it will not be as worthwile for you as for your children. But I will put a few things in writing for you.

First of all you should realize that the guilders become dollars here and things are no longer as they were when we got here. At that time a lot of gold was mined which is no longer of much value now.. One dollar is calculated at one rijksdaalder[i] or two and a half guilders. Today I think you could get a dollar for two guilders and five or six stivers[ii].  So much more is the gold of greater value than the banknotes. Today there is plenty for sale here, but very little for hire. If you can manage to buy forty acres, which would be sufficient for a yoke of oxen or two small horses, you can make a good living. And you can easily work that with one of your little boys, and then you won't have to cut so many sods[iii]. In this way you could have your other children take on a job, because hired hands earn a lot of money here.  There are hands here who earn as much as 120 to 150 dollars a year. Now you may think that they have to work extremely hard, but it is nothing worse than at your place in Holland. Therefore I say that for your children it would be better here. They could become good farmers here in the course of time.

But I should get back to you again Derk Willem. It wouldn't matter very much whether or not you would be able to pay for it all or whether you had a debt of a few hundred dollars. Though I must say that the interest rates are tremendously high: 8 or 9 percent at the lowest, but most of the time as much as 10 percent. So he who has a lot of debt cannot easily get out of it. To have much less than 40 acres here, would make things very difficult. In that case you cannot keep a team of oxen or horses, and with one ox or one horse you cannot work the land here properly.

I suppose you would like to know what such a piece of land would cost here. It varies a lot. At the moment the land is not so expensive as it used to be, because the grain was cheap for a couple of years. Today you can buy 40 acres of land for 1400...1600 as much as 2000 dollars. Depending on the (wooden) buildings that are on it. Nor do I know how it would suit you in those new areas where Jan Hendrik lives. The land over there is quite cheap. Some say the land is very good there, whereas others say it would not suit us there.  I don't know what it is like there; up to now I have had only one letter from Jan Hendrik and he has not written much about it. I have been expecting a letter for quite some time now but so far I have not received a single one. I myself have written as many as two letters to him, but I haven't had a reply to either of them. He is in good health for sure because that is what someone has written who went there last fall. But he is not much of a writer and that's that.

Yes loved ones, what more shall I write you. I have written you earlier what it would cost to settle here, so I don't think it necessary to repeat this once again.  Dear brother I don't know what more I should write you about this. I have written as much about it as I could.  Therefore, brother judge for yourself what you should do about it. You won't have to eat black bread[iv]. I haven't seen that again. Well, this should do.

Have the kindest regards from us all

Harmen Jan te Selle

 


 

[i].

Rijksdaalder

A coin that equals two Dutch guilders and fifty cents

[ii].

Stiver

Dutch five-cent piece or a nickel

[iii].

In Winterswijk, Gelderland the sods were cut 30 by 30 centimeters, and taken to the cowhouse in order to get them fertilized by the cows manure. Afterwards they were taken to the arable fields

[iv].

Swart brood

Roggebrood - Ryebread

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