Letter 32
Date:
April 15, 1894
Sender: Gerrit Jan
te Selle and his wife Anna Jonker-te Selle
Addressee: Derk Willem te Selle
Holland, Nebraska April
15, 1894
Dear beloved brother
and additional friends.
I want to let you know
that we are all very healthy and hope for you the same. All of the
time during the fall we looked forward to your letter but alas!
Then I thought that you would write during the holidays, but also
in this we were disappointed!
Would this not have happened,
then I would have written earlier to you and I would have invited
you for the wedding of my third daughter, Dina,
who married on January 8 with Jan Berend Sikkink, from Minnesota,
third son of J. A. Sikkink, our neighbor and our Albert
is married to his sister. But he still lives on the land of his
father, who has 160 acres there and I thought I told you already
that he bought here a plot of land as well, where he lived for a
year. Albert, my son, lives there now, as he had rented a house
from my neighbor who left for Kansas. J.A. Sikkink bought that
place now for 3,600 dollars and the 80 acres which came with it
are between mine and Jan Hendrik’s
land. So Dina now lives more than 500 miles away from us
and it is going well with her as she recently wrote us. He has 4
horses, 4 cows, 5 calves and that's pretty good for the beginning.
If we have some time to live then we will visit her in the future
if they don't do it. It is very good up there, but very cold.
It is
more then 300 miles to the north, nevertheless the land is very
fertile.
I had written you to
come to the world exhibition. I went myself for nine days. We left
here at 2:30 in the afternoon and arrived in Chicago at 7:30 in
the morning. It is
impossible to describe what great things you could see, from all
parts of the world! Even though I haven't seen hundreds of
thousands of it or better looked at it. After having been there
already for two days the brothers came also, though they did not
want to at first because his wife
then also wanted to come together with the child, and that cannot
be done. The largest building covers 41 acres, 1,687 feet long,
787 feet wide. Cost $1,500,000 dollars. A total of 3,000,000
square feet timber flooring, 1,000 houses of 25 by 50 feet would
fit within the walls. The outside walls are 66 feet high. The bows
over which the roof is built are 375 feet high and were there over
a length more than a fourth part of a mile. These bows were 14
feet wide. The ridge or roof had 31 of them. A total of 12 million
lbs. of steel was used for the middle section of this building and
2 million for the cover. The whole building provided with streets,
also one corridor on the inside which is 50 feet wide, and 86
smaller corridors of 12 feet wide. Small changes in carpentry did
cost the principals “only”
198,000 dollars. Exactly 100,000 lbs paint and 30,000 panes were
needed for this building alone.
And now you probably
ask me how they erected those bows. Well, they constructed a
chest, as I call it, which was 260 feet long, 50 feet wide, and
120 feet high. On this a tower of 135 feet high, for a total of
255 feet. The weight of this scaffolding was 20,000 lbs. and over
half a million timbers were used for this scaffolding, which were
shipped by rail, through the building. The 27 big bows were lifted
with a great number of pulley blocks and screwed together there.
I would not like to get the timber for free if I would have had to
pull it down..... A total of 900 acres was covered this way,
at a cost of $5 million total.
It was worth a trip to
the end of the world to see this! Water was brought into the
exhibition by two big machines. One brought 24 and the other 40
million gallons of water. Every day 17,000 horsepower was
necessary for electricity. That is ten times more than in 1889 in
Paris. A total of 24,000 horsepower was necessary in steam to keep
the machinery moving and these cost between 26 and 30 million
dollars. I cannot go into details for all these things because it
is impossible to describe. One day I, or better are we because I
met a person who lived here 17 years, visited the town. lt is
incredible! It is impossible to see the whole city.
The tallest house was
20 floors above ground, 302 feet high! Another hotel was 17
floors, and cost 3.5 million dollars. Many of these 15 and 16
floor buildings are in the heart of the town. You can't stand
still to look at them. The town is 37 miles long, but every
evening we went outside where long ago small villages existed,
which are now incorporated in the town and lots of Dutch people
live there. 20 miles with the electric railways cost only 5 cents.
On Sunday I visited Lansink,
which is 28 miles distance from the town where Reverend Dunwold of
Pikkers
lives. I heard him preach twice. I visited his house in the
evening. He talked a lot to Dad during his disease.
During the other nights
I visited Kensington and every time I took a different road in
order to see the town as much as possible.
But I cannot describe a
hundred of thousands of it. I visited a department store which was
400 feet long, 200 feet wide, and 8 floors. Eight lines, each 17
pillars carried this building! More than 6,000 customers were
visiting there scattered over all the rooms. 16 steam machines
brought people and goods up and down. I asked him how many sales
clerks there were. The answer was in busy times 2600, as well as
outside as inside the building. Everything any person might need
you can get there! All kinds of newspapers, even in Dutch! You can
read there for free! Even a doctor and lawyer and post and
telegraph office are there, everything.
Last summer was dry,
everything was cheap. Grain 45, corn 26 cents, butter 10, eggs 8.
We had nice weather and enough rain, it kept us busy. Wheat was 25
cents, oats 23, corn 98. Please write to me soon and I wish you
the blessings of the Lord. Kind regards from all of us and from me
Your brother G.J. Te
Selle.
I would really like to
notify you that we now expect a letter from you soon, as we have
heard nothing from you for such a long time. We always look out
for a letter from you.
We are becoming very
busy soon. We have 8 cows to milk and we are getting 4 more. We
are also busy now with the chickens. We already have 150 young
hens and that's a lot of work. Daily we get about seventy to
eighty eggs, and that's nice.
We should be satisfied in
view of the excess we get. We have no time yet for gardening, but
that’s
no problem, it is the year is stil young. The paper is full, so I
can't write much any more. I must finish writing now, but not with
the heart. My best regards to all of you. Who calls herself Anna te
Selle
.
Dina/Dena (born March 4, 1875), married Sikkink (John Berend
Sikkink). He was born January 20, 1871.
.
Albert
(also known as John Albert, J. A. and A. J.), was born September
17, 1869 in the Netherlands. Albert was married to Minnie
Sikkink.
.
Dina
and J. B. Sikkink lived in Minnesota.
.
Commentary by Norma te Selle-Prophet, Firth
Nebraska:
“When
I first read the above letter, I thought that the Fair was held
in the year of 1894. I have discovered that the Fair was
initially dedicated on October 12, 1892, but was not held until
the following year, May 1, 1893. through October 30, 1893.
I believe the "wife" who Gerrit Jan is speaking
of is Harmen Jan te Selle's wife, Johanna (nee Brethouwer) Te
Selle. She had a son, John Henry Te Selle, born on January 31,
1893. Therefore, during the time of the Fair (May 1, 1893
through October 30, 1893), John Henry would have been only 4 to
9 months old.
Gerrit Jan is deseribing a big building. lt
appears to be the Manufacturers and Liberal Arts Building. I
found a picture of it in a picture album which belonged to the
Dietz family.
Each
year the City of Lincoln and Lancaster County Library holds a
book sale. One year I discovered they had placed on sale a large
notebook that held original copies of little pamphlets dated
1894. These pamphlets were entitled "Reminiscences of the Fair,
A Portfolio of Photographs of the World's Columbian Exposition."
.
"Lansink" is Lansing, Michigan.
.
See
“Winterswijkse
pioniers in Amerika”
, Willem Wilterdink page 65. ISBN 90-70560-15-1
In
Clymer and Sheboygan people began to miss the church after a
while. In Clymer they asked
‘Pikkers
Jan Willem’
(J.W. Dunnewold * July 1821) from the Woold near Winterswijk
(who lived at that time in Milwaukee and worked in a quarry) to
be their minister. This
“Pikkers
Jan Willem, who was not a minister at all, decided to take
lessons and in 1851 he was ordained into the church. After 19
years in Clymer, he was called as a minister to Gibbsville,
Sheboygan County where a church was founded in 1856. Dunnewold
arrived in Boston on December 4, 1846. The year before Jan
Albert te Selle, Gerrit Jan’s
father died at the farm
‘De
Selle’.
.
Gerrit
Jan is referring to his father who died in 1845.
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