Letter 34
Date:
December 12, 1903
Sender: Gerrit
Jan te Selle
Addressee: Family and
Friends
Firth Nebraska.
December 12, 1903
Very Beloved Friends:
After having to wait a long
time before getting your letter, I want to let you know that we
received your letter in good order and that we were privileged to
know that you yourself are in good health and prosperity. Because
in view of your high age
as well as my own age, we cannot thank the Lord enough for the
many privileges he gives us.
If we consider our
unworthiness and our revolt and denial against Him, and in view of
the fact that he let His own Son suffer and die for us, so that we
can be His children again, then it should pain our hearts that we
let his Father's heart (as we may call it) hurt so badly, and
that we crucify God again, and sadden the Holy Ghost! lt
actually makes us humble and makes us feel gratitude to consider
the gift of Jesus at Golgotha and this is a beautiful consolation
toward the end of our lives.
Everything is well
here, although we had a very wet spring and the early planted corn
had to be replanted again.
On September 16 we got
a frost during the night at many places and then the late corn
stayed at the land and was not salable any more. But we were
spared! From my 150 acres I had about 2000 bushels. Grain was 16
and oats was 25 bushels per acre, although damage was suffered due
to the wetness. Hay was heavy, potatoes reasonable, apples not
much because of the late frost, cattle is cheap, and no trade! Hog
prices declined from 7 to 3˝
cents, butter 13, eggs 20, grain 62, corn 30, oats 25 cents.
One of my sons‑in‑law, H.
Veneklaasen,
is going in the spring to South Dakota, 250 miles north of here.
There the land is still cheaper. For the land that I bought 1˝
years ago from van Sikkink
for 50 dollars per acre I now got an offer for 65 dollars. This
summer we enlarged and beautified our church
a bit. That cost us almost 6000 dollars. I had to supervise
everything and that gave me quite a lot of work, but yesterday it
was finished.
We harvested the corn and
worked on it with the whole family because it's a lot of work. But
my son, Jan,
who lives close to us, had a good helper who picked 112 bushels a
day. You can't do this with your whole family. They had to pay 3
cents per bushel for picking, or husking as we call it here. Some
gave already 4 cents, so now they can wait for the snow to come
and put the cattle inside already until spring.
I would have written a
bit earlier but our Post office was being remodeled already a year
ago. But now, on the 2nd of last month, it opened. We get our
letters now at the roadside in a mailbox close to the house.
.
Derk Willem te Selle would have been about 76 in
December 1903. He died a few months after this letter on the
12th of February 1904.
.
"One of my sons‑in‑law, H. VeneKlaasen..”
was married to Della/Dela/Dillie te Selle, born September 30,
1873.
.
Gerrit Jan’s
daughter Dina/Dena married John Berend Sikkink and her brother
Albert (or J. A., or A. J.)... married Minnie Sikkink.
.
Church ... possibly the Dutch Reformed Church in
Holland, Nebraska.
.
Son "Jan" (John) 1879 - 1958. He was married to
Berendena Walvoord (* May 1880)
.
"te Selle out of Kansas" This is cousin Janna
Geertruid Aleida te Selle. Born in the Winterswijk Hamlet
Brinkheurne at farmstead
“Meekes”
and married to Hendrik Jan Bruggers. Emigrated to the USA May 8,
1883.