A Journey to Ohio in 1810, as Recorded in the Journal of Margaret Van Horn Dwight
YALE HISTORICAL MANUSCRIPTS
PUBLISHED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE Department of History FROM THE INCOME OF
THE FREDERICK JOHN KINGSBURY MEMORIAL FUND
As Recorded in the Journal of Margaret van Horn Dwight
Edited with an Introduction by Max Farrand
New Haven Yale University Press
Copyright, 1912, by Yale University Press Printed in the United States of America First published, October, 1912 Second printing, December, 1912 Third printing, December, 1913 Fourth printing, April, 1920 Fifth printing, October, 1933
All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any form (except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers.
If it be true that good wine needs no bush, 'tis true that a good play needs no epilogue; and Rosalind might well have added that a good story needs no prologue. The present journal is complete in itself, and it is such a perfect gem, that it seems a pity to mar its beauty by giving it any but the simplest setting. There are many readers, however, with enough human interest to wish to know who Rosalind really was, and to be assured that she married and lived happily ever after. That is the reason for this introduction.
Margaret Van Horn Dwight was born on December 29, 1790. She was the daughter of Doctor Maurice William Dwight, a brother of President Timothy Dwight of Yale, and Margaret (DeWitt) Dwight. The death of her father in 1796, and the subsequent marriage of her mother, was probably the reason for Margaret Dwight being taken by her grandmother, Mary Edwards Dwight, a daughter of Jonathan Edwards, who trained her as her own child in her family in Northampton. The death of her grandmother, February 7, 1807, was the occasion of her going to live in New Haven in the family of her aunt, Elizabeth Dwight, who had married William Walton Woolsey, and whose son was President Theodore Woolsey.
Three years later, in 1810, Margaret Dwight left New Haven to go to her cousins in Warren, Ohio. It was doubtless there that she met Mr. Bell, whom she married, December 17, 1811, a year after her arrival. William Bell, Jr., was born in Ireland, February 11, 1781, and after 1815 he was a wholesale merchant in Pittsburgh.
Margaret Van Horn Dwight
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INTRODUCTION
A JOURNEY TO OHIO
Milford Friday Eve. at Capt Pond's.
Sat. night, D. Nash's Inn. Middlesex-
FOOTNOTES:
Sunday eve—
Tuesday Noon- Ferry House near State Prison-
Hobuck, Wednesday Morn-Buskirck's Inn—
Friday morn- Chester N J.
Mansfield-N J-Sat-morn October 27-
Sunday Morn-
Sunday eve- Sundown-
Monday morn-October 29-
Pennsylvania- Monday-eve- A Dutchman's inn- I dont know where. Palks County-or some thing like it—
Sunday eve- East pensboro' township- P-
Jennyauter-P—Wednesday 2 oclock P M-between 2 brothers——
Peach Orchard, P- Thursday night-Phelps' Tavern—
Sunday night.
Wednesday night. A private house-10 miles w- of Bedford
Saturday eve-2 miles from Laurel Hill-Penn-
Monday night- a mile west of the mountains-
Thursday Morn- Sewel's tavern-Versailes-township-
Nov-24- Friday morn- Turtle Creek-Penn-
Wednesday Nov- 28- 7 miles from Greersburg-Penn-
Wednesday eve—
Thursday eve-
Saturday- P M- Warren- After so long a time—
Transcriber's note