Hulme's Journal, 1818-19; Flower's Letters from Lexington and the Illinois, 1819; Flower's Letters from the Illinois, 1820-21; and Woods's Two Years' Residence, 1820-21
Early Western Travels 1748-1846
A Series of Annotated Reprints of some of the best and rarest contemporary volumes of travel, descriptive of the Aborigines and Social and Economic Conditions in the Middle and Far West, during the Period of Early American Settlement.
Edited with Notes, Introductions, Index, etc., by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL.D.
Editor of The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents, Original Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Hennepin's New Discovery, etc.
Volume X
Hulme's Journal, 1818-19; Flower's Letters from Lexington and the Illinois, 1819; Flower's Letters from the Illinois, 1820-21; and Woods's Two Years' Residence, 1820-21
Cleveland, Ohio The Arthur H. Clark Company 1904
Copyright 1904, by THE ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
The Lakeside Press R. R. DONNELLEY & SONS COMPANY CHICAGO
During the second decade of the nineteenth century, a colony of English emigrants was established in southeastern Illinois, at a place in Edwards County known afterwards as English Prairie. Interesting in itself as being a typical experiment in transplantation and in assimilation to frontier conditions, this settlement has attracted unusual attention because of the war of pamphlets it evoked, and the political prominence of some of its detractors.
Agricultural emigration was, at that period, a subject of much importance in Great Britain, and the English Prairie settlement became the nucleus around which the contention was waged. At the close of the Napoleonic wars, England's rural interests were much depressed. Hopes had been entertained that, with the return of peace, conditions for the farmer would improve, but these expectations proved fallacious, prices continually lowered, rents and wages increased, distress was widespread, and agrarian discontent alarming. Added to this, the political situation was grave. The domination of the Tory party, the reactionary tendency of foreign affairs, and the general national impoverishment led to the growth of a strong Radical party, which demanded manhood suffrage, abolition of the Corn Laws, and abrogation of the time-honored privileges of the upper classes. Mobs and disturbances were frequent, and there was developed a strong sentiment in favor of emigration to the United States, where political freedom, combined with the prospects of cheap lands, offered an enticing prospect to the harassed rural population of England.
Thomas Hulme
Richard Flower
John Woods
---
PREFACE TO VOLUME X
{261} PREFACE
{263} INTRODUCTION TO THE JOURNAL
{271} THE JOURNAL
END OF THE JOURNAL
Flower's Letters from Lexington (June 25, 1819) and the Illinois (August 16, 1819)
PREFACE
LETTER I
LETTER II
THE END
Flower's Letters from the Illinois—January 18, 1820-May 7, 1821
LETTER I
LETTER II
LETTER III
LETTER IV
{50} EXTRACT OF A LETTER, FROM MR. BIRKBECK
END OF THE LETTERS
FINIS
Woods's Two Years' Residence in the Settlement on the English Prairie—June 25, 1820-July 3, 1821
Wambro, English Prairie, Illinois State, North America.
{290} "269. James Monroe, President of the United States of America,
APPENDIX
THE END
FOOTNOTES