Title:
Letter from Jeanne [C.] Carr to John Muir, [1870] Oct 2.
Creator:
Jeanne [C.] Carr
Publisher:
University of the Pacific Library Holt-Atherton Special Collections. Please contact this institution directly to obtain copies
of the images or permission to publish or use them beyond educational purposes.
Contributor:
John Muir
Date:
[1870] Oct 2
2008
Type:
Text
Format:
Image/jpeg2000
Identifier:
muir02_0346-md-1
Source:
Original letter dimensions: 33 x 21.5 cm.
Language:
eng
Coverage:
Oakland, [California]
Rights:
Copyright status unknown
Some letters written to John Muir may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Transmission or reproduction
of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners.
Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Transcription:
Oakland, Oct. 2, 1870 Dear John Muir: I write as usual with the whip of neglected things suspended over me, but I must
tell you that Ned has gone to South America -- sails from Boston this week (probably on Tuesday) to join the Bolivian Commercial
and Colonization Company, Mr. A. D.Piper of San Francisco, Prest. Two years ago one Col. Church, well known in Washington
circles, got a grant or concession from Brazilian and Bolivian governments for the navigation of the waters of the upper Amazon,
and Mr. A. D. Piper then at LaPaz and in favor with the authorities, induced them to make a formal grant of sixty millions
of acres on the Purus in what is known as the Department of Beni--for American colonization. They have been slowly and carefully
collecting their colony, made up mostly in Boston and Providence, have purchased a good steamer, take out a cargo (private
owners), and will bring back Peruvian bark, cocoa, etc. They intend to make trips every two months. Ned went with Mrs. Piper,
wife of the Prest., and one Mr. Barry, an old Californian family from Monroe, Wis., who is employed by the company to select
farming lands. Expense 100, from Boston to Herndar City on the Purus, found -- time, inside of4 weeks, to Para (mouth of Amazon),
10-12 days, 1000 miles steaming on Amazon, 800 on Purus about ten more. John Turner (the boy who put his pick into the chloride
at Eberhardt or Keystone mine), and young Beckley, formerly from Madison, are the only persons I know of going from there
this trip. John goes to explore the gold fields of the Beni. I told Mrs. Piper (who goes to mother these two hundred young
men, with a good German woman for nurse and another for sempstress) of John Muir's qualifications to bless such a colony,
that he could invent anything from a churn to a cherub and she thought maybe you would like to go to the Andes for scenery
Soul , or somebody, has said you were really coming down. If so, we can talk things over. You will get first of all cheap
and comfortable passage to the heart of the Andes. If you join the company (no pledges are required of you) you have 320 acres
of land which you can locate anywhere on the grant not reserved for school purposes. I see from the Sacramento Union what
an evening you had at Mirror Lake Oh dear, dear Give my love to Mrs. Yelverton and Hutchings. Lots of Madison people here
now -- Mr. and Mrs. Proudfit, Mrs. Williams and daughter you may have seen. We are very busy eating our way through the County
Fairs, but I take time to covet your walks, and think of you very often. Waterstone gone within the week, after one of the
most considered and profitable summers I have known tourists to take.John is South Ameriky also, Al happy with nine birds
and a rabbit. We need a little squirrel in this house. Jeanne Carr.