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Letter to Mrs. Elizabeth Faries, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from Eunice B. Pearson, West
Chester, Pennsylvania, February 3, 1839
...I expect the fashionable ladies of the city are promenading in silk
dresses and shawls by this time as they take off cloaks as soon as
possible and even before it is proper. Eunice B. Pearson, West
Chester, Pennsylvania February 3, 1839
West Chester Feb. 3rd 1839
Dear Aunts
It is with pleasure I sit down this morning to write a few lines to those
who have always proved themselves warm and kind friends to me and to my
family. I often think I have been negligent in not writing to you
oftener but I have so many things to think about I have hardly time to
write to any body.
We have the strangest weather here I ever saw one day it is warm like
spring and the next as cold as winter I could not help smiling this
morning to see the girls dressing for meeting with cloaks, muffs, and
boas, so unlike last Sunday when all that had shawls had them on
yesterday was a beautiful day I had quite a pleasant walk through the
town in the afternoon, it was so warm that my cloak was quite oppressive
all the ladies were dressed for spring it is a much larger place than
I expected these are several churches, a bank, court house, a cabinet
of curiosities and several other public buildings. It seemed so queer to
see all the stores open as I have never been there before except on
Sunday to pass through as we go to meeting.
I have just returned from the dentist. I have had a tooth pulled I
thought I would try and wait untile I went home but I have had the tooth
so badly for two or three days. I could not stand it any longer. It was
a back tooth and very much decayed and I am glad it is out. Cousin
Sibilla said she would go with me if I would not want her to hold my head
but I told her she might trust to that. I think I never had a tooth
extracted with less pain
I expect the fashionable ladies of the city are promenading in silk
dresses and shawls by this time as they take off cloaks as soon as
possible and even before it is proper.
We have about 46 scholars now. we had 50 in the beginning of the term but
4 have gone away. I like the school very much and think if girls would
apply themselves they might acquire a handsome and liberal education, but
there are too many here of the opposite sort so they get their lessons
well enough to be allowed to go to lecture on Friday night that is all
they care for. I am studying Rhetoric, and like it pretty well but think
it is hard to remember the teachers seem to think it is of a great deal
of importance. We are required to get our lessons well or pay the
penalty which is to write 8 lines in a copy book for every error. Some
of the girls have 100, 150, and sometimes nearly 200 to write for errors.
They think it is not fair to make [them] stay from lecture Friday night
if they do miss. I tell them they would not learn their lessons at all
if it was not for that I have never been from lecture but once and then
I had the tooth ach[e] so badly I could not go. the lectures are to hold
four weeks longer which will be nearly the end of the term. The term
stops the second Thursday before I leave here. The girls have begun to
count the days already to the end of the term
How is Aunt Graces and your own health. I was thinking the other day
about you. Some part of the time it had been very cold and at other
times quite warm. I think I never saw so changeable a winter in my life
I suppose the Freshet did a great deal of damage in Philadelphia and New
York from the accounts received. It did not do much damage [here] as
there is not any stream nearer than two miles. Some of the girls were
away at the time and had a great many amusing accounts to tell when they
came back some of which I think must have been exaggerated, they seemed
too queer to be true.
They are very particular here about the manner of folding and directing
letters if they are not done nicely they will not let them go Some of
the girls never take any pains with them and sometimes get other girls to
direct them which is not allowed at all.
I received a letter from home yesterday. they were all well but I suppose
you hear oftener than I do they were up to see me about three weeks ago
I was very glad to see them not having sean any of my friends since I
came here
There is another girls school in West Chester. It is held by
stockholders I believe at any rate it is a public institution. It is a
much gayer school than this, we see them every Sunday going to church
they go to Presbyterian in the morning and Episcopal in the afternoon.
Some of our girls go to Episcopal those who go to Quaker Meeting in the
morning I do not know whether you got my other letter or not. I did
not know where to direct but thought I would risk your getting it when
I wrote that I neglected to enquire of you the number and must direct
this to the same way Give my love to Uncle Faries and all who ask for
me
Your affectionate niece
Eunice B. Pearson

Wishing you had an ancestor photograph? Check out the 1800s photographs and antique photo albums on Lost Faces. There are over 2,500 photos in this growing genealogy collection
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Submitter: Phillip F. Schlee E-
mail: schlee@ksu.edu Notes: Letter to Mrs. Elizabeth Faries, Vine St. between 10
and 11 St., Philadelphia, [Pennsylvania], from Eunice B. Pearson, West
Chester, Pennsylvania, February 3, 1839; from the Phillip F. Schlee
Collection.
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