2 Oct 1864
My Dear Sarah,
The trip to Gray Summit, although long and tiring, was uneventful, and I arrived in the late afternoon of the 2nd. I found the town as attractive as always, with the many quite prosperous businesses, and the homes and town well maintained. It would be difficult to find a finer town west of the Mississippi.
I was allowed to pen my sheep in the barn and bed down in the loft. Some of the finer residents were appalled that I would accept those accommodations, but they are a generation removed from the days that Missouri was a frontier and have become quite soft from living in town.
The valley was beginning to show the changing of the seasons as the trees in the hills where starting to paint their annual canvas with yellow, orange and red. The gardens were nearing the end of their productivity, as well as the grape arbor leading up to the Inn. Captain Smith’s Inn is as fine as any restaurant as I have visited in Saint Louis. The meals were of excellent quality with more than sufficient portions.
I hate to trouble you with news of the war, but Gray Summit has not escaped it’s wrath. Recent activities in the area have kept the residents cautious of strangers which have overrun the town. Some believe that these strangers are either stragglers or deserters of Price’s army, as he moved through the area in recent weeks. They are a sorry looking bunch of men, who you cannot but have sympathy. They are welcomed, but like a stray dog, you fear to befriend them because you rather have them move on.
I will sleep lightly tonight and will pull my ladder into the loft and sleep with a pistol under my pillow, for fear of what the strangers may do. I will write more tomorrow, but as I am exhausted from the trip, I will retire for now to my loft.
As always, your devoted and loving husband.
Grieves
AKA: Dan Hill
New Madrid Guards
My Dear Sarah,
The trip to Gray Summit, although long and tiring, was uneventful, and I arrived in the late afternoon of the 2nd. I found the town as attractive as always, with the many quite prosperous businesses, and the homes and town well maintained. It would be difficult to find a finer town west of the Mississippi.
I was allowed to pen my sheep in the barn and bed down in the loft. Some of the finer residents were appalled that I would accept those accommodations, but they are a generation removed from the days that Missouri was a frontier and have become quite soft from living in town.
The valley was beginning to show the changing of the seasons as the trees in the hills where starting to paint their annual canvas with yellow, orange and red. The gardens were nearing the end of their productivity, as well as the grape arbor leading up to the Inn. Captain Smith’s Inn is as fine as any restaurant as I have visited in Saint Louis. The meals were of excellent quality with more than sufficient portions.
I hate to trouble you with news of the war, but Gray Summit has not escaped it’s wrath. Recent activities in the area have kept the residents cautious of strangers which have overrun the town. Some believe that these strangers are either stragglers or deserters of Price’s army, as he moved through the area in recent weeks. They are a sorry looking bunch of men, who you cannot but have sympathy. They are welcomed, but like a stray dog, you fear to befriend them because you rather have them move on.
I will sleep lightly tonight and will pull my ladder into the loft and sleep with a pistol under my pillow, for fear of what the strangers may do. I will write more tomorrow, but as I am exhausted from the trip, I will retire for now to my loft.
As always, your devoted and loving husband.
Grieves
AKA: Dan Hill
New Madrid Guards
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