LaSalle County
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1932 Stories

RELICS OF INTEREST

By Kathryn Chapman, Dist. 161

 There is much to be said of our ancestors who suffered so bravely as they helped make our country become what it is. We pupils should feel proud that we are able to honor them in some small way.

For over one hundred years our County of La Salle has made much progress in many ways. Our forefathers must have suffered much as they endured the many hardships before them. Still we like to hear about the first years they spent in this part of the country.

I have enjoyed seeing, and learning about old relics kept in the older homes. Some articles I was shown were made by the first settlers in this part of La Salle County. One was a navy-blue and white bedspread or coverlet which has been kept for over ninety-four years. It is still in very good condition. The pattern is a very beautiful one. Great skill is shown to be used by the makers. It is hard to believe that this spread was not made by some expensive machine similar to those used today. A white fringe sewed around the edge is torn, but the coverlet is very strong.

In the early days the girls were taught to spin and knit garments for the whole family. Often the young girls were busy making clothing to be worn during the cold winter months. The many labor-saving machines now used in La Salle County make much easier work and show much progress.

The yarn used to weave this spread was spun from pure carded wool in Orleans County, Kendal, New York by a twelve year old girl named Susan Nelson.

Susan was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nels Nelson who came to America from Norway on the ship "Restoration." This group set sail on July 4, 1825, and landed in New York October 9, 1825, a period of 97 days.

The "Restoration" was a three-mast sailing vessel weighing forty tons, and carried fifty three passengers.

The bedspread which I write about was woven by an aged lady known in Orleans county, New York, as Grandma Greene. She wove articles for a livelihood.

There was much to the art of spinning by hand. The carded wool was spun into strands, measured, wound into balls, and colored. After having completed these processes, it could be knitted or woven. Much of the clothing used was not colored.

The spinning wheel which Miss Nelson used is kept as a relic in the home of her daughter, my teacher's mother. The frame still stands and could be used with good results if one wished to.

At the age of twenty years, Susan Nelson, with her parents and other members of the family came from New York to Illinois and settled in Miller township. In 1850 she was married to Charles Donelson. After living in Dayton for a short time, they resided in Ottawa, Illinois until 1853. At that place Mr. Donelson worked as a wagon builder. Later they moved to their farm situated two and one-half miles northeast of Seneca, where they lived the rest of their lives.

Other relics I have seen beside the spinning wheel and the bedspread are a spool rack and a book of songs.

The spool rack is well made of hard polished wood. It was given to Mrs. Donelson when she was a child at the age of five years. It has been kept exactly one hundred one years. Now it is considered an article of real importance.

The book of songs copied by this same person is dated January 19, 1845 at which time she was nineteen years old and was attending a night singing school for young folks. Some of the songs included are: "Cold Water Army," "All is Weil," "New Missionary Hymn," "The True Yankee Sailor," "Come, Come Away," "The Orphan Girl," and "Independence Day." I am sure these young folks enjoyed learning such songs which perhaps were some of the best numbers because many are the same ones printed in song books now.

It is very interesting to learn much about old relics. They are lasting because they were made of the best material and by great workmen. The lives of the people are so much like the old relics because they are not forgotten after we learn something great about them. Let us always honor our parents and ancestors by trying to do only the good in the best way we can.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 06 Jun 2015 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 79.


Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 79.


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