Tags
The Minor Side, John Peirson (Pearson) Minor, John P. Minor, Abia Minor, Harriet Minor, Hannah McClelland Minor, Chicago Fire of 1871, Stock prices 1872

Abia Minor Writes Home, 1872
Sulivan Moultrie Co Ills
June 25th 1872
Dear Father I Received your kind letter dated the 5th June in reply I will Say we are all as well as usual The last I heard from Jacksonville Harriet was improving. *(1) I would have answered sooner But I was starting to Chicago with Some Sheep I Sold them for five cents they weghed 104 lbs Made me some money they cost me about 2 1/2 cts I have about 200 Sheep on hands my pastures is good about knee high Timothy When up I saw the Burt district *(2) and no one can discribe it nor can they discribe the improvements going on it look like anything But a City The Buildings going up are mutch better then the Old Ones We have a fine prospect for corn and oats wheat will be light grass is fine Stock is low cattle from 3 to 5 cents hogs 3 cts corn 38 cts If I could get a good lot of Sheep I would come to Pittsburg But they are hard to get what I mean by good ones are some that will weigh 120 oz upwards. I would like to hear from you often You will find endorsed my note with Mother Millers name Dated Back to the time you got the interest from Tompkins *(3) with these lines I reamain yours as ever Abia Minor.
*(1) Harriet is Abia’s second wife. Why she was a patient at Illinois Central Hospital for the Insane, Jacksonville, Illinois, is unknown.
*(2) Abia Minor, eldest son of John Pearson Minor and first wife Hannah McClelland, was a farmer taking his stock to Chicago. On this trip he witnessed the recovery efforts that followed the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 started, as a the folksong would have it, by ol’ Mrs. O’Leary’s cow. It raged from October 8 until extinguished by heavy rainfall on October 10. Seventeen thousand buildings of Old Chicago were destroyed, and 90,000 people were left homeless. Three hundred people lost their lives.
*(3) John P Minor lent money to relatives and friends, charging up to 10% interest. Each act was recorded with a note which detailed the loan and its terms. This references one such transaction.