The Diaries of Ralph Leland Goodrich, 1859-1867
March
1, 1861
In
school. Pleasant day. John Green, [1]
one of my scholars, is very sick & is not expected to live. Down the street.
Got a letter from Austin. Reading, Mr. Mathews came over in the evening. Newton
[McConaughey] came. March
2, 1861
Wrote
a letter home and one to Mrs. Adams [in] Florida. Went down the street.
Afternoon, went to the [post] office & to Mr. Reardon’s. Evening, writing.
Mr. Mathews came over and we played dominoes. Talking afterwards with Mrs.
Syberg about seduction, &c. She
is a strange woman – fiery & headstrong, but is easily changed. Mrs.
McCullock says to her boys, “Stop your noise. Stop it this minute. I’ll cut
your ears off close to your head, I will.” Quite
a number of men here to attend the convention. [2]
Captain Churchill, [3]
one of the commissioners to get arms for the State, is here. [Christopher C.]
Danly, the other, writes from New York [City] & says the city is a Babylon. March
3, 1861
Rainy.
At Sunday school. At church. Communion. I staid but did not go up as I waited
for others & they did not. It was raining when over & I offered my
services & umbrella to Miss Gallagher. It was awfully muddy and rainy. We
went some distance when we met a negro with an umbrella for her. She said there
was one for her & called the boy & said it would save me the trouble to
go [any] farther. She was very much obliged. I came home. I was a fool not to go
on [with her]. Evening, at church. Tilla, Mr. [W. C.] Stout’s negro girl, was
married in church. Staid with Mr. Mathews & Mrs. Syberg. We went to Dr.
Wheat’s & had some supper & punch. Dr. [Wheat] was jolly. He said he
thought that Mr. Syberg’s statue of the Greek Slave should be dressed. March
4, 1861
Convention
meets. March
5, 1861
In
school. Rather cold. Evening, boys called Mrs. Syberg the old shit… March
6, 1861
Rather
cold. Held a consultation with the boys & they all denied that they used the
words to Mrs. Syberg. Mr. Mathews probably will sell me some land. Went down the
street. Got a letter from [my sister] Augusta. March
7, 1861
In
school. Went down the street. Convention, but nothing going on. March
8, 1861
Got
a complimentary invitation to go to the panorama – the same [one] I visited at
home with George Stratton (views on the Rhine & ascension of Mt. Blanc). [4] This
last week I had an emission and stained my drawers & Aunt Lucy saw it when
washing & told Mrs. Syberg. Aunt Lucy said I done something which she knew.
I asked her [what it was]. Mrs. Syberg said Aunt Lucy found it out when she
washed; my clothes bore the marks & Mrs. Syberg said I was quite a boy &
a “Lutherian.” Went to
the panorama. Saw Cam Watkins. Said Henry was going to leave his father. Said he
would engage me. Got a letter from [cousin] Annie Fiddis. Mrs. Igbey is a gay
bird. She knows, and is not ashamed to tell. She says I must be the Doctor when
the time comes for her cat to give birth. March
9, 1861
Been
making some tresses for plants. Mr. Mathews here a little while. Went down the
street. Afternoon, reading & writing. Evening, Newton [McConaughey] came. March
10, 1861
Pleasant.
At Sunday school. When I went into the library this morning, Dr. Wheat did not
raise his eyes or speak to me. At church, in the prayer for congress, Dr. Wheat
has changed it to one for the State & for the Convention here assembled.
Afternoon, went up to Governor Rector’s for Mrs. Syberg to find out when
Captain [Syberg] is coming. Did not see him. Reading. Evening, went to church.
Mr. Mathews came over and said that hot times were expected in the convention.
The secession party would go out anyhow. He said some more scholars were coming
tomorrow [and] wanted me to put on better clothes than I had been accustomed to
wear.
[1]
Probably John Green, age 13, the
son of Harriet Frances [Booker] Green (1819-1902) – a native of Kentucky. John’s father, Rev. Joshua Fry Green, died in August 1854. [2]
This convention was called to consider an ordinance for secession from the [3]
Captain
Thomas Churchill (1824-1905) was a Confederate major general during
the Civil War and would become the governor of Arkansas
in 1881. In 1861, he and his wife Ann Sevier became the proud parents of
Juliette Churchill who would grow up to become Goodrich’s third
wife. [4]
Wolfstenberger’s Panorama, billed as the “mirror of the world”, was
painted on two miles of canvas according to the [Little Rock] Arkansas Daily True Democrat of
9 March 1861. The [ |
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