JAMES C. CHRISTIE AND FAMILY:
An Inventory of Their Papers
| | |
|
|
| Creator: | Christie, James C.,
1811-1890. |
| Title: | James C. Christie and family
papers. |
| Date: | undated and 1823,
1835-1949. |
| Abstract: | Correspondence, diaries,
writings, clippings, printed matter, and other papers documenting in rich
detail several generations of the James Christie family of Dodge County,
Wisconsin; Rapidan Township, Blue Earth County, Minnesota; and Stevens County,
Washington. |
| Quantity: | 18.5 cu. ft. (47 boxes; 3
microfilm reels; and 1 oversize folder). |
| Location: | P1281 and M539: See Detailed Description section for box
locations. |
Return to the Table of Contents
James C.
Christie, a Scotsman from Dundee, was born September 29, 1811 the son of
Janet Smith (1790-1872) and William Christie (1786-1819). He worked in Sion
Mills, County Tyrone, Ireland as a master spinner and emigrated with his family
to the United States in 1846. He had two brothers: William, Jr. (1813-1889) and
Alexander (1818-1857). After his father's death his mother married Alexander
Bartie (1801-1884), who worked in the power looms at Dundee. They had two
children: Jessie (1824-1914) and David Smith (1827-1879). James had
little formal education and educated himself through reading in many subjects.
He entered into a betrothal contract with Elizabeth Gilchrist in 1829 and they
had two children: William Gilchrist (December 18, 1830) and Mary (April 1832).
Soon after Mary's birth Elizabeth died. Mary died at the age of eighteen
months. Both are buried in the Logie Kirkyard in Scotland. After Mary's
death James went to Ireland to work in the flax mills, leaving his son,
William, with his grandmother in Scotland. In Ireland James met and married
Elizabeth "Eliza" Reid (1818-1850). They had six children: two sons who died in
infancy, both named Alexander; Thomas Davidson (1843-1921); Sarah Jane
(1844-1919); Alexander Smith (1846-1933); and David Bertie (1848-1920). Eliza
Christie died in 1850, unable to deliver her seventh child. In 1853 James
married Persis Noyes (1807-1887). James' two brothers, Alexander and
William, emigrated to the United States in the 1840s and found employment as
machinists. During the winter season they worked in Cuba, operating machines
used in the sugar cane fields. In 1846 they sent for the James Christie family
in Ireland and the Alexander Bartie family in Scotland, which included Jessie;
her husband, James Aimer; their daughter, Mary Bell; and the Barties' son,
David. These families also emigrated to the United States, eventually settling
near each other in Clyman Township, Dodge County, Wisconsin. James
Christie farmed in Clyman, Wisconsin from 1846 to 1868. After 1868 he and his
son, David, moved to Rapidan Township, Blue Earth County, Minnesota. They
continued to farm there until 1886, after which they moved to Bridger's Canyon,
Montana where David established a sheep ranch. James Christie died on January
13, 1890.
William Gilchrist
Christie, son of James Christie and Elizabeth Gilchrist, was born
December 18, 1830 in Dundee, Scotland. He remained with his grandmother in
Scotland after his mother's death in 1832; rejoining his father and stepmother
in Ireland in 1840. During 1846 he came with his family to the United States
and went to Wisconsin with his father and his uncle, David Bartie. By 1856 he
was farming in Olmsted County, Minnesota. In 1861 he sold his farm and enlisted
with his brother, Thomas, in the Minnesota Artillery, 1st Battery of Light
Artillery in which they served until 1865. He was taken prisoner after the
battle of Bentonville (North Carolina) in March 1865. On December 30, 1865 he
married his cousin, Mary Bell Aimer. In February 1866 he bought farm land near
St. Charles, Winona County, Minnesota. He and Mary had eleven children. The
diphtheria epidemic of 1880 claimed the lives of three of their sons; a
daughter died of the same disease in 1901. William G. Christie died on
September 19, 1901 and Mary B. Christie died on December 12, 1927.
Sarah Jane Christie, daughter of James Christie and Eliza
Reid, was born in Sion Mills, County Tyrone, Ireland in 1844. Her education at
Fox Lake Seminary (Fox Lake, Wisconsin) was in part paid for by her brothers,
William and Thomas, while they were serving in the Civil War. She graduated in
1863, after which she taught school in nearby communities. In 1873 she was
teaching German and English literature at Carleton College (Northfield,
Minnesota). From 1875 to 1877 she taught at Wheaton College (Wheaton,
Illinois). In 1890 she was elected superintendent of schools of Blue Earth
County, Minnesota. During 1879 Sarah married William Long Stevens
(1825-1914), a widower with four children: Buell V. (1857-1935), Estella B.
(1858-), Francis W. (1860-), and Charles Edwin (1862-1924). They lived on his
farm near Rapidan, Minnesota and had two daughters: Elizabeth "Bessie" Reid
(1880-1961) and Mary Jewett (1885-1903). Sarah Christie Stevens died in 1919 in
Minneapolis.
Alexander Smith Christie was
born July 9, 1846 in Sion Mills, County Tyrone, Ireland. He was the third son
of James and Eliza Christie to bear that name, the first two Alexanders both
having died in infancy. When he was one month old his family came to the United
States. He spent his early life on the family's farm in Wisconsin. In 1865 he
joined Company A of the 2nd Regiment of Minnesota Infantry. After the Civil War
ended Alexander attended Beloit College (Beloit, Wisconsin) (1867) and the
University of Wisconsin (1872). He taught school in Wisconsin and Minnesota
before he entered Harvard University (1876-1879) where he studied under
mathematician Benjamin Pierce. In 1879 he obtained a position with the United
States Coastal Survey. In 1887 he was appointed head of the Tidal Division of
the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey in Washington, D.C.; he was
dismissed from the survey in 1893. He spent the next five years in Minnesota,
Montana, and Arkansas. In 1898 he left for Alaska, returning to the continental
United States in 1901. The rest of his life was spent in Montana, California,
and Washington, D.C. Alexander S. Christie never married. He died in 1933 in
Washington, D.C.
David Bertie Christie's
biographical sketch can be found in the inventory to the David B. Christie and
family correspondence, 1871-1933, cataloged separately.
Thomas Davidson Christie's biographical sketch can be
found in the inventory to the Thomas and Carmelite Christie and family papers,
1843-1975, cataloged separately.
Return to the Table of Contents
The James C.
Christie and family papers document the history of three families: Christie,
Stevens, and Monahan. This collection consist largely of chronologically
arranged family correspondence and other papers of the entire Christie family,
including James Christie's children: Sarah, Alexander, Thomas, and David and
Sarah's children and step-children: Buell V. Estella B., Frank W., Charles
Edwin, Elizabeth Reid, and Mary Jewett. The collection also includes volumes,
essays, newspaper clippings, printed materials, deeds, broadsides, programs,
maps, commercial calling cards, cotillion programs, invitations, diaries,
notebooks, account books, memorandum books, school registers, and a hotel
register from Mankato, Minnesota. This collection includes Thomas' and
David's correspondence until the time they each married. Thereafter, separate
manuscript collections exist for each of them: the Thomas and Carmelite
Christie and family papers, 1843-1975, and the David B. Christie and family
correspondence, 1871-1933, respectively. The letters by James to his son
Thomas, while Thomas was in Turkey, are missing until 1884 after which they
appear in quantity. Alexander's correspondence with his nieces and nephews
continues in each family series. The materials dating from 1835 to 1879
were generated chiefly by James Christie, his children, and other Christie
relatives, with a few William Stevens items appearing in 1850. With the
marriage of Sarah Christie to William Stevens in 1879, a concentration of
Stevens family correspondence begins, while the Christie letters continue. In
1905 Elizabeth Stevens married Robert Hugh Monahan, introducing a third family
line. However, there is relatively little from the Monahans and a great deal
from the Christies and Stevens'. The bulk of the letters date from 1860 to
1930. There is a sizeable subseries of Buell V. Stevens correspondence
written during the time in which he worked as a railroad passenger car
conductor, railroad office clerk, traveling dry goods salesman, rancher, and
farmer (1879-1935). The bulk of the Buell's correspondence consists of the
exchanges between himself and his stepmother, Sarah, his brother, Frank, and
his sisters, Elizabeth and Estella. The subseries also includes a great deal of
correspondence received by Buell from friends in Iowa and Minnesota.
The Christie family members were articulate observers, and their letters
reflect social, religious, economic, and political conditions, both in the
United States and abroad, for nearly one hundred years.
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| The Thomas and Carmelite Christie and
family papers, 1843-1975, are available in the Minnesota Historical Society
manuscript collections, catalogued separately. |
| The David B. Christie and
family correspondence, 1871-1933, is available in the Minnesota Historical
Society manuscript collections, catalogued separately. |
| Some family
photographs are located in the Minnesota Historical Society sound and visual
collections. |
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| More information on the Christie and related families is
available in the genealogy folder at the beginning of Box 1 of the papers.
Family sketches (Christie, Reid, Stevens, and Smith) have been written to
clarify the relationship between various family branches. The folder also
contains genealogical charts compiled by the cataloger. The information in
these sketches and charts has been drawn from the papers, from family records,
and from death certificates. |
| A group of data sheets contain information
on the contents of each folder in the Christie and Stevens family chronological
correspondence. Subjects and authors are noted, as well as individual letters
of particular interest. A separate summary sheet was prepared relating the
families' activities during that period and listing major correspondence
subjects. The data sheets are filed in Box 40. |
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
| This collection is indexed under the following headings in the
catalog of the Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials
about related topics, persons or places should search the catalog using these
headings. |
| Topics: |
| | Agriculture--Minnesota--Blue Earth
County. |
| | Agriculture--Wisconsin--Dodge
County. |
| | Armenians--Missions--Turkey--Tarsus. |
| | Baptists--Missions. |
| | Bee culture. |
| | Butter trade--Minnesota--Blue Earth
County. |
| | Egg trade--Minnesota--Blue Earth County. |
| | Elementary school teachers. |
| | Folk
medicine--Minnesota. |
| | Grasshopper plagues,
1873-1877--Minnesota. |
| | Indians of North
America--Education. |
| | Indians of North
America--Montana--Reservations. |
| | Indians of North
America--Rites and ceremonies. |
| | Locusts--Minnesota. |
| | Medicine--Minnesota. |
| | Meteorology--Minnesota--Fort
Ridgely--Observations. |
| | Missionaries--Turkey--Tarsus. |
| | Mining claims--Arkansas. |
| | Mining
claims--Washington. |
| | Northfield (Minn.)--Bank robbery,
1876. |
| | School discipline--Minnesota. |
| | Scottish-Irish Americans. |
| | Steamboats--Minnesota--Big
Stone Lake (Minn. and S.D.). |
| | Storms--Minnesota. |
| | Temperance--United States--Societies, etc. |
| | Traveling sales personnel--Middle West. |
| | Women
college teachers--Minnesota. |
| | Women in medicine. |
| | Women--Societies and clubs. |
| | Women--Suffrage--Minnesota. |
| Places: |
| | Alaska--Description and travel. |
| | Beltrami County (Minn.). |
| | Blue Earth County
(Minn.). |
| | Boone County (Ark.). |
| | Crow
Indian Reservation (Mont.). |
| | Ireland--Description and
travel--1801-1900. |
| | Rapidan (Blue Earth County,
Minn.). |
| | Scotland--Description and
travel. |
| | Stevens County (Wash.). |
| | United
States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Campaigns. |
| | United
States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Participation,
African-Americans. |
| Persons: |
| | Breck, F. P. |
| | Brown, John H. |
| | Christie, Alexander S. |
| | Christie, David B., 1848-1920. |
| | Christie
family. |
| | Christie, Thomas. |
| | Christie,
William Gilchrist, 1830-1901. |
| | Gerrish, Myrtle
A. |
| | Hall, Estella Stevens, 1858-. |
| | Monahan, Elizabeth Stevens, 1880-1961. |
| | Monahan,
Robert Hugh, 1870-1947. |
| | Oberholtzer, Ernest Carl,
1884-1977. |
| | Peckham, A. Frank (Augustus Frank),
-1920. |
| | Petter, May Lucretia, -1952. |
| | Stevens, Buell V., 1857-1935. |
| | Stevens, Francis
W.1860-. |
| | Stevens, Sarah Christie, 1844-1919. |
| | Stevens, William Long, 1825-1914. |
| | Valesh, Eva
McDonald, 1865-1956. |
| Organizations: |
| | Andover Seminary (Andover,
Mass.). |
| | Beloit College. |
| | Blue Earth
County (Minn.). School District No. 79 (Rapidan : Township). |
| | Carlton College (Northfield, Minn.). |
| | Chicago,
Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company. |
| | Fox Lake College
(Fox Lake, Wis.). |
| | Hamline University (St. Paul,
Minn.). |
| | Mankato State Teachers College. |
| | Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway
Company. |
| | Minnesota Sunday School Association. |
| | St. Paul's Institute (Tarsus, Turkey). |
| | U.S. Coast
and Geodetic Survey. |
| | United States. Army. Minnesota Light
Artillery, Battery 1st, 1861-1865. |
| | United States. Army.
Minnesota Light Artillery, Battery 2nd, 1861-1865. |
| | Wheaton
College (Wheaton, Ill.). |
| | Wisconsin Female College (Fox
Lake, Wis.). |
| Types of
Documentation: |
| | Diaries. |
| | Genealogies. |
| | Meteorological records. |
Return to the Table of Contents
| | |
|
|
Provenance Note The Christie Family
Papers are composed of three separate collections (P1281, P1282, P1283) of
letters and other papers from several generations of the Christie family. The
Christie papers were originally given to the Minnesota Historical Society in
1965 by a descendent of Sarah Christie Stevens (1844-1919), and were cataloged
as a single collection. As more additions were received, the single collection
was divided into three: the papers of James, Thomas, and David.
| Preferred
Citation: |
| | [Indicate the cited item and/or
series here]. James C. Christie and Family Papers. Minnesota Historical
Society. |
| | See the Chicago Manual of Style for
additional examples. |
| Accession
Information: |
| | Accession number: 9,920; 11,836; 11,841; 11,904; 11,983;
11,984; 11,985; 11,957; 11,958; 11,959; 11,962; 11,963; 12,054; 12,074; 12,110;
12,121; 12,138; 12,442; 13,255; 14,860; 15,918 |
| Processing Information: |
| | Processed by: Bonnie
Beatson Palmquist, January 1992; Lynn Leitte, October 1999 and October 2002 |
| | PALS ID number: 900038527 RLIN ID: MNHV94-A492 |
Return to the Table of Contents
Note to
Researchers: To request materials, please note both the location and box
numbers shown below.
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Correspondence: The Christie
Period, 1823-1879
|
| The papers begin in 1823
with manuscript poems and jump to 1835 with the confirmation certificate of
Elizabeth Reid. There are letters exchanged by Eliza and James Christie while
she was in Scotland and he was in Ireland. In 1846 Eliza and her children were
living with her brother, Robert Reid, in Connecticut while James was clearing
land and building a cabin in Wisconsin during which James wrote of his
struggles to become established on the frontier. There are only a few items
written during the 1840s and 1850s, including a speech on spiritualism (1852)
by James Christie and an anonymous essay on slavery (ca. 1859). |
| The
Civil War years (1861-1865) provide letters from William, Thomas, and Alexander
Christie during their service with the Minnesota Artillery. Included are
descriptions of St. Louis, Missouri, and Washington, D.C.; camp life; the
battles of Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Atlanta; the character of the South; a visit
to a munitions factory; transportation; and William's capture and release.
Because of their popularity, these items have been microfilmed. Researchers may
use the microfilm; the originals (boxes A and B) are closed to general use .
|
| During this period Sarah wrote of her school costs and daily
assignments at Fox Lake Seminary (Fox Lake, Wisconsin) while David and
Alexander wrote about local people. In the winter of 1865-1866 the four
Christie brothers traveled to Minnesota to find new farmland. Their letters to
their father describe their journey and the land available to buy. A newspaper
account by Alexander of this journey was published in 1897 and can be found in
volume 29 (Box 40) in the collection. |
| For the remainder of this period
(1866-1879) there is information on Sarah's teaching career and those of her
friends from Fox Lake Seminary; her abortive career as a dressmaker in Beloit
(1869); her career at Carleton College (1873-1875) where she taught German and
English literature; her teaching experiences at Wheaton College (1875-1877);
the grasshopper infestation (1873-1877); the temperance movement; Sarah's
friendship with and marriage to William L. Stevens; and her friendship with A.
A. Veblen of Northfield, Minnesota. The correspondence also describes student
life at the University of Minnesota through letters to Sarah by her friend,
Chelsea J. Rockwood. |
| Alexander wrote of his education at Beloit College
(1867), the University of Wisconsin (1872), and Harvard University (1876-1877);
his struggles to earn his way with teaching and tutoring positions; his
mathematics studies; his fruitless application for a position at Wheaton
College (1876); and his successful application for a job with the United States
Coast and Geodetic Survey (1878). |
| Thomas Christie's experiences at the
University of Wisconsin (1866), Beloit College (1866-1871), and Andover
Seminary (1874-1877) are described, as is his work as a book salesman, his
courtship and marriage (1866), and his residence in Turkey as a representative
(1877-1920) of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. |
| In addition to the above subjects, Alexander, Thomas, and Sarah wrote to
each other during this period about the various schools they had attended or in
which they were teaching. They discuss discipline, wages, and the subjects
taught. |
| James Christie and his sons, William and David, wrote of farming
practices, including information on crops and yields, prices received for
crops, and the grasshopper plague (1873-1877). Weather being such an important
factor in a farmer's life, there are numerous mentions of blizzards (1875),
tornadoes (1871), hailstorms (1879), floods (1879), and snowstorms (1865). |
| Folk medicine and illnesses, a cataract operation (1869), abortion (1868,
1873), and epidemics of typhoid fever are reported, as well as the prescription
of medicine by Sarah Christie Stevens, who possessed some medical knowledge.
James Christie and his sons, William, Thomas, and Alexander, exchanged long
letters on religion, spiritualism, and infant baptism. There is correspondence
between James and his niece, Helen Christie, about her conversion to
Catholicism. |
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | A |
Civil war correspondence, 1861 - June 1864.RESTRICTED use M539
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | B |
Civil war
correspondence, 1861-1866. RESTRICTED use M539
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 1 |
Genealogy, undated.
|
| |
Francis W. Stevens, "A Sketch" (historical), undated.
|
| |
Correspondence, undated and 1823, 1835 -
1860.
|
| | | The undated correspondence is
separated by authors, with an additional folder of fragments and letters from
miscellaneous authors. |
| Location | Box |
| M539 | 1 |
Correspondence, May
1861 - April 1862.1 microfilm reel.
|
| Location | Box |
| M539 | 2 |
Correspondence, May 1863 - February 1864. 1
microfilm reel.
|
| Location | Box |
| M539 | 3 |
Correspondence, 1865. 1 microfilm reel.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 2 |
Correspondence, May
1865 - February 1868.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 3 |
Correspondence,
March 1868 - December 1870.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 4 |
Correspondence,
January 1871 - March 1873.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 5 |
Correspondence,
April 1873 - July 1875.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 6 |
Correspondence,
August 1875 - July 1877.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 7 |
Correspondence,
August 1877 - March 1879.
|
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Organization of the Collection Section
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Correspondence: The Stevens Period, 1878-1949
|
| Much of the correspondence of this period was carried on by
Sarah Christie Stevens or was channeled through her. Throughout her life Sarah
maintained her interest in education and was especially concerned about the
education of her four stepchildren--Buell, Estella, Francis, and Charles--and
her two daughters, Elizabeth and Mary. She was elected county superintendent of
schools of Blue Earth County, Minnesota in 1890 and remained active in school
and church education. During this time she was also active in the temperance
and women's suffrage movements and corresponded with social activist Eva
McDonald Valesh. Several letters (1889) deal with the subject of abortion. She
operated a butter (1886-1889) and egg (1902-1905) business from the farm in
Rapidan, Minnesota. During 1903-1919 she was interested in land promotion
ventures throughout the United States. |
| Thomas Christie wrote of his
missionary work in Turkey (1877-1920) and his travels in Ireland, Scotland, the
Orient, and the United States. He wrote of his relations with the Turkish
government, and the attendant problems of the Armenian minority, plagues, and
uprisings. |
| Alexander Christie wrote of his work for the United States
Coast and Geodetic Survey (1878-1893) and his efforts to be reinstated after
his dismissal. He comments on life in Washington, D.C. and his long friendships
with Minnesota politician and diplomat John Lind, and with H. Conrad Bierwirth
of Harvard University. After teaching in Montana, he left in 1898 for the
Alaskan gold fields and returned in 1901. He also describes a cross-country
bicycle trip from Washington, D.C. |
| Of William G. Christie's letters only
those to his father, brothers, and sisters have been located. He wrote to his
father of his farm, crops and yields, and the deaths of his four children. In
1897 he began a series of letters containing information on the family's early
life in Scotland, Ireland, and Wisconsin. |
| One of the significant
correspondents in the Stevens family was Buell V. Stevens, who wrote of his
experiences as a railroad conductor and clerk for the Minneapolis, St. Paul and
Sault St. Marie Railway and for the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway;
as a traveling salesman for various firms (1881-1907); and entrepenuer
(1901-1907). The correspondence reflects his efforts to secure and maintain
commissioned sales positions with dry goods firms in the Midwest (1880-1890s);
a short lived attempt to operate his own dry goods warehouse, McDonnel and
Stevens Drygoods (1885); his attempts to establish a grocery store in central
Minnesota (1901); business and investing partnerships with his brother, Frank
(1887-1900); and land ownership in Boone County, Arkansas (ca. 1916-1935).
Buell eventually lived with his sister, Estella "Stella" Hall, in Indio,
California, where they operated a fig and date farm (1913-1917). Buell's
correspondence reflects his friendships with Myrtle "Myrta" A. Gerrish (neé
Chamberlain), A. Frank Peckham, May "Mae" Lucretia Petter (neé Scofield), and
Myra E. Van Dersal (neé Kling), F. P. Breck, and his ties to his siblings
particularly Bessie, Stella, and Frank. Buell V. Stevens died in Puente,
California on August 1, 1935. |
| Estella B. Hall (neé Stevens) lived in
Minnesota, Washington, and California. Her 1879 correspondence indicates that
she was engaged to "Mr. K," but called off the engagement in May 1879, shortly
before it was rumored that he was killed in a railroad accident, though it also
cites that she married Jefferson Kincaid of Minneapolis, Minnesota in the fall
of 1879. They attempted to settle a claim of 160 acres in Grant County, Dakota
Territory during 1880. In the spring of 1885 she married Andrew Jackson of
Ortonville, Minnesota with whom she lived in Paynesville, Minnesota and later
Washington. In 1897 she wrote of his abuses and drunkenness; shortly after
(1898), she left him and took a job in the Eastern Washington Hospital for the
Insane (Medical Lake, Washington). Estella married her third husband, John F.
Hall of Boundary, Washington, in fall of 1899. John Hall died in a mining
accident in 1903. Throughout the correspondence Estella wrote about her family;
school teaching; mining and ranching; her employment at the hospital; her life
in Washington (ca.1895-1911); the death of her third husband; the ongoing
lawsuits brought against her over the estate of John Hall by his first wife,
Anna Hall; her plans once the estate was settled; and her daughter Elizabeth
"Elsie". The lawsuits filed over Hall's estate were not settled until December
1905. Elsie Jackson married Richard Lattimore on April 25, 1906. |
| Francis
"Frank" Stevens wrote of his residence with Thomas Christie in Turkey
(1880-1881) and his travels in Washington, Oregon, and other parts of the
United States. He taught school in Montana, Oregon, and Washington. There is a
continuous thread of correspondence between Frank and Buell that covers nearly
a twenty-year period. |
| Elizabeth "Bessie" Stevens attended the state
normal school in Mankato and taught school briefly before she enrolled in the
medical school of Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota in 1902. There she
met Robert Hugh Monahan, who was also a medical student. They were married on
September 26, 1905 and graduated from Hamline in 1906. She wrote of her studies
at Hamline, student life, her courtship, and marriage. Her later letters
concern her work with her husband in the Northern Minnesota Hospital
Association in Blackduck and International Falls, Minnesota. |
| Letters by
Charles Edwin Stevens, who signs his letters both as "Charles" and "Ed," are
relatively infrequent in comparison to those of his siblings. He married
Margaret in 1889 and ranched in Daisy, Washington. Charles died in Los Angeles,
California in 1924. There are only a few letters to and from Mary Jewett
Stevens, who died at the age of 18. |
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 8 |
Correspondence,April 1879 - December
1880.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 9 |
Correspondence, January - December 1881.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 10 |
Correspondence,
January 1882 - June 1883.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 11 |
Correspondence,July 1883 - July
1884.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 12 |
Correspondence, August 1884 - May 1886.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 13 |
Correspondence,
June 1886 - October 1887.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 14 |
Correspondence,November 1887 - May
1889.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 15 |
Correspondence, June
1889 - November 1890.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 16 |
Correspondence,
December 1890 - April 1892.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 17 |
Correspondence,May 1892 - May
1894.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 18 |
Correspondence, June 1894 - August
1896.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 19 |
Correspondence, September 1896 - December 1897.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 20 |
Correspondence,
January 1898 - August 1899.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 21 |
Correspondence,September 1899 - March
1901.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 22 |
Correspondence, April 1901 - August 1902.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 23 |
Correspondence,
September 1902 - September 1904.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 24 |
Correspondence,October 1904 - January
1906.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 25 |
Correspondence, February 1906 - November 1907.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 26 |
Correspondence,
December 1907 - February 1911.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 27 |
Correspondence,March 1911 - December
1914.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 28 |
Correspondence, January 1915 - August 1916.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 29 |
Correspondence,
September 1916 - April 1918.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 30 |
Correspondence,May 1918 - 1949.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 31 |
Buell V. Stevens correspondence, 1879-1935:
|
| | |
[?], Ella,1890.
|
| | |
[?],
Flossie, 1884-1885.
|
| | |
[?], Libbie, 1881-1882.
|
| | |
A. Ellinger & Co., Manufacturers of Cloaks and Suits (Chicago,
Illinois),1885.
|
| | |
American Express Company shipping receipts,
1887-1888.
|
| | |
Andrew, C. A., 1895-1896.
|
| | |
Arthur, Warren & Abbott Notions (St. Paul,
Minnesota),1891.
|
| | |
Belding Brothers & Co., Silk Manufacturers
(Chicago, Illinois), 1884,
1898.
|
| | |
Bowles, George R.,
1898-1899.
|
| | |
Breck, F. P., 1885-1894.
|
| | |
Broadhead Worsted Mills (Jamestown, New York),
1891-1893.
|
| | |
Brown, John H., 1916-1935.
|
| | | | Mr. Brown
resides in International Falls, Minnesota. The bulk of the exchanges between
Mr. Brown and Mr. Stevens pertains to the lands in Boone County, Arkansas.
|
| | |
Brown Shoe Company (St.
Louis, Missouri), 1895-1899.
|
| | |
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway,1885-1901.
|
| | | | Largely business correspondence about Mr. Stevens'
positions as clerk and conductor for the railway. Frequent correspondents are:
A. J. Underwood and W. M. Kellie. |
| | |
Christie, Alexander Smith, 1880-1895.
|
| | |
Clark, Emma, 1879-[1894?].
|
| | |
Clerical Cooperative Company (Cincinnati, Ohio),
1895.
|
| | |
Cole, Clara B., 1882-1903.
|
| | |
Detective Mining Company (Minneapolis, Minnesota) stock
certificates, 1888-1889.
|
| | |
Fairchild, Clara M.,
1882-1886.
|
| | |
Flanagan, Agnes E., 1889-1890.
|
| | |
Forman, George M., 1899-1906.
|
| | |
Fuller, Helen B., 1884-1887.
|
| | |
Gay
Brothers & Company (New York, New York), 1895.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 32 | |
Gerrish
(neé Chamberlain), Myrtle "Myrta" A., 1890-1897. 2 folders.
|
| | |
Grayston, W. E., 1892-1893.
|
| | |
H. H. King & Co., Grain Commission
Millers' Agents (Minneapolis, Minnesota), 1892-1894.
|
| | |
Harris, Jno. W., 1886-1887.
|
| | |
Hennepin Steam Laundry (Minneapolis, Minnesota)
receipts,1887-1891.
|
| | |
Hall (neé Stevens), Estella "Stella" B. and John
F.,1899-1918.
|
| | | | For correspondence with Stella dating prior to July
1899, see: Jackson (neé Stevens), Estella "Stella" B. |
| | |
Iowa State Traveling Men's Association (Des
Moines, Iowa), 1895-1905.
|
| | |
Jackson (neé Stevens), Estella "Stella"
B.,1879-1899.
|
| | | | For correspondence with Stella dating after July 1899,
see: Hall (neé Stevens), Estella "Stella" B. and John H. |
| | |
Lamson, Minnie May "Mignon,"1888-1890.
|
| | |
Lind, John, 1896-1899.
|
| | |
M.
Gimbel & Sons, Wholesale Hatters and Manufacturers of Gloves (Chicago,
Illinois), 1894.
|
| | |
Merrill, Mrs. C. M., 1882.
|
| | |
Merrill,
Grace, 1900-1901.
|
| | |
Miller, R. J., 1881.
|
| | |
Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway,
1889-1898.
|
| | | | Largely business correspondence about Mr. Stevens' positions
as clerk and conductor for the railway. Frequent correspondents are: F. D.
Underwood, W. M. Kellie, and Jonathan G. Taylor. |
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 33 | |
Minor,
Nellie B.,1880-1886.
|
| | |
Monahan (neé Stevens), Elizabeth "Bessie" Reid
and Robert Hugh, 1907-1931.
|
| | | | For
correspondence with Bessie prior to 1907, see: Stevens, Elizabeth "Bessie"
Reid. |
| | |
Nimmons, George R.,
1885, 1895.
|
| | |
Patterson & Stevenson, Importers, Manufacturers, and
Jobbers of Hats, Caps, Gloves & Mittens (Minneapolis, Minnesota),
1895-1901.
|
| | |
Peckham, A. Frank, 1888-1901. 2
folders.
|
| | |
Petter (neé Scofield),
May "Mae" Lucretia,1885-1897.
2 folders.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 34 | |
Petter (neé
Scofield), May "Mae" Lucretia, 1885-1897.
|
| | |
R.
B. Tomlinson & Son, Wholesale Dealers in Hats, Caps, Gloves and Mittens
(Minneapolis, Minnesota), 1893-1895.
|
| | |
Rausch, F. W. / Bedford Business College and Shorthand
Institute (Bedford, Indiana), 1895.
|
| | |
Reid,
Thomas, 1895-1906.
|
| | |
Robideaux, Libbi, 1889-[1890?].
|
| | |
Rucker, Howard L. / University of Commerce and Finance
(Minneapolis, Minnesota), 1894-1895.
|
| | |
S.
H. Wood Produce Co., Stock and Grain Brokers (Minneapolis, Minnesota),
1893-1896.
|
| | | | Letterhead also cites the company name as: S. H. Wood Produce
Co., Grain, Provisions, Stocks and Produce (1893-1894); S. H. Wood & Co.,
Grain, Provisions, Stocks and Produce (1894); Wood & Co., Grain Brokers
(1895); Wood & Co., Grain Commission (1895); and Wood Grain Commission
Company (1896). |
| | |
Shelby
Farmers' Mutual Insurance Company (Myrna, Minnesota), 1892.
|
| | |
Smith, W. B., 1916-1917.
|
| | |
[Stam, Cal W.?] C. W. S., 1884-1886.
|
| | |
Stevens, Charles Edwin, 1885-1896.
|
| | |
Stevens, Elizabeth "Bessie" Reid, 1887-1905.
|
| | | | For
correspondence with Bessie dating after 1906, see: Monahan (neé Stevens),
Elizabeth "Bessie" Reid and Robert Hugh. |
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 35 | |
Stevens,
Elizabeth "Bessie" Reid, 1887-1905.
|
| | | | For
correspondence with Bessie dating after 1906, see: Monahan (neé Stevens),
Elizabeth "Bessie" Reid and Robert Hugh. |
| | |
Stevens, Francis "Frank" W., 1881-1906. 4 folders.
|
| | |
Stevens, Frank T.,1880-1881, 1906.
|
| | |
Stevens, Libbi, 1891.
|
| | |
Stevens, Mary Jewett,
1900-1903.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 36 | |
Stevens, Sarah Jane Christie, 1879-1919. 5
folders.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 37 | |
Stevens, Sarah Jane Christie, 1879-1919. 6
folders.
|
| | |
Stevens, William Long,
1878-1913. 2
folders.
|
| | |
Van Dersal (neé
Kling), Myra E., undated and 1879-1882.
2 folders.
|
| | |
W. L. Pettit & Company, Wholesale Jewelers (Minneapolis,
Minnesota), 1891-1892.
|
| | |
Wallace, W. A., 1892-1894.
|
| | |
Wareham, Leo, 1881-1887.
|
| | |
Western Business Agency (Minneapolis, Minnesota),
1892-1893.
|
| | |
Wyman, Mullin & VanDyke,Wholesale Drygood and Notions
(Minneapolis, Minnesota), 1881-1885.
|
| | | | Later: Wyman,
Mullin & VanDyke, Importers and Jobbers of Drygood, Notions & C.
[sic] |
| | |
Wyman, Parridge &
Company, Wholesale Drygoods (Minneapolis, Minnesota), 1892-1898.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 39 | |
Miscellaneous correspondence, undated and 1879-1906, 1916, 1930. 6 folders.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 40 |
Data Sheets,
compiled 1975.
|
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Organization of the Collection Section
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Diaries and Other Volumes:
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 45 |
Alexander S.
Christie, undated and
1860-[1907]:
|
| | |
Notebook,
undated. volume
22.
|
| | |
Catalog of Books in the Library of Alexander S.
Christie, undated. volume 19.
|
| | | | On page 43 is an essay
by Christie dated March 25, 1922. |
| | |
Farm diary, March 1, 1860 -
May 18, 1864.volume 30.
|
| | | | Two farm diaries (volumes 20 and 30, 1860-1864) tell of the happenings and
daily weather on the Christie farm in Clyman, Wisconsin. |
| | |
Diary and notebook, May 19, 1864 - February 23, 1866. volume 20.
|
| | | | In the back of volume
20 is a meteorological table kept at Fort Ridgley by Alfred Muller, October 12,
1865 - May 1, 1866. |
| | |
"U.S.
Coast and Geodetic Survey Tidal Station at the Navy Yard, Washington,
D.C.,"1891-1893. volume 24.
|
| | |
Diary,
January 2, 1894 - April 23, 1897.
volume 21.
|
| | |
Minnesota Republican Club of the District of Columbia notes,
1897. volume 26.
|
| | |
Notebook, 1897-1920. volume 29.
|
| | | | Contains newspaper clippings on his reminiscences of the
journey to Minnesota in 1865, and of meeting with General Joseph E. Johnson in
1884. |
| | |
Notebook, 1898. volume 23.
|
| | |
"Ellipse Astronomy" notebook, [1907?].volume 27.
|
| |
Sarah Christie Stevens, 1863-1905:
|
| | |
Friendship book from Fox Lake Seminary [belonging to Sarah
Christie?], 1863-1872. volume 34.
|
| | |
Carleton
College class book,1873. volume 11.
|
| | |
Mission
circle minutes, 1886-1887.
volume 13.
|
| | |
Notebook,[ca, 1892?].
volume 25.
|
| | |
Notebook,[ca. 1894?].
volume 31.
|
| | |
Diary,May 27, 1894 - June
25, 1900.volume 12.
|
| | |
Account book for "Help & Repairs," [ca. 1898-ca. 1899?]. volume 15.
|
| | |
Garden and plant
record,1902. volume 14.
|
| | |
Mrs.
William L. Stevens account with Henry C. Wiedenheft, 1905.volume 16.
|
| |
William L. Stevens, [ca. 1848-1889]:
|
| | |
Memorandum book [belonging to William L. Stevens?], [ca. 1849-ca. 1862?]. volume
5.
|
| | |
William L. Stevens account
with Geo. M. Ray, 1885.
volume 6.
|
| | |
Memorandum book [belonging to William L. Stevens?],
1886. volume
7.
|
| | |
Memorandum book [belonging to
William L. Stevens?], [ca. 1887-ca.
1888?].volume 8.
|
| | |
William L. Stevens account with J. G. Graham,
1888. volume 9.
|
| | |
Memorandum book [belonging to
William L. Stevens?], [ca. 1888 - ca.
1889?].volume 10.
|
| |
Buell V. Stevens, undated and 1876-1892:
|
| | |
Diary fragment,March -
December 1876.
|
| | |
Diary,
January 1, 1877 - January 30, 1878.
|
| | |
Diary fragment,
May 24 - December 31, [1879?].
|
| | |
Diary, January 1 - June 30, 1880.
|
| | |
Diary fragment, July 5 - December 30, [1880?].
|
| | |
Diary,January 1 -
December 31, 1881.
|
| | |
Diary,
January 1 - December 31, 1882.
|
| | |
Diary, January 1 - December 31, 1883.
|
| | |
Diary, January 1 - December 31, 1884.
|
| | |
Diary,January 1 -
October 10, 1891.
|
| | |
Diary
fragment, August 8 - December 25, 1891.
|
| | |
Diary, October 11, 1891 - March 23, 1892.
|
| | |
Expenses and cash received record book,
[1880?].
|
| | |
Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway Company
conductor's remittance books, April -
June 1890. 2 booklets.
|
| | |
Sales, prices, and expenses record books,
undated and [1883?]-1893. 11 volumes.
|
| | |
Travel
diary,March 3 - April 18, [18?].
photocopy in 1 folder.
|
| |
Volumes from other Stevens and Christie family members,
1847-1910:
|
| | |
Map used by Christie brothers in Minnesota,
1865-1866. volume
33.
|
| | |
Daily school register,
District 79, Blue Earth, Minnesota, November 10, 1873 - June 11, 1875. volume
3.
|
| | |
Diary fragment [belonging to
Bessie Stevens?], [ca. 1891?].
volume 32.
|
| | |
Daily school register, District 79, Blue Earth County, Minnesota,
beginning April 1, 1895.
volume 4.
|
| | | | The
teachers were Francis Stevens and Doretha Gerlach. |
| | |
Register, Union Hotel, Mankato, Minnesota,
1897-1898. volume
28.
|
| | |
Elizabeth Reid Stevens
notebook, February 10 - June 3,
1902.volume 2.
|
| | | | Probably her assignments for her classes in Renville, Minnesota. |
| | |
Weather observations,
1905-1910. volume
35.
|
| | | | Kept by William Stevens; later
observations and comments by Sarah Christie Stevens. |
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Organization of the Collection Section
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Printed Materials:
|
| The printed materials include circulars,
advertisements, pamphlets, leaflets, and maps. As the collection was being
processed printed items pertaining to certain subjects of interest to family
members (e.g., land promotion, Women's Christian Temperance Union, women's
suffrage) were gathered into separate files. |
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 40 |
Invitations to
cotillions and other social events, 1847-1853.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 41 |
Agriculture,undated
and 1861-1906.
|
| |
Religious and
Sunday school papers, undated and 1887-1919.
|
| |
Woman's Christian Temperance Union,
undated and 1886-1919.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 42 |
Medicine and
playbills, undated and 1877-1898.
|
| |
Schools and education, undated and 1878-1915.
|
| |
Miscellaneous, undated and 1880-1908.
|
| |
Alexander S. Christie's
writings, undated.
|
| |
Computation of tides,undated.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 43 |
Woman Suffrage Association, undated and
1884-1919.
|
| |
Insurance: Farm and
life, undated and 1875-1899.
|
| |
Essays, songs, and hymns, undated.
|
| |
Land
promotion, undated and 1903-1907.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 44 |
Land promotion,1907-1919.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 40 |
Land promotion,1919.
|
| |
Commercial calling cards, undated [ca. 1850-1930]. 5
envelopes.
|
| Location | Box |
| P1281 | 42 |
Northwestern Home
Trade Association memorandum and advertisements book, [1895?]. volume 17.
|
| |
Northwestern Home Trade
Associations memorandum and advertisements book, [1895?]. volume 18.
|
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Organization of the Collection Section
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Diplomas and
Certificates:
|
| Location | Box |
| +28 | |
Township 19N Range 18W plat drawing for mine
locations in Boone and Marion counties in Arkansas,undated.
|
| |
Law degree, Columbia University, issued to Alexander S. Christie,
June 1885.
|
| |
Master of Law degree, National University, Washington, D.C., issued
to Alexander S. Christie, [May 1888?].
|
| |
Certificate of admission to the Bar of the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, issued to Alexander S.
Christie,June 21, 1888.
|
| |
Railway Officials and Conductors Accident Association
(Indianapolis, Indiana) certificate of membership and insurance for Buell V.
Stevens,June 27, 1890.
|
| |
Mutual Accident Association of the
Northwest (Chicago, Illinois) certificate of insurance for Buell V. Stevens,
August 24, 1891.
|
| |
German Insurance Company (Freeport, Illinois)
certificate of insurance and transfer of right in policy from W. A. Wallace to
Buell V. Stevens, September 12,
1892.
|
| |
Diploma, Elementary
Course, Mankato State Normal School, issued to Elizabeth Reid Stevens,
November 28, 1900.
|
| |
Diploma, Advanced Course, Mankato State Normal School, issued
to Elizabeth Reid Stevens, June 7, 1901.
|
| |
Certificate of election to the Association
of Military Surgeons, issued to Robert H. Monahan, October 7, 1917.
|
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Organization of the Collection Section
|