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Hammond, Robert, Sr. Correspondence and other materials

Overview

Scope and Contents

Subject Terms

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Finding Aid for Hammond, Robert, Sr. Correspondence and other materials, 1867-1921 | Illinois History and Lincoln Collections

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Collection Overview

Title: Hammond, Robert, Sr. Correspondence and other materials, 1867-1921

Collection identifier: 969

Primary Creator: Hammond, Robert, Sr.

Extent: 0.2 cubic feet

Subjects: Alabama--Huntsville, Farms, Frontier and pioneer life, New Jersey, New York, New York Juvenile Asylum, Weather

Forms of Material: Personal papers

Scope and Contents of the Materials

In 1859, Robert Hammond and his family emigrated from Castleblayney, County Monaghan, Ireland, to New York City. During the Civil War, he served in New York units, first for three months and then for three years, during which time his wife died. Matthew and John, the oldest of his five children, became newsboys in New York City and otherwise fended for themselves, while the younger children were placed in the New York Juvenile Asylum, from which they were bound out, Robert, Jr., and George to Jacob L. and John Smith, farmers near Duncan Mills, Fulton County, Ill., and Sarah (Sadie) to a family in Iowa.

After the war, Hammond enlisted in Co. A, 22nd U.S. Infantry and was stationed at Fort Randall and Fort Rice in the Dakota Territory. He then either worked on a plantation or engaged in garden farming in Whitesburg (near Huntsville), Ala.

This collection contains letters from and about Hammond and also a 19-page typescript of those letters. In 1867, Jacob Smith assured him that his bound-out sons were satisfied with their situations. In the same year, Hammond wrote his older boys, sending them funds to pay off his creditors in New York and referring to the harsh weather and Indian troubles on the frontier.

Between 1872 and 1874, Hammond wrote to his son Robert as well as to Matthew. The indentures of his younger sons were coming to an end and the older sons had established themselves in business in New Jersey. As Hammond grew older, he turned to his children for support, asking for particular items of clothing. The collection also includes letters to Matthew Hammond from I. C. Underwood of Huntsville, Ala., who sought to be reimbursed for his expenses in caring for the senior Hammond before his death.

In 1921, Robert Hammond, Jr.'s sister, Sarah Packard Andrew, who had moved from Keokuk, Iowa to Bloomington, Ill., wrote his widow, returning a newspaper clipping from her that reprinted the biographical sketch of Hammond in the Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of Fulton County, ed. Newton Bateman, Paul Selby, and Jesse Heylin (Chicago: Munsell Publishing Co., 1908), 2:900.

The collection includes copies of a photograph of the younger boys in 1867, and of Hammond's clothing store in Paterson, N.J., in the 1870s, by which point the older boys had established themselves in business.

The letters, although fragmentary, illustrate the difficulties of a poor Irish emigrant family as it adjusted to life in America.

The collection was donated to the University of Illinois Library in 2012 by Robert Hammond, Sr.'s great-grandson, Charles Hammond, Jr. of Key West, Fla., who received a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from the University. Dr. Hammond is a great-grandson of Robert Hammond, Sr.

Subject/Index Terms

Alabama--Huntsville
Farms
Frontier and pioneer life
New Jersey
New York
New York Juvenile Asylum
Weather

Administrative Information

Repository: Illinois History and Lincoln Collections

Box/Folder List

URL: http://www.library.illinois.edu/ihx/inventories/hammond-robert.pdf

PDF finding aid for Hammond, Robert, Sr. Correspondence and other materials


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