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قراءة كتاب Faux's Memorable Days in America, 1819-20; and Welby's Visit to North America, 1819-20, part 2 (1820)

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Faux's Memorable Days in America, 1819-20; and Welby's Visit to North America, 1819-20, part 2 (1820)

Faux's Memorable Days in America, 1819-20; and Welby's Visit to North America, 1819-20, part 2 (1820)

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

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A Visit to the English Settlement in the Illinois 248 Harmony 260 A Winter at Philadelphia 294 Horrible Execution! 309         Lectures on Anatomy 314

ILLUSTRATIONS TO VOLUME XII

"Log Tavern, Indiana" 142
Facsimile of title-page to Welby 143
"Little Brandywine, Pennsylvania" 176
"Bridge at Columbia, Pennsylvania" 179
"Susquehannah River at Columbia" 184
"Place of Worship & Burial Ground, at Ligonier Town, Pennsylvania" 185
"Widow McMurran's Tavern, Scrub Ridge" 189
"View on Scrub Ridge" 193
Wooden scoop (text cut) 203
"Ferry at Maysville, on the Ohio" 209
"Maysville, on the Ohio, Kentucky" 215
"Frankfort, Kentucky" 224
"The Church at Harmonie" 264
"Bridge at Zanesville, Ohio" 277
"View at Fort Cumberland, Maryland" 281
"View at Fort Cumberland, Maryland" 286



Part II (1820) of Faux's Memorable Days in America
November 27, 1818-July 21, 1820

Reprint of the original edition: London, 1823. Part I is comprised
in Volume XI of our series


JOURNAL
(PART II)

January 1st, 1820.—I left Princeton at ten o'clock, with Mr. Phillips and Mr. Wheeler; and here parted with my good and kind friend Ingle.

I met and spoke, ten miles off, with two hog-jobbing judges, Judge Prince and Judge Daniel,104 driving home twenty fat hogs, which they had just bought.

I reached, and rested at Petersburgh,105 consisting of fifteen houses. I passed good farms. Our landlord of this infant town, though having an [333] ostler, was compelled to groom, saddle, unsaddle, and to do all himself. Having fifty dollars owing to him, from a gentleman of Evansville, he arrested him, when he went into the bounds; then he sued one of the bondsmen, who also entered the bounds. The squire is next to be sued, who, it is expected, will do likewise.

Sunday, 2nd.—I rode thirty-one miles this day, and rested at Edmonstone, in a little cold log-hole, out of which I turned an officer's black cat, which jumped from the roof into our faces, while in bed; but she soon found her way in again, through a hole in the roof. The cat liked our fire. We got no coffee nor tea, but cold milk and pork, and corn cake.

3rd.—Travelled all day, through the mud-holes formed by springs running from countless hills, covered with fine timber, to breakfast, at three o'clock, p. m. I supped and slept at Judge Chambers's, a comfortable house, and saw again the judge's mother, of eighty, whose activity and superior

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