Contents


Collection Overview

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Search Terms

Frost Family Correspondence, 1849-ca. 1860.

Finding Aid

Encoding funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

© 2004

Collection Overview

Creator: Frost family.
Title: Frost Family Correspondence
Dates: 1849-ca. 1860.
Abstract: Frost family: Daniel Frost, Marietta Sherwood Frost (Mount Holyoke Female Seminary graduate, 1847) and five children. Papers consist of letters describing family activities, education and health, documenting primarily family life in a clergyman's household in New England in the 1850s. Also include references to the experiences of Marietta Sherwood Frost's father, William Sherwood, as a gold miner in California.
Extent: 1 box (2.5 linear in.)
Language: English.
Identification: MS 0541
Location: LD 7096.6 1847 Sherwood

Biographical Note

Marietta Sherwood, the daughter of William and Esther Sherwood of Southport, Connecticut, was born circa 1827 and graduated from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1847. In 1849 she married Daniel D. Frost, a minister who served at the Congregational Church in Redding, Connecticut from 1844-1856 when the Frosts moved to West Stockbridge, Massachusetts. The Frosts had five children. Marietta died in Wabasha, Minnesota in 1863.

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

The Frost Family Papers consist of twenty-five letters to William and Esther Sherwood from their daughter Marietta Sherwood Frost, son-in-law Reverend Daniel D. Frost, and grandson Edward D. Frost written between August 13, 1849 and circa February 1860. The letters discuss family activities, domestic chores, the education of the children and the health of the family members. Also included are descriptions and comparisons of daily life in Redding, Connecticut and West Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Particularly noteworthy are a letters written in 1853 and 1858 discussing William Sherwood's experiences in the California gold rush and his plans to depart for the gold mines of Australia. A letter from April 29, 1858 describes a temperance lecture in West Stockbridge and the formation of a "Band of Hope" whose members "promise to abstain from all intoxicating drinks, from use of tobacco in any form and from profane swearing." That letter also mentions a speech by a Mr. Colt, who remarked that "a good war was just what our country needed to bring people to their sences [sic] to promote right feeling--that we had become too wicked and too wealthy." Of further interest is a letter written on February 18 in about 1860 describing the death of the Frosts' son Aaron.

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Search Terms

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