The year was 1822 and after a poor harvest in Ireland in 1821, famine
and disease were widespread, particularly in the south and west of
Ireland. The Gettysburg
Compiler (Gettysburg, Pennsylvania) of 24 July 1822 reported that,
"A letter from T.S. Lindlay, Esq. High Sheriff of Mayo, says, the
distresses arise from ‘A failure in the potatoe [sic] crop of the
last year, and the inability of the lower classes to purchase either
this root or any other provision at present. The small plot usually
attached to the cabins of the poor, in many cases, remain unsown from
the impossibility of procuring seed. Nothing can be more wretched
than the situation of the peasantry generally in Mayo. I have seen
hundreds of wretched people greedily seeking for water cresses, wild
mustard, nettletops, dwarf thistles, or dandelion all the spring, and
this unnatural food has been the only meal within their reach.'"
The Edinburgh Advertiser (Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland) of 31 May 1822 gave
similar descriptions of conditions in County Mayo, as well as reports
from other counties. Typhus fever was reported in County Kerry and a
report from Galway stated that "the population of the town and
vicinage of Galway, under-rated at 30,000 souls, to which are to be
added thousands of wretched beings whom famine has driven hither from
the remote parts of Connemara, exhibit at this moment a spectacle of
extended and complicated misery which baffles description..."
From Limerick,
"The scene at the Catherine-street Dispensing Station
yesterday, was truly awful--the poor meagre, half-starved women with
cans and piggins [small wooden pails], many of them with an infant or
two clinging to their backs, appeared in a continued crowd of great
and almost impenetrable density, to obtain their pint of porridge
(the quantum allowable on each ticket). A vast number of these were
furnished with two, four, six, or eight tickets, according to the
number of the family--but strange to tell, only one pint was given to
many with a family. We are truly concerned to find that Dysentery
Patients will not be received in the Fever Hospital as usual, in
consequence of the increase of Fever in this city."
The winter of 1822 in New York was remembered as a cold one by one
resident in a New York Times article of 5 January 1879.
"There was no coal used in the City then except the soft coal which
blacksmiths used. Wood was the only fuel, and it was piled as high as
the housetops in yards in many parts of the City. [Stephen Sweet's]
father was in the wood business and his supply, which was large, was
exhausted in February on account of the cold weather...Mr. Sweet
remembers that the North River was frozen over for a number of days
so that teams crossed on the ice where the ferry-boats now run, and
that he rode on a load of wood from the foot of Cortlandt-street to
Jersey City. He also recalls the fact that two young men named
Harrison and Houghton built a shanty on the ice in the middle of the
Hudson River and at the "Half-way House," as it was called, sold rum
to passengers for 14 days."
In St. Louis, advertisements were appearing seeking "One Hundred
enterprising young men ... to ascent the Missouri River to its
source, and there to be employed for one, two, or three years." These
men would form the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, organized by William
Henry Ashley and Major Andrew Henry. Known as "Ashley's Hundred,"
these trappers would work independently and then gather in the summer
to exchange pelts for pay. The company employed such notables as Kit
Carson, Jedediah Smith, Joseph Meek, and Jim Beckwourth.
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