WINDSORIANS GO TO
CALIFORNIA, FEB. 4, 1883 (From Hants
Journal) A carload of
Windsorians for California - a large party of respectable persons,
mostly farmer's sons, from near Windsor, Nova Scotia, left here
yesterday for the Pacific Coast. The party
consists of 14 persons and four children. Their names are as
follows:
John Sweet,
his
wife (Margaret) and two daughters (Eliza and Janet), and his son,
Charles B. Sweet and his wife (Sarah), John B. Sweet, his wife
(Susan),
and their two children (Alfred and William), all of Martock.
William
Leighton, Charles Gormley, Jane Kehoe and Charles Vaughn, of
Windsor
Forks:
Dill Scott, St. Croix, and Miss Jennie Sweet of Wentworth.
They will
have a
special car to themselves most of the way. The sum paid for the
tickets
amounted to over $1,000.
---------------------
(commentary by Iola Young)
--------------------------------------
Sam
Lytle's name was omitted from the list. Also there are but two
children
listed.
Frank Lytle,
a
boy of nearly fifteen, went down to nearby John Taylor's to borrow
the
horse and sled and he drove Charles B. Sweet and his wife (Sarah
Lytle)
and Sam Lytle to the railway station.
This was not
a
farm sled nor was it a sleigh. It had a bed with boards around the
sides and boards could be laid across to make as many seats as
needed.
He drove back to the Lytle home and picked up his passengers.(I
don't
know if he picked up John Sweet and his wife and two daughters or
if
they went with the other Sweets).
It was early
morning and snow was on the ground. There were frozen drifts,
three and
four feet high on the road, so they drove through the fields. At
Newport Station the passengers boarded a local train and took the
emigrant train at Windsor Junction. The train crossed into Maine
and
travelled via Boston. This special car contained the emigrants and
all
their possessions. Here they cooked, ate and slept through the
long
journey.
In San
Francisco
the group stayed at a hotel to await a steamer sailing to Eureka,
in
Humboldt County. Richard Sweet, who was living in Livermore, met
them
in San Francisco, as his sister, Miss Jennie Sweet, was going
there
(Livermore). James Sweet, who was already in Humboldt, and I
believe,
was working at Fern Cottage Ranch, had a house for his parents and
family.
They made up
"field beds" on the floor. The women of the party all slept in one
long
bed in one room while the men folk slept in another room. A number
of
years later we (the Charles B. Sweet family) lived in that same
house
for several years, so every nook and cranny of it is familiar. The
house is still there (1961) but the orchard and trees surrounding
it
are gone and it looks very bare.
by: Iola S.
Young, Placerville, California
Quoted from
pg. 38
& 39 Hunter
Family History by Iola Young and
Belle Smiley, 1966