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This photo is of The Roofless Church, a world famous church in New Harmony, IN. The dome here is part of a beautiful walled 8 acre open space and Jane Blaffer Owen got press in the NYT for her amazing dream come true. Notice anything strange in this photo? And who's that young guy? Photo Credit: James K. Mellow, St. Louis MO

Nov 30, 2018

1788 Dear Jean #2, just for you.

          Karen Chadwick's fiction tribute, Part Two of five, 8/18/18:

David Dale, A Life by David J. McLaren, Stenlake Publisher, Ayrshire, 2015 – a truly beautiful new book rich with photos, docs, maps, all supporting Dr. McLaren’s extensive research on David Dale, 1739-1806. Dale was one of the first “Captains of Industry” at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution with his new cotton yarn mill in New Lanark, Scotland beginning in 1786. I found this book fascinating for a few reasons, here’s one.

In 1799, Dale’s oldest daughter, Anne Caroline, married Robert Owen. RO married into a pot of money. In 1825, RO purchased a town from a departing Lutheran cult in the new state of Indiana and renamed it New Harmony. RO took his passion for social engineering, six of his well-educated adult children, were joined by other dreamers, and attempted to create a ridiculous communal experiment that failed two years later. RO could talk the talk, he couldn’t walk the walk.

Flash forward to 1995 and my new job in New Harmony as private secretary to Jane Blaffer Owen. She married Kenneth Dale Owen, KDO, in 1940 and I worked for her when she was in her 80s. She brought great wealth to the marriage as her Blaffer/Texas roots were in Humble Oil which morphed to Exxon. KDO was a descendant of David Dale and Robert Owen, through Richard Dale Owen, who remained in Indiana after his father’s big dream crashed. Wealth from the Dale/Owen legacy had evaporated by KDO’s time, leaving KDO with a prestigious name and no wealth. Young Jane Blaffer appreciated that this suitor was not from the lazy wealthy class she grew up with and she was impressed that he had worked his way through college. That credential and his notable name sealed the deal.

This wing of the Owen family continued with the tradition of honoring David Dale. Kenneth and Jane gave the Dale name as middle name to two of their daughters. The Blaffer wealth saved an interesting portion of American history as Jane Blaffer Owen poured herself into the restoration and renovation of historic New Harmony for over 70 years. I helped.

All page references from David Dale, A Life. Buy it! It’s valuable.
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David Dale of New Lanark by David J. McLaren, Caring Books, Glasgow, 1999, my copy autographed!
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David Dale of New Lanark by David J. McLaren, Milngavie: Heatherbank Press, 1983. This research regarding Dale and New Lanark is the basis for my letter to my young nephews now on my blog and also an appendix of The Other Woman, Private Secretary to a Daughter of Exxon Oil. I seek an agent/publisher for this work.                    
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Gratitude to Dr. David J. McLaren and Dougie MacLean, Dunkeld Records, Perthshire




November 3, 1788
Dear Jean,
            You won’t believe this sister, but it’s true – there was a big fire last month {p.53} and New Lanark Mill #1 is pretty much trashed. Candles and cotton dust are probably the cause. Somebody said it was some of the “boarder” boys who started a small fire in a chimney to warm up one morning, and the embers landed in the room where waste cotton was, who knows? Luckily Mr. Dale has insurance, that’ll take some of the money pain away. Nobody got hurt, and they saved a lot of the equipment, but we still aren’t back at work.
Mr. Dale is so understanding, he still pays us and feeds us while the Mill is down. We hope to be back at it in a few weeks. It’s so strange to have time with the kids, sleep in, get to know other Village folks, volunteer at the church some, finally get to my own sewing and mending. Tommy, 10, Mary 9, and darling Janie just turned 7, they are loving this free time. We are welcome to have food cooked at the Mill, but sometimes I cook here, the kids love my cooking, sweethearts they are. My John taught me the best way to cook fish, Highlanders LOVE fish and know how to make any taste great, salmon is the easy one, and Rose fish, herring, mackerel, and gurry shark can be yummy, too. When I can get a good piece at a good price, we have it and pray for our John’s new life on a cloud. We miss him every hour of every day. Tommy is starting to look like him, I want to laugh and cry at the same time.
The best part is sometimes we watch the construction guys, some are re-doing Mill #1 after the fire, and other guys are working on new Mill #2, and even some are starting Mill #3. We make it special, there’s a good place to sit by the River Clyde and watch {p. 53}, I pack a dinner and everything. Tommy says that work looks more interesting than his job at the spinner. I told him, keep studying arithmetic.
Excuse me sister, but I have to brag again about this most wonderful aspect of our mill life – FREE education for all the children! First time in human history! Woo Wee!  Our schedule is changed temporary with the fire, but here’s the normal plan. After the all children, hundreds that include Mill Village kids like mine and many orphan “boarders” get off work at the mill at 7:p, they are given a fast light supper, then school, right at the mill, 7:30p – 9:p six nights a week, reading, arithmetic, and writing, and girls can learn how to make thread lace or things like sewing, if they want to. Oh, well, free for us, because Mr. D pays for the costs, three Masters have steady work here teaching those classes to children after they’ve worked 13-hour shift. Hmm, well, if you count the ½ hr. break for free breakfast, and the hour for free dinner, the actual work hours are 11 & ½.  
Tommy and I talked some more, maybe he can get a construction job when he’s grown. He tells me the math is mostly about textile numbers, how’s that gonna help him learn building problems? I told him to ask the Master for more ways to study numbers, ask for harder problems about building math. I could see him consider that and then he smiled. He’s smart, like his father.
Cousin Annabel and I saw each other last week. She had the day off and I’ve got all this free time until the Mill gets running, so she came all the way from Glasgow to my place, we split the cost of her buggy fare.  I was so happy to have her visit. My first visitor ever, I felt like an Upper! Me, hostess, I could even offer her a scone with tea. I made her a scarf with some leftover fabric from dresses I made the girls, I was so happy to have something for her.
The kids did a little performance for her, sang a song and did a dance they learned at the last ceilidh, “kay-lee.” Tommy pretended he was Dougie MacLean and played air-guitar! How those kids remembered Dougie’s song, “Feel So Near” after hearing it once is impressive, and don’t you know, they invented new lines for Dougie’s song. His is a strong one about appreciating the harsh conditions of west coast of Scotland, so near to lovely and powerful images of nature. The girls changed the words, things like:
“we feel so neaaaaar to the howling of thousands of spinning jennies,
we feel so neaaaaar to the crashing of the Clyde turning the wheel,
we feel too near to the grumpy boss,
we feel too near to cotton yarn,
we feel too near to New Lanark”
Well, they got us laughing so much! I think I’ve got some exceptional kids! Annabel was so happy she started to cry, she wishes she had children. I guess I won the lottery with my little loves.
She says working for Mr. and Mrs. Dale is just fine, some servants at other Uppers homes don’t have it so good. Mrs. D keeps having babies, 8 so far {p. 243}. Mr. D is so proud of his children, thems that live and thems that die. He had to start a family grave plot {p. 16} when their second-born girl, Arabella, died when she was one year old, cause of death “teething,” Annabel said everybody in the household cried. Two more died since, cause of death for one was “fever,” and next death was “chincough” (whooping cough). The whole Dale household, family and servants, are all super happy about first son, little William is the most spoiled kid in Scotland! They all need reasons to smile, the deaths drain everybody. It’s one thing to lose one before birth or right at birth, but when we fall in love with that new baby, it really hurts to have the Grim Reaper take that sweet life. You and I both know. If the Uppers could have doctors as on top of their work as the Writers of the Signet (lawyers) are, there would be less Upper kids dying. I mean, really, teething kills a baby? Really? Doesn’t matter from my view, no doctors for us for anything. Same for you in your new country, USA, Jean?
Annabel’s biggest job is taking care of Mr. D’s clothes, and she says it’s work, because he goes to so many meetings, gives so many speeches and sermons, meets lots of Uppers and has to dress up all the time.
Oh yes, she finally told me the juicy story about Mr. D – wait until you hear this.  She said one of the domestics, Fran, was helper for one of Mr. D’s Chamber of Commerce committee meetings he had at the Dale house, and Fran heard the others talking up a trip they were planning and wanted Mr. D to come with them. They were going to St. Andrews to knock the wee ball a bit and wanted Mr. D to join them.
Annabel said when the word got around to staff, they started taking bets about if he would go, or not. Older staff knows Mr. D doesn’t usually go away from Mrs. D just for fun, no. He’ll go to Edinburgh for business, and if Mrs. D can join him, they make a few days trip of it and take the children and nannies, as her family is there. Of course, he is often here at the Mill, but most often tries to get back to Glasgow as soon as he can. Back hall debate was, will Mr. D to go with some men just to have fun for 4 days? Yes, no, no yes. Add this to the drama, some Uppers made extra visits to Mr. D to encourage him to come along to St. Andrews.
Would he? Wouldn’t he? The newer staff thought he might, the long-time staff said no way. Well, don’t you know, the servants know him better than his Upper buddies! Mr. D cleverly backed out of the trip by telling the fellows that he and Mrs. D are having another baby, he wants to be near her, and he wished them a hole-in-one! He’d much rather have committee meetings right at the house to talk for hours {p.244} about yarn, it’s quality, it’s length, it’s twist. That’s as juicy as it gets at the Dale house. Annabel was on the winning side of the bet, too.  The winners got breakfast in bed on their day off!
Annabel had to brag about the Dale’s fancy house, three floors up, one underneath, and the biggest on the new street, Charlotte Street, named after the Queen. Annabel brought a sketch she made of Dale’s fancy house, she can draw good! She went on about famous architect who designed every house on Charlotte Street. I smiled and kept my opinion to myself. Robert Adam’s work {p. 25} is foreboding, cold, braggart even. Smile anyway, more tea, Annabel?
Methinks buildings and houses and shops should be set back 4-5 feet, have some Mother Nature space for God’s sake. But no, all these buildings are right to the sidewalk or street, I don’t care for such bold greed. A few flowers, a bench, a shrub or a tree, something to show love for life. Oh well, Robert Adams had to face the fact that he’d underestimated the River Clyde action, and Dale’s fancy dancy house gets flooded occasionally. I’m sad to say that it’s the same here in New Lanark, buildings right to the sidewalk {photos, p. 63}.
Annabel told a hilarious story of Dales having a big fancy party, but his famed wine cellar was flooded. Staff found a tall guy who was willing – for shillings you bet – to carry Dale’s oldest daughter, Anne Caroline, on his shoulders {p. 27} through the high-water downstairs and they got several bottles of wine for the party upstairs!
Mrs. Dale is from Edinburgh, her father, dead now, was the head cheese at the new bank, Royal Bank of Scotland {p. 15}, so she came to the marriage with her overflowing dowry. Annabel says the servants have a joke among them how Mr. D married up and Annabel got to read the marriage contract {p.15} once while she was cleaning Mr. D’s office room, she said it’s a hoot! Uppers are all about law stuff, even Mrs. D’s brother is a Writer to the Signet (lawyer). She’s from clout.  
Mr. Dale is honest about his roots, he’s from regular folk in Stewarton, Ayrshire, no fancy anything for him as a lad, {p.10}, “the farmhouses were mere hovels,” but his dad did pay the parish school for Mr. D to learn reading, arithmetic and extra pay to learn writing, and wow, he used that education {considered finest educational system for paying students in Western Europe, p. 11} and has made a name for himself and his family. Start with a good brain, add a little education and mix in a LOT of ambition, and David Dale is the result.
She says Mr. Dale is on so many committees, Boards, Societies, Merchant organizations, chairs meetings for many related interests and purposes {p. 7}, occasional Town’s Hospital manager, and he’s part of new Glasgow Chapter of Royal Bank of Scotland to consider loans for business. She saw Mr. D’s accounts and wow, every place he’s a member costs $, subscription fees for everything he’s supporting and that $ goes to wider community betterment. Some organizations charge extra for voting privilege and these monies keep Glasgow and New Lanark able to be respectable cities. The Uppers pay a lot – a LOT – for us to have good urban life. Street lights at dark! Until 10: p! I’m so glad my little loves don’t have to walk home in the dark when they get out of school at 9: p, nothing like that in the countryside.
Annabel told me about Mr. D’s status in Glasgow, he’s a Burgess and Member of the Guild Brethren, those handles don’t come easy or cheap she assures me. And I had no idea that all those businessmen have to swear an Oath – Very Big Deal – they are required to be Protestants and they take a commitment to “the true religion, presently professed within this realm and authorized by the laws thereof” {p.14} or, an even stricter oath required from Roman Catholics who hope to do business in Glasgow {p.260}. No way can a Jewish person, or oh my, a Lutheran or heaven forbid, an Anglican, do business around here. I can’t quite get my head around that, do those people have bad breath or not worthy business sense, or lots of wives, what? Yes, it’s one thing to have good opinion about folks we go to church with, but why be tough with people who go to another church? Does their God teach them bad manners? What?
Mr. D’s also big in his new church, Old Scotch Independents, {p. 204} he and friends started, some big mess about whether the congregation should be the ones to pick new minister OR how the Established Church, EC, Presbyterian, don’t you know, has always done it – the high muckity mucks choose new minister for the congregation. Whatever. All that doesn’t slow Mr. D one tiny bit, he loves to preach anywhere he can. He even started some civic things like Glasgow Chamber of Commerce {p.28}, and The Humane Society, this will help pull drowning folks out of the River Clyde when there’s an emergency, the volunteer men now have their own dock and a boat ready for rescuing folks.
Mr. Dale just served as Secretary for the very influential Trades House {p. 183} and his primary life is in Glasgow {p. 7} where most of his business and professional commitments {his schedule would choke a horse} are within blocks of each other. Mr. D is famous for walking from one commitment to home to next commitment and loves chatting with others walking. Annabel says Glasgow is that kind of city.
Mr. D has lots going on, buys properties and has deals with many Uppers. He started not only New Lanark Cotton Mill, but three other mills!  Rumor on the street is that Mr. D and Mr. Arkwright started together on our mill here {p.43}, but something caused them to break their business arrangement, maybe the Scot/English thing? They say Arkwright, English, was from a common poor big family, but he became the richest man in the world with his inventions, even though he could barely sign his own name. He became Sir Richard Arkwright. Money talks, eh?
 Annabel says Mr. D changes clothes two or three times a day, and how he keeps getting a little bigger every year is a test for her sewing skill. She smiled when she told me that Mr. D is always a kind and generous man, even though he likes to drive a hard bargain in business, he’s a sweetheart at home and all the staff love him. They joke that he’s a lion on the street, a lamb at home. She likes her work, I see why.
We visited for three hours, then Annabel went back to Mr. D’s fancy house in Glasgow. She lives in the downstairs, has a room with two other servants, and she’s happy for the work. Her man died too, and she’s got no kids alive, so she’s figuring out how to get by on her own. Her contract for service comes up for renewal soon, she hopes the Dales will offer her another contract and a raise, but what she would LOVE is a private room of her own in the house. She dreams big.
Jean, I keep re-reading your last letter, the part about the birds really moved me. When you wrote about how those passenger pigeons flew over your place in Virginya for three whole days, WOW! You told me how even though it was clear weather, those millions and millions of birds flying blocked the sun?! I love your way of saying it, “it looked like a feathered river across the sky,” that should be a title for a book. (It is! Thanks Joel Greenberg!)  When you wrote that their largest recorded nesting territory was 850 square miles, if that’s anything like kilometers, well, that would be a big chunk of Scotland, like from here to Edinburgh and more, that’s a LOT of birds. And you got to see them moving that time, I’m jealous! Jean, if somebody would have told me about such a big flock of birds, I would have doubted their truth, but reading your letter I completely believe your news, thank thank thank you.
I miss connection with Mother Nature, this mill work, indoors for 72 hours, well, not much nature unless you count spiders and an occasional mouse scurrying around. The kids sneak scraps to a stray dog that hangs around our building, poor little fellow has no one to take him in, and we can’t, but the kids feed him sometimes anyway. Tommy even taught him a trick and named him Laddy. There is something valuable about kids loving animals, I pretend I’m mad, but the kids know better. They caught me giving Laddy a scrap of cheese, I’m busted.
I finally start to understand the who, what, why, where and when of the boarders here. You’ve lived in the colonies so long and now you’re part of the new USA; do they have anything like this in Virginya?
The Uppers do not like anybody homeless on the streets in Glasgow or Edinburgh, they can’t call themselves Christians if homeless folks are out on the streets. Uppers put $ together and in Edinburgh there’s The West Kirk Charity Workhouse, {p. 84} and in Glasgow, a big Town’s Hospital. Both places are lock-up for old poor folks with no family, the strange folks who are mixed up in the head, and lots and lots of kids. Some of the kids were put there as abandoned babies and little kids, other kids were put there by their parent who just couldn’t feed them for a while and promise to come get their kid when they can. So, the Workhouse and Town’s Hospital have a huge job of keeping all those people, and we hear that they’re not happy places.
The Uppers who put the money in the Town’s Hospital also take turns being the manager, to watch how the money is spent, how the folks stuck there are doing, and to save money - they don’t hire a manager - they take turns being the manager. Don’t you know, their main goal {p. 184} is to get as many of those people out of there and back out working as soon as possible. They don’t like wasting money if someone can work and take care of themselves. The folks who really can’t be normal, they do some hand spinning or weaving right there, that brings in some income for the Hospital. Us Scots are all about WORK!
So – Mr. Dale does his civic duty and is manager there sometimes, and when he sees young kids who seem well behaved, he brings them to New Lanark to work in our mill.
Now here’s the weird part – the Town’s Hospital is legally responsible for each kid, and when Mr. D takes a kid from there as an apprentice, a contract must be signed by Town’s Hospital and the mill, meaning that sometimes Mr. D signs both ends of the contract. The Town’s Hospital wins twice. Now they don’t have to feed and clothe and house that child, and Mr. D pays the Town’s Hospital for each kid he takes {p. 86}.
Mr. Dale calls these kids “boarders” because they don’t just work here. They live here until they turn 16. Then they are free to leave and start their adult life. No, they don’t get a wage, but they work for their room and board, get free education, two sets of clothes, one set work clothes and one Sunday set, linens {undies!}, too, and a pair winter shoes and one pair winter socks. The boarders, hundreds of them, sleep 3 to a straw mat bed, 75 to a room, and are learning to make their way with no mom or dad to answer to. Mr. D and mill manager Mr. Kelly try to instill their values with the boarders, but let’s face it, {p. 85}, those kids “bring problems of health, morals, and discipline when they walk in the mill door.”
 My kids tell me vivid stories about the problem boarders, they have to work together 13 hours a day, 6 days a week, and then sit in school with them 6 nights a week, too. Thank God some of the boarders are good kids, my sweeties enjoy friendship with them. Considering that the boarders are from very rough beginning, Mr. D says, “... many now have stout, healthy bodies and are of decent behavior who in all probability would have been languishing with disease and pests to society had they not been employed at Lanark cotton mills” {p. 103}.
The way I see it – these kids are way luckier than the kids who stay at the Town’s Hospital. The boarders have a much better chance to make something of themselves when they’re grown, think of that resume.  Mr. D said it this way in his plea to get longer indenture contracts on certain smart children, “… if I am spared in life might have the pleasure of introducing the well behaved among them to such employment as to enable them not only to provide for themselves but to be useful to others” {p. 100}. Useful to others, that’s powerful.
 Sometimes Mr. Dale will offer them another contract when they become adult and are done with apprentice contract, but likely not, he needs tiny people to get under the big machines, grown folks can’t do the work.  I’m so puzzled what the clockmakers and men with engineering savvy were thinking when they came up with machines so big and so low to the floor that only little kids can get under the jammed machine. The boarders and Village kids like mine, almost run the mills, as many of them as adults working here. I keep thinking we have the best way to think of our young people, {p. 79}, except for the lame design of the jennies, after all, this is almost 1800.
But don’t you know, the boarder kids are kinda stressed, some are clueless about their parents or even their birthday, sad, eh? Some of them are sad or mad about how good the Village kids have it, yeah, family, place to live with family, and a paycheck. I tell Tommy, Mary, and Janie to not brag.
Oh my, speaking of the mill – here’s a good one. Once in a while, when milk is out of season, the cooks feed us swats. Yep, wicked good stuff that changes the mood around the mill – molasses fermented with new beer, {p. 91 & 252}, yummy over oatmeal for breakfast. The whole crew changes to happy workers for the shift, that’s a change!
One more thing, Mr. Dale is REAL big on us workers attending church, and with all the church breakups, we can go to any one and that’s ok with Mr. D. He’s so nice, he’ll rent a pew for mill families to attend Established Church right down the street even though he won’t go to that church.
Well, Highlanders working here much prefer the Pope’s church. Mr. Dale pretends that’s ok, but he doesn’t do much for their faith. Highlanders stick to Gaelic, my John helped me learn a little of it. There’s always a rift between the Highlanders and Lowlanders. Still a Scot thing about Mary Queen of Scots if you ask me. She was Catholic, and it probably was the reason her Anglican cousin Queen Elizabeth cut off her head. My John said there was some mess about Mary Queen of Scots and how her no-account husband died, not sure what that was about. That was 200 years ago, geez, chill out!
I wish I could chill out about my John not with us, I had the strangest flashback when I was heating up water last night. In one instant I could see, feel, KNOW that my John was with me, helping get the coal stove going for hot water to boil. Oh, Jean, he was the best husband, we just loved helping each other all through our tenant farmer years. If I was hauling water to our home – some might call it a hovel - but home to us - he’d stop what he was doing and help me. If I was taking something to the barn and he was shoveling horse shit, I’d stop what I was doing and grab another shovel and help him, we just loved being together no matter what was in front of us. We even had a supper deal, whoever cooked (and my John could make some delicious food, he invented fish tenders - no bones - and the kids loved them), the other one would do clean up. We always had the food/kitchen work done before we went to bed.
I miss him, love him, and dream of him walking in the door. I talk to the kids all the time about their father, how he cared for them, how he wanted them to be smart workers, how he wished for grandbabies from our babies. Mary pretended to be shocked, “You mean Daddy wanted me to have babies when I was a baby?” No! Tommy wishes there was a picture of him, I tell him to look in a mirror, he looks like his handsome father. I’m so glad we had church as a family before things got so hard, it sure helps now with our mill life.
I hope to find someone around here who knows about the Highland problems most usually called The Clearances. My John told me some of what him and his family suffered, it was so awful I could barely put all the facts together. Highlanders got solid reason to be pissed at the Uppers, they did those people wrong. My John said they jerked the land right from his clan. He walked away from his family, his land, his life when he was 10 years old. When he showed up to our Dad’s tenant farm two years later, able to speak pretty good English and asking for work, Dad took him for a long walk, had a serious talk with him about life, work, church, and farm needs. You had already left for the colonies, we needed somebody to birth those lambs when you left!  He was the best hired hand for us, and yes, we fell in love.
I think about what my John told me about what happened to his Highland clan, and now I want to know more, like who were the bastards who took their land? Sorry for the rough word, but some Scots are just that. Ah, strike that word, it only insults a person’s mother. Some Scots are ass-holes, and they might have been from perfectly fine mothers. The English aren’t the only harsh and greedy ones, we got  ’em here, too.
Mr. Dale just wants all his workers to attend church, LOL, his wife even went with the Baptists, wow! She must have some guts to pull that off so smooth {p. 205}. Mr. D just smiles and sticks with his church. Mr. D’s new meeting house/church seats 500, they are optimists! They can’t do weddings, only “approved” EC ministers can marry folks by law. Mr. D is passionate to speak his truth, and lots of times he preaches at the Bridewell, the brand-new prison in Glasgow. He really wants Scot people to behave themselves and be honorable workers, I like that.
Today is Sunday and my birthday. I splurged and bought a small bag of sugar from the West Indies, a small tin of molasses from Jamaica, and a pinch of ginger. I made 28 ginger molasses cookies after church and the kids and I ate them all! We know how to party! 28 for my 28th.
Jean, I hope you and your kids are doing ok, we heard about a wicked storm that has made a mess of Virginya. I hope you and loves are safe and working. Sorry to hear about your husband Ian’s leg after being thrown from a horse. Can he still work? I could send you a little money if you need it. Do the shillings and guineas work over there?
Me, the kids and Annabel send our love to you all.
Soon, Cheers, Love, sis k
Gratitude to A Feathered River Across the Sky, The Passenger Pigeon’s Flight to Extinction by Joel Greenberg. 2014, Bloombury USA. Love this part: Printed and bound: Thomson-Shore, Inc., Dexter, MI.  ~ ~ ~  Fyi, scientists consider that there were likely 3 to 5 Billion – yes Billion – Passenger Pigeons in the eastern and northern parts of North America when Columbus landed. By 1914, the last living bird died in captivity. Gone. Extinct. Greed.
PS – Fiction! This letter is fiction!  All page references point to the reality of the time, please refer to title mentioned first, yet know these letters are fiction! I’m not a Scot yet am so moved by Dr. McLaren’s thorough research on David Dale.

Please know that New Lanark Mills are now a World Heritage Site, and destination for visitors seeking tours, accommodations within the Mill complex, and yes, a gift shop! Contact them: trust@newlanark.org

Certainly, this piece of history fits with a piece of my history. My life and work in New Harmony, Indiana are all of a weave.  I seek a literary agent for my non-fiction work, The Other Woman, Private Secretary to a Daughter of Exxon Oil.



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