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Celia Hasbrouck Papers (1861-1928)
Finding Aid completed by Courtney Fallon, March 2005
Volume: 1.25 cubic feet, 2 boxes
Acquisition: This collection was donated to the Huguenot Historical Society by Sue Brooks of New Paltz, NY in May 2004 and on unspecified earlier dates.
Access: Unrestricted.
Copyright: Request for permission to publish materials from these records should be discussed with the Archivist and Director of the Huguenot Historical Society.
Family Biographical Sketch
Celia Hasbrouck
was born on July 19, 1843 to Isaiah Hasbrouck and Elizabeth
Eller and spent most of her life in Liberty and nearby
towns (Loch Sheldrake, Neversink, Divine's Corners, etc.)
in Sullivan County, New York. [1]
She was one of ten siblings, including Benjamin (1820-1896),
Hiram B. (1829-1906), Elizabeth (1831-1910), John E. (1833-1897),
Augustus (1837-1904), Rachel Ann (1839-1842), and Elmeda
(1855-1861). Several of her siblings relocated to various
towns in California, where Celia visited at least once.
Celia died unmarried on June 30, 1929 and is buried along
with several of her relatives in the Velie Cemetery in
Liberty.
Notes
[1]
Hasbrouck, Kenneth E. The Hasbrouck Family in
America with European Background, Third Edition,
published by the Hasbrouck Family Association, Huguenot
Historical Society, New Paltz, NY (1986). Unless otherwise
noted, all genealogical information is also taken from
this source or directly from the collection.
Collection Description
The collection
documents the life of the Hasbrouck family of Sullivan
County, New York, particularly Celia Hasbrouck and her
siblings of Lock Sheldrake, and to a lesser extent, Wooster
F. Hasbrouck of Liberty, New York. Other documents concern
family members that settled in California during the late
nineteenth century. Records include correspondence, legal
and financial papers, news clippings, photographs, calling
and greeting cards, and a few brief creative writings.
The main strength
of the collection lies in the correspondence, which dates
from 1861 to 1928 and covers a wide variety of topics
such as family news and events such as deaths, illnesses,
marriages, visits, home life, social occasions, travel,
finances, economics, weather, school and genealogy. The
majority of the correspondence dates from 1870-1900 and
is between Celia and her brothers John E. Hasbrouck, Augustus
Hasbrouck, and Hiram B. Hasbrouck, and her sisters Ann
Acelia Hasbrouck, Elizabeth Hoyt and Maria Forshay. Of
particular interest are letters from John E. Hasbrouck
describing life and the search for gold in Petaluma, Sonoma
County, California and in Nevada City, 1861-1895; letters
detailing Maria Forshay's unsuccessful battle with breast
cancer, 1880-1883; a few letters describing the school
and teaching conditions in Petaluma, California and Greenfield,
Ulster County, New York during the 1870s; and three letters
from Sherman A. Hasbrouck written while he was in the
Napa Valley Asylum (1890-1893). After 1915 the correspondence
consists mainly of postcards and greeting cards sent to
Celia.
Other papers include
legal documents relating to Hasbrouck family property
in Sullivan County, New York, a marriage certificate for
Hiram B. Hasbrouck and Acelia Hill, and the settlement
of the estate of Hiriam B. Hasbrouck, 1913, and financial
papers (mostly bills and receipts) concerning kitchen
supplies and clothing purchases. Several newspaper clippings
cover the deaths of Benjamin Hasbrouck and Mrs. Floyd
A. Kinne of Liberty in the 1890s, and the sale of the
Isaiah Hasbrouck homestead, 1913-1920. Other items include
a note from a juror on the Rosenstock vs. Haumner case
regarding the outcome of the trial, 1891; a writing entitled
“How to Cure a Cancer”, a school essay written by Celia
Hasbrouck entitled "A Convention of Books" (1865),
and an untitled poem. In addition, there are bills and
receipts for medications and supplies for the W.F. Hasbrouck
Drugstore in Liberty, New York dating from 1900-1910
The photographs
include tintypes, daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, paper portraits,
paper prints, glass negatives, and one drawing, primarily
dating from ca. 1860s to the 1920s, show Celia Hasbrouck,
friends and family members such as Celia's nephew Wooster
F. Hasbrouck, his wife Susan M. Pierson, and his daughter
Ruth Caroline Hasbrouck. Two photograph albums ca.1860s
and ca.1890s, respectively, contain numerous unidentified
images, presumably of friends and family members.
The papers range
in condition from fair to good, showing minor damage from
yellowing, staining, fading, and tearing. The handwriting
throughout all the papers is legible. The papers are organized
by type into envelopes or by size.
Series
Descriptions
The collection
is arranged into two series: Correspondence and Miscellaneous
Papers, and photographs and Photograph Albums.
Series
1: Correspondence and Miscellaneous Papers (1861-1928)
Correspondence
is arranged chronologically or by size. [1]
This series includes letters written to Celia Hasbrouck
and other family members relating to news of family and
friends, finances and daily life in Sonoma County, California
and Sullivan County, New York. Other correspondence includes
invitations, greeting cards, postcards and calling cards.
This series also includes legal documents, financial documents,
and creative writings. There is one marriage certificate
located in Box #2.
Series
2: Photographs and Photograph Albums (ca.1860s-1920s)
This series includes
photographs of the Hasbrouck family and relating families
in various forms such as mid-late nineteenth century daguerreotypes,
ambrotypes and tin types, paper portraits and prints (1880s-1920s),
negatives and glass negatives, a drawing of Hiram B. Hasbrouck,
an oversize photo of an unidentified house and unidentified
man (ca.1900), a photo album (ca.1890s) and a fragmented
photo album (ca.1860s) with both tintypes and portraits.
A significant amount of the photographs are of Wooster
F. Hasbrouck, his wife Susan M. Pierson and his daughter
Ruth Caroline Hasbrouck.
Box and
Folder List
Box
1 :
Series
1: Correspondence and Miscellaneous Papers (1861-1928)
Correspondence
(1861-1928) -eleven folders
Legal and Miscellaneous
Papers (1869-1922)
Box
2 :
Series
3: Photographs and Photograph Albums (ca.1860s-1920s)
Albums (1860s-1890s)Cased
photographs -nine with one fragment (1860s-1890s)
Miscellaneous
photographs (ca.1850s-ca.1910s)
Portraits
(ca.1860s-1920s)
Oversize
photograph of unidentified house (c a.1900)
Date Published: June 7, 2005
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