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John
Whitbeck Hasbrouck Papers (1830-1902)
Finding Aid completed by Eric
Roth 5/14/2004
Volume:
1 folder.
Acquisition:
Unknown. These papers may share provenance with the John
Edward Hasbrouck Papers (1839 –1931). [i]
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.
Notes
[i]
A genealogical scrapbook kept by John Whitbeck Hasbrouck
can be found in the John Edward Hasbrouck Papers (1839-1931).
Biographical Note:
John Whitbeck Hasbrouck,
newspaper editor and Whig Party politician and activist,
was born at Woodstock, NY on November 20, 1821. [i]
He was the ninth of a family of ten children born
to Richard Montgomery Hasbrouck (1776-1860) and Maria
Johnson (1782-1853). On July 27, 1856 John married women's
rights activist Dr. Lydia Sayer (1827-1910), [ii]
daughter of Benjamin Sayer and Rebecca Forshee. Together
they had three children: Daisy (b. 1857), Sayer (b. 1860),
and Burt (b. 1862). The family removed to Kingston, NY
ca. 1834, where John graduated from the Kingston Academy,
presumably in 1839. [iii]
Over the next several he years worked as a clerk
and bookkeeper at the Ulster County Bank and other local
businesses, wrote for the Kingston Journal and
other local newspapers, and became a founding member of
both the Young Men's Christian Association (also called
Lyceum) and the Kingston Literary Association. He also
spent one year working at an unidentified “wholesale crockery
house” in New York City.
In spring 1846
Hasbrouck moved to Bloomingburgh, Sullivan County, where
he operated the Sullivan Whig newspaper until
1851. [iv] While
at Bloomingburgh, he held the public offices of school
superintendent and postmaster. In 1850 he ran for State
Assembly but was narrowly defeated by his Democratic Party
opponent. Within the correspondence of this collection,
Hasbrouck and his associates are often referred to as
“Henry Clay Whigs.”
In fall 1851, Hasbrouck
relocated to Middletown, Orange County, NY, where he founded
the Whig Press newspaper (renamed Orange
County Press in 1866 and Middletown Times
in 1906) and published several other newspapers, pamphlets
and directories. Hasbrouck sold the newspaper in 1868
and went into retirement until his death in 1906. However,
while in retirement he did briefly publish a reform paper
in 1881 entitled the Liberal Sentinel.
Notes
[i]
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.
[ii]
Ruttenber, E.M., and L. H. Clark. History of Orange
County, New York, with biographical sketches of many of
its pioneers and prominent men, 2 vols. Philadelphia
, Everts & Peck, 1881, Republished in 1980 at Interlaken,
NY, by Heart of the Lakes Publishing, pp. 196-198.
[iii]
Ibid.
[iv]
Obituary, Middletown Mercury,
August 7, 1906. Middeltown, NY.
Collection Description
The collection
is comprised primarily of correspondence to John Whittaker
Hasbrouck relating to New York State politics and the
management of newspapers in Bloomingburgh, Sullivan County
and Middletown, Orange County, New York. The main strength
of the collection is threefold: 1) it provides documentation
of the political network of Whig Party affiliates within
the Hudson Valley and their activities, 2) it provides
documentation of the close connection between newspaper
management and party politics during the mid-nineteenth
century, and 3) it provides information about the early
activities of two social clubs for men in the Hudson Valley:
the Young Men's Christian Association of Kingston and
the Goshen Club. However, it must be noted that the collection
is not comprehensive: financial records, subscription
lists, advertisements, and the newspapers themselves are
largely absent. [i]
For the duration
of his career as a newspaper editor from 1845-1867 Hasbrouck
maintained a correspondence with numerous elected officials,
Whig Party activists, and other newspaper editors throughout
the Hudson Valley and elsewhere. [ii]
As a result, the correspondence is peppered with
brief but frequent references to political issues being
discussed at the state and national levels. In addition
to frequent political discussions of a general nature
(which often include references to Henry Clay and the
Whig Party), some of the specific topics mentioned include
the New York & Erie Railroad (1847), landlord-tenant
relations (1845), the indictment of James Reynolds (1849),
a case of slander against a politician for having an Irish-born
father (1852), prohibition (1855), and the elections of
W.H. Seward to U.S. Senate (1855) and “Long John” to the
position of mayor of Chicago (1861).
Two other topics
also mentioned frequently in the correspondence include
the practical business of newspaper management (such as
the sale of property and equipment, soliciting article
submissions, salary rates, employment opportunities, pamphlet
deliveries, etc.), and solicitations of speakers for the
Kingston Young Men's Association meetings (1840-1844).
Other letters concern family matters during the 1830s
and 1840s such as John's sister teaching a school in Shandaken,
family visits, an unidentified divorce, and a visit to
a circus in Washington D.C. in 1830. Other letters of
note in the collection include an 1845 letter written
by E. Whitaker discussing his successful attempts to perform
“animal magnetism” (hypnotism) and clairvoyance, and a
1902 letter with three accompanying prints relating to
old sawmills in Woodstock, NY during the early nineteenth
century.
In addition to
the correspondence, the collection also contains newspaper
clippings, invitations, and other papers. The newspaper
clippings primarily concern local history, but there is
also an obituary of John W. Hasbrouck from 1906 and an
undated editorial on church discipline.
Other items of
interest include an 1845 paper entitled “A Week in Shandaken,”
invitations to Port Jervis Light Guard anniversary ball
(1852) and an unidentified party (undated), incorporation
papers of the Goshen Club (undated), an account with the
Middletown Homeopathic Insurance Asylum (1872), legal
papers concerning the construction of a new street in
Middletown, NY (1872, 1883); deeds, title, receipts, and
other papers of John W. and his family to land in Los
Angeles, CA (1888-1894); an undated hand-drawn diagram
of the Sharpe Cemetery; and a notice by J. W. and L. S.
printed on linen, forbidding pollution or injuring trees
on unspecified property; an undated subscription booklet
of the Sullivan Whig, and several pages of an
undated narrative written by Hasbrouck reminiscing about
his career as a newspaper editor.
The physical condition
of the papers is generally fair, with the papers showing
damage from yellowing, fading, staining, and tearing.
Some items show considerable fraying around the edges.
The handwriting also varies considerably, but is generally
legible throughout. The 1845 paper entitled "A Week
in Shandaken" the ink is extremely faded, rendering
the document barely legible.
Other collections
held by the Huguenot Historical Society relating to regional
political matters during the early and mid-nineteenth
century include the Joseph Osterhoudt Papers (1806-1884)
, the Lucas Elmendorf Papers (1746-1845),
and the Mary Bruyn Forsyth Letters (1826-1847). Also
of interest is the Early American Newspaper Collection
(1783-1835).
Notes
[i]
Various newspapers published by John W. Hasbrouck
can be found on microfilim at the various locations: Cornell
University Libraries, Ithaca, NY; Newburgh Free Library,
Newburgh, NY; Thrall Library, Middletown, NY; the New
York State Historical Association Library, Cooperstown,
NY; the New York State Library, Albany, NY; and the State
University of New York Libraries at Buffalo, Binghamton,
NY.
[ii]
Notable correspondents include Wm. B. Wright, John
W. Allen, E. Whitaker of Saugerties, NY (1849), S. Hosack
Mix of Schoharie (1849), T. Kipack (?) of Washington D.
C. (1849), Gad Wales of Monticello, NY, B. Dales of Philadelphia
and M.O. Wilder of Washington D. C. (all 1850), J. H.
Norton of Port Jervix (1851), John Waller, Jr. of Troy,
NY, John S. Brown of Goshen, NY, and William Quimby and
John S. Taylor of New York, and (all 1852), E. S. Wheeler,
a Civil War soldier writing from Louisiana (undated).
There is no Box and Folder List
for this collection.
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