The Widow's Mail Order Husband (Mail Order Brides)

Susan Leigh Carlton

Tomball, TX

[email protected]

<$wc30,000> words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Widow’s Mail Order Husband

 

by

 

Susan Leigh Carlton

Copyright

 

Susan Leigh Carlton 2014

 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

This book contains Material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book May be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author / publisher.

 

Table of Contents

Grapevine, Texas

Prologue

Chapter 1: Zion Church, Ladies Sewing Circle, May 1875…

Chapter 2:  Home of Mary Cartwright

Chapter 3:  An Answer To My Letter

Chapter 4:  Arrival In Fort Worth

Chapter 5:  Mary’s New Home

Chapter 6:  Our First Night

Chapter 7:  Getting Emily To Talk

Chapter 8:  The Storm

Chapter  9:  Mary Cleans Up

Chapter 10:  Tom and Mary Agree On A Plan

Chapter 11:  Creating A School

Chapter 12:  Tom Does Some Soul Searching

Chapter 13:  It’s Been A Very Good Day

Chapter 14: School Starts

Chapter 15:  Two Relationships Progress

Chapter 16:  An Uneventful Pregnancy

Chapter 17:  Matthew Thomas Hartness

Chapter 18:  Church

Chapter 19:  Indian Uprisings

Chapter 20:  Here’s The Bullet

Chapter 21:  A Slow Return To Normal

Chapter 22:  1880 Christmas Time At the Lazy H

Epilogue

About Susan Leigh Carlton

Susan’s Other Books

 

Grapevine, Texas

 

Grapevine, Texas is a city of approximately 50,000 inhabitants, some twenty miles from Dallas. Its name comes from the native grapes in the area.  In the recent past, several wineries have opened in Grapevine.  The city is very active in maintaining its historic downtown corridor. In 2007 CNNMoney.com rated Grapevine as one of "America's Best Places to Live."

In the fall of 1843, General Sam Houston and other Republic of Texas Commissioners met with the chiefs of ten Indian nations on the banks of Grape Vine Springs. This meeting ended with the signing of a treaty of "peace, friendship, and commerce," opening the area for homesteaders. The settlement that emerged was named Grape Vine due to its location on the appropriately-named Grape Vine Prairie near Grape Vine Springs.

The first recorded white settlement in the area occurred in the late 1840s and early 1850s. General Richard Montgomery Gano owned property near Grape Vine and rallied the early settlement against Comanche raiding parties. He later led a band of volunteers to battle in the American Civil War.

During the 19th century, growth was slow but steady; and by 1890, roughly 800 residents called Grape Vine home.  It had a newspaper, a public school, several cotton gins, a post office and railroad service.  Grape Vine made gains early in the 20th century, and on January 12, 1914, the name was altered to one word, Grapevine.

An event of note occurred on Easter Sunday, April 1, 1934.  Henry Methvin, an associate of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, killed two police officers, E.B. Wheeler and H.D. Murphy, during an altercation near Grapevine. A historical marker remains at the intersection of Dove Road and State Highway 114. Points of historical interest nearby include several cabins near Grapevine Lake previously owned by Jack Ruby, the man convicted in the murder of presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald.

The name of one of the churches in the area was the Lonesome Dove Baptist Church.  I have wondered if this is where Larry McMurtry found the name for his book and runaway hit, “Lonesome Dove”.  I have been unable to document this.

The population of Grapevine fell in the interval between the two world wars.  Cotton was the primary crop for Grapevine until the early 20th
century, when it was overtaken by cantaloupe farms, accounting for as many as 25,000 acres. For many years, a Rotary Club sign outside of town boasted of Grapevine as "Cantaloupe Capital of the World".

Population growth continued at a moderate pace until the opening of Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, (DFW) in 1974.  Growth exploded with massive development in the area
, due to the airport development.  Grapevine had previously depended heavily on agricultural production, but then quickly changed into a regional center of commerce due to its proximity to the airport's north entrance. The economic benefits of the airport's construction continue to encourage new levels of development in Grapevine to this day.

My son was born in nearby Irving and now lives in Flower Mound, about four miles from Grapevine Lake.   We have eaten in several of the restaurants in the eclectic historic section of Grapevine.  We have also attended church there.  It is a beautiful city that is proactive in protecting their heritage.

Prologue

 

Mary Cartwright’s husband was with General Meade’s Union Army somewhere in Virginia. Her twentieth birthday was July 10, 1863 and she was hoping against hope Joshua would be able to make it home for the event. She and Joshua had married just after her eighteenth birthday and she had seen him only once in the past year. “I wish this terrible war would just end. It has gone on too long. We’ve lost nearly an entire generation,” she thought.

 

On the day of her birth, as was her usual habit, she went to the train station in Hagerstown, where the casualty lists were posted. The lists of those who had fallen were usually posted on the board outside the depot, five to ten days after a battle. As she came near the site, she heard the crowd talking about a major battle that had occurred at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, only thirty two miles away. The names on the casualty lists were arranged by unit.

 

Under the listing, Hancock’s II Corp, she saw the name, Joshua Hancock. Her husband was dead, on the third day of the Battle of Gettysburg. Mary could not say how she made it back to her parent’s home. She was in a state of shock. Her mother tried to comfort her, but failed. Mary was devastated over the loss of her husband and grieved for over two years before she gradually resumed her life.

 

There were no men in her life for the simple reason the war had taken out most of the males of her generation.

             

Chapter 1: Zion Church, Ladies Sewing Circle, May 1875…

 

“Did you hear about Minerva Logan?” asked Cora Tompkins.

 

“No, what happened?” chorused several of the 10 women present.

 

“Why, she advertised in a newspaper for a husband, that’s what, and she’s going off to some place in Texas to marry a man she’s never even met,” said Cora.

 

“Why ever would anyone do such a thing?” Emma Sayres asked.

 

“Maybe she was tired of being alone,” offered Mary Cartwright. Mary had lost her husband on her twentieth birthday. She’s lived alone since her parents passed away five years ago.

 

“That’s no reason to go running off with some stranger,” Cora said. Several of the married ladies in the circle nodded in agreement.

 

“I can understand her feeling that way,” said Mary. “It gets tiresome, not having anyone to talk to.“

 

“Well, I think it’s scandalous,” Cora said. “Scandalous, that’s what it is.”

 

“How is your husband, Cora? Is he well?’ asked Mary, who was one of the five widows present.

 

“Why yes, he’s well, though his rheumatism acts up once in a while, why do you ask?” Cora said.

 

“He wasn’t in the war, was he?” asked Mary.

 

“What has that to do with anything” Cora asked.

 

“Since you’ve never been alone, how can you criticize someone trying to rid herself of the loneliness?” Mary asked. She gathered her unused sewing equipment and prepared to leave.

 

“Well, I never,” sniffed Cora.

 

“No, you haven't, and for that, you should be grateful. Now, ladies, I think I will go home to my empty house,” Mary said

 

As she walked away, she heard Cora ask of the others, “Did you hear the way she talked to me…” Mary didn’t hear the rest of Cora’s question.

 

As she walked home, she was thinking about Minerva Logan. Mary had never heard of anyone advertising for a husband. “I wonder where she heard about the newspaper?” Mary thought to herself. “What kind of courage would it take to take such action?”

 

Along the way home, she passed, the Logan house. She stopped and looked at the house. Then she found herself walking up the steps. “In for a penny,” she thought and knocked at the door.

 

Minerva answered the door, and said, “Why, Mary, hello. I didn’t expect you. Please come in?” Minerva had known Mary most of her adult life, seeing her at church and at the general store on occasion. She had lost her husband in the same battle in which Mary’s husband had fallen. Would you like some tea? I have the kettle on the stove.”

 

“No, I’m fine,” Mary said. “I just heard you’re getting married. Is it true?”

 

“Oh, that’s right, today was the sewing circle, wasn’t it?” she asked with a laugh.

 

“Well, that’s where I heard it,” Mary said. “If it’s not too personal, would you tell me about it?”

 

“Mary, it’s been so lonely around here, I could hardly stand it. I guess I don’t have to tell you about lonely. You lost Joshua in the same battle,”

 

“I do know all about being lonely,” Mary said.

 

Minerva said, “It might be unseemly to talk about it, but I haven't been with a man since my Benjamin left. There just aren’t any men here our age.”

 

“Tell me about it,” Mary said. “The only one I have to talk to is my cat.”

 

“Anyway, I heard about this newspaper where women can advertise for a husband or just the opposite. The war left a shortage of men here, and out west, those that went looking for gold have no women to marry. So there’s a newspaper called The Matrimonial News, published in San Francisco and Saint Louis, taking these ads. They don’t charge the women for theirs, but to get the newspaper, you have to subscribe. I did, and I decided to place an ad,” Minerva said.

 

“Weren’t you worried about someone coming here?” Mary asked.

 

“Oh no,” Minerva said. “All letters go to the newspaper and they forward them on. If you get a letter from someone in whom you might be interested, you can give the newspaper permission to pass on your name and address. I received letters from several men, and corresponded with two of them. One caught my interest and we wrote several times back and forth. We decided to meet and get married. He provided the transportation, but you can pay your own way if you like. I’ve sold the house and furniture to a nice couple and I’m leaving for Fort Worth, Texas, the end of the week.”

 

“Aren’t you nervous about this?” Mary asked.

 

“Of course I am, but I will have the money to come back if it doesn’t work. Mary, I have to take the chance. There’s nothing here for me and I don’t want to live and die alone.”

 

“Would you give me the address of the paper?” Mary asked softly.

 

“I’ll do better than that. I’ll give you the last paper I received. You can see my ad.”

 

“Would you?” Mary asked. “I’d be ever so grateful.”

 

“Just a minute, I’ll get it,” Minerva said. She left the room and returned shortly with a newspaper of several pages.

 

“May I borrow it? I’ll return it,” Mary promised. Minerva handed the paper to Cora, who stuck it in her pocket.

 

“I’ll bring it back, I want to see you off. You’re going by train, aren’t you?” Mary asked.

 

“Yes, there’s a train that goes through Fort Worth,” Minerva answered.

 

“Minerva, I appreciate this more than I can say. Thank you. I really admire your courage,” Mary said.

 

“Courage is born out of desperation and I was desperate. Now at least, I’m going to have a chance,” Minerva said.

 

Mary stood, then embraced Minerva. “Maybe you’ve just given me a chance too,” she said. “I’ll see you before you leave.”

 

Two days later, she returned the paper. “I’ll be getting my own copy now. I’ve placed an ad too. How long did you have to wait for an answer?” she asked.

 

“It was about three weeks between the letters until we started writing directly, then two weeks.”

 

“I don’t think I’m going to do anything about my house until I’m sure about something,” Mary said. “Mr. Charles, at the bank, handled everything after my father died and I trust him to handle this,” she said. “That is, if I get any answers,” she said ruefully.

 

“You’ll get answers, Mary, just like I did. Just be careful. If it doesn’t sound right, it probably isn’t,” Minerva advised.

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