Friday, April 19, 2013

Windsor County Court April 16


Windsor County Court – April 16



Rafael Martinez, DOB 6/29/51, pled guilty to a charge of petit larceny in Hartford on March 6/2013. Martinez stole some bags of money from the White River Car Wash.



Neil Tinker pled guilty to operating with a suspended license in Hartford on February 25.



Cody Jordan, DOB 11/20/90, pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Hartford on January 2, 2013.



Frank Heynig, DOB 4/23/91, pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Springfield on February 16.



Douglas Sargent, DOB 11/1/69, pled guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Springfield on March 11.



Kevin Stevens, DOB 5/21/64 was charged with his first DUI in Hartford on April 6 in Hartford.



Joseph Wright, DOB 10/22/72 pled not guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana



Matthew Dailey, DOB 10/27/88, pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Cavendish on February 15.



Candace Alberti, DOB 8/20/82 pled not guilty to a charge of retail theft in Springfield on March 8.



Other Crime News:



In other crime news – Two men from New Jersey were arrested in front of Riverside Middle School in Springfield in a drug-related incident. You can read about it here:




Read about Holly Bates of Charlestown – arrested on two outstanding Vermont warrants-




Read about two assaults in Royalton here:




Read about a gang-related heroin bust here:






Another gang-related crime:





Consumption in Canaan and New England


Horace Currier died at age 48. Since I was on vacation this week, I went to the Canaan town clerk's office and looked up his death certificate. Horace died of Consumption. He was the first person to die in Canaan in 1866, having died in early January. As I looked down the page of entries, I was horrified to see that the vast majority of people who died in Canaan in 1966 died of either old age or Consumption. Eleven people died of Consumption that year : Henry Chase, age 39, Sally Blaisdell, age 76, Calvin Pressy, age 67, Clara Cilley, age 19, Caleb Bartlett, age 44, Herbert Morele, age 27, Persis Homan, age 24, Levi Goss, age 35, Elisa Smith, age 26, and John Stickney, age 30.

Most of these people were married. Many of the men were listed as farmers. Henry Chase was listed as a soldier. John Stickney was listed as a thief, as nearly as I could tell. I really studied that entry, and I do think it said “thief” as plain as day. After I went to the town clerk, I went to the cemetery. When you look around the Canaan cemetery, you really get a feeling for the leading families in the town, because people are buried by family groups for the most part. These people who died of Consumption in 1866 were representative of some of the leading families in the town: Chase, Blaisdell, Currier, Pressy, Bartlett, Goss, and Smith. Blaisdell and Bartlett are names that sound familiar from the Noyes Academy story.

I found Persis Homan's grave. She was married to Samuel Homan in 1863, and died 3 years later. Samuel then married Persis' sister Ruth, who was 19 at the time of their marriage. She died two years later on July 22, 1870. At the bottom of her tombstone, there is another name: Mabel Homan, died August 2, 1870, aged 28 days. Ruth died in childbirth and her baby died less than a month later. Samuel Homan's tombstone wasn't there, and I searched the cemetery for it. Just by visiting a cemetery, you can learn what people from long ago were like. Here is a guy who was 25 when he lost his first wife. He cared for her enough to pay for a nice gravestone. Not everyone had nice gravestones – they were expensive and not everyone could afford to buy one. He married his wife's sister Ruth – and she died in childbirth and then the baby died. This is so sad, I almost cried at the cemetery. Just four years after his first wife died, Samuel bought another gravestone, with two names on it this time, his wife's and his daughter's. When I looked on Ancestry.com. I found that yes, Samuel did marry again. He married Jennie Rowell and moved to Lebanon, New Hamphire, where he lived with Jennie and her parents. They never had any kids.



Consumption was another name for Tuberculosis. Tuberculosis was the leading cause of death in New England in the 19th century. Pthisis, white death, and “the gentle disease” are other names for tuberculosis. Tuberculosis patients had flushed cheeks, and bright eyes due to a constant fever; loss of energy, loss of appetite and a constant cough. The disease was called consumption because it consumed a patient. The patient just gradually wasted away, getting sicker and sicker until they were bedridden and finally died. This process could take years. I believe that this is why Horace Currier didn't continue running the store after his business partner, Mr. Wallace, died in 1853. He was probabsly too sick to work, but it took him another 13 years to die. This is why he is listed as a merchant in the 1850 census but as a “gentleman” in the 1860 census. He was an invalid at that time. It would be interesting to know if Mr Wallace had “consumption” as well. I bet he did.

 

 

Horace and Emma had 6 children, and at least three of them were born after Horace stopped working in 1853. I can't imagine raising 6 children and caring for an invalid husband at the same time. The other thing is, I am dying to know, how did Emma pay the bills? Not only did she raise those kids, but several of them grew up to be important people. Her son William Darwin has a mausoleum in the Canaan cemetery. If you judge a person's status and wealth by the quality of their gravestone, and I do to some extent, this guy had plenty of both. Another son, Frank Dunklee, became a Senator in Washington. It might have been difficult, I'm sure it was, but clearly Emma did a good job raising her children.

Tuberculosis is caused by a germ – specifically a bacteria called the mycobacterium toberculosis. This bacteria lodges in a person's lungs, where it forms pockets called “tuburcles”. These pockets harden, spread, and become necrotic, causing a patient to become more and more sick as the disease continues to progress inside the lungs. Tuberculosis can be spread through the mucus that patients cough up, and it can also be spread through infected milk. The practice of coughing into a handkerchief, then keeping the handkerchief around for several days until it was time to do laundry contributed to the spread of the disease.

Tuberculosis most often affected young adults, rarely affected young children, and young women got it more often than young men. This may be true nationally, but in Canaan, in 1866, more men died of Consumption than women, and the age of death seemed to be distributed among all age brackets except young children. The theory of todayis that young women did laundry and cleaning, inside, so they would have been more exposed to the germs that carried the disease.

Back then, there were many theories about how the disease spread and who caught it. Many people believed that Consumption was caught from a vague “something in the air” - not that far off. However, they believed that it was caught from damp night air, so people shut their houses up tight, trapping the germs inside where people could become infected more easily. Some believed that Consumption was a disease of the poor, because the Irish in tenements seemed to be particularly afflicted. Others believed that it was a disease of the well-to-do, affecting the charming and delicate daughters of the upper middle class. In rural areas such as Canaan, New Hampshire, families that were better off lived in town, on Broad Street (Canaan Street) or in the village. Young people would have stayed inside more, and spent more time shut up in schools than their rural counterparts, who were outside helping with farm chores, and were more often absent from school. In this way, young people living in town would have been more likely to get sick. In cities, tenements with overcrowded conditions and very poor sanitation would have been perfect breeding grounds for the disease.

Another prevalent belief was that since tuberculosis seemed to run in familes, it must be inherited. It's easy to understand why people believed this. The disease seemed to run in families because it was contagious, and once you caught it, it would be a while before you started to have symptoms. Once the bacterium was in your house, successive people would fall ill from the disease.

Sometimes Consumption was called the “romantic” disease. Young people would become ill just at the age they should have been courting and marrying. Many times people would marry, knowing full well that their new husband or wife didn't have long to live. It seems sensible that Samuel Homan knew that Persis was consumptive when he married her, because she died two years later. There was a theory that Consumption caused people to become melancholy (depressed) moody or overly sensitive. I'm sure it did, actually, but this happened because these poor souls with Consumption were sick and dying.

Many artists and writers had Tuberculosis, leading to the thought that the disease somehow caused people to become more creative. Robert Louis Stephenson, Frederick Chopin, Lord Byron, John Keats, Anne and Emily Bronte, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Stephen Crane, Robert Burns,Stephen Foster, Henry David Thoreau, the list of artists and authors who had consumption goes on and on. Again, I can see how people would think that somehow Consumption stimulated the brain to be more creative. We know, however, that that wasn't the case, and I think it was the enforced leisure time that caused these artists to write and compose music. They couldn't lay there day after day with nothing to do, so they wrote books and composed music. Similarly, consumptive young women were thought to be good models for paintings. They had good color, with pink cheeks and bright eyes, and they were thin with high cheekbones and long necks.

The first scientific knowledge of Tuberculosis came when doctors began using stethoscopes to listen to the lungs and hearts of their patients. They soon picked up on the fact that the lungs of consumptive patients had a distinctive sound. Medical students who dissected cadavers (which was illegal, but that's a another subject altogether) observed and documented the diseased condition of many dead lungs. Gradually, the medical community began to understand Tuberculosis as a lung disease.

The real breakthrough occurred in 1882, when a Prussian physician named Robert Koch isolated, identified and named the bacteria that causes Tuberculosis by examining the mucus expectorated by a patient under a microscope. Doctors started advising families to undertake sanitary precautions to avoid spreading the disease, especially isolating and boiling the handkerchiefs of the patients. Public Health agencies disseminated information about how to keep people healthy. Still, people insisted on believing that you could get Tuberculosis from going ouside without a coat on, or by dancing too much too late at night.

Although the tuberculosis bacteria wasn't discovered until 1882, folks must have figured out how to prevent the spread of the disease to some extent before that. Frank Currier died of an apoplexy in 1889. That year, one person died of Consumption, Anne Goldthwaite, age 32. Interestingly enough, many sources list apoplexy as one of the main causes of death in the 1800's after Consumption. High Blood pressure and atrial fibrillation were unknown at the time. No matter what, people are going to die.

 
 
I also discovered some interesting trivia when I watched the Canaan History DVD - I think it is entitled "A Tour of Canaan 100 Years Ago".  The pipe wrench was invented in Canaan.  Also, another fun fact - the very first recipient of a diploma from Cardigan Mountain school - the first boy in line at the first graduation - was F. Lee Bailey - famous lawyer during the '60's and '70's.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Windsor County Court April 9


Michael Moodie, DOB 3/28/91 pled not guilty to charges of a burglary that occurred in Hartford on September 8, 2012. In a separate case, he pled not guilty to a charge of possession of a depressant/stimulant or narcotic in Windsor on November 7, 2012.



Adam Coronis, DOB 10/11/7, pled not guilty to a charge of counterfeiting in Windsor on May 4, 2012. He also pled not guilty to charges of burglary, and buying, selling, or possessing stolen property. Coronis is mentioned in the Springfield police log here: http://springfieldvt.blogspot.com/2012/04 and on the WNTK newsblog here:http://wntk.com/wp_news/tag/arrests/



William Manson, DOB 8/9/88 pled not guilty to a charge of assault and robbery with injury in Springfield on January 29. He was also charged with possession of heroin on August 11,2011. Read about the assault charge in more detail: http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20130206/NEWS02/702069940/1001/NEWS



Seth Robinson, DOB 2/2/82 was charged with counterfeiting in Springfield on February 11. You can read more about this incident at: http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20130411/NEWS02/704119923



Leann Snow, DOB 9/23/73 pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license



Brian Corliss, DOB 5/8/61 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Chester on April 5


Steven Philips, DOB 7/10/62 was charged with grand larceny. This charge stems from an alleged theft of silver and gold items from the chapel at the VA Hospital in White River Junction on December 27, 2009.



Jillian Dyer, DOB 12/17/85, pled not guilty to a charge of her first DUI in Hartford on April 2



Bryan Connery, DOB 6/23/82 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Ludlow on April 4



Kyle Larabee, DOB 5/14/93 pled not guilty to charges of operating with a suspended license, and careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Sharon on December 4








19th Century Post offices


The Curriers of Canaan were a family of merchants. From various histories of Canaan and Grafton County, we know that Horace worked in his father's store, and then partnered with James Wallace until Wallace died in 1853. In the 1850 Canaan census, Horace is listed as a merchant. In the 1860 census, he is listed as a gentleman. Did he retire after Wallace died? Was he in poor health? He died in 1866, at age 48.

All of the Curriers lived near each other. Nathaniel Currier lived about six houses away from Horace and Emma in 1860. Nathaniel died in 1863 and his son Horace died 3 years later. Emma Currier never remarried. She had six children, and the youngest was only 3 when his father died. She stayed in the same house until she died in 1888. You have to wonder how these widows managed to feed and clothe their families after their husbands died. Emma's oldest child was a girl, Jennie, who was 17 at the time of her father's death.

In the 1870 Canaan census, Frank Currier is listed as a merchant in the census, and his brother Henry, 14 years younger than Frank, is listed as a clerk in a dry goods store. Henry lived near Frank. It seems that Frank might have lived in Nathaniel's house. On the census list, he is about the same number of houses separated from Emma as Nathaniel was, although it is harder to figure this out than you might think. It is very surprising how much the names change in the neighborhood. In fact, the Curriers are the only names that stay the same through the decade. It seems that people were so much more mobile back in the 1800's. We moved to our neighborhood twenty years ago, and excepting the people who have died, the neighborhood has stayed the same. This is true with the neighborhood my parents live in as well. If you saw a census list from their neighborhood, many of the names would still be the same as they were in the 1960's. With so many people moving in and out, it is hard to really be sure that Frank lived in Nathaniel's house.

Frank Currier married Ella Minton when he was 51 and she was 26. They had a daughter, Helen, who was born the year they got married, and a son, John, six years later. In 1879, Frank became the postmaster in Canaan. Often general storekeepers served in the capacity of postmaster as well. The general store was in the center of town, and served as the hub of the village, making it the obvious place for the post office.

In 19th century America, the postal service was the second oldest federal department and employed the most people of any government agency. The postal service was founded in 1775. At the beginning of our country, there were 30 post offices between Williamsburg, Virginia and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Mail service was important during the American Revolution. The committees of correspondence, groups of citizens in every state planning our rebellion against Great Britain, communicated with each other through the mail.

At the end of the 1700's, when the United States was newly formed, the federal government contracted with stagecoach companies to carry the mail. This was controversial. Some people thought that federal money shouldn't be used to subsidize companies that transported private individuals. President Washington thought it was a good idea. He thought anything that encouraged travel and communication between the states should be encouraged. The postal service also paid for the roads between post offices to be maintained. These roads were called post roads. The post roads still exist today. Many people felt that maintaining the post roads was an inappropriate use of federal funds, since these roads were used primarily for private purposes.

In the beginning, mail services were used mostly for business and government purposes. As we saw in the story of Simeon Ide, everyone in the early United States was interested and involved in politics. Newspapers were the political vehicle of the day, and they were distributed through the mail. Newspaper printers delivered fresh newspapers to their subscribers through the mail, and people read those newspapers and then passed them on to others through the mail. It wasn't long before clever newspaper readers began to send clandestine personal messages on the newspapers they were sending to friends and relatives in the mail. They might write a tiny message somewhere in a margin, or black out some letters on a headline to send a message, or send a coded message in the address.

As the American economy and government grew, professionals became increasingly comfortable using the mail as a way to conduct business, and they began to use the mail to conduct personal correspondence as well. Before 1845, Postal rates were based on the number of sheets in the envelope and the distance the item was going. Mail cost 8¢ per sheet under 40 miles, 10¢ a sheet 40 – 90 miles, 21¢ a sheet 91-150 miles, on up to 25¢ a sheet over 500 miles. Letter writers would sometimes fill up a sheet of paper, then turn the paper sideways and write more going a different way to save on postage. The postmaster used wax and a stamp to seal envelopes at the post office. Because there were so few post offices, many people relied on personal carriers, sending letters by friends who might be traveling to a city where a letter recipient lived. People who were travelling also carried letters to the nearest post office, to be sent to another city where they might languish for months before someone came to get them. The recipient of a letter paid for the letter, not the mailer. As more and more people used the postal service, more post offices were opened. In 1828, there were 7,530 post offices nationwide.

In 1845, the Postal Department began basing rates on the weight of an item, with a rate for 300 miles or less, and a rate for over 300 miles. In 1855, any letter weighing half an ounce could be sent up to 3,000 miles for 3¢. This encompassed most of the United States at that time.

Britain began using postage stamps before the United States. In 1847, Congress passed an act authorizing the printing of United States postage stamps. The first American stamps were a 5¢
stamp depicting Benjamin Franklin and a 10¢ stamp depicting George Washington. These stamps weren't perforated. The postmaster had to cut out the number of stamps a customer wanted, and each individual stamp had to be cut out to be used on a letter. The Postal Department introduced perforated stamps in 1857.
 

With the cheaper, more standardized rates, average people could use the mail, and it became a national pastime. At the same time the postal service modernized, two events occurred to make mailing letters even more popular. "Western Fever" took hold in Vermont and New Hampshire. Many Northern New Englanders left their homes to seek their fortunes in the new midwestern states, or to the gold fields of California. William Allen Wallace himself went to the gold fields of California when, as a young man, he couldn't stand the dull life of constant hard work in Canaan. He didn't make his fortune in the gold fields, but he ended up staying in California to become one of the first schoolteachers in Los Angeles. That proved to a miserable experience, and he returned to Canaan. Apparently this was the end of his wanderlust, because he stayed in Canaan the rest of his life.

Emigrants who left New Hampshire and Vermont for the gold fields in California, or to make a new life in the midwest wrote letters back home to maintain ties with their families. Thanks to the postal improvements of 1845 and 1855, families could afford to stay in touch across the continent, and could be reasonably well assured that their letters would reach their destinations.

During the Civil War, soldiers and their families exchanged record numbers of letters. Often the soldiers and their families were well aware that these letters documented history. Fathers and husbands instructed their families to save the letters, and wives diligently saved the mail they received from their husbands on the battlefields. Several of these collections of letters have been published in books. David Henkin, in "The Postal Age" writes that 180,000 letters a day were sent or received by soldiers in the Civil War. The list of Canaan residents who served in the Civil War is too long to include here, but it would certainly be worth pursuing another time. Suffice it to say that the Canaan post office would certainly have been busy with correspondence between Canaan residents and their loved ones serving in the Civil War.

By 1879, when Frank Currier became Postmaster in Canaan, letter writing was a common pastime. If you didn't know how to write a letter, you could buy a book that gave you templates for writing letters for various purposes.

Letters began with standard lines: "I take my pen in hand and write that I am in good health, and pray that you enjoy the same blessing." Penmanship was taken very seriously. Husbands and parents who received letters from their children or wives would often critique the letters and send them back for corrections. Letter writers were encouraged to write first drafts of letters before sending the final version. Many courtships were conducted through mail, and probably parents of these young people complained about how ridiculous this practice was, the way they complain about people starting relationships today through Facebook.


Frank Currier was Postmaster in Canaan for 10 years. He died in 1889. Ella lived with her daughter Helen, who never remarried. Helen lived in the same house she grew up in, and died in 1968 at age 94. In every census, Helen is never listed as having a job, so she must have lived off an inheritance. Helen's brother John was married and was a carpenter in Canaan.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Windsor County Court April 2

Sean Finnegan, DOB 12/11/77 pled not guilty to a charge of his third DUI, in Chester on February 19

Elizabeth Howe, DOB 5/22/92, pled not guilty to charges of giving false information to a police officer to implicate another, and alcohol consumption by a minor, in South Royalton on March 30.

Christopher Mangan, DOB 7/31/78, pled not guilty to charges of reckless and negligent operation of a motor vehicle and leaving the scene of an accident in Windsor on March 27

Matthew Clark, DOB 8/7/79, pled not  guilty to charges of his second DUI and resisting arrest in Hartford on March 27

Azer Avdagic, DOB 10/4/89, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Hartford on March 28

Jonathan Miller, DOB 5/25/83, pled guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license in Windsor.

Matthew Gonyea, DOB 5/22/85, pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Springfield on February 16.

Antoine Juhasz, DOB 10/26/83, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Cavendish on March 17

Jerome Lacobelle, DOB 9/21/63, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Ludlow.

Danielle Beaudry, DOB 9/21/91 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Cavendish on March 30.

Martin Gonyea, DOB 9/4/86 pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Springfield on February 16.

Cody Crawford, DOB 9/17/93 pled guilty to a charge of alcohol consumption by a minor in Springfield on October 3.  This is a case that went back to court when the accused didn't complete diversion.

Lowell Schnurr, DOB 1/10/92 pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Springfield on March 31

Windsor County Court March 26

Zachary Bostock, DOB 1/4/89 pled not guilty to his first DUI in Bridgewater on March 9

Michael Drury pled not guilty to a charge of attempting to elude an officer and driving with reckless or gross negligence in Bethel on February 26.

Mechelle Kneideinger, DOB 6/14/89 pled guilty a charge of her first DUI, in Hartford on March 17

Bruce Wayne Lambert, DOB 1/21/56, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, and driving with reckless or gross negligence in Ludlow on March 20

Leon Desmarais, DOB 4/2/85 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Springfield on March 16

Natasha Bruso, DOB 10/04/91, pled not guilty to unlawful mischief, and disorderly conduct/fight in Windsor on February 13.

Philip Carvalho, DOB 2/20/66, pled guilty to minor/alcohol enabling in Windsor on September 22

Karl LaFlam, DOB 2/20/66 pled not guilty to simple assault on December 17 in Hartford

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Rural General Stores in the 1800's


In the preface to “The History of Canaan, New Hampshire”, James Wallace, William Allen Wallace's son, explains that his father died before he was able to finish his book. James actually finished the book after his father's death, and had it published. James states that most of the events in the book took place before 1860, because, “the strenuous life of this town happened before that date. Since the Rebellion, the life of the people has run smoothly. History is not made in that way.”

I definitely have found this to be the case throughout the Upper Valley. Almost every town has a fascinating, well-written town history that ends with the Civil War. One possible explanation for this is the opposite of what James Wallace says. The Civil War and the changes that followed it were so cataclysmic that people longed to remember a simpler, gentler time; a time when heroes were really heroes. They could look back at the town founders and civic leaders, like Oliver Farnsworth, Simeon Ide and Nathaniel Currier, and find men to venerate and look up to as stalwart individuals who were honest and brave, men who stood up for what was right, men who fought the odds and remained true to their beliefs, standards of the past life when it seemed like currently, things were running amuck.

Nathaniel Currier had two sons who became merchants. William Wallace tells us that Horace was employed in his father's store, and partnered with James Wallace until James died in 1853. Horace was married and had six children. He died in 1866 at age 48. Horace's brother Franklin, was also a merchant.

Frank was five years younger than Horace. He was born in 1823 and didn't get married until he was 51, and then to a woman 25 years younger than he was. Her name was Ella Minton, and she and Frank got married in 1874. They had two children, Ella and John. Ella was born the same year they were married, and John was born six years later, in 1880.

Horace and Frank followed their father's footsteps, becoming storekeepers in an era of rapid change. General stores had always been the center of life in a rural village. In areas with no general store, farm families had to either produce absolutely everything they ate, used or wore, or they had to travel long distances to purchase items they couldn't make or grow. General stores made it possible for farm families to specialize in making certain items, and buying or bartering for other necessities. Before the Civil War, necessities were all anyone could afford. After the war was over, the American economy grew so quickly that even farm families from rural New Hampshire could afford a few luxuries.

General stores often had large windows on either side of the front door. One window showed women's items and the other showed men's items. Sometimes store owners wanted their store to look bigger than it was, so they put a false front onto their store to make it look taller and more impressive. I don't think this was common in the Upper Valley, though. One building that does have a false front is the Good Buy Store in Wilder. Come to think of it, that building has the two big windows on either side of the door as well. Anyway, when you hear people talk about someone who “puts up a front”, this is where that saying comes from. Back in the day, it meant to put a fake front on a store to make it look higher, and now it means to act like things are better than they are.

 
                    19th century Michigan General store        Good Buy Store - 2013  

In the early 1800's, storekeepers did a lot of their trading by barter, because there wasn't much money in circulation. The store owner would sell items, and take other items in trade. Often merchandise wasn't marked with the price like it is now. The storekeepers would use a code to mark both the cost of the item and the price of the item on every piece of merchandise in the store. They would use a ten letter word or phrase, and assign each letter a digit from 0 – 9, then they would mark the merchandise with tags in code. Thus FAT COW MILK would stand for 123 456 7890. A lantern that cost the merchant $2.00, that the merchant would like to trade for another item worth $2.50, would have a tag that read AKK on the top and A OK on the bottom.

After the Civil War, more people had money, and general stores began to mark their merchandise with prices. Rather than barter, storeowners paid people money for food and merchandise, and the people who sold them the items could use the money to buy what they wanted. This is about the time cash registers first came into use.

A saloon keeper in Dayton Ohio, James Ritty, patented the cash register in 1879. He invented the cash register to stop his employees from pocketing money when they sold drinks. Cash registers
made it impossible to access cash until a sale was made. Then, the employee had to punch the keys to record the sale, and at the end of the transaction the cash drawer opened. At the same time the drawer opened, a bell went off, signaling to the owner of the store or saloon that a sale had been made. There is a theory that this is what started odd sales prices, because a store employee would have to open the cash register to give a penny's worth of change to someone buying an item for $1.99, thereby making a record of the sale and keeping the employee honest. This debunks the myth of everyone being so honest and trustworthy in the “good old days”.

General stores usually carried produce, groceries, dry goods, housewares and hardware. Produce was fruits and vegetables. Groceries was all of your other cooking supplies, especially baking ingredients, spices, coffee, tea and sugar. Dry goods was paper, cloth, and the sundry items associated with them, like pins, needles, thread, ink and fountain pens. Housewares were what the women needed to do their jobs, like flour sifters, cutlery, irons, washtubs, and other items needed to run a household. Hardware was what it is today, mostly nails, screws, and hand tools. Many of these items could have been made by a blacksmith, who sold them to the storekeeper.

There were no paper bags or boxes (and certainly no plastic). Housewives brought their own cloth bags, baskets or crockery to carry goods home in. They carried coffee, flour and sugar in their own cloth bags. They used crockery to carry liquid, like molasses, vinegar, honey, or in the Upper Valley, maple sugar. Storeowners would sell dry goods in bags, but they charged extra for the bags. Small purchases were wrapped in paper. Some small goods, like seeds or candy, were sold in a poke. The person selling the goods would rip a length of brown paper from a roll, shape it into a cone, and pour the dry goods into it. This was called a poke.

People who lived a way from town would only come in to buy from the store every month or so. I'm sure the Curriers had many customers for whom a trip to the store was a real occasion. In this day, eight or ten miles out of town was a real journey, and many families came into town one Saturday a month, or even one Saturday a season. For others who may have been poorer, a trip to town happened once or twice a year. These store customers bought in bulk, and brought their purchases home in huge cloth sacks and wooden barrels, in the back of their farm wagons.

Customers could walk through the store and look at merchandise and pick out what they wanted from the dry goods section, housewares and hardware. When it came to groceries, they would go to the counter with an order and the grocer would fill their order. There weren't name brands like there are today. Most of the groceries were locally grown or milled. Coffee, tea, molasses and sugar were imported by the grocer and everyone's order was taken from the same barrel.

There is a story that the word “counter” came from a medieval method of tallying up purchases. Our Arabic numerical system had not been adopted by Europeans in the Middle Ages, so storekeeper in very early medieval towns had no way to tally amounts of purchases. They developed a flat board that had grooves in it. They would place discs in the grooves, with each disc standing for a certain amount or number of goods the customer was buying. Then the customer would be charged, almost certainly in trade, for the amount of goods he bought. Eventually, the “counter” became a fixed part of the very early store, and transactions took place over the “counter”. There is evidence of this type of counter being used at Jamestowne in very early Virginia.

Of course, we really don't know what Currier's store was like. We do know that they sold rum. Every general store sold some types of groceries, dry goods, housewares, and hardware. I'm pretty sure they did not have a fake front – don't ask me why, but I just doubt they did. They may or may not have used a code to price their merchandise. No matter what, it's fun to speculate about what they sold, and what the inside of the stores looked like.