Thursday, December 27, 2012

A Golden Decade for Simeon Ide


 
 
 
 
As Simeon became older, his devotion to Evelelina never wavered.  Louis Flanders gives us several glimpses of Simeon's love for Angelina in his book. In 1827, Simeon and a friend were out at a political rally. He convinced the friend to spend the night at his house, because they had both been drinking and it wasn't a good idea for the friend to go all the way home. They made such a racket coming up the walkway and into the house that they woke Evelina up and she met them at the door. As he told his son-in-law (probably Louis Flanders' father) “you should have seen the look on her face”. That was it for Simeon and alcohol. The next day, he took all the liquor bottles out of the house, smashed them against the foundation of the barn, and never touched a drop of liquor again. He also didn't smoke or play cards until he was in his eighties.

Simeon joined the Episcopal church, although he makes it plain in his diaries that he had never been in love with “The Church of England”. My guess is that Evelina was Episcopalian and it was her wish to join the Episcopal church in Windsor. Why else would Simeon have joined a church he didnd't really like? Her brother Edward became the vicar of the Episcopal Church in Windsor, which seems to me to indicate a strong tie to the Episcopal church. On the other hand, there is no mention of Lemuel and Sarah having strong ties to any denomination.

Once he had decided to join the church, Simeon threw himself into church affairs with enthusiasm, becoming a vestryman and a delegate to the Diocesan conventions. Louis says, “There are some of us alive today who remember him in his eighty-eighth year, standing in his pew as erect as in his youth, his fine old head crowned with a shock of snow-white hair, earnestly responding to the psalms or joining in the hymns with a trembling voice.”

The 1820's were a golden decade for Simeon. His family and his business were growing by leaps and bounds. In 1820, when he moved his shop to the second floor of West's tavern, he had a Ramage two-pull wooden frame printing press. The sole main difference between a Ramage press and the original printing press invented by Gutenberg was that Ramage incorporated many metal parts into his press, thus making his press much more durable. The Ramage press was called a “two pull” because each copy required the printer to pull the lever down twice. Although presses made totally of iron did exist at that time, they were wicked heavy and hard to take apart, making the Ramage press more popular for the average printer.

 
 

In 1824, Simeon did have to break down and buy a Wells Iron printing press. This press was still operated by hand, but needed one pull instead of two. Peter Wells, of Philadelphia, had designed a printing press with a series of toggle levers rather than a main screw. The more powerful motion of the toggle switches tore apart wooden frames, so the whole machine had to be made of metal. Unfortunately for Wells, several other inventors from America and Europe had similar designs, and the controversy of who had the idea first has never been solved. The Wells press only dominated the industry for a few years. Simeon's Wells press may have been the first iron printing press used in Vermont

 

In 1828 Simeon bought a bed and platten power press which printed 12 sheets a minute. This press was invented by Haskell and Metcalf of Woodstock, Vermont. Bed and platen power presses used flat bed and flat impressions to print, and not rotary drums. This printer used water or horse power throughout the whole printing process, except to load unprinted sheets of paper in the front and take off the printed sheets at the back. Although this purchase put Simeon into a new era of technology, it also ended an era of prosperity and success, and ushered in an era of headache, heartache, and stress.
 
 

Monday, December 17, 2012

Windsor County Court, December 11


Jessica Quimby, DOB 5/27/86, pled not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight on October 28 in Windsor



Ashley Husband, DOB 9/28/90 was also charged with disorderly conduct/fight on October 28 in Windsor



Timothy Simonds, DOB 1/20/82, pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license on October 2 in Bridgewater.



Amanda Viger, DOB 3/24/84 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Windsor on October 26



Keith Descrochers, DOB 3/31/82, pled guilty to his first DUI charge, in Hartford on November 21



Jennifer Clough, DOB 10/19/89 pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/obstruct on November 5 in Sharon



Shane Harlow, DOB 4/11/65 pled not guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of a crash with property damage on October 6 in Hartford



Hunter Dwinell, DOB 2/19/92 pled not guilty to a charge of escaping from custody/furlough on December 4



James Filipowicz, DOB 6/20/90 pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Chester on November 1



Magen Hill, DOB 5/3/86 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Weathersfield on November 6



Benjamin Stearman, DOB 8/14/80 pled guilty to a charge of marijuana possession in Windsor on October 17



Joey Bergeron, DOB 2/26/81 pled not guilty to a charge of buying, receiving, selling, possessing or concealing stolen property in Reading on November 4



Alexander Gee, DOB 9/10/91, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight in Windsor on October 15



Ashley Blanchard, DOB 1/12/93, pled not guilty to 2 counts of sale of depressant/stimulant/or narcotic and two counts of sale of heroin in February. Blanchard was also charged with possession of drugs with intent to sell in Holyoke, Massachusetts. In Holyoke's Police Department blog, the Holyoke police chief said that Blanchard was the sixth person that month from Vermont who had been arrested for drug offenses and made a statement that from now on, any time the police department sees a car with Vermont license plates in Holyoke, they are going to assume the person is there to obtain drugs. The policy of the Holyoke police department is now to stop every car they see with Vermont license plates. I hope they don't include Vermonters going to the Holyoke Mall.


Luella Powell, DOB 2/27/81 pled not guilty to a charge of aiding in the commission of a felony in Chester on May 15




Simeon Goes to Washington


By the time Simeon had been married for five years, he had paid for his business and owned a house worth $2,000, built by his brother William. In one of his diaries, he observes that, “For nearly 30 years, my family consisted of between 10 and 15 people, including children. Simeon had ten children, and his wife's mother Charity Goddard lived with them, as well as his wife's four siblings, Edward, Nathan, Harriet and Charlotte Goddard. His children were Harriet, born in 1819; George, born in 1821; Mary, born in 1823; Lemuel, born in 1825; Sarah, born in 1827; Frances, born in 1828; Ellen, born in 1831; Agnes, born in 1833, Julia, born in 1835; and Charlotte, born in 1837. Sarah married A.B. Flanders, and it was her son and daughter who wrote “Simeon Ide, Yeoman, Freedman, and Pioneer Printer”.

In 1820, Simeon moved his print shop to the second floor of West's Tavern. West's Tavern was where Vermont's founders signed the Constitution of Vermont in 1777. In 1825, Simeon became a bookbinder and publisher as well as a printer, and moved to even bigger quarters. He had begun printing for both the Vermont government and the federal government. He began printing the laws of Vermont, and he got a printing contract for the U.S. Post Office.

Simeon went all the way to Washington, D.C. to apply in person for the Post Office contract.

His trip began when he left Windsor by stagecoach at 1:00 p.m, and arrived in Boston at 8:00 pm. The next day, he took a stagecoach to Providence, Rhode Island. On the afternoon of the third day, he took a steamboat to New York. He didn't like the steamboat ride, but he wasn't seasick. He didn't like the sound of the water in the bilge because he couldn't sleep. Late on the fourth day, he left New York for New Jersey, headed for Philadelphia. On this leg of the trip he alternated between riding watercraft and stagecoach. On the morning of the fifth day he left Philadelphia on a steamship bound for Baltimore. On this ship, he made friends with a Quaker gentleman.

This man was also headed for Washington, D.C. and he was on the same stagecoach train, a train of eight four-horse coaches. They weren't in the same coach, though. Simeon was in Coach Four and the other man was in Coach Two. When they got to Baltimore, Simeon switched with someone else so that he could ride in coach two with his new friend.

Soon they were on their way again. Simeon was irritated at the long breaks the drivers took. It seems that the drivers liked to stop for a while and  “take a drop to lay the dust”. After a fairly long interval of steady driving they had to stop because there had been a terrible accident. Coach Four had overturned and landed at the bottom of a ravine. Many people were hurt and several died. Apparently after the last stop, when they got going again, Coach Four had headed out ahead of Coach Three and the driver of Coach Three tried to pass Coach Four and ended up running Coach Four off the road. Simeon says that “Rum was the cause of the accident, or I should perhaps say, the recklessness of the drivers produced by the rum.”

Luckily, because he had switched coaches, Simeon arrived in Washington without mishap, and personally submitted his bid for the Post Office contract. When he was in Washington, a newspaper reporter someone from Windsor knew showed him around the town and he actually got to meet President John Quincy Adams. He had to repeat the whole process of his trip in reverse, to make it back to Windsor. A few weeks after he got back to Vermont, he was notified that he had won the bid. His expenses for the whole trip “footed up to about $70”.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Windsor County Court December 4


Kayla Cassady, DOB 4/22/94, pled not guilty to a charge of sexual assault on a victim less than 16 years of age, in Sharon, in November


Kerry St Lawrence, DOB 1/27/62 pled not guilty to a charge of heroin possession in Hartford on October 5

David Durphey, DOB 1/28/88 was charged with driving with a suspended license on October 8 in Springfield


Donald Larock, DOB 8/1/68, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault on October 20 in Stockbridge


Billy Joe Prive, DOB 3/20/78, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with his license suspended on October 17 in Cavendish

Claes Mattson, DOB 6/13/54, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with his license suspended on October 12 in Bridgewater.


Frederick Rogers, DOB 12/6/79, pled guilty to a charge of driving with his license suspended in Cavendish on Octber 4


Walter Wood, DOB 6/26/60, pled not guilty to a charge of taking a big game animal by illegal means in Royalton. Wood was allegedly caught using corn as bait during deer hunting on October 20.


Ericka Lindberg, DOB 9/6/63, pled guilty to a charge of simple assault on a law enforcement officer in Cavendish on September 29

Sonya Gordon, DOB 10/21/74, pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Chester on October 11.


Loren Washburn, DOB 2/7/82, pled guilty to a second charge of DUI in Bethel on November 13

Joshua Gonyo, DOB 9/17/87, pled not guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Hartford on October 9


Cynthia Parker, DOB 1 / 4/ 62, pled not guilty to a first charge of DUI in Woodstock on November 17

Jackie Shuttle, DOB 8/28/86, pled not guilty to a charge of petit larceny in Hartford on October 12. Shuttle allegedly stole a cell phone.


Van Mongeur, DOB 3/7/64, pled not guilty to charges of violating a relief/prevention of abuse order, unlawful tresspass, and interfering with access to emergency services on November 6. He was also charged with unlawful tresspass on November 3.

Simeon Finds True Love


By Spring of 1813, Simeon ran out of excuses to stay in Windsor, and he finally had to return to his father's farm. In April, he was helping his brother cut cordwood for the next winter. I can personally attest to the fact that if you're doing cordwood, it's a good time to get your sons home.

Simeon found himself at loose ends. He tried to continue with an apprenticeship, and signed on with Major William Faye of the Rutland Herald, but left there after a week. In May, Simeon got a letter from a friend who had found work in Brattleboro. The letter mentioned that there might be employment in Brattleboro, so Simeon “gathered his belongings in a silk handkerchief” and walked 60 miles to Brattleboro. He ended up being hired by William Fessenden for 80 cents a day, to print Webster's spelling book. Simeon said in his diary that he operated “8 two-pull hand presses; each requiring two able-bodied men to work it. (page 31 in Yeoman). Fessenden also ran a bookstore, and one of the perks of his job was that he could borrow any books he wanted from the bookstore.

While Simeon was in Brattleboro he got a letter from Major Faye offering him a better job. Apparently Major Fay didn't hold it against Simeon for leaving his apprenticeship so quickly, possibly because there wasn't enough work for Simeon there at the time. Fay had just begun publishing “Watt's Psalms and Hymns”.

Simeon stayed in Rutland for 13 months. While he was there, he joined a social club that called themselves “The Beauties”. Simeon remained friends with “The Beauties”, and exchanged letters with them for the rest of his life. “The Beauties” met at each others' houses regularly, for dinner, drink and conversation about books and other intellectual pursuits. They also attended parties together. Simeon associated with two “girls of wealth and position”, and it appears that either one of those girls would have been happy to have been courted by Simeon.

Simeon, however, had his eye on another girl, who was of neither wealth nor position, nor old enough to marry. Pamela Goddard was 16 years old when Simeon met her. Her father, a clockmaker and silversmith, was in poor health. Simeon fell in love with her, and vowed that if her father died, he would take care of Pamela, her four siblings and her mother, Charity.

In the meantime, however, things were not going well. The work dried up in Rutland, and Simeon went back to Windsor looking for work and couldn't find a job. 1815 was the first year in a three year economic depression. Also, 1816 was the year without a summer. A volcano eruption in Indonesia caused the disruption of weather patterns around the world. 1816 was called the year without the summer throughout the United States, and Vermonters called it “1800 and froze to death”.

During the summer of 1816, there was a frost every month. Craftsbury and Montpelier had a foot of snow in June. An article in Spooner's Vermont Journal, in Windsor, said, “It is extremely cold for this time of year. The late frosts have killed the corn. It is not probable that enough will get ripe for seed for next year. There is not sufficient hay to winter cattle upon and nothing with which to fatten them this fall.” (vermonthistory.org “The Year Without A Summer”) Simeon doesn't mention “the year without a summer” in his diary, but he does mention that hay cost $16 to $18 a ton. Vermont lost at least 10,000 people that year, when people gave up on Vermont and moved to places where it was easier to grow crops.

Finally Simeon had to go back to Lemuel's farm once again, except that this time, Lemuel's farm was in New Ipswich, New Hampshire. He decided that if he couldn't find a job as a printer he would start his own printing company, in an old blacksmith's shop on his father's farm. He went to Boston to buy some secondhand print. It was the first time he had ever been in a city that big, and he was sure he would be “tricked” by big city people looking to take advantage of a country traveler, but he conducted his business there without any trouble. Soon he was printing in his little blacksmith/printing shop New Testaments which he sold for 28 cents apiece. His 11 year old sister helped run the printing press and set the type. Through it all, he continued to court Pamela Goddard by writing letters.

Simeon broke even on the New Testaments, but he didn't make any money. Still, he had the type he had bought in Boston, and it was paid for. He decided to start a newspaper in either Keene, or Brattleboro, and finally decided that Brattleboro would be the better choice. Everyone advised him not to start a newspaper. For one thing, the economy wasn't good. For another thing, the positive outcome of the War of 1812 had been the death of the party, and at least one of Simeon's advisers told him that the lack of political rivalry in the “Era of Good Feelings” would cause a newspaper to be a “Miss Nancy affaire” meaning boring and lackluster. One person, however, did have some faith in Simeon, saying, “This young Ide may succeed, he's tough enough to live on a rock.”

Simeon might have been tough enough to live on a rock, but Simeon didn't want to bring Pamela, her mother and her sisters and brothers to live on a rock. He started his newspaper in Brattleboro and called it “The AmericanYeoman”. He rented some rooms in G.F. Atherton's store,near the Post Office on a corner of Main Street and set up his press. With his brother Truman as his apprentice, Simeon worked 16-18 hours a day. Before long he had 400 subscribers and was earning a living. When Jesse Cochran wanted to sell the “Vermont Republican” in Windsor, Simeon bought that paper, merged it with “The American Yeoman” and moved back to Windsor. It is impossible to trace the ownership of the “Vermont Republican” with absolute certainty before this, but I think it was founded by Oliver Farnsworth and Sylvester Churchill, who Simeon had originally been apprenticed to, then sold to Jesse Cochran, who sold it to Simeon. Simeon merged the paper with the American Yeoman and called it the Vermont Republican and Yeoman. He bought “Spooner's Journal”, merged that with the “Vermont Republican and Yeoman”, and called the new paper “The Vermont Republican and Journal”. I think.

In 1818 Simeon felt he was well enough established to marry Evelina Pamela Goddard on March 11, in Rutland, with a few family friends and a few members of his old club “The Beauties” as witnesses. Simeon wrote in his diary 55 years later that, “ No length of time will obliterate the gratitude I owe to my heavenly father for so ordering my goings in the days of my youthful wanderings, that I shunned the allurements of wealth and high position and remained steadfast to my first love.” (Here I think Simeon is referring to the two girls of wealth and position) “Next to this is my debt of gratitude to her sainted mother who gave me so pure, so loving, so dutiful and so confiding a helpmeet. I was not worthy of so bright a jewel.” He also says that for the next 30 years, his family consisted of between 10 and 15 people, including his wife, his 10 children, his mother's wife, Charity Goddard, who died in 1857, and his wife's siblings, Edward, Nathan, Harriet and Charlotte Goddard.