Ohio History Journal

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SPECULATIVE INTEREST IN OHIO LANDS IN 1829

SPECULATIVE INTEREST IN OHIO LANDS IN 1829

AS REVEALED IN A LETTER FROM HENRY FARMER TO

SAMUEL J. BROWNE

Edited by WILLIAM D. OVERMAN

The following letter from Henry Farmer to his brother-in-law,

Samuel J. Browne of Cincinnati, affords a detailed account by an

observant and well-informed Englishman of the unsettled political,

economic and social conditions in England just prior to the Era of

Reform (1832).1

The statistical data on the cost of poor relief, 1819-1828, will

interest those who have studied the administration of present day

agencies for the dispensation of relief. The cost of administration

in England during the decade alluded to was over twenty percent

while the latest available data shows that the administrative cost of

W.P.A. is about five percent.

Henry Farmer studied the possibilities of various business

ventures and showed an eagerness to engage in some speculative en-

terprise, particularly in the lands of the American Middle West. He

reports that because of the intolerable economic condition many

unfortunate Englishmen committed petty larceny so as to insure a

sentence bringing deportation to some English colony. The detail

with which the writer treats of a variety of subjects may be ex-

plained by the fact that he was writing to a newspaper publisher.

The land along the Ohio River above Cincinnati, chiefly be-

cause of cheap transportation by water to New Orleans, was the

 

1 Symmes Browne MSS (in Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Library).

These papers, numbering over 2,000 items, consist largely of correspondence, diaries, personal

accounts, receipts, and ephemera pertaining to patriotic societies and lodges. The cor-

respondence, largely between members of the family, including early letters of Mrs.

Symmes (Fanny Bassett) Browne, covers the period from the Civil War to about 1920.

Symmes Browne commanded a gunboat during the war.

There are a few letters (1817-1840) to Symmes's father, Samuel J. Browne, and

mother, Fanny Farmer Browne, mostly from her family residing in Bath, England. The

letter here printed was written by her brother Henry Farmer and although unsigned is

easily identified by comparison with others in the same hand. Samuel J. Browne published

the Cincinnati Emporium (1824-1829?) which was combined with the National Crisis in

1825. He published the rare and important second Cincinnati Directory in the same year.

The writer of this letter used every available inch of paper and doubled the size of the

letter by adding an interlinear message in red ink. A lengthy description of the Military

Academy at West Point, about which Henry Farmer had read in a New York paper, has

been omitted.

(329)