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Lot 354

[WESTERN AMERICANA]. A group of 5 letters sent from Missouri and hand-carried along the Oregon Trail to Charles H. Burch (1828-1904), a "Pioneer of 1844" and one of Oregon's earliest settlers.
Sale 1344 - American Historical Ephemera and Photography
May 31, 2024 10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati
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Estimate
$700 - 1,000
Price Realized
$889
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium
Lot Description
[WESTERN AMERICANA]. A group of 5 letters sent from Missouri and hand-carried along the Oregon Trail to Charles H. Burch (1828-1904), a "Pioneer of 1844" and one of Oregon's earliest settlers.

A group of 5 stampless covers addressed to Charles H. Burch, spanning April 1847 - June 1852, comprising:

Cover addressed to "Mr. Charles H. Burch / Oregon." Chariton County, MO, 24 April 1845. Burch's sister Charlotte Elizabeth Burch Lock (1824-1857) writes with general family and community news primarily related to weather, illness, and the loss of a child. She notes that the weather had been remarkably wet, "the Missouri river is said to have been 8 or 10 feet higher than ever was seen before by a white man it covered the bottoms from bluff to bluff it swept all the fencing, and, even some houses, destroyed all crops, and a great deal of stock...." -- Cover addressed to "Mr. Charles H. Burch / Oregon" and with manuscript note added "Presented by S.B. Burch." Chariton County, MO, 1 April 1847. Sisters Charlotte Lock and Mary Jane Burch Wallace (1822-1859) write to their brother Charles primarily expressing religious exhortations but also repeatedly acknowledging the vast distance separating them from their brother. -- Cover addressed to Burch at "Oregon City / Oregon." Livingston, County, MO, 2 August 1851. Burch's sister Mary Wallace and her husband William J. Wallace write to Burch. William has just returned from the California gold fields, and relays details of trip on a sailing vessel that was "48 days on the Pacific." William indicates he has funds to send to Burch, and that relative Tyrus Burch hopes to go t Oregon the following spring. They send their respects to Benjamin Burch [likely Benjamin Franklin Burch, 1825-1893, who emigrated to Oregon in 1845 and later became a prominent Oregon politician]. -- Cover addressed to Burch at "Oregon City / Oregon." Chariton, County, MO, 9 May 1852. Charlotte writes in a postscript, "Uncle J told us you had sold out in California and he knew not where you would go for this reason I send this to Oregon requesting some of them [family members] to direct to you if you are not there...." -- Cover addressed to Burch at "Lafayette Yamhill Co. / Oregon territory." Livingston, County, MO, 10 June 1852. Mary writes of the sickness that has plagued the community, indicating that they would not likely be able to emigrate to Oregon this season had they desired to do so due to her feeble health. Word has reached her of her brother's marriage, as she sends her to love Charles and "Sister Phebe." William's note in the same letter discusses the sale of Charles's land in Missouri, including the sale of an enslaved man "Ephraim." William indicates that Ephraim was sold to one man who "did not take to him" but that directly afterwards he sold him again to another man for the same amount of $900.

The letters, each dated in the spring and summer months, were likely sent to correspond with the departure season for emigrants headed west.

Charles Harold Burch was born in Chariton County, Missouri. Chariton was one of several Missouri counties settled mostly by southerners, in an area of the state known as "Little Dixie." Having lost both his mother and father by the age of ten, Burch resided with his paternal grandparents for the next six years. Yamhill County, Oregon, histories record that in 1844 a sixteen-year-old Burch departed Chariton County with an emigrant train heading west, riding a mule and continuing with the party until Fort Bridger, Wyoming. There he left the party with which he had traveled and came to Oregon, arriving as one of the earliest white settlers in the region. In 1846 Burch ventured to California where he served briefly in Co. A of the California Mounted Rifleman, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel John C. Fremont and then pursued mining for some time. By 1851 he had returned to Yamhill County where he married Phoebe Buffum and commenced homesteading. Over the course of the following decades Burch expanded his farm and was elected as a state representative in 1878 and 1884. He died in Yamhill County, Oregon in 1904.
This lot is located in Cincinnati.
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