Friday, September 11, 1835

1835

September

Friday 11

7 20/..

12 5/..

No kiss.

Ready in 35 minutes.  Rainy night and morning till after 7 – fair and F 56° now at 7 55/.. a.m.

Breakfast at 8 –

Had Frank Day – Said if he thought it worthwhile to come for the winter I would engage him for over then, but he was not scholar enough for me to engage him more permanently – but we should see – His present wages 16/. per week and two drinkings a day – Said I would give him 16/. a week, and consider about the drinkings – He lives at Hove Edge – pays £4 a year – Said I would put him into Mytholm, to hold his cottage there on the same terms as his place – To leave both at a month’s notice – I would see about the rent – Agreed for him to come next Monday week the 28th instante mense –

Breakfast in 3/4 hour – had Mr. Husband and Cockroft – ordering about Farm yard wall, and setting the great door posts and getting the covers over the drain under the doorway – Ordering about loop-hole windows for farmyard wall – and Mr. Husband directed Cockroft how to put in these and finish the great buttress at the low corner of the wall – Then went with him to set out the Lodge bridge to be called Adney bridge

Robert Schofield bodding at the little drains on each side the main drain at the cascade bridge and Mark Hepworth levelling on the other side the road –

In and out with one workman or other – Nelson’s 2 masons at the Hall and Linen closet flues – Finished both this evening – Made fire in the one, and put the stove (originally got for the library passage) into the Linen closet – All seems to answer –

Had Holt about 11 – Will come again on Monday after seeing Turner and making an agreement about the tail-goit stones that can be managed with – The bottoms Turner had brought are  rag instead of flag and won’t do –

Walked with Holt to Ann’s Hipperholme lane water drift – He thinks my plan of making a large cistern and piping the water down the Tan house the best plan – Ordered the Stump Cross Inn cistern to be instead of 4 feet square, 8 feet long by 4 feet wide and 3 feet deep – Holt and Mr. Holme have bought 20 acres of yard-thick coal of North in Shelf  (under lease from Mrs. Beaumont of Britton) for £600 – Very cheap –

Parted with Holt in Hipperholme (leaving him to go to Turner and gave him the agreement made by Washington to settle about) and home through the walk at 12 1/2 –

Had met George Robinson by the way – Said I was sorry to have inconvenienced him about the Spiggs water but it could not be helped and he would soon have the water back as usual – George Robinson very civil –

Sat with Ann at her luncheon – 1/4 hour with my father and Marian till about 2 –

Sent John to Dobson with pencil-written order for 15 yards 3 foot long and 3 inch thick rag bottoms, and 15 yards 3 foot 6 inch long and 4 inch thick tops, and 5 yards 5 foot long 4 or 5 inch thick covers for the Cascade drain –

Had Mr. Husband – Blasting at Northgate and a piece of stone (40 lbs. pounds) fell on the Northgate Chapel and broke in a slate, which however Nelson immediately repaired – But Mr. Husband wished to know if I would allow blasting – No! Certainly not – dangerous and illegal in that situation, and there must be no more of it –

In and out – Washington here all the day at Ann’s accounts – I sat in the drawing room and by bit and bit in the course of the afternoon and a little in the evening read from page 8 to 67 Bakewell’s Geology (3rd time over)

Dinner at 6 1/4 – Some time with my father and Marian – Coffee – read over the newspaper – Tea at 9 1/2 – 10 minutes with my aunt till 10 10/.. then till 10 50/.., wrote all the above of today –

Rainy day – F 55° now at 10 50/.. p.m.

Letter this evening from Messers Henry Bates and son, Warton  lane, respecting the water wheel.


WYAS Finding Numbers SH:7/ML/E/18/0095 and SH:7/ML/E/18/0096

Comments

  1. Wow, that is a blast of a day. Anne manages SO much, her energy is phenomenal. A great read.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow, that is a blast of a day. Anne manages SO much, her energy is phenomenal. A great read.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Saturday, July 13, 1839 Travel Journal

Tuesday, July 14, 1829

Saturday, September 26, 1835