Sunday, March 29, 2020

Threshing Oats: An Affidavit


Threshing Oats:  An Affidavit         
by Alan Bensley Borer

            
Life in Marion County, Ohio, in the 1840s was challenging to say the least.  Although no longer in the frontier stage of development, it was far from being cosmopolitan either.  With an 1840 population of only 18,352, it was the home of first generation settlers, farmers, and artisans.  And if the farmer died before the crops could be harvested, some provision must be made to harvest them.  The farmer’s estate could not be settled if valuable farm products were in the field or unprocessed.  The estate would run the farm, at least until it was settled.  And the mechanisms of law were in place to see that they were.
            Christopher Gunn was a hard-working man.  With a wife and two small children, he needed to watch every penny and collect every debt, no matter how small.  On November 8, 1843, Gunn spent the day threshing oats, a physically exhausting job.  Threshing machinery was in its infancy, and Gunn may have threshed by using a flail.  Comprised of a long pole jointed to a short stick, the flail separated the oats from their stalk by more or less whipping them steadily.  Imagine working from sunup to sundown at such a task.  Gunn’s pay for his efforts was $1.00.

            The oats were owned by the estate of one Henry Cope.  Mr. Cope owned 40 acres of land in Marion County.  We do not know exactly when he died, but it was after 1838, the last year the county collected property tax from him.  Estates can be tied up in court for years, but for whatever reason, the Cope estate failed to pay Christian Gunn for that day of threshing oats.
            After fourteen months of waiting, Christian Gunn went before Justice of the Peace Curtis Allen and swore an affidavit, which stated in part, that he had proof of the work completed because he made a note of it in his “account Book.”  This suggests that the estate was waiting for documented proof the Gunn actually spent the day threshing, and that his request for payment was not simply hearsay.  Or perhaps the estate wanted further proof; Cope was not paid his dollar until November 28, 1848.  Whether it was a question of proof, evidence, or red tape is unknown.
            Some literate farmers of the nineteenth century kept copious records.  Diaries, ledgers, and account books chronicle the ups and downs of period farm life.  In 1917, the federal Department of Agriculture even published a bulletin encouraging farmers and farms to keep notes and fiscal accounts, both for recordkeeping and memories:
“Aside from all the strictly business items, there are daily notes of personal interest, of plans and ambitions, and of neighborhood happenings, which in themselves make a valuable record.  Thus the value of these diaries to him lies not only in the practical farm accounts, but in the pleasures of reminiscence he derives from reading their pages.”[i]
The surviving examples of these written records have performed one other service, in that they have made it possible to reconstruct parts of the agrarian past.  Gunn used his account book to certify when and where he did a job of work.
            As noted, Christian Gunn finally received his dollar for threshing oats.  Later in life, he moved his family to Williamsport, Indiana.  Later in life, census takers described him as a farmer, so he may have owned land of his own. “Mr. Gunn has been a resident of this county for many years and is well known throughout this section,” his 1891 obituary stated.  At the end, he may not have remembered that day In November of ’43 threshing oats for Henry Cope’s estate.  But his account book, or at least part of its contents, survive in the affidavit.  I in turn used the affidavit to recreate a chilly November day on a Marion County farm.


[i] E. H. Thomson, The Use of a Diary for Farm Accounts (Farmers’ Bulletin 782), (Washington: United States Department of Agriculture, 1917), p. 3.

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