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EMERSON IN HIS
FAMILY
RUTH HASKINS EMERSON (1768-1853) 68. Photograph of Ruth Haskins Emerson in old age, from
Emerson family photograph album. Album from the estate of Amelia Forbes
Emerson, 1982.
“My mother was born in Boston, 9 November 1768, & had therefore
completed 85 years, a week before her death. Her father Captain John
Haskins whose distillery on Harrison Avenue was pulled down not many years
ago was an industrious thriving man with a family of thirteen living children.
He was an Episcopalian & up to the time of the Revolution a tory.
My mother was bred in the English church, & always retained an affection
for the Book of Common Prayer. She married in 1796 and all her subsequent
family connexions were in the Congregational Church[.] At the time
of her marriage her husband was settled in Harvard, Masstts. In [1799]
they removed to Boston on his installation at First Church. He died
in 1812 and left her with six children & without property. She
kept her family together & at once adopted the only means open to her
by receiving boarders into her house & by the assistance of some excellent
friends, she carried four of her five sons through Harvard College.
The family was never broken up until 1826, when on the death of Dr Ripleys
daughter (my fathers half-sister) she accepted the Doctor’s earnest invitation
to make her home at his house. She remained there until my marriage
in 1830, when she came to live with me. After my housekeeping was
broken up in 1832, and on my return from Europe in 1833, she went with
me to Concord, & we became boarders in Doctor Ripley’s family, until
I bought a house & took her home with me in 1835. This was her
permanent home until her death. I hardly know what to add to these
few dates. I have been in the habit of esteeming her manners &
character the fruit of a past age. She was born a subject of King
George, had lived through the whole existence of the Republic, remembered
& described with interesting details the appearance of Washington at
the Assemblies in Boston after the war, when every lady wore his name on
her scarf; & had derived from that period her punctilious courtesy
extended to every person, and continued to the last hour of her life.
Her children as they grew up had abundant reason to thank her prudence
which secured to them an education which in the circumstances was the most
judicious provision that could be made for them. I remember being
struck with the comment of a lady who said in my family when some debate
arose about my Mother’s thrift in her time, the lady said, ‘Ah, but she
secured the essentials. She got the children educated.’ ”—RWE
to Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham, December 3, 1853.
No image in this online display may be reproduced in
any form, including electronic, without permission from the Curator of
Special Collections of the Concord Free Public Library.
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