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Mary Belin du Pont inbound letters

Creation: 1894
 Collection
Accession: 2228

Abstract

Mary Belin (1839-1913) married Lammot du Pont (1831-1884) and had eleven children, many who were prominent in the building up of the E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company. The volume consists of a typed transcript of letters originally sent to Mary Belin du Pont (1839-1913) by her daughters Louisa ("La") (1868-1926), Sophie M. ("Tabby") (1871-1894), Isabella ("Bella") (1882-1946), and Margaretta ("Peg") (1884-1973) in 1894. The letters center around a single incident wherein Sophie, who was suffering from tuberculosis, was sent to Colorado Springs for a cure.

Dates

  • Creation: 1894

Creator

Extent

1 volume(s)

Biographical Note

Mary Belin (1839-1913) married Lammot du Pont (1831-1884) and had eleven children, many who were prominent in the building up of the E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company.

Belin was the daughter of Henry H. Belin (1803-1891) and Isabell d'Andelot (1812-1863). Her father was the main bookkeeper for the DuPont Company. Belin married Lammot du Pont in 1865. Lammot was killed by a nitroglycerin explosion in 1884, leaving behind ten, soon to be eleven, children and his wife.

The couple had eleven children: Louisea D'Andelot (1868-1926), Pierre Samuel (1870-1954), Sophie Madeline (1871-1894), Henry Belin (1873-1902), William Kemble (1875-1907), Irenee (1876-1963), Mary Alletta Belin (1878-1938), Lammot (1880-1952), Isabella Mathieu (1882-1946), and Margaretta Lammot (1884-1973).

Belin died June 13, 1913 in Wilmington, Delaware. She had suffered a broken hip in a fall at her home and never recovered from the injury.

Scope and Contents

The volume consists of a typed transcript of letters originally sent to Mary Belin du Pont (1839-1913) by her daughters Louisa ("La") (1868-1926), Sophie M. ("Tabby") (1871-1894), Isabella ("Bella") (1882-1946), and Margaretta ("Peg") (1884-1973) in 1894. The transcript was made by Mary Belin du Pont's grandson, W. W. Laird, Jr. (1910-1989), and his wife Winnifred Moreton Laird (1912-1996) in 1940 as a Christmas present for his aunt Margaretta and her husband R. R. M. Carpenter (1877-1949).

The letters revolve around a single incident wherein Sophie, who was suffering from tuberculosis, was sent to Colorado Springs for a cure. Her mother accompanied her, and her sisters later paid her an extended visit. Unfortunately, Sophie died later that year at the age of twenty-three. Most of the letters are from Louisa, who was about twenty-six, as is a travel diary. Margaretta was then only ten and the letters exhibit a child's phonetic spellings and unpolished grammar.

The letters and diary notes record events typical of recreational travel by young middle class women. These include the tedium and unpleasantness of long-distance train travel (including traveling with "hayseeds"), reaction to typical tourist sites (the Garden of the Gods, the Royal Gorge, etc.), games, dances, and family outings. The travel portion is bracketed by letters from the children to their mother in Colorado Springs describing domestic activities back in Wilmington.

Access Restrictions

No restrictions on access; this collection is open for research.

Related Materials

Mary Belin du Pont recipe book (Accession 2458), Manuscripts and Archives Department, Hagley Museum and Library.

Language of Materials

English

Finding Aid & Administrative Information

Title:
Mary Belin du Pont inbound letters
Description rules:
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description:
English
Script of description:
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2021: Ashley Williams

Repository Details

Repository Details

Part of the Manuscripts and Archives Repository

Contact:
PO Box 3630
Wilmington Delaware 19807 USA
302-658-2400