
MARY JANE PARSONS (1842-1938)
1 linear inch
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ACQUISITION: |
The papers (donor no. 896) were donated by Carl Parsons in 2003. |
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ACCESS: |
The papers are open for research. |
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COPYRIGHT: |
Copyright held by the donor has been transferred to The University of Iowa. |
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PHOTOGRAPHS: |
In Folder 1. |
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PROCESSED BY: |
Margaret Richardson, Janet
Weaver, 2003.
[ParsonsMaryJ.doc] |
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Biography
Mary Jane Higgens
was born in 1842 in
In 1861 Mary Jane Higgens
married Byron Parsons and the couple set up housekeeping in a one-room log
house that had previously belonged to Byron’s parents. They had four children:
George Leonard, William Sydney, Alfred Norris and adopted daughter Maude
May. In 1864, when their first child was
two years old, Byron Parsons went to fight in the Civil War. Parsons recalls in her memoir, “I told Byron
when he went to the war, ‘If you ever come home alive, we are going to pull for
the west.’ He got home in July 1865 and
in September we were on the road for
Scope and Content Note
The Mary Jane Parsons papers date from
1935 and measure 1 linear inch. The papers consist
primarily of the 178-page memoir of Mary Jane Parsons, “The Patchwork Quilt:
Memoirs of the Pioneer Life of Mary Jane (Mrs. Byron) Parsons, 1842-1938, as
told to Myrtle Parsons, 1935.” Also
included is a genealogy, a family tree and color copies of early photographs of
the homestead.
The memoir of Mary Jane Parsons describes such
day-to-day aspects of pioneer life as how to make a cord bed, the number of
geese required to make a feather bed, how to dry and spin wool, how to gather
and cook sugar down, and the methods for making candles, cheese and soap. Parsons reveals her knowledge of farming
through her intricate description of plows, the handling of horse teams,
pitching bundles and husking corn. She
vividly recalls the Civil War camp in Wisconsin where she visited her husband
before his unit was sent to active duty and the journey west by covered wagon
undertaken by the Parsons family from 1865 to 1866. She describes the intricacies of daily life
on the homestead as well as the blizzards, cyclones, fires and fierce summer
storms of the prairie. She contemplates the many people she came in contact
with including the Indians who lived nearby, travelers passing through, and
visiting Gypsies and tramps. Mary Jane
Parsons’ memoir closes with her reflections on fifty years of marriage.