11 December 1870 • New York, N.Y.
(New York Tribune, 13 Dec 70, UCCL 11731)
To the Editor of The Tribune. 1
Sir: Mr. R. C. Gridley, widely known upon the Pacific coast, died at Paradise, Cal., November 24, of neuralgia of the heart. Mr. Gridley was one of the early emigrants to the Californian gold-fields, [&], during his twenty years’ residence, maintained an enviable reputation for integrity, benevolence, & enterprise.2 His name was familiar to the nation during the days when fairs & such enterprises, in behalf of the Sanitary fund,3 were common, in consequence of his efforts in aid of that charity with the once famous “Sanitary flour sack.” He had engaged to carry a 50-pound sack of flour from one end of the town of Austin, Nevada, to the other, in case an approaching election went against his political party. His party lost the election, & Mr. Gridley made good his word. When he had completed his task, he put up the flour at auction, for the benefit of the United States Sanitary fund. The buyer immediately ordered that it be sold again for the fund. Mr. Gridley sold it again, & continued to sell & resell it till it had brought $800, gold. The news spread far & wide, & other towns called for Mr. Gridley & the flour sack. He left his partner in charge of his business4 & started with the sack, & in every town was received with bands of music & by the citizens in mass. In one day, in Virginia City & its suburbs (17,000 inhabitants), the sack sold for $30,000, gold.5 Mr. Gridley sold it in the large towns & cities of California, & then brought it East, & sold it over & over again here;6 &, finally, after selling it at the Mississippi Valley Fair, at St. Louis, for a great sum, it was made into small cakes there, & these were sold at extravagant prices.7 This long & tedious expedition, undertaken & carried through to the end with whole-hearted zeal, albeit there was no dollar of remuneration in it for Mr. Gridley, is the best exemplar of the generous nature of the man, & also of his great energy.8
Albemarle, Dec. 11, 1870.
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L4, 270–272.
Emendations and textual notes:
& • and [also at 270.6, 7; 271.2, 5, 6, 7 (three times), 8 (twice), 9, 10, 11, 12 (three times), 13, 14, 15, 16, 18]
S. L. C. • s. l. c.