MacDonald Family correspondence and ledger, 1841-1930

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Series I: Correspondence



Box 1 Dr. J.W. Barstow to MacDonald Family, 1857-1870


Box 1 Allan MacDonald to Mary Maclean, 1853-1861


Box 1 Eliza MacDonald--Letters--to and from, 1857-1883


John M. MacDonald


Box 1 to Allan MacDonald, 1842-1850


Box 1 to Allan MacDonald, Eliza MacDonald, and Dr. Ranny, 1842-1849


Box 1 European trip, 1831-1832


Box 1 MacDonald Family Receipts, 1858-1867


Box 1 Miller Family--Correspondence, 1825-1859


Box 1 Mitchell Family, 1879-1930


Box 1 Miscellaneous, 1851-1886, undated


Box 1 Notes, undated

Series II: Daily Ledger of Expences



Cmi Box Ledger (Box 2) Ledger for a private mental asylum established at Murray Hill by Dr. James Macdonald with the aid of his wife, Eliza, and his brother, Allan Macdonald.

Eliza appears to have managed the household as well as the bookkeeping, as she occasionally issues small sums "to myself" in the ledger (e.g., Dec. 28, 1842, "Box for Eliza (myself)". Dr. Macdonald, who also appears in occasional ledger entries, usually for "lent" sums, was a longtime physician for the mentally ill, having worked for 10 years (1825-1830 and 1832-1837) at the Bloomingdale Asylum in New York City and touring European asylums as an observer for the better part of 1831. His Murray Hill asylum was a "long cherished design" ("James Macdonald, M.D.", The American Journal of Insanity, Vols. 5-6, p. 85), and was located in two secluded houses in what were then the suburbs of Manhattan, opening its doors to patients on June 1, 1841. Having outgrown these accommodations within a few short years, it was then relocated to Sanford Hall, in Flushing, Queens, where it stayed in operation at least until its founder's death in May 1849.

The ledger begins with an entry dated only 1841: "This Book cost -- $.75 | Bottle of Ink - 12-1/2 [cents]". The entry immediately following is March 27, 1841 (the purchase of a horse, for $90), and for the next three months, through the beginning of July, Eliza records the numerous purchases necessary to outfit and ready the houses for patients, including everything from carpeting and a carriage to a silver tea set, mirrors, a tin bath, a skillet, tables, hardware, buckles, "lynch-pins" for a wagon, and so on, as well as the hiring and paying (and feeding) of household staff and getting a circular printed. The first patient may have been admitted on July 14: noted here as "Albert Rogers, of Brooklyn, credit, 3 mos. Board of wife". The cost, $110, indicates that the asylum's clientele had to have been upper class. Several other "boarders" are added to the books in subsequent entries, although it is not until September 17, 1841, that one, Timothy Courow(?), is directly noted as being a patient. Naturally, as more and more boarders and/or patients become residents, the amount of food and other sundries needed increases exponentially, with vast quantities of eggs, bread, blackberries, peaches, oysters, and cakes noted in the ledger.