Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 3
It is so so long since I wrote you last that I am almost asham’d to call myself your Correspondent; and not hearing from you for a long time past makes me doubt whether I am writing to the Living or the Dead; if to the former I know my sins of omission will be pardon’d, if to the latter, they require none. I am now here on my way to Brookfield where Mr. Greenleaf & myself are going to examine some sulphurious Pyrites, agreeable to an Order of the House.1 The Army are in high spirits & remarkably hea
I came from Home Last Tuesday & have been detain’d here ever since on account of bad weather; your Family, when I left ‘em where all well & our Friends in general hearty. Salt petre goes on very slow with us at present. I have made no experiments worth relating, but having collected a quantity of Tobacco Storks; I mean to make a Compost for next Spring, intending to spend this Winter in Sulphur, it being more agreeable to the Season. If you are alive, do write me something more than three lines in a Letter & inform me what you are about, if consistant.
Salt Petre has been made at Watertown by Doctr. Whiting & they are now imploy’d at Newbery-Port, where they have a large works.
I shall write you an Account of our Experiments at Brookf
As a follow-up of his Oct. 6 appointment (see Joseph Greenleaf to RTP, Oct. 17, 1775, above), the House on Nov. 2 appointed Joseph Greenleaf “with other Persons, not exceeding two, as he may choose,” to visit Brookfield or other places “to make Experiments with the Earth there, said to be proper for producing Sulpher” (Journals of the House of Representatives, 51, pt. 1: 224).