Shee family papers

Cecelia (circa 1750-1779) and John Parke (1755-1780) were the children of Thomas Parke of Kent County, Delaware. Around 1770, Cecelia married Bertles Shee. Cecelia lived in Philadelphia and Dover, Delaware. Both John Parke and Bertles Shee served in the Continental Army. This small collection of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shee, Bertles 1742-1787. (Creator), Shee, Cecelia Parke. (Creator)
Collection:Shee Family Papers
Collection Number:3154
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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Physical Description: 0.4 Linear feet ; 1 box [5 folders]
Access: The collection is open for research.
Summary: Cecelia (circa 1750-1779) and John Parke (1755-1780) were the children of Thomas Parke of Kent County, Delaware. Around 1770, Cecelia married Bertles Shee. Cecelia lived in Philadelphia and Dover, Delaware. Both John Parke and Bertles Shee served in the Continental Army. This small collection of papers from the Shee family mostly consists of detailed letters Cecelia wrote to John in the army between July 1775 and February 1777. There are also genealogical notes, a copy of Bertles Shee's will, a letter concerning property in Ireland, a letter from John Chew concering Bertles Shee's debts, and a set of typed transciptions of most of the documents in the collection.
This collection of papers from the Shee family is housed in one box (five folders) and spans the years 1775 to 1785. In Folder 2 are sixteen letters sent from Cecelia Parke Shee to John Parke between the years 1775 and 1777, though a few letters are not dated. Aside from the letters, there is a 2009 copy of transcriptions and notes from the donor (Folder 1), a few miscellaneous family papers, including a copy of Bertles Shee's will (Folder 3), miscellaneous clippings and genealogical notes on the Shee family from an unknown writer (Folder 4), and the original enclosure in which the papers were housed (Folder 5). Researchers are asked to please consult the transcriptions provided in Folder 1 before handling the original fragile documents in Folders 2, 3, and 4. Though few in number, Cecelia's letters are detailed and touch upon numerous personal events, including visits with friends, such as Nancy Stocker, a woman apparently after John's affections, one Miss Sally Robinson, Thomas McKean, and Caesar Rodney. "Caesar Rodney has waited on me," she mentioned on 3 December 1775, "I am endeavoring to get him to settle our old account - he tries to shift it off." She also briefly mentions acquaintanceships with members of the Bradford, Wharton, and Willing families of Philadelphia. She also wrote about her husband, son, and family. "[I] have increased my family by two negroes a boy and a girl which Bertles took for bad debts" she wrote on 16 August 1775. In her letter of 20 July 1776, she praises her son, Parke Shee, "a very rakish name," she noted. "[A]nd the rogue has such sparkling eyes . . . every body says he is the finest [Philadelphian] they have ever seen." Another topic she mentioned frequently but in lesser detail was her health. In October 1776, both she and her husband were sick: "Mr. Shee continues in a very bad way - slow fevers – as for myself I am not much better than he – but I am used to the sickness - and my poor child I am obliged to wean for want of a nurse." In total, these letters offer incredible insights into the life of a well-to-do family from a woman who, though sometimes left alone (since Bertles also fought during the war), kept remarkable company and a clear mind despite her health problems. Other notable items in the collection include a copy of Bertles Shee's will, dated 1778, in which he mentions his son Parke, a daughter Cecelia, and his “late wife;” an undated letter from John Chew concerning Bertles Shee's debts; and a 1789 letter from Richard Dolin to John Shee concerning property in Ireland. There is also a small collection of handwritten genealogical notes on the Shee and Parke families from an unknown writer, as well as two clippings that were found among the papers, one with the headline “Great Funeral of Washington Held Here;” the other is a copy of a poem or song with the title “The Delaware County Sketch of the late hubbub in Uncle Sam’s Mealtub.”