This collection contains 2 letters (3 pages) and 1 account book (15 pages) related to the family of Frederick Shinckle, a leather worker who lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the turn of the 19th century. The letters concern his son Frederick's travels and his daughter-in-law Margaret's financial difficulties. The account book records the finances of the elder Frederick's estate following his death in 1810.
Frederick Shinckle, Jr., wrote a letter to his parents, Frederick and Salome Shinckle, from New York on December 4, 1789, in which he briefly discussed a 5-day voyage to New York and alluded to some financial difficulties. He reported North Carolina's adoption of the United States Constitution by a margin of 18 votes. His wife Margaret wrote to her father-in-law on May 12, 1790, from Philadelphia. She reacted negatively to his request that she move her belongings to a different room in his home and described her destitution and other difficulties she and her children suffered when her husband was separated from them.
An unknown executor compiled an account book respecting the financial affairs of Frederick Shinckle's estate after his death in April 1810. The volume has two overlapping sections: the first contains accounts dated May 4, 1810-January 27, 1819; the second, titled "Account of Vents appertaining to Estate of F. Shinckle," contains accounts dated April 10, 1812-March 11, 1817. Shinckle's estate paid a regular remittance to his widow, to taxes, and to repair-related fees, among other expenses. The estate received payments from banks, bonds, "Louisiana stock," and individual debtors. A 2-page item containing 4 columns of similar financial records is laid into the volume.
Frederick Shinckle was born around 1726, and lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he worked as a "skin dresser." By his first marriage he had at least one son, Frederick Shinckle, Jr. (1761-1806). He later married Salome Hall on December 3, 1795. The elder Frederick Shinckle died on April 22, 1810. His son Frederick worked as a grocer in Philadelphia and married Margaret Hyde (ca. 1769-1797), the daughter of John and Catherine Hyde. They had at least two daughters, Catherine (ca. 1784-1798) and Mary Hyde (b. 1796). Frederick was temporarily absent from his wife and children around May 1790, and they lived with his father.