Before closing the history of the
many trials and troubles which I have experienced
during my life, I will here say that I have never found,
in all my dealings with men for more than forty years,
such an untruthful and dishonest a man as
of a certain town in Connecticut. In 1858, he
induced me to come into his factory to carry on a little
business. My situation was such, in consequence
of the failure of the Jerome Manufacturing Company,
that I could do nothing in my own name, as he knew.
I had a little money that had been paid me for the
use of my trademark in England, and I felt very anxious,
as old as I was, to make a little money so that I
could pay some small debts which my family had made
a short time before the company failed. I had
also two children who looked to me for some help.
This man said to me, “you may have the use of
my factory for ‘so much,’ and you may carry
on the business for one year in my name for so ‘much.’”
This was agreed to by both parties. In a few
days he came to me and said that he had been talking
with his nephew about having the business carried
on in his name “& Co.;”
being the “Company” and he was to keep
his nephew harmless, as he had nothing for the use
of his name. The nephew came into the factory
a short time after, and I asked him if he had agreed
to what had stated to me; he
said that he had, and that I could go on with the
business in the name of himself & Co.; he was quite
sure that his uncle would keep him harmless.
I went on with the business in this name from May
to December, both of those men knowing all the while
just as much about the business as I did, and they
never said but that it was all right as we had agreed.
I paid in my money from time to time as it was wanted.
Late in the fall, I paid in at one time, one thousand
nine hundred dollars, through a firm who owed me that
amount, and who gave their notes to
on short time, which notes were paid. A short
time after this, knowing that I had no more money
to put into the business, he undoubtedly thought it
time to do what he had intended to do at a suitable
time from the beginning. One day when I was unwell
and confined to the house, a man who had a claim against
the company, called on to make
a settlement. Before this time he had made two
payments on this same account, but he now told this
man that there never had been such a company, and
that he would never pay it while at the
same time, he had the same property which the man offered
to take back but which he had refused to give up,
and said that I had no right to use the name of
& Co. This was after he had been using the name
for me in drafts and notes, and all other business
transactions, for more than eight months. He
said that he would have me arrested for fraud and
put in the State Prison. This treatment was rather
hard towards a man who had never before been accused
of dishonesty, and who had done business on a large
scale with thousands of men for more than forty years.
He at one time requested me to borrow a note for him
from one of my friends, which I did, and which he
paid promptly when due. He did this, as I now
suppose, because the business was not in as good shape
for him as it might be in another three months; so
he wished me to get the favor renewed, which I did.
When it became due, he denied that it was a borrowed
note, declared that I was owing him, and had handed
this note to him as one that was good and would be
paid. One of his best friends has since told
me that there was more honor among horse-thieves than
this man had shown towards me. I put into the
business between four and five thousand dollars, worked
hard almost a year, and have received about five hundred
dollars. is trying to scare me
by threatening to sue me for perjury; so that if he
could make me fool enough to pay the debts of
& Co., he would have just so much more to put into
his own pocket. When he can get a grand jury
to find a true bill against me for fraud or perjury,
I will promise to go to Wethersfield and stay there
the remainder of my life, without any further trial.
After all that I have said, I think of him just as
all his neighbors do; for they have told me that it
was the common talk among them, when I first went into
his factory, that he would in some way cheat me out
of every dollar that I put into his hands. It
would take just about as much evidence to prove that
young crows would be black when their feathers are
grown, as it would to satisfy the community that these
statements are true, especially where he is known.
For knavery, untruthfulness, and wickedness, I have
never seen anything, in all my business experience
of forty years, that will compare with this.
He would not have taken such a course with me once,
but he took advantage of my age and misfortunes to
commit these frauds, thinking that I could not defend
myself, and that he could defraud and crush me.
I had paid every dollar of my money
into this business which I had at that time, and had
nothing to live on through the winter. But John
Woodruff in his kindness, raised money enough for me
to live on through the winter, and the following spring
I moved to New Haven.