Travel notes from the American Southwest with a front-row view of life on the road
A firsthand collection of letters from 1893 that chronicles long train journeys through New Orleans, San Antonio, and El Paso. It blends landscape, climate, and local life with personal reflections on weather, water, and daily routines in a shifting frontier town.
The entries blend practical details with vivid scenes: adobe buildings and wind-swept plazas, irrigated fields and desert canyons, schools and a modern post office side by side with traditional Pueblo life. The author observes how people live, work, and celebrate, from Arbor Day tree-planting to crowded gatherings in public parks, while offering a clear sense of place without getting lost in speculation.
What you’ll experience:
- Descriptions of climate, wind, and the dry, desert-adjacent landscape that frames travel days.
- Close looks at towns, hotels, plazas, and street life, plus the contrast between American and Mexican influences.
- Encounters with locals, including interpreters, farmers, and Pueblo people, through a respectful, curious lens.
- Personal reflections on travel routines, weather data, and the idea of home while on the road.
Ideal for readers of travel journals and historical memoirs who enjoy vivid, grounded scenes and everyday observations from the late 19th century.