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TO HIS SON ASKING FOR MONEY:

“COME DOWNTO HARD BUSINESS FACTS”

134

HARRISON, BENJAMIN. Autograph Letter Signed, “Your affectionate Father, /

BenjHarrison,” as Senator, to his adult son, Russell Harrison (“Dear Russell”), describing

the limits of his ability to advance money to him, and encouraging him to run his [news-

paper publishing] business without debt. 8 pages, 8vo, written on two folded sheets;

incomplete two-page holograph postscript, horizontal folds. (TFC)

Indianapolis, 12 August 1887

[800/1,200]

. . . I can of course meet the draft you have drawn.Tho’ at some considerable inconvenience, but I do

not see how I can advance any more. I have now 5,000$ each borrowed from the only banks I can go

to and I do not see how I can increase my debt at either. . . . I shall not have any beyond our necessary

living expenses. . . . Can you not sell some of your Coutts accounts to some one in the country

indebted to you?You must try and return this money to me as soon as you can. . . .

And now as to the Journal Co.You must run it so that it will pay its own bills.You cannot get fur-

ther credit at the banks, and I cannot advance any money for I have not got it. It is ruin not success to

enlarge the business beyond your means. . . .

What is my Ranch at Townsend worth and could it be sold for cash? . . . I think I would like to sell

it & apply the proceeds on my debts. . . .We had a good rain last night, which will help some of the

corn out & better still give some chance for fall pasture.”

The postscript: “. . . I would make an extra effort to save the Journal Co. if I could believe that you

would hereafter keep it out of debt . . . . I wish you would send me a full statement of its affairs. . . . I

am pinching . . . but I will do all this cheerfully, if you on your part will get rid of all ‘false visions’

and come down to hard business facts. . . .”

Russell Benjamin Harrison (1854-1936), son of President Benjamin Harrison, was a lawyer, entre-

preneur, and politician; he became the owner of the

Helena Daily Journal

in 1890, and earned the

rank of colonel in the Spanish-AmericanWar.