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Charles W. Chesnutt to The Treasurer of Geauga County, 5 January 1924

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  Treasurer Geauga County, Chardon, Ohio.1 Dear Sir:

Will you be good enough to send me the tax bill for the Chester Cliffs Company2 on property near Scotland, and state on the bill what year or half year the taxes are for?3

Some of the property was transferred last June, but the tax bill which you send will undoubtedly be for the period before that date. If I am mistaken about this, and there are any taxes assessed against Helen M. Chesnutt4 or Mary E. Donahey,5 please send those.

I enclose a stamped envelope for receipt.

Yours very truly, CWC:W Enc;



1. Chardon, Ohio, is the county seat of Geauga County, which in 1920 had about fifteen thousand inhabitants. [back]

2. The Chester Cliffs Club or Company was a small stockholding corporation founded in September 1903 by Chesnutt and ten friends who were "stockholders," in order to purchase eleven acres of land in Chester Township near Chesterland, Ohio, and Scotland, Ohio, twenty miles from Cleveland. Summer cottages were built by three of the parties in order to spend their summers away from the city, and in 1916 the Chesnutts purchased one of these. Stockholder meetings were called every fall, even as eventually only three families seem to have remained: the Chesnutts, the Donaheys (who were living in Chicago after 1905), and the Counts. In 1921, Frank Counts (1881–1946), a Cleveland lawyer who was the longtime secretary and treasurer of the Club and his wife Eulalie (Eula) (1869–1942) sold a lot with a cottage to Mary Ellen Delahunte (1870–1951) without consulting the other members, causing conflicts about property tax and upkeep for years. Shortly afterwards, Chesnutt, as the club president, took on the responsibility of reminding members of tax payments and calling the annual meeting. Some of the property was transferred to individual owners in 1923, but the corporation was never legally dissolved. [back]

3. See also Chesnutt's reply to Mary Dickerson Donahey's inquiry about the property tax on February 5, 1924. [back]

4. Helen Maria Chesnutt (1880–1969) was Chesnutt's second child. She earned degrees from Smith College and Columbia University, taught Latin (including to Langston Hughes) at Cleveland's Central High School for more than four decades starting in 1904, co-authored a Latin textbook, The Road to Latin, in 1932, and served on the executive committee of the American Philological Association in 1920. She became her father's literary executor and first biographer. [back]

5. Mary Augusta Dickerson Donahey (1876–1962) was a White journalist and author of children's books. She was originally from New Jersey, grew up in New York City and worked for the Cleveland Plain Dealer from 1898 to 1905. She married the cartoonist William Donahey (1883–1970) in 1905 and moved with him to Chicago, where she wrote children's and young adult books, cookbooks and newspaper columns. The couple befriended the Chesnutts in the early 1900s, when they were part of the Tresart Club and the Chester Cliffs Club. [back]