THIS township is number
twelve of the firt range of townships in the Connecticut Western
Reserve. It is the largest township in the county, being seven
miles in length by five in width. The surface is generally
level and low. The soil is a heavy clay, except a portion of
the township in the vicinity of the village of Kelloggsville, where
it inclines to gravel. It is watered principally by Ashtabula
creek, the main branch of which flows through the southwestern
portion of the township. The north branch enters the township
near the northeast corner, and flows in a southwestwardly course,
meeting and uniting with the main branch a short distance south of
Kelloggsville. Conneaut creek flows through the northwestern
part of the township. These streams afford excellent
water-power, which has been taken advantage of by the settlers while
clearing up the heavy forests. Saw-mills and grist-mills have
been constructed on both these streams in this township.
EARLY SETTLEMENTS.
Colonel Samuel Moulton,
from Whitestown, New York, was the first white man to make a
settlement in Monroe. He emigrated to this township in the
year 1799, and and settled on land just east of the village of
Kelloggsville, on what is at present known as the Ensign
farm. He erected the first log house in the township
the same year, near the present site of John Wetmore’s
residence. He resided here for about two years, when he sold
out his improvement to Jonathan Harrington, and moved on to a
lot a short distance west of his first settlement, on land now
occupied by a portion of the village of Kelloggsville. He
erected a cabin here near the present site of the tannery. It
is said that Colonel Moulton, when he came to this
township, eloped with another man’s wife, leaving behind him a
family, wealth, and position in his native place. This woman
soon left him, and married another man, who afterwards in turn left
her.
Jonathan Harrington, from Pennsylvania,
but originally from Rhode Island, was the second white settler in
the township. He came to Monroe in 1801,
buying out and settling on Colonel Moulton’s first
improvement. About the time Mr. Harrington
settled in Monroe, or immediately after, a Mr. Wm.
Moss,
from New York State, settled just southeast of the present village
of Kelloggsville, on the second lot east of the Sheffield town line.
About a year after (1802) William and James Ferguson, from
Virginia, originally from Carlisle, Pa., and George
Ferguson from the latter place, brothers, settled in the
township. William settled on a part of the same lot
Mr. Harrington had taken,
on the opposite side of the road. He bought his land of
Judge Austin, of Austinburg. He sold his land and
improvements in Monroe to Martin and Amos Kellogg,
and removed to Huron county. James Ferguson
settled on the flats of Ashtabula creek near the Sheffield line.
He lived here but two years, when he removed to Conneaut.
George settled on the south part of the same lot Mr.
Harrington settled on, buying the land of Abel, a son of
Jonathan Harrington.
In December, 1802, Mr. William Hardy
and family, of Mifflin county, Pennsylvania, started for Ashtabula
County. Mrs. Hardy was taken sick on the way,
and died at Black Lick, Indiana county. Pa. The rest of the
family, Mr. Hardy and little sons,—John,
Hance, and William,—John, the oldest, being but
eight years of age, and a little daughter, not yet a year old,
pursued their journey, arriving in Monroe on the 22d of April, 1803.
George Ferguson and family, the same day that
Mr. Hardy arrived, moved to Springfield, Erie county,
Pennsylvania, and Mr. Hardy moved into his cabin. Mr.
Hardy, in 1807, moved into the northwest part of the
township, which was then a part of Salem township, now Conneaut.
He died here in 1813. Mr. John Hardy, the
eldest of the three boys, is still living, and resides in a pleasant
home in the village of Kelloggsville. He and his two
brothers, Hance and William, who died during the year
1876, never have resided more than six miles from the place where
they first settled in 1803.
David Niles, Esq., from Mahoning county,
originally from Vermont, came to the township in 1803, soon after
the arrival of Mr. Hardy. He settled in the
northwest part of the township, near Conneaut creek, on the farm
where William Brydle now resides.
About 1803 or 1804, Mr. Daniel Talbot, from
Maryland, settled near the present residence of Almeron C. Hill.
He was a blacksmith, and built the first blacksmith-shop in the
township. He lived here but a few years, and then moved to
Kingsville, and afterwards to Huron county. In 1805 or 1806,
Jacob Paden, from Crawford county, Pennsylvania,
previously from the south part of Pennsylvania, settled in the
northwest part of Monroe, where he made improvements. About
1S08, Cornelius Weidner and sons—Leonard, Michael, Benjamin,
and Cornelius, Jr.—settled in the township on the place first
settled by Geo. Ferguson. Mr. and Mrs.
Weidner lived but a short time after, and about the year 1813
their place was bought by Perry G. Gardner.
Mr. Caleb Blodgett, from Batavia, New York,
originally from Vermont, came to Monroe about the year 1809 or 1810.
He first bought fifty acres of land near the northwest part of the
present village of Kelloggsville, where he then settled. He
was a man of very much energy, and was more prominently connected
with the business interests of Monroe for many years than any other
man. He first bought out the distillery of Wm. B. Frazier,
in the northwest corner of the township. He afterwards built
four or five distilleries in the township; was proprietor for some
time of important stage-lines on the Ridge road, and on the route
from Erie to Pittsburgh, which ran through Kelloggsville. He
built, in connection with a company in which he was the leading
spirit, a turnpike-road from the southeast corner of Richmond to the
north line of the original township of Monroe, a distance of fifteen
miles. This was known in those days as Blodgett’s
turnpike. For several years—about 1820 to 1825—he had the
contract of supplying beef and pork to the garrison at Green Bay.
He built a large flouring- mill in the east part of Sheffield, and a
steam grist-mill in the village of Kelloggsville about the year
1833. He was a man who assumed great risks, and many times
would be unable to meet his obligations. It is said that at one time
he bought a boiler at Pittsburgh, and in transporting it home hid
himself in it in order to evade being stopped by men whom he owed at
his stage stations along the route. At another time he came very
near being kidnapped by a party who were going to take him to
Batavia, New York, where a bail-bond was lying against him. He
was decoyed into their wagon by the parties on a pretense of their
desiring to buy his farm; but when they reached his place they
whipped up, at the same time holding him in the wagon so he could
not escape. He called to his men, and they hearing him, took
horses and pursued, overtaking the party in the vicinity of Clark’s
Corners, where they rescued him. There are many other
interesting incidents connected with Mr. Blodgett’s
history. He broke up here about 1834, and in the year 1836
went to Rock county, Wisconsin, where he settled on the site of the
city of Beloit, erecting the first log house in that place.
Martin Kellogg, from Virginia, originally from
Massachusetts, came to Monroe in 1813, and the following year his
brother, Amos Kellogg, from Massachusetts, settled in
the township. They at first bought and settled on six hundred
and forty acres of land just north of the village of Kelloggsville,
but afterwards bought William Ferguson’s improvement
of two hundred acres, the present site of the village, where
Martin then settled. The Kelloggs were also
prominently connected with the history of this township. The
village of Kelloggsville, at first known as Ferguson’s settlement,
derived its name from this family.
Harvey Dean, a brother-in-law of the
Kelloggs, from Virginia, though originally from Massachusetts,
came to the township in the year 1814. He settled one and a
half miles north of Kelloggsville. In 1816, Elijah and
Peter Peck, brothers, from New York, settled in
Monroe. They at first hired the Jonathan Harrington
farm, then owned by William Ensign, who had
settled here a year or two previous.
They afterwards bought three hundred acres of land
south of the village, the present Holbrook farm being a part of the
same. Here Elijah Peek built the same season a
saw-mill and grist-mill on Ashtabula creek. These mills were
burned in the spring of 1822, and rebuilt by Mr. Peck
during the summer following.
About the same time he built a distillery near the
mills. A few years after he sold out his improvements at this
place to Caleb Blodgett, and bought land about a mile
farther south, on the main branch of the Ashtabula, where he also
erected mills and a distillery. He also built mills in the
northwest part of the township, and at the north centre of
Sheffield.
About the time the Pecks arrived in
Monroe, settlements began to be made along the centre road, and in
the northeast part of the township. Previous to
[Pg. 201]
this time the settlements had been confined to the vicinity of
Kelloggsville village and the northwest part of the township.
Among the first who settled in the north part of the
township and along the Centre road were Ezekiel Colby†,
Rufus Hatch, Sr.†,
Rufus Hatch, Jr., Harvey Hatch**, Solomon Durkee,
Sr.†, Solomon
Durkee, Jr.†,
David Durkee†,
Humphrey Cram, James and Joseph Hicks, Ambrose Ford*,
John and Sedgwick§
Bushnell, Daniel Kelsey, Nathaniel Welsh, David†
and John Eaton†,
and Samuel Eaton, Sr.†,
Benjamin Abbott, Danville Hayward‡,
John and Eber Sanford‡,
John Haviland‡,
and Francis Kellogg†.
The early settlers of Monroe, as well as those of other
townships, had many privations and hardships to experience.
Mr. Hardy, the year he settled in the township with his family,
1803, brought with him ten sheep and ten hogs. The first year
the bears ate up his hogs and the wolves killed his sheep. He
planted four acres of corn, and the bears and coons destroyed that
also. The family were pretty hard up for provisions.
There were no inhabitants in Kingsville or Sheffield at this time.
The nearest place to get grinding done was at the mouth of Walnut
creek, Erie county, Pennsylvania. The settlers often planed
corn with a jack-plane, and after harvest would boil wheat.
For meat they depended mostly on the wild animals of the forest.
At one time, in the year 1805, Thomas Hamilton, while
out on a hunting expedition, fell in with a herd of thirteen elk, in
a bend of Conneaut creek, and succeeded in killing all of them.
He dressed them and secured the meat in the creek, afterwards giving
notice to the settlers, inviting them to help themselves, which
opportunity they gladly availed themselves of.
For several years during the early settlement of this
township it was almost impossible for the inhabitants to raise sheep
and hogs on account of the numerous wolves and bears which inhabited
the region. An incident worthy of notice, and which
illustrates the character and bravery of the early settlers, female
as well as male, occurred in this township at a very early date. Colonel
Moulton, the first settler, after a residence of two or three
years in Monroe, made a visit of about two months to his former home
in the east. His wife and one small child he left in the
young settlement. During his absence the wolves killed one of
his pigs. His wife, with invincible determination, resolved to
be avenged on the wolves. She constructed a square pen of
round poles, inclining inwardly from the base to the top, so that a
wolf might easily ascend from the outside to the top, and place
himself in the pen, which was of sufficient height to keep him caged
when once he got in. In this pen she placed what was left of the
slaughtered pig as a bait for the wolves. The plan was a
successful one, for the next morning found two wolves in the pen
unable to make their escape. Mrs. Moulton,
though unaccustomed to loading and firing a gun, determined to shoot
the wolves, and having heard hunters speak of shooting muskets
loaded with three fingers of powder, she measured by the length
instead of the width of her fingers. She then went to the pen
and discharged the gun at one of the wolves. The wolf was
instantly killed, and Mrs. Moulton, by the reaction of the
gun so heavily loaded, was thrown backward to the ground in a
senseless condition. Her little son, though considerably
frightened, brought cold water and applied it to her face, which
soon restored her from the shock. She then reloaded with one
and one-half finger’s length of powder, and killed the surviving
wolf.
----------
* Buried in Reid's Corners Cemetery just south of
Bushnell in Monroe Twp. area
1. Ambrose's wife, Amanda Ford
† Buried
in Durkee Cemetery
‡ Buried in
Farnham Cemetery
§ Buried in Kelloggsville Cemetery
** Buried in City Cemetery
Also note: Most of them are listed in the Census records in
these Ashtabula County website pages.
----------
INDIANS.
At the time the first
settlers arrived in Monroe, and up to the time of the War of 1812, a
number of Indian families, remnants of the Seneca and Massasauga
tribes, were encamped in the vicinity. The Massasaugas were
located in the west part of Sheffield township, and the Senecas a
short distance east of Kelloggsville, on land now owned by G. F.
Kingsley. They were disposed to be very friendly.
Old Captain Philip was the commander of those in this
section. He was a large, powerful man, and had a noble heart
for one of his race. Captain Philip had an excellent
wife and five children,—three sons and two daughters.
Occasionally there would be as many as forty or fifty Indians camped
here. They pursued hunting, making maple-sugar, and gathering
wild honey.
EARLY EVENTS.
The first marriage in
Monroe was that of Mr. George Ferguson, son of
William Ferguson, and Miss Maria Harrington,
daughter of Jonathan Harrington, and the parties are
supposed to have gone over the line into Pennsylvania to have the
ceremony performed. The name of the officiating officer is not
known. The event occurred in the year 1808. Soon after,
during the same year, Sanford Niles, son of David
Niles, was married to Miss Polly Ferguson,
daughter of William Ferguson. The officiating
officer it is thought was Nathan King, who was at this
time acting as justice of the peace in Conneaut, then Salem.
The first birth in the township was a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Talbot, named Joseph, born about 1804 or
1805.
The first female birth is thought to have been a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Ferguson.
The first death in Monroe was an infant child of
Jonathan Harrington and wife, which occurred in the year
1805 or 1806.
The first death of a grown person occurring in the
township was that of Mrs. Cornelius Weidner, which took place
soon after the family settled in 1808. The next death was that
of her husband, Mr. Weidner, in the year 1809.
The first religious meetings of a public character held
in Monroe were conducted by Rev. Joseph Badger. These
were held at the cabins of the settlers, commencing about the year
1804.
The first school taught in the township was during the
winter of 1805 and 1806. A Miss Laura Ford, from
Williamsfield township, was the teacher. The school was held
in Colonel Moulton’s cabin, he being away during that
winter. There were about ten or twelve scholars.
The first school-house was a log building, erected in
1814. This was located about a mile north of Kelloggsville, on
what is called the Martin Kellogg farm. David
Niles, Jr., taught the first school in this building the
following winter.
The first frame house erected in Monroe was built by
Mr. Caleb Blodgett, near the centre of the village
of Kelloggsville, on the present site of the brick residence of
Mrs. Benson. The exact date is not known, but it
was about the year 1811. The first brick residence in the
township was the one occupied by Mrs. Benson, which
was also erected by Mr. Blodgett, about the year 1824.
These buildings were each used by Mr. Blodgett as a
public-house, the frame building being the first tavern kept in
Monroe. The large frame building on the opposite side of the
road from the brick one now standing, and owned by Royal
Smith, was also built by Mr. Blodgett and used as
a tavern stand for a number of years.
The first saw-mill was built by Jacob Paden,
about the year 1807, in the northwest part of the township on a
little stream then called Bear creek, on the present farm of C.
F. Brydle.
The first grist-mill was also built by Mr.
Paden, in connection with the sawmill, at the same time.
About the year 1810 or 1811 he built a larger grist-mill,
located a few rods down the stream from the saw-mill. This was
a very good grist-mill for those days.
The first distillery in the township was built by Mr.
Paden in company with William B. Frazier, and was
located a short distance south of the mills.
The first tannery was built by Caleb Blodgett,
about the year 1820, on the opposite side of the road from the
present tannery. Major Clark superintended the
business for Mr. Blodgett until he sold to Deacon
James Brown, about three years. Mr.
Brown continued proprietor for about ten or twelve years, and in
1837 sold to Parkman Baker and Albert
Kellogg, who a few years before had built a tannery on the
opposite side of the road, on the site of the present tannery.
These tanneries were then consolidated.
The first cheese-factory was put into operation at
Kelloggsville in the year 1869. It was owned by a stock company.
Mr. Isaac Smith was the first president and treasurer, and
Mr. A. C. Stevens secretary. T. B. Wire
superintended the work the first season. The factory is at
present owned by Mr. J. Brown, who has been superintendent
since the first season. About eighty-five thousand pounds of
cheese are manufactured annually.
Vosburg’s cheese-factory, at Monroe Centre, was
built and put into operation by J. G. Vosburg, in the spring
of 1870. From fifty thousand to one hundred thousand pounds of
cheese are manufactured annually.
Lewis & Clark’s
cheese-factory, at Clark’s Corners, was built in the spring of
1874, and commenced operations the same season. There is an
annual manufacture of about sixty thousand pounds of cheese at this
factory.
EARLY ROADS.
The first road through
Monroe was the one made by the surveying-party in the year 1798.
This commenced at the State line, near the northeast corner of the
township, and extended in a diagonal direction, bearing to the
southwest, through the present village of Kelloggsville to
Austinburg. It was afterwards extended to Cleveland, and was
known as the old Girdled road, and afterwards as the Cuyahoga road.
This road crossed the present centre road a short distance south of
the present residence of Alonzo Ferguson.
The first roads made by the early settlers of Monroe
were, one from the Ferguson settlement to Paden’s
Mills, and one from the settlement to Conneaut, then Salem, by way
of David Nile’s place, now William Brydle’s.
About the year 1807 the State road was made. This
entered the township near the southwest corner, and followed along
the west bank of Ashtabula creek, crossing this stream about ten or
fifteen rods above the present bridge at Kelloggsville. After
crossing the creek it took a turn to the northwest, until reaching
the site of the old brick tavern. Here it took another turn,
bearing more to the west, and continued to the residence of
Esquire Fobes, on the north ridge in Kingsville, the
present site of the village of North Kingsville.
The next road was called the County road. This
extended from the site of
[Pg. 202]
the old brick tavern in Kelloggsville, north to Paden’s
Mills, then on by the cabins of William Hardy, Daniel Sawtelle,
and Joseph Tubbs, near the present S. T. Fickinger farm,
striking the Ridge road near Mr. Coonrod Stoon’s cabin, on
the farm now owned by Mr. Olmsted, a short distance east of Amboy.
Other roads were established. One from David
Gould’s farm, on the Ridge road in Conneaut, extending
south, striking Monroe about a mile east from the northwest corner,
crossing the creek near Mr. Brydle’s residence, thence
by Walker Bennett’s and Plinney Kellogg’s,
striking the east and west road into Kelloggsville. One from
Kelloggsville to the north centre of Monroe. These roads were
all laid out and established previous to the year 1810.
In 1814 a road was laid out and built by the
inhabitants of Kelloggsville, extending from Kelloggsville, in a
diagonal direction, through to William Reed’s, in the
north part of Pierpont, where it intersected another road.
The reason the roads from this township to Conneaut did
not extend as now, direct, crossing the creek at Farnham's
Mills, was that at that time there were bat few if any inhabitants
in that part of the township, and the hills in that locality were
very difficult ones to cross.
FIRST MAIL-ROUTE AND POST-OFFICE.
The first mail-route
through Monroe extended from Warren to Kinsman and from
Kinsman to Salem, now Conneaut, through Kelloggsville. Amos
Kellogg was the first postmaster. The post-office was kept at
the store of Kellogg, Dean, & Bloss.
There are at present three post-offices in the township: one at
Kelloggsville, Charles S. Hawkins, postmaster; another at
Monroe Centre, H. F. Hitchcock, postmaster; and one at
Clark's Corners, H. M. Cook, postmaster.
EARLY MERCANTILE INTERESTS.
The first store in Monroe
was kept in the northwest part of the township by Jacob
Paden, near where his mills were located. It was but a
small concern. The first store in Kelloggsville village was
opened by Judge Amos Kellogg, Lucius
Dean, and James M. Bloss, in a building then situated a
few rods northeast of the present tannery. They kept a good
stock of general merchandise, and conducted quite an extensive
business for the times. This store was opened about the year
1821 or 1822.
At the north centre of Monroe a store was built and
stocked with goods in the year 1845, by S. S. Bushnell.
A store was started first at Monroe Centre by the Farmer’s Union,
about 1850 or 1851. There was also a store kept at quite an
early date at Clark's Corners, on the town line between Monroe and
Conneaut. Mr. Wesley Clark was the
proprietor. At present there is a store at each of these
places; at the North Centre one kept by Mr. Carter, at
Monroe Centre one by Hitchcock & Felch, and at
Clark’s Corners one by H. M. Cook. Captain L. B.
Goldsmith is the proprietor of the present store at
Kelloggsville.
EARLY PHYSICIANS.
Dr. Jacob Vosburg
was the first physician who located in Monroe. He came about
the year 1819, and settled a mile northeast of the village. He
remained but two or three years and then removed to Erie,
Pennsylvania. He was a well read physician of the Allopathic
school.
The second physician was Dr. Greenleaf Fifield,
who located in Monroe soon after Dr. Vosburg left.
Dr. Fifield practiced here about one year, and then removed to
Conneaut, where he spent the remainder of his life and gained a high
reputation in his profession.
Dr. Stephen G. Holbrook was the next physician
to settle in the township. He came about the year 1824, when
but a young man, and soon afterwards married a daughter of Martin
Kellogg. He continued to reside in the township and to
practice his profession for a period of fifty years, or until his
death, which occurred in the year 1875.
BURIAL-GROUNDS.
The first deaths occurring
among the white settlers of Monroe have already been referred to as
a child of Jonathan Harrington, and Mr. and Mrs.
Weidner. The remains of these persons were buried on
Mr. Harrington’s land, in the east part of the present village
of Kelloggsville. It is said that the north and south road,
just east of the village, passes directly over these first graves.
The first burying-ground, with the exception of these graves just
mentioned, was located on land belonging to Amos Kellogg,
a few rods west of the present residence of John Hardy.
This was vacated after the present pleasant cemetery-grounds were
bought, in the east part of the village, early in the year 1830.
Judge Amos Kellogg was the first one to be interred in
this cemetery, his death occurring in April, 1830.
CHURCHES.
The Congregational church was organized in Monroe
township, in the year 1829, by Rev. Ephraim Woodruff, who was
the first minister. The church building
ELISHA FARNHAM
WM. K. PINNEY
H. F. HARDY
[Pg. 203]
Samuel Eaton, John Niles, E. B.
Woodbury; 1842, Samuel Eaton, E. B. Woodbury,
John Howard; 1843, John Howard, Samuel Eaton, John Hardy;
1844, John Hardy, Samuel Eaton, John Howard;
1845, John Hardy, S. S. Bushnell, Augustus Abbott;
1846, David Durkee, John Howard, George Van
Gaasbeck 1847, John Howard, George Van Gaasbeck,
I. W. Babbett; 1848, John Howard, George H.
Wickwire, John Wetmore; 1849, John Howard,
Rufus Hatch, J. E. Hill; 1850, J. E. Hill, R.
Washburn, J. Holmes; 1851, R. Washburn, H. N.
Bushnell, C. C. Baker; 1852, Rufus Hatch, J. E. Hill, J.
Mitchell; 1853, Alonzo Marshall, Lewis Howard, Samuel Eaton;
1854, same; 1855, Asa Fuller, Josiah Hicks, Alonzo
Marshall; 1856, same; 1857, S. S. Bushnell, Josiah
Hicks, John Howard; 1858, S. S. Bushnell, John Howard,
Gilbert Sweet; 1859, Augustus Abbott, Gilbert Sweet, J. W.
Read; 1860, Augustus Abbott, Lewis Howard, E.
P. Baker; 1861, E. P. Baker, Alonzo Ferguson, C. Dean;
1862, W. K. Kinney, S. S. Johnson, P. F. Kellogg; 1863, W.
P. Woodbury, Rufus Eaton, S. S. Johnson; 1864, G.
Sweet, G. G. Waite, P. F. Kellogg; 1865, G. G. Waite, P. F.
Kellogg, Julius Benson; 1866, G. G. Waite, C. Dean, ____
____; 1867, A. F. Moon, C. Dean, L. C. Atwater; 1868, A.
Curtiss, L. C. Atwater, E. Hayward; 1869, J. W. Traverse, L.
H. Kellogg, E. Hayward; 1870, E. Hayward, Lyman Everts, H. N.
Bushnell; 1871, H. N. Bushnell, L. Everts, R. Washburn;
1872, B. B. Hardy, John Wetmore, R. Washburn; 1873, R.
Washburn, R. Eaton, B. B. Hardy; 1874, E. P. Baker, R. H.
Eaton, G. A. Lillie; 1875, E. P. Baker, H. S. Dean, B.
S. Woodward; 1876, H. Morse, D. W. Houston, A. Marshall;
1877, D. W. Houston, R. P. Smith, Hiram Morse.
Township Clerks.—1819,
Peter Peck; 1820 and 1821, Martin Kellogg;
1822, James Vosburg; 1823 to 1852, inclusive,
Francis Kellogg; 1853, James M. Power; 1854, C.
L. Bushnell; 1855 to 1860, inclusive, Josiah Burge;
1861 to 1866, inclusive, L. B. Howard; 1867 and 1868, H.
F. Hitchcock; 1869 to 1877, inclusive, L. B. Howard.
Township Treasurers.—1819
to 1821, inclusive, Stephen Webb; 1822 to 1825,
inclusive, Rufus Hatch, Jr.; 1826 to 1837, inclusive,
Solomon Spalding; 1838 to 1844, inclusive, William K. Pinney;
1845 to 1856, inclusive, D. S. Gifford; 1857 to 1864,
inclusive, W. W. Kinney; 1865 to 1870, inclusive, S. S.
Johnson; 1871, C. Benson; 1872 to 1876, inclusive,
C. F. Eaton; 1877, L. G. Felch.
Listers.—1819, Harvey
Dean; 1820, Isaac Bennett; 1821, Henry
Belden; 1822, Ambrose Ford; 1823, Martin
Kellogg; 1824, John Bushnell; 1825, Eber
Sanford.
Assessors.—1841 to 1843,
Abner Kellogg; 1844 and 1845, Hervey Sperry;
1846, Isaac Smith; 1847, E. B. Woodbury; 1848
and 1849, S. S. Bushnell; 1850 and 1851, Lewis
Howard; 1852, T. S. Young; 1853, H. L. Scribner;
1854 and 1855, Alfred Buss; 1856, T. S. Young;
1857, Samuel Young; 1858, Philip Doel;
1859, John Dean; 1860, T. S. Young; 1861, S.
S. Bushnell; 1862, Samuel^Young; 1863, Elijah
Curtiss; 1864, W. W. Kinney; 1865, L. C. Atwater;
1866, T. S. Young; 1867, S. Hayward; 1868,
T. S. Young; 1869 to 1875, inclusive, Samuel Mitchell;
1876, H. N. Bushnell; 1877, Lewis Howard.
Justices of the Peace.—1819,
William Ensign, David Niles; 1821,
Amos Kellogg, Benjamin Abbott; 1824,
Elijah Peck, Samuel Eaton; 1825, Harvey
Sperry; 1827, Samuel Eaton, Henry
Belden; 1829, William Ensign; 1830, Henry
Belden, Ira Benton; 1832, James M. Bloss; 1833, Ira
Benton, Nathaniel Webster; 1839, Samuel Hayward;
1840, E. B. Woodbury; 1842, Hermon Torry; 1843,
Bartlett B. Smith; 1846, Solomon Durkee, Lewis Howard;
1848, B. B. Smith; 1849, S. S. Bushnell, Lewis Howard;
1851, B. B. Smith; 1852, S. S. Bushnell, Josiah Burge;
1855, T. S. Young; 1858, S. Hayward; 1859, J.
Burge; 1860, T. S. Young; 1861, S. Hayward; 1862, E.
P. Baker; 1866, P. F. Kellogg, Julius Benson; 1868, T.
S. Young; 1869, Julius Benson; 1870, Parkman Baker; 1873,
Parkman Baker; 1875, J. H. Wardwell, C. O. Wiley, Julius
Benson.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH.
WILLIAM KELSO PINNEY
HANCE F. HARDY
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