CHAPTER II.
Pg. 12
EARLY SETTLEMENT
FIRST ACTUAL SETTLERS - COUNTY SEAT LOCATED -
PIONEER BURIALS - GOING TO MILL - BUILDING THE CANAL - FIRST WHITE
MAN'S GRAVE - VARIOUS ITEMS OF INTEREST - STYLE OF LIVING -
"JOHNNY APPLESEED" - EARLY STATE OF SOCIETY - FIRST STILL HOUSE -
EARLY TEMPERANCE DAYS - THE JAIL - THE COURTHOUSE - POPULATION
DECREASED - EARLY RAILROAD LINES
In his speech before the "Centennial" in
Carrollton, William McCOY, a native of the county, gave a
greater parat of the facts herein stated on the pioneer settlement
of this county.
The first approach of a White face near to its border
(this county) was in 1761-2 when the Revs. Frederick POST and
John HECKEWEDER - Moravian Missionaries - had penetrated the
"wilderness" as far as the Tuscarawas Valley and labored with the
Indians at three stations - Shoenburn, Gnadenhutten and Salem,
Tuscarawas County.
Tradition informs us that about 1800 one Jesse
PALMER, a hunter effected his settlement in Washington Township
on the stream now bearing his name, being so called on account of
this pioneer being the first to invade the wilds of the country for
the purpose of making first settlement, and he chose the banks of
this pretty stream for his log cabin. One account fixed
PALMER's settlement on a part of section 16, later owned by
William MILLER, while another version declares it to have been
farther up the stream on land later owned by Robert HUSTON.
About the same date John JACKMAN settled on
land on the Elkhorn in Lee Township, later known as the Oliver
COGSIL farm. These two are generally believed to have
been the original white settlers and ever will be, a disputed
question, but there was but little difference in the dates of their
coming to what was then a "green glad solitude."
Immediately following came Jacob GOTSHALL, 1801;
Peter ALBAUGH, 1805; Daniel SHAWVER, 1807; then
Lucas and Solomon STINE in 1808; Adam SIMMONS,
1809 and others within that decade in the southeastern part of the
county. The DOWNINGS came in 1805; Richard THOMPSON,
James HEWITT, 1808; John REED, Sr., Isaac MILLER,
1809, all in Sandy Valley, extending from Pekin to Magnolia.
Benjamin KNIGHT, Samuel DUNLAP, 1807, on the Conotton, near
Leesville and New Hagerstown; also Joseph McCAUSLAND, 1807,
in Lee Township; Isaac DWIRE, John COAKLEY and William
CROXTON in 1808, near Carrollton and others along the road
leading from Canton to Steubenville; also by Robert GEORGE,
who settled near Scroggsfield in 1808-09, so that by the close of
the first decade of the nineteenth century, considerable settlement
had been made along the principal avenue of travel from the Ohio
River westward through the county.
September 17, 1808, the town of Pekin in Brown
Township, then in Stark County, was laid out by Isaac CRAIG
and Amos JENNEY, hence must be the oldest village plat within
Carroll County.
During the second decade the settlement within the
territory of this county was a little more rapid, and in addition to
an enlargement of the few scattered settlements already notice,
others were effected amongst whom were those who settled near
Norristown in East Township, by NORRIS, BAKER, BATTIN and
others; also the BAXTERS in Harris Township.
COUNTY SEAT LOCATED
During the first ten years of settlement
the county seat was located for the newly organized county.
Peter BOHART who has purchased a quarter section of land on
which the greater part
[INSERT PICTURE HERE UPON REQUEST]
PETER BOHART, LAID OUT CENTREVILLE IN 1815
Carrollton now stands, settled thereon about 1810 and October 4,
1815 laid out the town of "Centreville" (now Carrollton). The
house on the Helfrich corner was built that year by pioneer
BOHART.
Leesville was
laid out by Thomas PRICE and Peter SANDERS, August 12,
1815.
New Hagerstown was platted March
20, 1816, by Samuel DUNLAP who represented the county in the
Ohio Legislature that year.
Millinsburg was platted by
William VAUGHN, Alexander LEE and
David MILLIGAN.
Queensborough was platted by
George PATTERSON March 24, 1817 - both last named towns long
since defunct villages.
Augusta was laid out by Jacob
BROWN, February 28, 1818.
From 1820 to 1830, only towns laid out in the county
were Valdarno, between Pekin
and Minerva, by J. W. CONDY, September
22, 1827 - long since obliterated and forgotten.
New Harrisburg, by Jacob HARSH, April
21, 1827.
During the first twenty years after the settlement of
Carroll County, there were few disturbances of a serious character,
although numerous cases of hardship, bravery and courage are
related. The Indians committed occasional depredations, but
they were general peaceable.
PIONEER BURIALS
When Jesse PALMER, the hunter and
original settler departed this life his Scroggsfield neighbors gave
him the best possible burial that circumstances would at that date
permit. No undertaker being nearby they provided him with a
walnut coffin, made from a native tree, and in the most primitive
manner, yet respectable in appearance.
BARN RAISINGS.
In 1810, so sparce was the settlement of
Carroll County and near Centreville, that when Isaac DWIRE
raised a log barn, persons came from six to ten miles around and
among them a Mr. RUMPLE, living east of Harlem, who was
accidentally killed at the raising by a falling timber crushing him.
GOING TO MILL.
Before the erection of the PERKINS
Mill, by CRAIG and JENNEY in 1808 - first water mill
built in Carroll County - the settlers on the Sandy were under the
necessity of carrying their grain to Canton to be made into flour,
or perform the tiresome task of producing meal by the hand mill
which was effected by several families.
BUILDING OF THE CANAL.
February, 1825, "An act to provide for the
internal improvement of the State by navigable canals" was passed by
the Ohio Legislature; and in pursuance of it, the Ohio Canal was
located across the State extending from Lake Erie to the Ohio River.
January 11, 1828, the Sandy and Beaver Canal Company was
incorporated for the building of a canal near Boliver to the Ohio,
at Beaver, Pennsylvania, traversing the Sandy.
THE COUNTY'S FIRST WHITE MAN'S GRAVE.
The first white man buried, in what is now
Carroll County, and of which there is any record, was in 1789.
His name was SWEARINGEN, who, with a number of other men, had
been hunting for ginseng. SWEARINGEN being ill, had
remained in the camp along the banks of the Ohio, near Steubenville.
Indians captured him and hurried away with him. Upon returning
to their camp his companions discovered his absence and took up the
trail. They found him scalped and dead, at the J. B.
McCULLY spring, a mile and a half west of Carrollton. He
was buried on top of the hill, just southeast of the spring.
VARIOUS ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The geological reports for Carroll County
show that "In the Sandy Creek Bottoms, not far from Waynesburg,
Daniel WAGONER has found two teeth of a Mastodon, of great size,
and almost perfect in state of preservation. Together, they
weigh fifteen pounds. Also a tooth of large size was found in
1882 by W. H. MORGAN, near the Canal at Oneida.
STYLE OF LIVING.
The early settlers were all comparatively
poor in this world's goods, but had a mind to do and to dare.
Their style of living was, of course, plain and certain articles of
food were difficult to obtain, although game and wild meats were
plentiful and very cheap. Salt was a very scarce article and
had to be bright over the mountains from Pennsylvania on
pack-saddles, until MOORE's salt works were established in
Jefferson County, by the United States Government.
The belief in witches prevailed as late as 1825,
when several were shot or burned in effigy.
The great storm or 1830 made a clearing
of land more difficult by its uprooting much of the timber
throughout this county. Provisions were so cheap that owners
of the land were enabled to clear and fence at a cost of less than
$10 per acre.
"JOHNY APPLESEED"
Jonathan CHAPMASN traveled over
Carroll and Harrison counties and distributed his apple seeds for
many of the first orchards here. He was born in the City of
Boston, Massachusetts, 1775, and was called a crank, but in his
forty-five years' career at distributing apple seeds, he made out to
accomplish something worth while throughout the entire Northwest
Territory. He usually secured the seeds from about cider
presses in Pennsylvania. One orchard in Carroll County is
known as having been from his sowing - the one on the old Ward
farm one mile southwest from Carrollton. The place was later
owned by James HUSTON. This strange personage died aged
seventy-two years. Let this single paragraph stand as his
monument in Carroll County, for be it remembered that every county
history in this and adjoining states, in the Northwest Territory,
where John Appleseed operated, has had from a few lines to many
pages concerning this peculiar character, who loved to plant for
others, but lived like a recluse and beggar himself.
EARLY STATE OF SOCIETY.
Gen. Ephraim ECKLEY, well-known in
Carroll County, as pioneer and statesman, as well as a military man,
once wrote the following in substance, concerning early manners and
customs in this part of Ohio:
The life of an early pioneer was an unintermitted round
of labor. Each day must add unto the aggregate of its
predecessor in falling the timber, or pursuing the chase to keep the
scanty larder from becoming empty. Their lies were so burdened
with labor that their diversions simple and rustic as they
were, were daily toil. A new comer's cabin had to be raised,
they gathered from miles around and the hills were made musical with
the resounding echoes of their axes, each striving to outdo their
fellows in the hospitable effort to give their new neighbors a home.
The day is one of such labor as would make their progeny today
tremble at its contemplation. But it was only their ordinary
daily toil the exercise: ere right brooded over them, the cabin is
completed - taken from the stump, as it were, the logs adjusted, the
clapboards for the roof put on, the puncheon floor laid, and yet
some time spared in shooting at a mark, running races or jumping.
The refreshments, hog and hominy, or maybe bear meat, venison or
roasted wild turkey, accompanied by the never absent corncake, the
whole invariably supplemented by the contents of the little brown
jug, were served in rudimentary style and dispatched with vigorous
appetites. The wives and daughters have followed their
husbands and brothers to the new comers clearing, and when too dark
to sight along the rifle barrel, the house-warming begins. The
fiddler of the country is sufficiently advanced to boast of an
instrument, resins his bow and gives a few strokes across the
strings, when the merry couple fall in for the dance. The men
in there hunting shirts and homespun trousers, stuffed in the tops
of their boots of raw-hide; the women in linsey dresses of their own
weaving and making, join in the rivalry of the quickest step, the
highest jump and the liveliest shuffle. The perfume of honest
sweat had not then given way to the delicate rose-water of modern
assembly; they threw themselves into the spirit of "Chase the
Squirrel," "Peel the Willow" and the like as it was scratched from
the fiddle in the corner or sung by the by-standers.
A corn husking, flax pulling,
log-rolling were the holiday amusements, which were always crowned
by the shooting match or trail of athletic achievements topped off
with an all-night dance.
The sparseness of population gave
additional impetus to their natural honesty, for if a debt had been
dishonored it was speedily called to the attention of all the
neighborhood and he who refused prompt payment of his obligation,
either in furs, whiskey or powder, the circulating mediums of those
days, was sure to be unpleasantly reminded of it. If sickness
or other misfortune overtook one, the whole community was converted
into a committee to look after them and minister to their wants.
There was no room for selfishness in their hearts, but each one took
a kindly, active interest in the welfare of his fellows. Then,
probably more than ever since, by their lives and their actions, did
the people of this community answer and exemplify their answer to
the question, "Am I My Brother's Keeper?"
THE FIRST STILL-HOUSE.
In the spring of 1814, David EAKIN
moved into Brown Township and settled on the land later owned by
Thomas J. McCOBB, southeast of Oneida. There was a find
spring here, and a number of neighbors, suggested the idea of a
distillery as a profitable investment and accordingly a
"still-house" was erected the next year. Whiskey was then
active in the markets at $1.50 per gallon. Liquors in the
early days of the settlement on this county were a "household
necessity" and found everywhere, and kept as an article of
entertainment in almost every family. It was always offered
when friends an neighbors met. Indeed it was an insult to not
"set out the bottle" when friends called.
EARLY TEMPERANCE DAYS.
It is interesting in these days in 1921
when not a full year has passed since we had nation-wide
prohibition, to read of the days when our fathers and mothers, too,
thought liquors a fit article to grade every sideboard. But
there were temperance advocates even way back in the '40s and '50s,
who kept everlastingly at their cause until the end was crowned with
success, and now the persons who used to say "Prohibition will not
prohibit" have had a chance to change their minds.
The original manuscript showing resolutions
regarding the question explains itself:
"Agreeable to previous notice, a meeting convened
at the house of William HARDESTY, Sr., in Troy Village, Brown
Township (at early candle-lighting) January 19, A. D. 1838. On
motion the house was called to order by appointing Dr. N. STEEL,
president and George HARDESTY, secretary. Whereupon, on
motion of Rev. James McKAIN it was resolved that the meeting
consider the propriety of discussing the subject of temperance.
Resolved that the chair appoint a committee of five to draw up a
pledge. The chair appointed said committee, who retired for a
few minutes and reported as follows: 'We, the undersigned, do
pledge ourselves and our sacred honors that we will abstain from the
use of all intoxicating liquors as a beverage and that we will use
our influence to discountenance their use among those in our employ,
and that we will not traffic in them in any manner nor suffer them
to be used in our families, unless in extreme cases of sickness,'
which pledge was received by the meeting and signed by a large
number of names. They then resolved: That this society be
called the 'Brown Township Temperance Society, auxiliary to the
Carroll County Temperance Society.'"
On motion the meeting then adjourned to meet at
Bethlehem meeting-house on Wednesday evening next at early
candle-lighting,
(Signed) George HARDEST, secretary, and N. STEEL,
president.
THE JAIL.
June 8, 1833, the building of the jail was
let to Kendall JACKSON and was completed and accepted by the
county commissioners January 13, 1834. The conclusion of the
remarks in the commissioner's journal at that time read: "Ordered by
commissioners that John BEATTY, sheriff, get possession of
the jail immediately, and that he hold it until his successor be
elected and qualified into office." This was rather a peculiar
entry.
COURTHOUSE.
May 1, 1834 the building of the
Carroll County courthouse was awarded to James McMULLIN for
the sum of $3,500, but he failing to enter into contract with the
county commissioners, it was re-let to one John M. LACEY at
$3,699, but LACEY having failed to complete the building
John RANKIN completed it for $1,500, but his work proved
unsatisfactory and the matter was settled by arbitration December 7,
1836 and the finishing of the work was let to George Y. HAMPSON,
June, 1837 and he completed the structure so long in course of
construction, May 2, 1838 at the additional cost of $2,079.64.
POPULATION DECREASED.
In 1840 Carroll County had a population of
18,108, equal to forty-five persons to every square mile of its
area. The active industry of its people was that of farming
and felling the huge forests and subduing the lands suitable for
agricultural purposes. But the sons of such energetic sires
were not contented with the slow progress they were making, trying
to make a garden spot out of such a wilderness as "Little Carroll"
presented at that time. They pushed on farther toward the
setting sun, after first having disposed of their lands here.
This caused a perceptible decrease in the population of the county
thus early in its history. In 1850 the county had a population
of 17,685; in 1860 it was only 15,738; in 1870, 14,490, a
decrease of 3,617 during thirty years.
EARLY RAILROAD LINES.
In 1850, the Sandy and Beaver Canal was
completed, but proving a dismal failure it was abandoned in about
two years thereafter.
The Tuscarawas branch of the Cleveland & Pittsburgh
Railroad was built along the Sandy in 1853-54 and about the same
time the Carroll County Railroad from Oneida to Carrolltown was
completed. The last named railroad was changed to the Ohio &
Toledo Company and was a narrow gauge road extended from Oneida to
Minerva and from Carrollton to Cannonsburgh, reaching one of the
best coal fields within Carroll County.
The Wheeling & Lake Erie railroad by 1876 had reached
the southwest portion of the county with its grade, which ran along
the valley of the Conotton River.
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