CHAPTER V.
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DARBY TOWNSHIP
Pg. 96
Darby was among the first
townships settled in Madison county, its history dating as
far back as 1795. The first white man to locate within
this township was JONATHAN ALDER, who was discovered
by Benjamin Springer living on the banks of
Big Darby creek with his Indian wife in 1796. Alder
was born in New Jersey, about eight miles from Philadelphia,
Sept. 17, 1773. His parents were Bartholomew
and Hannah Alder. When Jonathan
was about seven years old, the family moved to Wythe county,
Virginia. where the father soon afterward died. In
1782 he and his brother were captured by a band of prowling
Indians, his brother being killed but he being held a
prisoner. He was adopted by the tribe and became, in
practically every sense, an Indian. He married an
Indian woman and made his living by hunting and farming
through the country now covered by Madison county.
In 1796, as mentioned
above, BENJAMIN SPRINGER, with his wife and two sons,
Silas and Thomas, also his son-in-law,
Usual Osborn, and wife, settled on Big Darby
creek. They were natives of Pennsylvania, and built
their cabin on land later owned by John Taylor,
close to the north line of Canaan township and just within
the limits of the same. But their names are mentioned
here because of their close proximity and close relations
with the early pioneers of Darby township. In 1798,
the Ewing brothers, James and Joshua,
emigrated from Kentucky to present Darby township and
settled a short distance northeast of the site of Plain
City. They bought farms lying on both sides of Big
Darby creek. One reason for making their purchases on
both sides of the stream was that they might have ready
access to the prairie grazing lands, and at the same time
have tillable lands on the elevated bottoms along the creek.
They supposed, as did many others, that the open prairie
land would afford them pasturage for many years to come.
In this, however, they were mistaken, for they were in time
owned by industrious farmers and inclosed with good fences.
Financially, JAMES EWING
was more favored than the average pioneers and was known in
the neighborhood as a rich man. He was one of the
directors of the Franklin Bank, of Franklintown, Ohio, and
this connection made him useful to the community in which he
resided. The person in need of capital, by getting
Mr. Ewing's recommendation as to the financial
safety of his note, could always get ready cash. For
many years the only postoffice in that region of the country
was kept by him for the accommodation of his neighbors, and
in connection with it he handled dry-goods, groceries,
notions, etc., in such quantities as would meet the pressing
demands of those early people.
Joshua Ewing died during the “sickly season”
of 1822-23. He was a surveyor and made many of the
early surveys of Madison county. Upon the erection of
Union county, in 1820, the property of the Ewing
brothers was thrown into the new county.
The TAYLOR BROTHERS,
John, Daniel and Richard, natives of New
York state. emigrated to Kentucky in 1795 and settled on
land they purchased near Lexington. They became
discouraged and disgusted because of the constant
litigations over titles, and determined to seek new lands.
John Taylor, going to the man from whom he had
made his purchase, made a trade with him for lands in the
then territory of Ohio. By this exchange he became the
owner of three hundred acres of land on the banks of Big
Derby, now in Union
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county. He moved to his new farm in 1800, sold his
first purchase to Frederick Sager, and bought
another about one mile south of Plain City, On both sides of
Big Darby creek, from John Graham. Here
he erected a log cabin, stable and outbuildings, and soon
afterward, probably about the year 1804, he married a widow
McCullough, sister of Judge Mitchell.
Two children blessed this union, a daughter and a son.
The daughter died in infancy, but the son, John Taylor,
Jr., lived on the old homestead for many years, and is
still remembered by the older residents of Darby township.
The other Taylor brothers followed
John from Kentucky about 1803. They had lost much
of their property in the bogus land titles of Kentucky, and
were, like most of the early pioneers, comparatively poor.
Daniel Taylor, with his family, went
directly to the Indian village above Plain City, where
Jonathan Alder was at this time living.
Alder surrendered the use of his hut to Taylor
and his wife, and they immediately took possession.
He, however, soon afterward built another beside this one,
the former being used for a kitchen and the latter for bed,
parlor and Sitting room. There the children of Mr.
Taylor and those of the Indians became intimately
associated in their plays.
All of the Taylor brothers settled on or
near Big Darby, and, by industry and economy, they secured a
generous competence.
Another early pioneer of this
township was JAMES NORTON, who came here with his
family in about 1810 or 1812, purchased a farm on Sugar run,
east of Big Darby, and lived there until his death, in 1836.
With him came his two sons, John and Solomon
Norton, John Norton, in 1820, married
Sarah Taylor, daughter of Daniel
Taylor.
In the year 1814 JEREMIAH
CONVERSE, a Revolutionary soldier, and Rhoda
Converse, his wife, emigrated with their family to this
township. Converse was born in New Hampshire in
1760. He emigrated with his father to the state of
Vermont prior to the Revolutionary War. Before the
close of this conflict he enlisted in the American cause.
During his service he was severely wounded, and was
discharged. He subsequently became a traveling
minister in the Methodist Episcopal church. On his
arrival in Darby township he and most of his sons bought
land in close proximity to each other and about three miles
west of Big Darby creek, on what was then known as the Darby
Plains. The Rev. Mr. Converse was
the first pioneer minister in this portion of the county.
He always lived on the farm he first purchased, where he
died in 1837, at the ripe age of seventy-eight years.
His eldest son, Sanford Converse, settled in
Licking county, Ohio, but the following sons settled near
their father: Parley, Squire, Lathrop,
Jeremiah, Jr. Silas and Charles
Converse.
PARLEY CONVERSE was
a farmer and mechanic. He was an exhorter in the
Methodist Episcopal church for over forty years. He
was also elected a justice of the peace and filled that
office with great credit to himself and justice to the
persons he met officially. On his retirement from his
farm he moved to Plain City, where he died in 1866. He
was the father of two sons, Caleb and Parley, Jr.,
who were both for many years residents of Union county.
Squire Converse was also a farmer, settled on
the plains and died during one of the sickly seasons.
He was the father of Jasper R. and Edwin
Asa Converse. Jasper R., the eldest,
was a large farmer on the plains and made a specialty of
breeding thoroughbred sheep. He died in 1859. He
was the father of Augustin Converse.
Lathrop Converse, a son of Rev. Jeremiah
Converse, lived on the plains until his death, in 1822.
one of the sickly periods. He had three sons, two of whom
were Darius and Joel N. Orinda, daughter
of the Rev. Jeremiah Converse, married Samuel
Sherwood, who lived in Canaan township.
JEREMIAH CONVERSE,
JR., son of the Rev. Jeremiah Converse and a
native of Vermont. was born in 1790. In 1813 he
married Malinda Derby, a descendant of the
titled family of Derbys in England. He
emigrated with his and his father's families to Darby
township
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in 1814. He was the father of a large family, and,
like others, suffered many privations incident to the life
of the pioneer and early settler. He bought a small
farm of Walter Dun, for one dollar and a
quarter an acre, and even at this low price it took him nine
years to complete his payments. He was a drum major in
the militia regiment of this county under the then existing
military laws of the state. He was an active member of
the Methodist Episcopal church for over thirty years.
He died in 1849. He was the father of C. D.,
Jeremiah and L. D. Converse. The
eldest son, C. D. Converse, became the owner of one
of the finest farms in the township and was a resident of
the township for many years. Doctor Jeremiah,
the second son, practiced medicine in Darby township for
years. L. D. Converse, the youngest son, also
became a farmer and spent his life in Darby township.
SILAS CONVERSE,
another son of Rev. Jeremiah Converse, came as a
young man with his father to this township in 1814. He
was married four times. Charles Converse,
the youngest child of the Rev. Mr. Converse, was a
mere child when they emigrated to this state. During
his childhood he was subject to terrible attacks of
inflammatory rheumatism, which left him a cripple the rest
of his life, necessitating the use of crutches in walking.
He became a prominent stock raiser in the township. He
died in 1869. He was the father of three sons,
James N., R. B. and Charles Converse.
Later in the same year that the
Converse family came (1814) ABNER NEWTON, SR.,
emigrated from the state of Vermont to this township and
purchased a farm in the Converse settlement.
He was a wheelwright and chair manufacturer. The
demand of the times for that class of articles made him
rather prominent in the affairs of the township. His
wheels were unsurpassed for workmanship and were a necessary
article in almost every family. The chairs he made
were less in demand, but were purchased as the people became
able to afford such luxuries. The more common seats
used were long benches, or three-legged stools. Prior
to and after Mr. Newton's death, his youngest
son, Abner Jr., continued to manufacture the above
articles as long as they were in demand or until machinery
supplied their place. He later became quite an
extensive manufacturer of boots and shoes, and partly in
connection with it, or soon after, he dealt in dry-goods,
groceries, etc. His health later broke down and he was
forced to retire.
The pioneer millwright of this
portion of the county was DANIEL BOWERS, who came to
Darby township in 1814. He settled near the present
village of Amity, being a single man at the time of his
emigration, but within a few years thereafter he married
Diadam Phiney, a young lady who came with Abel
Beach and family in the same year. He was early
employed by Frederick Sager to put up the
building and make all the necessary machinery for a
water-power grist-mill. This was the first mill of the
kind ever put up in this part of the county and was situated
about one mile north of Plain City, on Big Darby, which at
that time was in Darby township, but now in Union county.
The grinding-stone used in this mill was made from a great
boulder taken from the farm of John Taylor,
being worked and dressed into proper shape by Mr.
Sager himself. This part of the machinery was used
for many years, being almost equal to the French buhr.
He was later employed by Uri Beach to build a
saw-mill, and, soon afterward, a carding machine. This
latter was run by horse-power. The nature of the tread
power used was a great novelty, consisting of a great wheel,
perhaps twenty feet in diameter, with a strong center shaft
and iron journals and bearings. Into this shaft strong arms
were framed, extending about ten feet from the center and
well braced underneath, and the whole was covered with a
tight floor. The wheel was then set inclined, one side
much lower than the other. The horses were harnessed,
taken upon the floor and hitched to a stationary post or
beam; hence their weight and the act of walking revolved the
wheel beneath their feet, and thus set the machinery into
motion. This was considered a wonderful achievement
over the former method of carding all the wool for clothing
by
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hand. In the Settlement by the government of some
Indian reservations, Mr. Bowers was employed
by the agency as an interpreter, being the only person here
who understood the Wyandot language. His trade being
insufficient for the support of himself and his family, he
purchased a farm in the Converse settlement,
where he lived until his death, in 1834. There were
three children in this family, two sons and a daughter.
The eldest, John P. Bowers, resided for many years on
the old home estate as a farmer. He became a man of
great promise in the township, being several times elected
to the office of trustee, also as township assessor, real
estate assessor, and held the place of justice of the peace
for twenty-seven years. The youngest son, S. W.
Bowers, likewise became prominent in agricultural
circles of this part of the county.
CHARLES WARNER also came
to the Plains in the year 1814 and purchased a farm that was
to become known many years later as the I. W. Converse farm.
Here he made farm ing his business and, as a side line, took
up distilling. He erected a distillery, where he made
whiskey and peach brandy for the market. He usually kept
three or four yoke of cattle, which were used in wagoning
the products of his still to the chief trading points--
Chillicothe, Sandusky and Zanesville—taking, in exchange,
salt, glass and such other articles as were in demand among
the pioneer families. During the spring of the year he
turned his heavy ox teams to good account by breaking large
quantities of the prairie sod, which was too tough for the
ordinary horse team to plow. He died quite early in the
history of the township and left no descendants.
Also in the year of 1814 came
CHARLES McCLOUD, SR., to Darby township, buying a
farm and settling near the post road. Here he
supported his family and made an honest living out of his
farm. He died at his son-in-law's in 1844. He
was the father of two sons, Curtis and Charles
McCloud.
CHARLES McCLOUD,
the youngest of these two sons, lived and worked on the farm
of his father until of age, when his inclination and desire
for a profession induced him to select the science of
medicine as being the most congenial to his nature. He
went to Granville, Ohio, where he studied in the office of
Dr. Alpheus Bigelow. On
completing his studies, he returned and settled in Amity,
and for many years, by close application and undivided
attention, he was not only a successful physician, but a
leader in the profession. But, like many others in a
new country, as this was at that time, with almost
impassable roads at times, he became weary of the hardships
incident to the profession, and longed for a more retired
and less responsible life. With this end in view, he,
in company with Wesley Carpenter, purchased
quite an extensive tract of land below Amity, with a view of
making stock-raising and farming a specialty; but, by a few
years' experience in this new enterprise, he was convinced
of the fact that bone and muscle, especially in those days,
were among the essential features of success. He,
therefore, sold his interest in the farm to Mr.
Carpenter, and immediately purchased a large stock of
dry-goods and groceries and entered the general merchandise
business in Amity. Here he remained until after that
place was visited by the Asiatic cholera. He
subsequently sold his property and purchased in Plain City,
where he engaged largely in the mercantile business.
In 1844 he was elected a member of the Ohio Legislature and
filled that position with credit to himself and his
constituents. During the campaign of 1840, he had
taken a very active part in county politics. He made
quite a reputation for himself as a public speaker and so
favorably impressed the people in this and subsequent
campaigns that when the call came for delegates to the
constitutional convention of 1852 he was the people's
choice. He died at his home in Plain City in the year
1860, survived by his widow and two sons, R. C. and
Newton McCloud.
Early in the history of the
township came TITUS DORT, who purchased a farm about
one mile south of Plain City. As he was a blacksmith by
trade very little of his time could be taken up on his farm.
At this time good blacksmiths were very scarce, but very
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necessary, as the people were dependent upon them for most
of their farm implements, such as trace chains, hoes, axes,
plows, and many necessary and indispensable articles.
In the year 1818 SAMUEL SMITH
and family came from the state of Vermont and settled in
this township. He purchased a large tract of land,
containing about six hundred acres. On this farm he
built the first brick house on the plains. The roof of
this house was made by pine shingles, purchased in
Cincinnati, from the dairy products, and wagoned through an
almost trackless forest, requiring two weeks or more to make
the round trip.
SIMEON HAGER, who was born
in 1766, emigrated to Ohio and settled in this township in
1814. Soon afterward he purchased a farm near Plain
City and spent the remainder of his life in its management.
He died at his home in 1843. He was the father of
Simeon, Jr., Baldwin and Aurelius Hager.
In the year 1817 ISAAC BIGELOW
came to this part of Ohio with the idea in mind of opening
up a great stock farm, and purchased land now covering, in
part, the site of the village of Plain City. But the
tide of emigration seemed toward the central portion of
Ohio. The chief trading points of Zanesville,
Chillicothe, Cincinnati and Sandusky were so distant that
Mr. Bigelow conceived that idea of platting a new
town for the convenience of the future Settlers, where they
might make their necessary purchases of nails, glass, salt,
etc., and so planned to lay out a new town.
Accordingly, in 1818, the original town plat of Plain City
was laid out by him, but a more comprehensive sketch of the
founding of Plain City will be found in the history of that
village. Mr. Bigelow was a physician by
profession and for many years enjoyed a wide practice in
this and neighboring townships.
ISRAEL BIGELOW, his
father, came to the township in 1828 and purchased property
in the village of Plain City. He was also a practicing
physician and for several years followed his profession in
Plain City and the surrounding country. He died in Plain
City in 1838.
DR. DANIEL BIGELOW,
a son of Israel and a brother of Isaac Bigelow,
settled in the township in 1831, and likewise spent his life
in the active labors of a medical practitioner. He was
ever ready to attend all calls in his profession, and his
greatest delight was embodied in his efforts to mitigate the
sufferings of his fellow creatures. He was sociable,
pleasing and winning in his manner; his presence in the sick
room dispersed the gloom of his patients, and, in a word,
cheerfulness was traceable in every lineament of his
features.
Another settler who arrived in
the year 1818 was EBER McDOWELL, who purchased a farm
about two miles west of the Converse settlement.
He was a Soldier in the War of 1812. With others, he
experienced many of the hard struggles incident to pioneer
life. Though the price of land was seemingly very low,
yet all the farm products were correspondingly reduced in
price, and, in order to make the last payment on his farm,
he sold and delivered two hundred bushels of corn to a Mr.
Wright, of Dublin, Franklin county, for ten cents per
bushel. This delivery was made by hauling the corn,
with a heavy pair of cattle, a distance of fifteen miles,
requiring two days to make the round trip. The oxen
were also sold to the same person for twenty-seven dollars.
The money thus obtained enabled him to procure a deed for
the farm, on which he spent his days. He died at the
advanced age of ninety-six.
AMOS BEACH emigrated from
Vermont to Darby township in 1814. He became the owner
of a small farm on the Plains, where he lived and which he
successfully managed until about the year 1830, when,
selling his property, he removed to Union county. He
later returned to this county and lived in Plain City, where
he died.
ABNER and DAVID CHAPMAN,
two brothers, came to this township in about 1810.
Abner Chapman, a man of good education, first
purchased a farm near Plain City, but
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later sold this and located on the banks of the Big Darby.
It was included in Union county on its erection in 1820.
He spent a portion of his time for several years in teaching
School. His brother, also a young man of good
education and a surveyor by profession, taught School and
did a great deal of surveying for Walter Dun,
of Virginia. At this time there were many small strips
of land that had been unentered by former speculators.
Many of these were now entered and patented by him. He
later married a daughter of Joshua Ewing and
for many years lived on his farm on the Plains. He
later, however, moved to Union county and from there to the
state of Iowa.
WILLIAM McCUNE, a
step-son of Andrew Noteman, came with the
latter in 1803 and settled on the east bank of Big Darby
creek, immediately opposite the Indian village or camping
ground referred to above. In the creation of Union
county he was included within its territory. But the
stepson above referred to began to support himself early in
life. At the age of twelve, he went to Franklinton to
learn the trade of blacksmith. He remained there for
some time and, it is said, assisted in the forging of the
nails that were used in the construction of the old State
house at Columbus. Mr. McCune afterwards
went to Buck Creek and learned the tanning business, but,
after completing his trade, he came back and purchased and
moved onto a farm near Plain City. Mr.
McCune's tannery was one of the first in this part of
the county. Here was an accommodation kindly
appreciated by the people, and his thorough knowledge of the
business, in connection with his honesty, won for him a
large proportion of the custom of the county. A few
years prior to his death, he became entirely blind.
His home was cut off from Darby in 1820.
Another pioneer who hailed
from New England and who came to settle in Darby township
was RICHARD MORGRIDGE, who came with his family from
Connecticut to Licking county, Ohio, in 1816. Here he
was compelled to stop and remain a short period because of
sickness in his family. He came with more property
than was customary among those early, hearty woodsmen.
He emigrated with a good pair of horses and wagon, and with
him he brought a large box of Yankee clocks, which he had
purchased very cheap in his native state, but which he sold
at a great profit in the new country. All this
property was converted into cash within a short time.
However, this cash was in paper and, being issued by many
different banks, he went to Marietta and there exchanged it
for notes of the Muskingum Valley Bank of that place.
This banking house became insolvent a short time afterward
and closed business, leaving him penniless and with his
property gone. The sickness in his family forced him
to remain in Licking county for three years and also forced
him to incur expense that he could not meet. In 1819
he purchased a yoke of oxen and moved his family to Darby
township. There he purchased, or rather contracted
for, one hundred and thirty acres in the Converse settlement
of Walter Dun. The debts incurred in
Licking county were still hanging over him, and his
creditors came and attached all of his chattel property;
but, this being insufficient to satisfy their claims, his
body was also taken by the sheriff, to be lodged in the
county jail for debt. But, before leaving home with
that officer, his wife placed in his hands all the money in
their pos session, being one dollar and thirty cents.
After they had proceeded some distance, it occurred to Mr.
Morgridge that the law required the creditor to
support the debtor while in jail, if he had no means of
supporting himself. Therefore, he made an excuse to
stop by the roadside, where he secretly placed his money
under a rail in the fence, near a large tree. After
their arrival in London, a Search was instituted, and he was
found without any means of supporting himself. The
creditor was then asked to give bond for the maintenance of
the prisoner while in jail, which he refused to do,
whereupon Mr. Morgridge was set free.
Richard Morgridge never completed the payments on
his farm, but, after his death, the family met those
obligations.
There were other pioneers, whose descendants have long since
left their ancestral
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homes and pushed on to more remote parts, and among these
should be mentioned the Marquis, Petty,
Nickels and Frazell families. The
emigration to this part of the county from 1812 to 1820, as
shown in the pages above, was little short of wonderful.
By far the greater portion of them came from the New England
states, whose soil was so inferior in fertility to that of
Madison county that the fame of the latter became proverbial
for its fertility and productiveness. The sad years of
1822 and 1823, with their murderous “sickly seasons,” cast a
great cloud of gloom over the township and draped the
previously prospective outlook for a rapid and early
development of her resources, with death and disease that
threatened depopulation. The shock thus produced was
felt all over the county, but the heaviest burden of it
seems to have fallen on Darby and Canaan townships.
Emigration ceased, practically, until 1830 and 1832.
The only residents of the township from 1823 until 1830 were
the survivors of those two sickly seasons, and even some of
these returned to their native states or moved on to other
settlements. The great portion of the present
inhabitants of Darby township are the descendants of these
pioneer families.
EARLY STOCK SPECULATORS.
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ERECTION OF THE TOWNSHIP.
SOIL.
The soil of Darby township is of greater variety.
Near the streams it is a reddish gravelly loam, very deep
and well adapted to mixed agriculture, such as the
production
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of wheat, rye, oats and corn, as well as root crops.
After leaving the streams on the east, the soil, on the more
elevated lands, partakes of a light-colored clay, with a
small admixture of gravel, better adapted for grass and
grazing purposes. But the greater portion is a black
loam, and when once thoroughly drained is well calculated to
grow any and all of the agricultural products adapted to
this climate. The western portion of the township -
the prairie land - is composed of a deep, black loam,
presenting the appearance of having been composed of
vegetable decomposition, upon which, in its native state,
grew a wonderful growth of vegetation.
STREAMS.
OTHER PHYSICAL FEATURES.
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TOPOGRAPHY.
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GEOLOGY.
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very soft and easily cut when first removed, but soon
hardened on exposure. They were found from six inches
under the soil to as deep as the drain was built.
Therefore the extent of this deposit is not known.
Like many other portions of the county, there are here also
those old, time-worn boulders, scattered here and there as
monuments. They are not, however, as numerous here as
in many other places, except at a few points on each side of
Big Darby and near Sugar run, where they have been deposited
in considerable numbers.
Page 96 - CHAPTER VI. -
DEER CREEK TOWNSHIP
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