OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS


A Part of Genealogy Express
 

Welcome to
Mahoning County, Ohio
History & Genealogy

20th Century History of
Youngstown & Mahoning Co., Ohio

and Representative Citizens - Publ. Biographical Publ. Co.
Chicago, Illinois -
1907
-------------------ok**
 

CHAPTER XI.
THE CONNECTICUT LAND COMPANY
Articles of Association - The Excess Company - The Company's Title Perfected - Ordinance of 1787 -
Extinction of the Indian Title - Survey of the Reserve - Quantity of Land in the Reserve -
The Equalizing Committee - Mode of Partition - The Drafts..
Pg. 75

     The total number of persons composing the Connecticut Land Company was fifty-seven, there being several included whose names do not appear in the foregoing list.  On Sept. 5, 1797, at Hartford, Conn., they adopted fourteen articles of association and agreement, which were as follows:
     Article I.  It is agreed that tbe individuals concerned in the purchase made this day of the Connecticut Western Reserve shall be called the Connecticut Land Company.
     Article 2.  It is agreed that the committee appointed by the applicants for purchasing said Reserve, shall receive from the committee of whom said purchase has been made, each deed which shall be executed to a purchaser, and in their hands shall retain said deed until the proprietors thereof shall execute a deed in trust to John Caldwell, Jonathan Brace and John Morgan, and the survivors of them, and the last survivor of said three persons and his heirs forever, to hold in trust for such proprietor his share in said purchase, and to be disposed of as directed and agreed in the following articles.
     Article 3. It is agreed that seven persons shall be appointed by the company at a meeting to be holden this day at the house of John Lee in Hartford, who shall be a Board of Directors for said company, and that said directors, or the majority thereof, shall have power at the expense of said company to procure an extinguishment of the Indian title to said Reserve, if said title is not already extinguished to survey the whole of said Reserve, and to lay the same out in townships containing sixteen thousand acres each; to fix on a township in which the first settlement shall be made, to survey that township into small lots in such manner as they shall think proper, and to sell and dispose of said lots to actual settlers only.  To erect in said township a saw mill and grist mill at the expense of said company, to lay out and sell five other townships, of sixteen thousand acres each, to actual settlers only.  And the said trustees shall execute deeds of such part or parts of said six townships as shall be sold by said directors to said purchasers, but in case there shall be any salt spring or springs in said six townships, or in any or either of them, said directors shall not sell spring or springs, but shall reserve the same, together with two thousand acres of land including said spring or springs.  Said directors shall also have power to extinguish if possible, the Indian title, if any, to said Reserve, and to make all said surveys within two years from this date, and sooner if possible.  And when said Indian title, if any. shall have been extinguished and said

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surveys made, said trustees, or a majority thereof, shall convey to each proprietor of said Reserve, or any member who shall agree, his or their proportion or right therein, in severalty; the mode of dividing said Reserve, however, is to be in conformity to the orders and directions of the major part of the proprietors convened, and holden according to the mode hereinafter marked out.
     Article 4. It is also agreed that said directors shall cause the persons employed by them in surveying said Reserve to keep a regular field book, describing minutely and accurately the situation, soil, waters, kinds of timber, and natural productions of each township surveyed by them, which book said directors shall cause to be kept in the office of the clerk of said directors, and the said book shall be open to the inspection of each proprietor at all times.
     Article 5. It is agreed that said directors shall appoint a clerk, who shall keep a regular journal of all the votes and proceedings of said directors, and of the money disbursed by them for the use of the company; and said directors shall determine the wages of such clerks; and the said directors shall, once in a year, settle their accounts with the proprietors; and that all moneys received by the directors for taxes and the sale of lands, shall be subject to the disposal and direction of the company.
     Article 6. It is agreed that the trustees shall give certificates, agreeable to the form hereinafter prescribed, to all the proprietors in the original purchase made from this State, and that the grantees from said State shall lodge with the trustees the names of the proprietors for whom they respectively receive deeds, and the proportion of land to which said proprietors are entitled, a copy of which shall be lodged by the trustees with; the clerk of the directors.  It is further agreed that all transfers made by any proprietors shall be recorded in the book of the clerk of the directors, and no person claiming as an assignee shall be acknowledged as such until his deed shall have been thus recorded.
     Article 7.  It is agreed, in order to enable said Board of Directors to perform and accomplish, the business assigned them, that they shall be paid a tax, in the proportion of ten dollars on each of the shares of the company, to the clerk of the directors, to be at the disposal of said directors for the purpose afore said, which said tax shall be paid to said clerk on or before the sixth day of October next.
     Article 8.  It is agreed that the whole of said Reserve shall be divided into four hundred shares, and that the following shall be the mode of voting by the proprietors in their meetings:  Every proprietor of one share shall have one vote, and every proprietor of more than one share have one vote for the first share and then one vote for every two shares till the number of forty shares, and then one vote for every five shares provided that on the question, of the time of making a partition of the territory, every share shall be entitled to one vote.
     Article 9. It is agreed that the aforesaid trustees shall, on receiving a deed from any purchaser, according to the tenor of these articles, give to such proprietors a certificate in the following words:

  CONNECTICUT LAND COMPANY,
Hartford, September 5, 1795.

     This certifies that __________ is entitled to the trust and benefit of __________ twelve-hundredth-thousandths of the Connecticut Western Reserve, so-called, as held by John Caldwell, Jonathan Brace and John Morgan, trustees, in a deed of trust, dated the fifth day of September, one thousand sevenhundred and ninety-five, to hold said proportion or share to __________, the said __________, heirs and assigns, according to the terms, conditions, covenants, and exceptions contained in the said deed of trust and in certain articles of agreement, entered into by the persons composing the Connecticut Land Company, which said share is transferable by assignment, under hand and seal, witnessed by two witnesses, and acknowledged by any justice of the peace in the State of Connecticut, or before a notary public or judge of the common pleas in any of the United States, and to be recorded by the clerk of the Board of Directors, which said certificate shall be complete evidence of such person of his right


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in said Reserve, and shall be recorded by the clerk of the directors in the book which said clerk of the directors in the book which said clerk shall keep for the purpose of registering deeds.
     Article 10.  It is agreed that the first meeting of the said company be at the State House, in Hartford, on Tuesday, the 6th of October next, at two of the clock in the afternoon, at which meeting the mode of making partition shall be determined by the major vote of the proprietors there present, taking such votes by the principle hereinbefore marked out.
     It is also agreed that in all meetings of the company the proprietors shall be admitted to vote in person or by their proper attorney, legally authorized; and it is further agreed that there shall be a meeting of the company at the State House, in Hartford, at two o'clock in the afternoon, the Monday next before the second Tuesday in October, 1796, and another meeting of said company, at the same place, at two o'clock in the afternoon, the Tuesday next before the second Tuesday in October, 1797, and that the said directors shall have power to call occasional meetings at such times as they think proper; but such meetings shall always be at Hartford, and said directors shall give notice in some one newspaper in each county in Connecticut where newspapers are published, of the time and place of holding said meetings, whether stated or occasional, by publishing such notification in such papers, under their hands, for three weeks successively, within six weeks next before the day of such meeting.
     Article 11.  And, whereas, some of the proprietors may choose that their proportions of said Reserve should be divided to them in one lot or location, it is agreed that in case one-third in value of the owners shall, after a survey of said Reserve in townships, signify to said directors or meeting a request that such third part be set off in manner aforesaid, that said directors may appoint three commissioners who shall have power to divide the whole of said purchase into three parts, equal in value, according to quantity, quality, and situation and when said commissioners shall have so divided said Reserve, and made a report in writing of their doings to said directors, describing precisely the boundaries of each part, the said directors shall call a meeting of said proprietors, giving the notice required by these articles; and at such meeting the said three parts shall be numbered, and the number of each part shall be written on a separate piece of peper paper, and shall, in the presence of such meeting, be by the chairman of said meeting put into a box, and a person appointed by said meeting for that purpose, shall draw out of said box one of said numbers, and the part designated by such number shall be aparted to such person or persons requesting such a severance, and the said trustees shall, upon receiving a written direction from said directors for that purpose, execute a deed to such person or persons accordingly; after which such person or persons shall have no power to act in said company.
     Article 12.  It is agreed that the company shall have power by a major  vote, to raise money by a tax on the proprietors, to be apportioned equally to each proprietor according to his interest; and in case any proprietor shall neglect to pay his proportion of said taxes within fifty days, when the proprietor lives in the State - if out of the State within one hundred and twenty days after the same shall have become payable - and, after the publication thereof in the newspapers of this State, in the manner provided for warning meetings, that the directors shall have power to disposed of so much of the interest of such delinquent proprietor in said Reserve as may be necessary to pay the tax so aforesaid due and unsatisfied; and, in case any proprietor shall neglect to pay the tax of ten dollars upon a share agreed to by these articles within fifty days after the time of payment, so much of his share as will raise his part of said tax may be sold as aforesaid.
     Article 13.  In case of the death of any one or more of the trustees, the company may appoint a successor to such deceased person of persons in said trust; and, upon such appointment being made, the surviving trustee or trustees, shall pass a deed or deeds to such successor or successors, to hold the premises as co-trustees with the surviving trustees, in the manner as the original trustees held the same.
     Article 14.  It is agreed that the directors,

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in transacting the business of said company according to the articles aforesaid shall be subject to the control of said company by a vote of at least three-fourths of the interest of said company.
     The first Board of Directors consisted of Oliver Phelps, Henry Champion 2d, Moses Cleveland, Samuel W. Johnson, Ephraim Kirby. Samuel Mather, Jr., and Roger NewburyWilliam Hart was moderator of the first meeting.  At a meeting of the company on the first Tuesday in April. 1796, Ephraim Root was appointed clerk, which office he continued to hold until the company was dissolved in 1809.  A moderator was chosen at each meeting to preside at that meeting, and the directors were changed from time to time.  A mode of partition was agreed upon at the meeting held in April, 1796.
     The persons who subscribed to the "Articles of Association and Agreement constituting the Connecticut Land Company'' were as follows:

Arthur Miller
Uriel Holmes, Jr.
Ephraim Starr
Luther Loomis
Solomon Cowles
Daniel L. Coit
Pierpoint Edwards
Titus Street
R. C. Johnson,
Ephraim Kelly,
Gideon Granger, Jr.,
Moses Cleveland
Elijah Boardman,
Samuel Mather, Jr.,
Nehemiah Hubbard, Jr.
Joseph Williams,
William M. Bliss,
William Battle,
Timothy Burr,
Joseph C. Yates,
William Law,
Elisha Hyde,
William Lyman,
Daniel Holbrook,
Thaddeus Levvet,
Roger Newbury,
Roger Newbury,
for Justin Ely,
Elisha Strong,
Joshua Stow,
Jabez Stocking,
Jonathan Brace,
Joseph Howland,
James Bull,
William Judd,
Samuel P. Lord,
Oliver Phelps,
Zephaniah Swift,
Enoch Perkins,
William Hart,
Lemuel Storrs,
Caleb Atwater,
Peleg Sandford,
John Stoddard,
Benajah Kent,
Eliphalet Austin,
Samuel Mather,
James Johnson,
Uriah Tracey,
Ephraim Root
Solomon Griswold,
Ebenezer King, Jr.,
Elijah White,

     In behalf of themselves and their associates in Albany, New York.

THE EXCESS COMPANY.

     Oliver Phelps, the heaviest investor in the Reserve, had been owner with Benjamin Gorham of an extensive tractor land in Western New York, which they sold to Robert Livingston of Philadelphia.  The Reserve at that time being supposed to contain more than 4,000,000 acres, Livingston, who had sold his New York lands to a Holland company, proposed with Phelps and others to take the excess, or surplus, over 3,000,000 acres.  This scheme, which contained a large element of speculation, proved so attractive that an "Excess Company" was formed, the shares of which were eagerly sought.  The largest owner in this company was General Hull, who became conspicuous in the war of 1812 by his surrender of Detroit.  There was great dissatisfaction among the shareholders when it was discovered from the surveys that the company had no "excess" lands whatever, the total amount proving to be less than 3.000,000 acres.

THE COMPANY'S TITLE PERFECTED.

     Immediately after their organization the Connecticut Land Company found themselves confronted by several important tasks.  These were, to obtain a perfect title to their purchase, and to survey and make partition of their lands.  To perfect their title it was necessary for them to obtain a full release of the claim of the United States to the soil of the Reserve, and also to extinguish the Indian title.  Through the treaty made with Great Britain at the close of the Revolutionary War, the United States had come into possession of whatever interest Virginia.  Massachusetts, and New York may have had in the Western Reserve under the terms of their Colonial charters, and though long disregarded by Connecticut, this was a very real and substantial claim. With the responsibilities of their great enterprise upon them the Associates were under some solicitude as to whether it might not, upon trial, prove

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DELASON AVENUE PUBLIC SCHOOL, YOUNGSTOWN;     REUBEN McMILLEN FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY, YOUNGSTOWN;
 PUMPING STATION, YOUNGSTOWN; & POST OFFICE AND CENTRAL SCHOOL, YOUNGSTOWN]

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more valid than that of Connecticut, the company's grantor.  They were also greatly in need of a regular and adequate form of government.  They found themselves too far away from Connecticut for the laws of that State to be put into successful operation; and to profit by the Ordinance of 1787, which had been passed by Congress for the government of the North west Territory, it would have been necessary for them to admit the validity of the General Government's claim, and, as a consequence the insufficiency of their own title, which depended upon that of Connecticut.  In January, 1797, the company resolved that they would apply to the legislature of Connecticut to erect the Western Reserve into a county, under a temporary government and suitable laws, to be administered at the sole expense of the proprietors.  At the same meeting they appointed to the legislature of Connecticut to erect the Western Reserve into a county, under a temporary government and suitable laws, to be administered at the sole expense of the proprietor.  At the same meeting they appointed Daniel Holbrook, William Shepperd, Jr., Moses Warren, Jr., Seth Pease and Amos Spafford, a committee to divide such part of the lands as were free from Indian claims, in accordance with the mode of partition that had been previously agreed upon.  At the October meeting in the same year the directors and trustees were given power to pursue such measures as they should deem calculated to procure legal and practical government over the territory be longing to the company.  Nothing effectual, however, was done in consequence of these resolutions, and the State of Connecticut did not attempt to exercise any jurisdiction over the territory.  Connecticut was then urged to obtain from the United States a release of the Governmental claim.  "The result was that Congress, on the 28th day of April, 1800, authorized the President to execute and deliver on the part of the United States, letters patent to the government of Connecticut, releasing all right and title to the soil of the Reserve, upon condition that Connecticut should, on her part, forever renounce and release to the United States entire and complete civil jurisdiction over the Reserve.  Thus Connecticut obtained from the United States her claim to the soil, and transmitted and confirmed it to the Connecticut Land Company and to those who had purchased from it, and jurisdiction for the purposes of government vested in the United States."  The inhabitants of the Reserve thus found themselves provided with a wise and equitable form of government in the Ordinance of 1787, to which brief allusion will here be made.

ORDINANCE OF 1787.

     A temporary plan of government for the Western territory had been reported by Mr. Jefferson and adopted by Congress in April, 1784; but being found ineffective, it was repealed by the Ordinance of 1787, which created a practical machinery of government for immediate use, provided for the creation of the long-promised new States, and defined those high principles of civil polity which have continued in successful operation down to the present day.  They included religious liberty, the right of habeas corpus, trial by jury, proportional representation in the legislature, and the privileges of the common law.  Article III contained these words: "Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to good government, and to the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall for ever be encouraged."  It was also provided that the navigable waters should be free to all the inhabitants of the territory and of the United States, without tax, impost, or duty.  Slavery was prohibited, and it was declared "that the said territory and the States which may be formed therein shall forever remain a part of this Confederacy of the United States of America, subject to the Articles of Confederation, and to such, alterations therein as might be made, and to the laws enacted by Congress."  With this Ordinance, which was, in fact, a model constitution, the settlers in the Northwest were provided with a solid foundation upon which they might proceed to build a stable and enduring society, secure from any future danger of radical alterations on the assumption of Statehood, or from the needs of a larger and more complex population.

EXTINCTION OF THE INDIAN TITLE.

     As yet no proper means had been taken to secure the Indian title to lands west of the Ohio, though Congress had established a Board

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of Commissioners for that purpose in 1784.  These officials, however, instead of seeking peace and friendship through the Great Council of the Northwestern Confederacy, which now held annual meetings near the Rapids of the Maumee, adopted a policy of dealing with the tribes separately.  Thus the treaties of Fort Stanwix, in October, 1784; Fort Mcintosh, in January, 1785; Fort Finney, in January, 1786, and Fort Harmar, in January, 1789, had been made only with gatherings of unauthorized and irresponsible savages.  The error of the commissioners was pointed out in a memorable remonstrance sent to Congress by the Council of the Confederates, in December, 1786, and bore fruits in numerous raids and murders perpetrated upon the settlers of the Government lands by the very tribes who were ignorantly reported and supposed to have ceded the territory.  It led later to more general and widespread hostilities, involving the defeat of General Harmar's expedition in 1790, and the more disastrous defeat of St. Clair, in November, 1791, after which no white man's life was safe on the frontier until Wayne's great victory over the Indians at the battle of the Fallen Timber, Aug. 20, 1794.  The thoroughness of Wayne's methods so impressed the savages that they concluded with him the treaty of Greenville, which brought peace and security to the settlers.  It was never violated by any of the Indian tribes who were parties to it.  By it the Indians yielded their claims to the lands east of the Cuyahoga, and thereafter the Cuyahoga river and the portage between it and the Tuscarawas constituted the boundary between the United States and the Indians upon the Reserve until July 4, 1805.  "On that day a treaty was made at Fort Industry, by which the Indian title to all the Reserve west of the Cuyahoga was purchased.  Thus the Indian title to the soil of the Reserve was forever set at rest, and no flaw now existed in the Connecticut Land Company's claim to the ownership of the lands of the Reserve."

SURVEY OF THE RESERVE.

     In the early part of May, 1796, the company fitted out an expedition to survey that portion of the Reserve lying east of the Cuyahoga river.  This party consisted of about fifty persons, including General Moses Cleaveland, superintendent; Augustus Porter, principal surveyor and deputy superintendent; Seth Pease, astronomer and surveyor; Amos Spafford, John Milton Holley, Richard M. Stoddard and Moses Warren, surveyors; Joshua Stow, commissary, and Theodore Sheppard, physician.  There were thirty-seven employees who had been engaged as chainman, axemen and boatmen, and whose names were respectively, Joseph Tinker (principal boatman), George Proudfoot, Samuel Forbes, Stephen Benton, Samuel Hungerford, Samuel Davenport, Amzi Atwater, Elisha Ayres, Norman Wilcox, George Gooding, Samuel Agnew, David Beard, Titus V. Munson, Charles Parker, Nathaniel Doan, James Halket, Olnet F. Rice, Samuel Barnes, Daniel Shulay, Joseph Mclntyre, Francis Gray, Amos Sawtel, Amos Barber, William B. Hall, Asa Mason, Michael Coffin, Thomas Harris, Timothy Dunham, Shadrach Benham, Wareham Shepard, John Briant, Joseph Landon, Ezekiel Morly, Luke Hanchet, James Hamilton, John Lock, and Stephen Burbank.  There were also Elijah Gun and his wife, Anna, who came with the surveyors and took charge of Stow's castle at Conneaut; Job P. Stiles and his wife Tabitha, who took charge of the Company's stores at Cleveland, and two men - Chapman and Perry - who furnished the surveyors with fresh beef and traded with the Indians.  There were also one or more children.
     The party proceeded in flat-bottomed boats up the Mohawk river, and Wood Creek, to wards Lake Ontario.  At Oswego there was a British fort, which they were obliged to pass by a strategem, permission to do so having been refused by the officer in charge, in the absence of the regular commandant.  Once on the waters of Lake Ontario they proceeded by way of Niagara and Queenstown to Buffalo.  Here on June 23d they attended a council of tlie Six Nations, made presents to the Indians, and exchanged speeches with Red Jacket, Captain Brandt and others.  Several of the chiefs took dinner with the commissioners.  On this

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occasion Red Jacket delivered himself of some remarks on the subject of religion, which, as they probably embodied the sentiments of many, if not most, of the Indians, are here reproduced in substance.  "You white people make a great parade about religion.  You say you have a book of laws and rules which was given you by the Great Spirit; but is this true?  Was it written by his own hand and given to you?  No, it was written by your own people.  They do it for deception.  Their whole wishes center in their pockets; all they want is money.  White people tell us they wish to come and live among us as brothers, and teach us agriculture.  So they bring implements of industry and presents, tell us good stories, and all seems honest.  But when they are gone all appears as a dream.  Our land is taken from us, and still we don't know how to farm it."
     From Buffalo the party journeyed by way of Lake Erie to the mouth of Conneaut creek, where they landed on July 4, 1796.  As these pioneers of the Western Reserve, and the advance-guard of civilization, thus first touched soil on Independence Day, the birth-day of the Nation, it was doubly fitting that the occasion should be properly celebrated.  This they accordingly proceeded to do with such means as they had at hand.  In the Journal of General Moses Cleaveland is found the following reference to the occasion:
     "On this Creek (Conneaut) in New Connecticut land, July 4, 1796, under General Moses Cleaveland, the surveyors and men sent by the Connecticut Land Company to survey and settle the Connecticut Reserve, were the first English people who took possession of it.  The day memorable as the birthday of American Independence and freedom from British tyranny, and commemorated by all good freeborn sons of America, and memorable as the day on which the settlement of this new country was commenced, and in time may raise her head amongst the most enlightened and improved States.  And after many difficulties, perplexities, and hardships were surmounted, and we were on the good and promised land, felt that a just tribute of respect to the day ought to be paid.  There were in all, including men, women, and children, fifty in number.  The men, under Captain Tinker, ranged them selves on the beach, and fired a Federal salute of fifteen rounds, and then the sixteenth in honor of New Connecticut.  We gave three cheers and christened the place Fort Independence.  Drank several toasts, viz :

1st. The President of the United States.
2nd. The state of New Connecticut.
3rd. The Connecticut Land Company.
4th. May the Part of Independence and the fifty sons and daughters who have entered it this day be successful and prosperous.
5th. May these sons and daughters multiply in sixteen times fifty.
6th. May every person have his bowspirit trimmed and ready to enter every port that opens.
  Closed with three cheers.  Drank several pails of grog, supped, and retired in remarkably good order.

     On the next day two boats were dispatched under the direction of Tinker to Fort Erie to fetch the remainder of the stores.  On the 7th an interview was had with a deputation of the Massasagoes Indians, under chief Paqua, who wished to ascertain the settlers' intentions with respect to themselves, they being the occupants of the land in the vicinity of Conneaut.  General Cleaveland reassured them as to the intentions of the party, and gave them some presents, including the inevitable whisky, at the same time warning them against indolence and drunkeness, "which checked their begging for more whisky."
     The surveyors then began the main work of the expedition.  Proceeding to the south line of the Reserve, they first "ascertained the point where the forty-first degree of north latitude intersects the western line of Pennsylvania, and from this line of latitude as a base, meridian lines five miles apart were run north to the lake.  Lines of latitude were then run five miles apart, thus dividing the Reserve into townships five miles square.  As the lands lying west of the Cuyahoga remained in possession of the Indians until the treaty of Fort Industry, in 1805 the Reserve was not surveyed at this time further west than to the

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Cuyahoga and the portage between it and the Tuscarawas, a distance west from the western hue of Pennsylvania of fifty-six miles.  The remainder of the Reserve was surveyed in 1806.  The surveyors began, as we have seen, at the southeast corner of the Reserve, and ran parallel lines north from the base line and parallel lines west from the Pennsylvania line five miles apart.  The meridian lines formed the ranges, and the lines of latitude the townships."
     The said beginning point is the southeast corner of Poland township in Mahoning county.

QUANTITY OF LAND IN THE RESERVE.

Land east of the Cuyahoga, exclusive of Parsons tract in acres

2,002,970

Land west of the Cuyahoga, exclusive of surplus land, islands, and sufferers' lands

827,291

Surplus land, so-called 5,286
Islands 5,924
Parsons', or Salt Spring Tract 25,450
Sufferers, or Fire Lands 500,000

THE EQUALIZING COMMITTEE.

     The method in which the land was divided is so clearly and succinctly described in the History Trumbull and Mahoning of Counties (Cleveland, 1882), that we shall close this chapter with a partial transcription of the account of that work.
     "After this survey was completed the Land Company, in order that the share holders might share equitably as nearly as possible the lands of the Reserve, or to avoid the likelihood of a part of the shareholders drawing the best, and others the medium, and again others the poorest of the lands, appointed an equalizing- committee, whose duties we shall explain.
     "The amount of the purchase money, $1,200,000, was divided into four hundred shares, each share value being $3,000.  The holder of one share, therefore, had one four-hundredth undivided interest in the whole tract, and he who held four or five or twenty shares had four or five or twenty times as much interest undivided in the whole Reserve as he who held but one.  As some townships would be more valuable than others, the company adopted, at a meeting of shareholders, at Hartford, Conn., in April, 1796, a mode of making partition, and appointed a committee of equalization to divide the Reserve in accordance with the Company's plan.  The committee appointed were Daniel Holbrook, William Sheppard, Jr., Moses Warren, Jr., Seth Pease, and Amos Spafford.
     "The Directors of the Company * * * selected six townships to be offered for sale to actual settlers alone, and in which the first improvements were designed to be made.  The townships thus selected were numbers eleven in the sixth' range; ten, in the ninth range; nine in the tenth range; eight, in the eleventh range; seven, in the twelfth range; and two, in the second range.  These townships are now known as Madison, Mentor, and Willoughby, in Lake County; Euclid and Newburg, in Cuyahoga County; and Youngstown, in Mahoning.  Number three, in the third range, or Weathersfield, in Trumbull County, was omitted from the first draft made by the company, owing to the uncertainty of the boundaries of Mr. Parsons' claim.  This township has sometimes been called the Salt Spring township.  The six townships above named were offered for sale before partition was made and parts of them were sold.  Excepting the Parsons claim and the seven townships above named, the remainder of the Reserve east of Cuyahoga was divided among the members of the company as follows:

MODE OF PARTITION.

     "The four best townships in the eastern part of the Reserve were selected and surveyed into lots, an average of one hundred lots to the township.  As there were four hundred shares, the four townships would yield one lot for

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each holder or holders of one or more shares every share.  When these lots were drawn, participated in the draft.  The committee selected township eleven in range seven, and townships five, six, and seven, in range eleven, for the four best townships.  These are Perry, in Lake County, Northfield, in Summit County, Bedford and Warrenville, in Cuyahoga County.
     "Then the committee proceeded to select from the remaining townships certain other townships that should be next in value to the four already selected, which were to be used for equalizing purposes.  The tracts thus selected, being whole townships and parts of townships * * *  are now known as Auburn, Newbury, Munson, Cardon, Bainbridge, Russell and Chester townships, in Geauga County; Concord and Kirtland, in Lake County; Springfield and Twinsburg, in Summit County; Solon, Orange and Mayfield, in Cuyahoga County.  The fractional townships are Conneaut gore, Ashtabula gore, Saybrook gore, Geneva, Madison gore, Painesville, Willoughby gore, Independence, Coventry and Portage.
     "After this selection had been made they selected the average townships, to the value of each of which each of the others should be brought by the equalizing process of annexation.  The eight best of the remaining townships were taken. * * *  They are now known as Poland, in Mahoning County; Hartford, in Trumbull County; Pierpont, Monroe, Conneaut, Saybrook and Harpersfield, in Ashtabula County; and Parkman, in Geagua County.  These were the standard townships, and all the other townships of inferior value to these eight, which would include all the others not mentioned above, were to be raised to the standard value of the average townships by annexations from the equalizing townships.  These last named were cut up into parcels of various sizes and values, and annexed to the inferior townships in such a way as to make them all of equal value, in the opinion of the committee.  When the committee had performed this task it was found that, with the exception of the four townships first selected, the Parsons tract, and the townships that had been previously set aside to be sold, the whole tract would amount to an equivalent of ninety three shares.  There were, therefore, ninety three equalized townships or parcels to be drawn for east of the Cuyahoga.

THE DRAFTS.

     "To entitle a shareholder to the ownership of an equalized township, it was necessary for him to be the proprietor of $12,903.23 of the original purchase of the company, or, in other words, he must possess about three and three tenth shares of the original purchase.  The division by draft took place on the 29th of January, 1798.  The townships were numbered from one to ninety-three, and the numbers, on slips of paper, placed in a box.  The names of shareholders were arranged alphabetically, and in those instances in which an original investment was insufficient to entitle such investor to an equalized township, he formed a combination with others, in like situation, and the name of that person of this combination that took alphabetic precedence was used in the draft.  If the small proprietors were, from disagreement among themselves, unable to unite, a committee was appointed to select and classify them, and those selected were compelled to submit to this arrangement.  If, after they had drawn a township, they could not agree in dividing it between them, this committee, or another one appointed for that purpose, divided it for them.  That township designated bv the first number drawn belonged to the first man on the list, and the second drawn belonged to the second man, and so on until all were drawn.  Thus was the ownership in common served, and each individual secured his interest in severalty.  John Morgan, John Caldwell, and Jonathn Brace, the trustees, as rapidly as partition was effected, conveyed by deed to the several purchasers the land they had drawn.
     "The second draft was made in 1802, and was for such portions of the seven townships omitted in the first draft as remained at that time unsold.  This draft was divided into

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ninety shares, representing $13,333.33 of the purchase money.
     "The third draft was made in 1807, and was for the lands lying west of the Cuyahoga and was divided into forty-six parts, each representing $26,687.
     "The fourth draft was made in 1809, at which time the surplus land, so-called, was divided, including sundry notes and claims arising from sales that had been effected of the seven townships omitted in the first drawing."
 

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