|
"STRANGER, you commenced this
business just a little too late," is a remark that is often made
to us in our perambulations through the country in search of its
early history. “All who could have told you about the
early settlement here are dead and gone,” say they, and we find
it but too true. There are few neighborhoods in this
section of the State where facts pertaining to original
settlements can be obtained from first hands. Every year,
the chances of preserving the early history of the county are
becoming fewer and ere long will be lost forever. The
devastating sweep of time and the progress of art are
remorseless and unsparing of primitive landmarks, however dear
they may have been to a former generation, and however sacred
the memories that cluster around them. The relics of the
pioneer will soon
be forgotten by the busy generations that have succeeded him.
“The old log cabin, with its puncheon floor —
The old log cabin, with its clapboard door —
Shall we ever forget its moss-grown roof?
The old rattling loom, with its warp and woof?
The old stick chimney of ‘cat’ and clay —
The old hearthstone where we used to pray?
We’ll not forget how we used to eat
The sweet honey-comb and the fat deer-meat,
We’ll not forget how we used to bake
That best of bread, the old Johnny Cake.”
These lines, from a rural bard, contain a sentiment
that was familiar to the pioneer, but to the present generation
it is as a “sealed book,” except so far as it is interpreted by
some “aged dame or tottering sire” who still survives, and can
tell of the time when they “fought the Indians, the bears and
the wolves,” for a foothold in the Great West.
North Bloomfield Township lies in the north tier of
townships of Morrow County. It is bounded
on the north by Richland County, on the east by Troy Township,
on the south by Congress, on the
west by Washington, and is designated as Township No. 19, in
Range 20, of the Congressional
survey, and had a population of 1,194 in 1870. It
originally extended north to the Mansfield and
Gabon road, but, upon the formation of Morrow County, one tier
of sections was added to Sandusky
Township in Richland County; thus it is one tier of sections
short of a Congressional township. The
township is well drained by the several little streams that have
their source within its limits,
and their numerous tributaries. The North Fork of the
Mohican rises in Section 23, and flows nearly north for six or
eight miles, when it changes its course to the eastward, and
passes out into Troy Township through Section 12. The
Clear Fork of the Mohican rises also in Section 23, flows in a
southeast direction, and passes out through Section 36.
The Whetstone has its source in Section 27, flows west for a few
miles, and then changes southward, passing into Congress, near
the little village of West Point. A number of other
rivulets and brooks traverse the township, which are nameless,
but which form a natural system of drainage. The surface
of North Bloomfield is sufficiently rolling as to require but
little artificial draining, but cannot be termed hilly or
broken. It is one of the finest farming regions in Morrow
County, and the comfortable and even elegant farm-houses denote
the prosperity of the people. Grain of all kinds is
extensively grown, while considerable attention is paid to
stock-raising. The township was originally covered with
fine timber, consisting of oak, walnut, beech, hickory, elm, ash
and other species
Page 391 -
common in this section of the country. About two miles of
railroad is within the Township limits, but there is no station
nearer than Iberia or Galion, the former in Washington Township,
and the latter in Crawford County. No large cities or
manufacturing establishments are to be found in the township,
but it is wholly a farming and stockraising region. Its
schools compare favorably with any township in the county, and
seven church edifices point their spires heavenward.
The first settlement in this township was made in the
northeastern part, near the village of Blooming Grove. A
man named Maxwell, whose first name could not be
ascertained, settled here about 1820, it is supposed. He
was from Pennsylvania, and sold out to Ebenezer
Harding when he came in the spring of 1821 or 1822, after
which he moved to the far West. This was doubtless the
first actual settlement made by a white man in what is now known
as North Bloomfield Township, and was made nearly sixty years
ago.
Next after Maxwell came the Hardings.
Amos Harding, the patriarch of the Harding family,
came first, and settled in what is still Richland County, about
the year 1819. Ebenezer, one of his sons, came
next, and bought out Maxwell, as we have seen, in
1821—22. The next year, his two brothers, Geo. T.
and Salmon E., came and settled near him. While the
elder Harding settled north of the village, his sons settled
south of it, in what is now Bloomfield Township. Salmon
laid out the village of Blooming Grove, and afterward sold out
and moved to Galion, where he died several years ago. He
was brought back and buried in the village cemetery, near where
a large portion of his life had been spent. When he laid
out' the village, he gave a lot of ground for a graveyard, and
requested to be buried there, a request that his friends and
relatives fulfilled. Ebenezer did not remain long,
but sold out and moved further West. George died
here, but has a son still living a short distance from the place
of his father’s early settlement, and is the last of the third
generation of the Harding family in this neighborhood.
He lives just over the line in Richland County, but has always
lived in the neighborhood. From him we learned many facts
of interest connected with the early settlement of this section.
He used to go to old Benny Sharrock’s to mill down
on the Whetstone, when he was a lad but seven years old, and was
so small they had to tie both him and the sack of corn on the
horse. Once he was belated, and the shades of evening
settled down before he reached home. His father and mother
became somewhat frightened, and, unable to endure the suspense,
the former mounted a horse and went in search of him. He
had but a short distance to go, when the trails separated, and
either one went to the mill. He deliberated some time as
to which to take, but finally made up his mind and hurried on.
Scarcely had he passed out of sight, when the boy came in on the
other trail and pursued his way on home, ignorant of the fact
that his father had gone the other trail to meet him. Upon
his arrival at home, his mother hastily lifted him from the
horse, jerked the bag of meal off, and mounting, immediately
took the back track after the old gentlemen, to try, if
possible, to prevent his going on to the mill. When we
remember that wolves were plenty, and when maddened by hunger
did not hesitate to attack grown-up people, we can realize
readily the anxiety of the parents when their boy was detained
at the mill until after nightfall.
Mr. Harding remembers Galion when there were but
two houses in it, and the place was called “New Moccasin,” and
afterward “Spongetown,” and still later it enjoyed several other
names equally as rude. He also remembers Mansfield when it
consisted merely of an old block-house, which was, at a later
day, improvised into a jail and court house — the upper story
used for a court room, and the lower for a prison. Indians
were plenty in those days, but none lived in the immediate
vicinity, but often passed through from Upper Sandusky to Mount
Vernon. Their hunting grounds embraced all this country,
and squads used to come down and hunt for weeks. On these
hunting excursions they would trade venison to the pale-faces
for tobacco
Page 392 -
and whisky. “ Capt.” Dowdy, an old chief, used often to
come here to hunt. They were friendly toward the whites
and did nothing out of the way, except to steal little things
sometimes, for which they had a strong penchant.
From the settlement of the Hardings up to 1827
the following families came in and located farms: James
Stearns, Hiram Stephens, James Wells,
Bascom, James Kerr, Isaac Barnes,
John Crawford, Amos Webster and
perhaps others. Stearns, Wells and
Stephens were from Pennsylvania. The first named
settled in 1823-24; the other two in 1825. All cleared up
farms, but are now dead. Bascom and Kerr
came about the same time, and were also from Pennsylvania.
Kerr was Bascom’s son-in-law, and they came to the
country together. Bascom settled where Mrs.
Crawford now lives. He and his wife are both dead
and lie in the little graveyard at Ebenezer church.
Kerr settled near Bascom and where his widow still
lives. He died in 1867. His first wife died early,
and his second wife was a daughter of Isaac Barnes,
also an old settler of the township, and a native of Western
Virginia. He entered the land now belonging to Mr.
Rule at West Point. He sold out and moved to
Wisconsin, and afterward to Minnesota, where he died.
Bascom and Kerr came all the way from Pennsylvania in
wagons, then the common mode of traveling, and they settled here
in an unbroken forest. Mr. Kerr's widow, who
is still living, is a women of intelligence, and possesses an
excellent memory, and communicated to us many items of
historical interest. Crawford, like a large
majority of the settlers in this section, was from Pennsylvania.
His wife was a sister to James Braden, and
Braden’s wife was a sister to Crawford. They
swapped sisters, as it were. Crawford came about
1826, and settled where his widow still lives. He died
about three years ago. Braden came also from
Pennsylvania about 1835, and is dead, but his widow is still
living. These early settlers, viz., Kerr,
Crawford and Braden, who lived in this neighborhood
almost in sight of each other, are dead, leaving widows living
upon the places of their early settlement. Amos
Webster, another Pennsylvanian, and a brother-in-law to the
Hardings, settled in the northeast corner of the township
soon after them. He cleared up a farm, sold out and went
to Indiana; afterward to Iowa, where he died.
William Buckingham settled a little
northeast of West Point in 1831. He came originally from
Pennsylvania and settled in Knox County as early as 1828, from
whence he came to this settlement. He died in 1837, but
his widow lived until four years ago, and died at the age of
eighty-four years. John Elder, from
Pennsylvania, was the first settler in the west part of the
township, and entered the land where his son, Samuel
Elder, now lives, when it was an untouched forest. Not
a tree amiss, as the latter gentlemen informed us, except now
and then, where “one had been cut down for honey or a coon.”
Mr. Elder settled first in Troy Township, in 1829,
and, in the fall of 1830, removed to this section, where he died
in 1837. Samuel, who lives on the old homestead,
remembers hauling corn from the old place in Troy Township, the
first winter they lived here. It was a winter of unusual
severity, and, with oxen hitched to a large sled, they would go
back and forth through the snow, taking two days to make a round
trip, and carrying their provisions with them, as the country
was not as thickly settled as it is now.
Jacob Sief was the next settler after
Elder, and came in 1829. He was originally from Baden,
Germany, but had lived some time in Columbiana County, O.,
before settling here. He has been dead forty years or
more, but has three sons still living in the neighborhood,
Jacob, Gotlieb and Philip. Daniel
Bolgard, Philip Flook and Vincent Dye
were Pennsylvanians. Bolgard, whose family consisted of
several children, came soon after the Elders, and, though they
were somewhat deficient in education and refinement, were withal
warm-hearted people. The old gentleman died years ago, but
a son, Enoch Bolgard, is still liv-
Page 393 -
ing. Dye came about 1832-33. His son,
Vincent Dye, Jr., occupies the old homestead - his father is
long dead. Tom, another son, went to California,
where he remained some time, and then came back here imbued with
all the elements of border life. He still lives in this
county. Flook settled about the same time as did
Dye. He has been dead many years, and Mrs.
Overley lives now upon the place of his original settlement.
John Warner came into the settlement a few years after
the Elders. He is still living in the southern part of the
township. Henry Snyder, from Pennsylvania, settled
here in 1834. He moved to Indiana, where he afterward
died. Arch McCoy and Rev. Mr. Hosler were
early settlers; the one was an early teacher and the other a
preacher. McCoy went to Missouri, where he became a
prominent man, was elected to the Legislature, and was also a
delegate to the National Democratic Convention that nominated
James Buchanan for President. He was killed in
Missouri during the late war, but by whom was never known.
Both parties were accused of the deed. He was somewhat
fickle in party principles, and, upon removing to Missouri,
changed from a Whig to a Democrat, because he found the latter
in power, and much the stronger party. Mr. Hosler
who was a preacher of the Albright denomination, removed
to Illinois, where he died. William Kenyon another
of the early settlers of this township, came from the Isle of
Man originally, about 1831-32. He and his wife are both
dead, and sleep in the little burying-ground at Ebenezer Church
of which they were members in life. A son is still living,
also a daughter, the wife of Mr. McFarland.
William Harris and James Appleman were pioneers of
this township. Harris is dead, but Appleman
who came from Pennsylvania, lives with his son, on the place of
his original settlement. He says it has been almost sixty
years since he pulled off his coat and commenced clearing a farm
here.
This comprises a list of the early settlers of the
township to a period where the tide of immigration began to flow
in with such force as to render it impossible for the historian
to keep pace with it. Farms were opened and cleared up in
every neighborhood, and the pioneers' cabins dotted the plains
and valleys, while domestic animals, such as hogs and cattle,
filled the forests instead of bears and wolves. The latter
lingered, however, and were only driven after the Indians by
hard knocks. They resisted the encroachments of the
invaders as stubbornly and as fiercely, in their way, as did the
savages themselves. The grand transformation ahs been
complete. Sixty years ago, the pioneers found an unbroken
forest, marked only by Indian trails. To-day, the
historian finds flourishing farms, beautiful homes, and churches
and school-houses, where erst the woods stood dark and dismal.
Truly, the wilderness ahs been metamorphosed into a veritable
paradise.
One of the great sources of worry to the pioneer is the
obtaining of provisions and the necessaries of life. Meat
was easily procured, for, when tired of bacon, it was an easy
matter to kill a deer; often these animals were shot from the
cabin door. But bread was not so easily attainable.
To go to Mount Vernon and Fredericksburg to mill was common, and
to be detained several days was equally common. A mill
patronized considerably by the early settlers of this township
was a little concern kept by "Uncle Benny" Sharrock, as
he was called. It was little more than a corn-cracker,
though he ground corn, wheat and buckwheat, all on the same run
of stones, which were made of concretions or "nigger-heads," as
more commonly called. It was said that "Uncle Benny"
could make more flower from a bushel of buckwheat than any
miller within fifty miles, and 33 pounds to the bushel was but
ordinary work for him. The first birth death and marriage
in North Bloomfield are not remembered. But that births
and marriages have occurred, the present population is the best
of evidence; and that the "pale horse and his rider" have been
abroad in the township, the number of thickly populated
cemeteries bear incontestable proof.
The roads in the township are excellent, and
Page 394 -
intersect every portion, generally being laid out on section
lines, instead of angling wherever it was found convenient to
run them. The first road in North Bloomfield was that
passing through the village of Blooming Grove, running from
Galion to Lexington. It is one of the roads of the
township that was laid out regardless of section lines, but
rather to the sound of the dinner-horn. The story is told
of the engineer who surveyed it, that, whenever he heard a
settler's horn blow for dinner, he would vary the line so as to
strike his cabin, which is the cause of its zigzag course.
The next road through the township was the Mansfield and Marion
road.
A post office was established at the residence of
William Wallace, who lived on the State road running from
Delaware to Mansfield, three miles south of the village of
Blooming Grove, at a very early day. Wallace was
the Postmaster, and the name of the office was Barcelona.
He kept it until it was moved to Blooming Grove, upon the laying
of it out as a village. The names of the laying of it out
as a village. The names of the first physician and the
first blacksmith in the township have been lost in the
"obscurity of the past."
Simultaneously, almost with the howling of the wolfe,
was heard the voice of the preacher, as one "crying in the
wilderness." The circuit rider, that pioneer minister of
the Cross, was early in the field, and, long before there were
any churches of schoolhouse in the township, the people gathered
at some neighbor's cabin, or in the war weather collected in
some cool grove, where
"Earth's unnumbered flowers
All turning up their gentle eyes to heaven;
The birds, with bright wings glancing in the sun,
Filling the air with rainbow miniatures."
seemed to join with them in praises to the
Most High. Rev. Mr. Hosler (of the Albrights) was
one of the early preachers of the township, and is the first one
remembered in the west part of it, where he used to preach every
two weeks at the house of Peter Ferestmaker. Elder
Knapp, Revs. Bel, Camp and Dubois were also early
preachers. The township is well supplied with churches at
the present day, and if the people are not very religious it is
their own fault, for they certainly do not lack church
facilities. Pleasant Hill Methodist Episcopal Church is
located about three-quarters of a mile west of the village of
West Point, just north of the line between this and Congress
Township. Just when the society was organized, is not
known, but at an early date. The house, which is a log
building, was erected about 1846, but the society was organized
long before, and services held in people's houses. The
house was built by the people of the neighborhood, Henry
Sipes and his sons doing the largest part of it. The
church and circuit were organized by Rev. Zephaniah Bell,
from Mt. Gilead, and was included in the Mt. Gilead Circuit.
Rev. Mr. DuBois was the preacher when the church was
built. The membership is now about fifty, and the Pastor
is the Rev. Mr. Buxton, who is in charge of the
Darlington Circuit, of which this is a part. Among the
early members of this church were Henry Sipes and wife
(he was the first class leader), Richard Iiams and wife
(his house was the preaching place), Isaac Barnes and
wife, and others of the early settlers. A Sunday school is
carried on during the summer season, and, at the present
writing, has just been organized for the summer, with David
Elder as superintendent, and some seventy-five attendants.
Ebenezer Methodist Episcopal Church, located on Section
20, was originally organized at the house of James Braden
about 1835 -6. Some time after organization, headquarters
were changed to the house of James Kerr. Among the
early members were William Kenyon and wife, John
Crawford and wife, James Braden and wife and James
Kerr and wife. It was organized by Rev. Z. Bell,
the founder of Pleasant Hill Church mentioned above. The
Church was built in 1846, and is a frame building. With
some modernization, it is still doing duty as a house of
worship. Rev. Mr. DuBois was the preacher at the
time of its erection; the
Page 395 -
present Pastor is Rev. Johnson. The membership has
been much depleted by death and removals, and numbers about
forty. A Sunday school is carried on during the summer,
but has not yet been resurrected for the season just opening.
A pretty little cemetery lies adjacent to the church, where
sleep many of the pioneer members. The first burial in it
was a child of Kenyon’s, and the next a child of Kerr’s.
The brick church is located near the “Half Acre” school
house, and belongs to the denomination known as German Reformed;
the services of the church are conducted in the German language.
The church was built in 1857, and is an elegant brick structure.
It is in a flourishing state, having nearly one hundred members,
with a good Sunday school during the summer season, but is not
yet opened. Rev. Mr. Marcus, of Crestline, is the
present Pastor of the Church. There was at one time a
United Brethren Church near the site of this, but it has long
since passed away.
The Old School Presbyterian Church, about a mile south
of the village of Blooming Grove, was built not far from
1850—perhaps as early as 1848 — and is a frame building.
It has generally been supplied from Galion. Rev. Mr.
Blaney was the minister when the church was built, but there
is no regular pastor now. Rev. Mr. Thompson, of
Galion, used to preach for the church every two weeks.
Before the church was built, preaching was held at George
Marshman’s, who was one of the old members. Mr.
Ferguson was one of the pillars, and, as the old members
died off, its strength departed, until, at this time, the
society is almost extinct.
Education received the earnest attention of the
pioneers, and at an early day the log school house made its
appearance. Even before the people were able to build
these primitive temples of learning, schools were taught in
deserted cabins, barns, old stables, or any kind of a building
found vacant. The first school of which we have any
account in this township was taught by Arch. McCoy, in a
rude log cabin near Aaron Sief’s, which had been built
for a dwelling. This small beginning in the way of
education has developed into a system surpassed by no township
in Morrow County. There are eight school districts now in
the township, in each of which is a comfortable school house.
The following statistics are from the last report made to the
County Auditor: Balance on hand Sept. 1, 1878—$1,661.96; State
tax, $531; local tax for school-house purposes, $840.32; amount
paid teachers within the year, $1,681.85; total value of school
property, $8,500. Teachers employed, males 8, females 7;
monthly wages paid, males, $35, females $22. Number of pupils
enrolled— males 176, females 138; average daily attendance,
males 105, females 91. Balance on hand Sept. 1, 1879,
$1,176.09.
North Bloomfield is Democratic in politics, and, when
questions of importance are up, good majorities are usually
given. In the late war, its patriotism was beyond
question, and the bravest and best of its sons offered
themselves for the defense of the Union and the Constitution.
The town house of North Bloomfield is situated two miles south
and two miles west from Blooming Grove. This is where
elections are held, and where all the township business is
transacted.
The village of Blooming Grove was laid out by Salmon
E. Harding, upon whose land it was mostly located, and the
plat recorded in Richland County Mar. 5, 1835. A small
portion of George T. Harding’s land was embraced in the
original survey, and, since it was laid out, several additions
have been made to it. The town is on Section 11, of
Township 19, and Range 20 of the Congressional survey. The
first residence was built by William Johnson, and
the first storehouse was built by Carl & Dunlap,
who were the first merchants. This storehouse stands on
the northeast corner, and is now owned by Dr. Jones.
Carl & Dunlap were succeeded in the mercantile
business by a man named Whitaker, who carried on a store
for some years. The post office was established here, or,
rather it was removed from Wallace’s to this place, in
1841, after it was laid out as a town, and the name changed from
Barcelona to Corsica,
Page 396 -
partly because at that time there was but one other office in
the United States by that name, and partly because of the
admiration entertained by the citizens for the First Napoleon.
As a mark of respect they called it after his birthplace, the
Island of Corsica. I. G. Barker was the first
Postmaster after it was removed to Blooming Grove. He was
succeeded by John Clark Johnston, who held the office for
twelve years. Mr. Johnston comes of a noble family.
He is a second cousin to the Confederate General, Joe
Johnston, though he says he does not like to acknowledge the
relationship. We are not quite so radical as that in our
opinions, for, although Joe Johnston was on the wrong
side of the fence in the late unpleasantness, yet he ranked
among the greatest Generals of either army. He also claims
to be the fourth generation from Oliver Cromwell.
We should be less proud of this than of a relationship to Joe
Johnston. After many changes in the post office
department of Blooming Grove, Chris Williams has
succeeded to the office. J. C. Johnston was the
first blacksmith of the village, and opened a shop in 1836.
The present summary of business is as follows: Two stores, one
by Henry Bachman, and another by J. F. Keller;
one wagon shop, by Siegesmund Baker; two
blacksmith shops, by J. C. Johnston and Abram Evans;
one hotel, by J. R. Dille—the first tavern in the place
was kept by old Johnny Johns, as he was called;
two physicians, Dr. McFarland, Homeopathist, and
Dr. Johns, old school; one schoolhouse, Miss
Appleman, teacher. A two story schoolhouse will be
built during the present (1880) summer.
Blooming Grove is a quiet and moral little village, and
is without saloons. They are institutions that the good
people do not allow inside of the corporate limits of the
village. A Dutchman came there once for the purpose of
opening a saloon, and had made all his arrangements for the
business, when he was told that the people would not tolerate
such a movement, and that he would be presented to the grand
jury at its first term.
“Py Gott,” said he, “I no stay,” and he didn’t.
An old preacher once told some of the citizens that they were a
“peculiar people,” that they would quarrel among themselves on
politics and religion, and, five miles from home, they would
fight for each other like dogs. Not only is Blooming Grove
a moral town, but it is a very religious one. There are
three churches inside of the corporation, and (Old School
Presbyterian) just south of another the town.
The Bloomfield Baptist Church was organized Oct. 23,
1833, and was a part of the Springfield church. When they
became sufficiently strong, a society was formed by the Rev.
Frederick Freemen. The first church was a
frame building, and stood three-quarters of a mile north of the
village. It was then in what is now Richland County. After
Morrow County was laid off, it was moved across the line, within
a few hundred yards of where the present church stands.
There it remained, and was used by the society until 1870, when
the present brick edifice was erected at a cost of about $2,500.
The church at present has no regular Pastor, and a membership of
only about thirty. It has been much depleted by death and
removals in the last few years. An excellent Sunday school
is maintained the year round. There are fifty-four
enrolled members, under the superintendence of Christopher
Bowser. Elder Hall was the Pastor of
this church for many years, and still preaches in it whenever he
can do so conveniently.
The Methodist Episcopal Church of Blooming Grove was
organized about 1835. Preaching was had sometimes at the
house of James Harris and at other houses in the
neighborhood. About 1840 they moved to town and occupied
the schoolhouse. In 1848, a frame church was built.
This house does not seem to have been built upon a rock, for
when the “winds blew and the floods came and beat upon that
house, it fell,” or rather it was blown away in a storm, and
dropped upon an adjoining lot. The people I gathered
together and put it back on its original site,
Page 397 -
where itdid duty until 1871, when the present handsome brick,
now occupied, was built. This edifice cost $3,000, and is
of modern architecture. Rev. Mr. Johnson
is Pastor, and the membership is not far from one hundred.
A few years ago, just after the close of a revival, there were
over two hundred members, but many have “fainted and fallen by
the wayside.” A Sunday school is maintained throughout the
year, of which Dr. McFarland is Superintendent.
He is said to take great interest in it, and to devote a great
deal of time and labor to the good of the children.
Rev. Logan Harris, now a Bishop in the M. E.
Church, was one of the first ministers who preached in the
village of Blooming Grove. He was raised in the township
of Troy, near by, and is remembered as a rather bad boy, of whom
many hard stories are told. Elder Knapp held
the first revival in the town. He was a local preacher,
and a good one. Some roughs threatened to put him
out of the house if he came over and attempted to hold meeting.
When told of the threats, he said: “Well, as I never have been
put out, I will go and let them try it.” He went, but was
not molested.
There is an organization of the Adventists in
Blooming Grove, formed a year or two ago. They have quite a stylish edifice, built in 1879,
and as a religious society, are creating considerable
interest. The head of this denomination is, we
believe, at Battle Creek, Mich. One of the
tenets of their religion is, that one-tenth of everything
a believer possesses must be “given to the
Lord.” Some irreverent fellow recently remarked
that, “one tenth of everything they have, must
go to the Lord via Battle Creek.” The Treasury,
it appears, is there; and everything is collected at that point,
and there devoted to religious purposes.
In connection with the Christian Churches, it is not
out of place to mention those benevolent organizations which,
though not strictly religious, are highly moral in their
teachings. A lodge of Odd Fellows was organized in the
village in 1873. It was instituted on the 20th of August
of that year, as Corsica Lodge, No. 556, I. O. O. F., and among
its charter members Siegismund Baker, W. Enck,
S. A. Numbers, and D. K. Mitchell, who were the
first officers, and ranked as their names are given above.
There are on the records sixteen members in good standing, and
the following are the present officers: Enoch, F. Bachman,
N. G.; Nelson Chapin, V. G.; Abram Evans,
Secretary, and George B. Baggs, Treasurer. The
lodge
was instituted by John E. Bell, Grand Master, and W.
C. Earl, Grand Secretary.
There is a very pretty cemetery adjacent to the town.
The land was given for a burying ground by Salmon
Harding, and was the first public graveyard in the
neighborhood. Several additions have been made to it since
by purchase. Within its limits sleep many of the pioneers
of the country. It is well kept, and the number of
beautiful stones and monuments shows the affection of the living
for the dead.
The village of West Point is situated on the line
between North Bloomfield and Congress townships, and is about as
nearly divided between the two sections as it well can be.
The store and the post office are in North Bloomfield, while the
church and the schoolhouse are in Congress, and the residences
are about “’alf and ’alf,” as an Englishman might say. The
history of West Point will be more particularly given in the
chapter devoted to Congress Township. |