History of Huntington County, Indiana : from the earliest time to the present, with biographical sketches, notes, etc., together with a short history of the Northwest, the Indiana Territory, and the State of Indiana, Part 1

Author:
Publication date: 1900
Publisher: [s.l.] : Walsworth Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 958


USA > Indiana > Huntington County > History of Huntington County, Indiana : from the earliest time to the present, with biographical sketches, notes, etc., together with a short history of the Northwest, the Indiana Territory, and the State of Indiana > Part 1


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ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY


L' 3 1833 02322 5003


GENEALOGY 977.201 H92HA


HISTORY


OF


HUNTINGTON COUNTY,


INDIANA.


FROM THE EARLIEST TIME TO THE PRESENT, WITH BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, NOTES, ETC., TOGETHER WITH A SHORT HISTORY OF THE NORTHWEST, THE INDIANA TERRITORY, AND THE STATE OF INDIANA.


ILLUSTRATED.


CHICAGO : BRANT & FULLER. 1 887.


The reproduction of this book has been made possible through the sponsorship of the Huntington County Historical Society, Huntington, Indiana.


DEMOCRAT PRINTING COMPANY, MADISON, WIS.


Reproduced by Walsworth Publishing Company, Inc.


PREFACE.


1926768


A FTER several months of almost uninterrupted labor, the History of Huntington County is completed. In issuing it to our patrons we do not claim for it perfection; but that it contains that reasonable degree of accuracy which only could be expected of us, is confidently asserted. The difficulties that sur- round such an undertaking can scarcely be realized by one who has never engaged in work of the kind. To reconcile the doubt- ful and often conflicting statements that are so frequently made by those who would seem to be best informed, is a task both per- plexing and tedious. Yet we believe that we have been able to present a history of the county that is as nearly complete as reason can demand, and the book exceeds our promises in almost every particular. We have endeavored to set forth the facts in as concise and unostentatious language as possible, believing it is for the facts and not for rhetorical display that the book is de- sired. The mechanical execution and general appearance of the volume will recommend it, even to the fastidious. The arrange- ment of the matter is such as to render an index almost super- fluous, as the subject under consideration is at the top of every right-hand page. For further details the italic subdivisions will enable the reader to refer with readiness to any topic. In the spelling of proper names there is such a wide difference, even among members of the same family, and is a matter of so arbi- trary. a nature, that our only guide was each man's desire. Every clew that gave promise of important facts connected with the county's history has been investigated by those engaged in the work. We believe the volume will be favorably received and highly appreciated by those for whom it was prepared. Our thanks are due to those who have rendered us assistance and to our patrons.


THE PUBLISHERS.


CHICAGO, ILL., June, 1887.


CONTENTS.


PART I-HISTORY OF INDIANA.


CHAPTER I.


PAGE.


PREHISTORIC RACES ..


17


Antiquities ..


19


Chinese, The.


18


Discovery by Columbus. 33


Explorations by the Whites. 37


Indians, The .. 31


Immigration, The First 18


Immigration, The Second


20


Pyramids, etc., The 21


Relics of the Mound-Builders


23


Savage Customs. 34


Tartars, The 23


Vincennes 39


Wabash River, The 39


37


CHAPTER II.


NATIONAL POLICIES, ETC .. 41


American Policy, The. 46


Atrocity of the Savages. 47


Burning of Hinton


48


British Policy, The


46


Clark's Expedition.


52


French Scheme, The.


41


Gilbault, Father.


65


Government of the Northwest.


67


Hamilton's Career.


64


Liquor and Gaming Laws.


74


Missionaries, The Catholic ...


42


Ordinance of 1787 70


Pontiac's War ..


46


Ruse Against the Indians 64


Vigo, Francis ..


6


CHAPTER III.


OPERATIONS AGAINST THE INDIANS 75


Battle at Peoria Lake. 1044 Coal. 207


Campaign of Harrison 92


Cession Treaties. 93


Defeat of St. Clair. 79


Defensive Operations. 76


Expedition of Harmer


75


Expedition of Wayne.


79


Expedition of St. Clair


78


Expedition of Williamson


78


Fort Miami, Battle of.


80


Harrison and the Indians. 87


Hopkins' Campaign 105


Kickapoo Town, Burning of. 78


Maumee, Battle of ... 75


Massacre at Pigeon Roost .. 103 Mississinewa Town, Battle at. 106 Oratory, Tecumseh's .. 114


100


Peace with the Indians 106 Siege of Fort Wayne ... 101


Siege of Fort Harrison 103


Tecumseh. 111


Tippecanoe, Battle of. 98 War of 1812 .. 101


War of 1812, Close of the. 108


CHAPTER IV.


ORGANIZATION OF INDIANA TERRITORY. 82 Bank, Establishment of. 120


Courts, Formation of .. 120


County Offices, Appointment of. 119


Corydon, the Capital 117 Gov. Posey. 117


Indiana in 1810. 84


Population in 1815 118


Territorial Legislature, The First. 84


Western Sun, The. 84


CHAPTER V. PAGE.


ORGANIZATION OF THE STATE, ETC. 121


Amendment, The Fifteenth. 147


Black Hawk War. 126 Constitution, Formation of the 121


Campaigns Against the Indians. 128


Defeat of Black Flawk 130


Exodus of the ludians .. 131


General Assembly, The First. 122


Guadalupe-Hidalgo, Treaty of. 142


134


Indian 'Titles 132


Immigration. 125


Lafayette, Action at. 127


Land Sales. 133


Mexican War, The. 136


Slavery


144


CHAPTER VI.


INDIANA IN THE REBELLION 148


Batteries of Light Infantry 182


Battle Record of States. 188


Call to Arms, The.


149


Colored Troops of Indiana. 182


Calls ot 1864 177


Field, In the .. 152


Independent Cavalry Regiment 181


Morgan's Raid 170


Minute-Men .. 170


One Hundred Days' Men 176


Regiments, Formation of. 151


Regiments, Sketch of. 153


Six Months' Regiments .. 172


CHAPTER VII.


STATE AFFAIRS AFTER THE REBELLION 189


Agriculture 209


Divorce Laws 193


Finances. 194


Geology. 205


Internal Improvements. 199


Indiana Horticultural Society. 212


Indiana Promological Society 213


Special Laws. 190


State Bank .. 196


State Board of Agriculture. 209


State Expositions. 210


Wealth and Progress. 197


CHAPTER VIII.


EDUCATION AND BENEVOLENCE. 215


Blind Institute, The 232


City School System. 218


Compensation of Teachers


220 Denominational and Private Institutions 230


Deaf and Dumb Institute .. 236


Education 265


Enumeration of Scholars 219


Family Worship. 252


215


Funds, Management of the 217


Female Prison and Reformatory 241


House of Refuge, The. 243


Insane Hospital, The .. 238


Northern Indiana Normal School 229


Origin of School Funds 221


Purdue University .. 224


School Statistics. 218


State University, The. 222


State Normal School


228


State Prison, South !. 239


State Prison, North 240


Total School Funds. 220


Harmony Community ..


White Men, The First


Prophet Town, Destruction of


Free School System, The ..


viii


CONTENTS.


PART II .- HISTORY OF HUNTINGTON COUNTY.


CHAPTER I.


GEOLOGY-General Features-The Original Wabash -Sections at Markle and War- ren-Lime and its Analysis-Deposits at Andrews-Oil Well at Silver Creek- The Glacial Drift, etc 307


CHAPTER II.


INDIAN HISTORY-The Quaker Missionaries- Early Indian Tribes - Miami Chiefs- Early Reminiscences-An Adoption Dance-Superstitions - Prehistoric ..... 615


CHAPTER III.


COUNTY ORGANIZATION-Act of the Legisla- ture-Early Acts of the County Board- Building of the County Jail-The Court House-The Poor Farm-Bridges, Roads, etc .- County Finances-Medical Society -County Officers-Early Land Entries -Elections-Agricultural Society, etc .. 321


CHAPTER IV.


MILITARY HISTORY - Huntington County Prior to 1860-Opening of the Rebellion -Public Sentiment-Call for Troops- Active Volunteering - First Company for the War-Other Volunteering-Pub- lic Spirit in 1862-Companies from this County-The Drafts-Men Furnished by the County-Roll of Honor-Bounty and Relief 342


CHAPTER V.


BENCH AND BAR - Early Courts - Early Judges -- Riding the Circuit-Early Trials -A Negligent Clerk-First Murder Trial -Courts under the New Constitution- Later Judges-Important Trials-The Bar-Roll of Attorneys-Probate and Common Pleas Courts-Resident Attor- ueys, etc. 371


CHAPTER VI.


SCHOOLS-First Teachers-Early Schools-


School Houses of Early Days-Town- ship Schools-General Matters-School Examiners and County Superintendents -Public Schools of Huntington City .... 387


CHAPTER VII.


CITY OF HUNTINGTON -- The Red Man's Re- sort The Helvey Brothers-Other Early Comers-Gen. John Tipton - Securing the County Seat-Early Records-First Election-Early Trade and Commerce- Some of the Old Settlers-Wabash & Erie Canal-Indian Agency-Incorporation- List of Officers-Changes in the Busi- ness Center - Additions - The Cholera Scourge-Churches of the Town-Secret Societies-The Press-Banks-Manufac- turing and Other Industries -Fire De- partment-Gold and Natural Gas Ex- citements-Coming of the Railroad .. 401


Clear Creek Township History 568


Clear Creek Township Biographies 568


Dallas Township History 601


Dallas Township Biographies 615


Huntington Township History 401


Huntington Township Biographies 441


Jackson Township History. 685


Jackson Township Biographies 651


Jefferson Township History 668


Jefferson Township Biographies 675


Lancaster Township History. 690


Lancaster Township Biographies 699


Polk Township History 728


Polk Township Biographies. 736


Rock Creek Township History 747


Rock Creek Township Biographies 756


Salamonie Township History 791


Salamonie Township Biographies. 801


Union Township History 846


Union Township Biographies 851


Warren Township History ... 859


Warren Township Biographies. 863


Wayne Township History 871


Wayne Township Biographies 876


ILLUSTRATIONS.


Ayres, Edwin B. 571


Branyan, James C.


409


Briant, C. E . 559


Brookover, A. G.


Facing 864


Chenoweth, G. P


679


Day, S. F


625


Gemmill, Henry C.


769


Grayston, F. S. C.


463


Lee, Ezra T


828


Mohler, A. D. 517


Slack, James R. 355


Way, S. C 783


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


FORMER OCCUPANTS.


PREHISTORIC RACES.


Scientists have ascribed to the Mound Builders varied origins, and though their divergence of opinion may for a time seem incom- patible with a thorough investigation of the subject, and tend to a confusion of ideas, no doubt whatever can exist as to the compar- ative accuracy of conclusions arrived at by some of them. Like the vexed question of the Pillar Towers of Ireland, it has caused much speculation, and elicited the opinions of so many learned antiquarians, ethnologists and travelers, that it will not be found beyond the range of possibility to make deductions that may suffice to solve the problem who were the prehistoric settlers of America. To achieve this it will not be necessary to go beyond the period over which Scripture history extends, or to indulge in those airy flights of imagination so sadly identified with occasional writers of even the Christian school, and all the accepted literary exponents of modern paganism.


That this continent is co-existent with the world of the ancients cannot be questioned. Every investigation, instituted under the auspices of modern civilization, confirms the fact and leaves no channel open through which the skeptic can escape the thorough refutation of his opinions. China, with its numerous living testi- monials of antiquity, with its ancient, though limited literature and its Babelish superstitions, claims a continuous history from antediluvian times; but although its continuity may be denied with every just reason, there is nothing to prevent the transmission of a hieroglyphic record of its history prior to 1656 anno mundi, since many traces of its early settlement survived the Deluge, and becanie sacred objects of the first historical epoch. This very sur- vival of a record, such as that of which the Chinese boast, is not at variance with the designs of a God who made and ruled the universe; but that an antediluvian people inhabited this continent,


18


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


will not be claimed; because it is not probable, though it may be possible, that a settlement in a land which may be considered a portion of the Asiatic continent, was effected by the immediate followers of the first progenitors of the human race. Therefore, on entering the study of the ancient people who raised tliese tumu- lus monuments over large tracts of the country, it will be just. sufficient to wander back to that time when the flood-gates of heaven were swung open to hurl destruction on a wicked world; and in doing so the inquiry must be based on legendary, or rather- upon many circumstantial evidences; for, so far as written narra- tive extends, there is nothing to show that a movement of people. too far east resulted in a Western settlement.


THE FIRST IMMIGRATION.


The first and most probable sources in which the origin of the Builders must be sought, are those countries lying along the east- ern coast of Asia, which doubtless at that time stretched far beyond its present limits, and presented a continnous shore from Lopatka to Point Cambodia, holding a population comparatively civilized, and all professing some elementary form of the Boodhism of later days. Those peoples, like the Chinese of the present, were bonnd to live at home, and probably observed that law until after the con- fusion of languages and the dispersion of the builders of Babel in 1757, A. M .; but subsequently, within the following century, the old Mongolians, like the new, crossed the great ocean in the very paths taken by the present representatives of the race, arrived on the same shores, which now extend a very questionable hospitality to them, and entered at once upon the colonization of the country south and east, while the Caucasian race engaged in a similar move- ment of exploration and colonization over what may be justly termed the western extension of Asia, and both peoples growing stalwart under the change, attained a moral and physical eminence to which they never could lay claim under the tropical sun which shed its beams upon the cradle of the human race.


That mysterious people who, like the Brahmins of to-day, wor- shiped some transitory deity, and in after years, evidently embraced the idealization of Boodhism, as preached in Mongolia early in the 35th century of the world, together with acquiring the learning of the Confucian and Pythagorean schools of the same period, spread all over the land, and in their numerous settlements erected these raths, or mounds, and sacrificial altars whereon they received their


19


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


periodical visiting gods, surrendered their bodies to natural absorp- tion or annihilation, and watched for the return of some transmi- grated soul, the while adoring the universe, which with all beings they believed would be eternally existent. They possessed religious orders corresponding in external show at least with the Essenes or Theraputæ of the pre-Christian and Christian epochs, and to the: reformed Theraputæ or monks of the present. Every memento of their coming and their stay which has descended to us is an evi- dence of their civilized condition. The free copper found within the tumuli; the open veins of the Superior and Iron Mountain. copper-mines, with all the modus operandi of ancient mining, such as ladders, levers, chisels, and hammer-heads, discovered by the: French explorers of the Northwest and the Mississippi, are conclu- sive proofs that those prehistoric people were highly civilized, and that many flourishing colonies were spread throughout the Missis- sippi valley, while yet the mammoth, the mastodon, and a hundred other animals, now only known by their gigantic fossil' remains, guarded the eastern shore of the continent as it-were against sup- posed invasions of the Tower Builders who went west from Babel; while yet the beautiful isles of the Antilles formed an integral portion of this continent, long years before the European Northman dreamed of setting forth to the discovery of Greenland and the northern isles, and certainly at a time when all that portion of America north of latitude 45° was an ice-incumbered waste.


Within the last few years great advances have been made toward the discovery of antiquities whether pertaining to remains of organic or inorganic nature. Together with many small, but telling relics of the early inhabitants of the country, the fossils of pre- historic animals have been unearthed from end to end of the land, and in districts, too, long pronounced by geologists of some repute to be without even a vestige of vertebrate fossils. Among the collected souvenirs of an age about which so very little is known, are twenty-five vertebræ averaging thirteen inches in diameter, and three vertebra ossified together measure nine cubical feet; a thigh-bone five feet long by twenty-eight, by twelve inches in diameter, and the shaft fourteen by eight inches thick, the entire lot weighing 600 lbs. These fossils are presumed to belong to the cretaceous period, when the Dinosaur roamed over the country from East to West, desolating the villages of the people. This animal is said to have been sixty feet long, and when feeding in cypress and palm forests, to extend himself eighty-five feet, so that he may


20


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


devour the budding tops of those great trees. Other efforts in this direction may lead to great results, and culminate probably in the discovery of a tablet engraven by some learned Mound Builder, describing in the ancient hieroglyphics of China all these men and beasts whose history excites so much speculation. The identity of the Mound Builders with the Mongolians might lead us to hope for such a consummation; nor is it beyond the range of probability, particularly in this practical age, to find the future labors of some industrious antiquarian requited by the upheaval of a tablet, written in the Tartar characters of 1700 years ago, bearing on a subject which can now be treated only on a purely circumstantial basis.


THE SECOND IMMIGRATION


may have begun a few centuries prior to the Christian era, and unlike the former expedition or expeditions, to have traversed north- eastern Asia to its Arctic confines, and then east to the narrow channel now known as Behring's Straits, which they crossed, and sailing up the unchanging Yukon, settled under the shadow of Mount St. Elias for many years, and pushing South commingled with their countrymen, soon acquiring the characteristics of the descendants of the first colonists. Chinese chronicles tell of such a people, who went North and were never heard of more. Circum- stances conspire to render that particular colony the carriers of a new religious faith and of an alphabetic system of a representative character to the old colonists, and they, doubtless, exercised a most beneficial influence in other respects ; because the influx of immi- grants of such culture as were the Chinese, even of that remote period, must necessarily hear very favorable results, not only in bringing in reports of their travels, but also accounts from the fatherland bearing on the latest events.


With the idea of a second and important exodus there are many theorists united, one of whoin says: "It is now the generally received opinion that the first inhabitants of America passed over from Asia through these straits. The number of small islands lying between both continents renders this opinion still more probable; and it is yet further confirmed by some remarkable traces of similarity in the physical conformation of the northern natives of both continents. The Esquimaux of North America, the Samoieds of Asia, and the Laplanders of Europe, are supposed to be of the same family; and this supposition is strengthened by the affinity which exists in their languages. The researches of Ham-


21


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


boldt have traced the Mexicans to the vicinity of Behring's Straits; whence it is conjectured that. they, as well as the Peruvians and other tribes, came originally from Asia, and were the Hiongnoos, who are, in the Chinese annals, said to have emigrated under Puno, and to have been lost in the North of Siberia."


Since this theory is accepted by most antiquaries, there is every reason to believe that from the discovery of what may be called an overland route to what was then considered an eastern extension of that country which is now known as the "Celestial Empire," many caravans of emigrants passed to their new homes in the land of illimitable possibilities until the way became a well-marked trail over which the Asiatic might travel forward, and having once entered the Elysian fields never entertained an idea of returning. Thus from generation to generation the tide of immigration poured in until the slopes of the Pacific and the banks of the great inland rivers became hives of busy industry. Magnificent cities and monuments were raised at the bidding of the tribal leaders and populous settlements centered with happy villages sprung up everywhere in manifestation of the power and wealth and knowl- edge of the people. The colonizing Caucasian of the historic period walked over this great country on the very ruins of a civil- ization which a thousand years before eclipsed all that of which he. could boast. He walked through the wilderness of the West over buried treasures hidden under the accumulated growth of nature, nor rested until he saw, with great surprise, the remains of ancient pyramids and temples and cities, larger and evidently more beauti- ful than ancient Egypt could bring forth after its long years of uninterrupted history. The pyramids resemble those of Egypt in exterior form, and in some instances are of larger dimensions. The pyramid of Cholula is square, having each side of its base 1,335 feet in length, and its height about 172 feet. Another pyramid, situated in the north of Vera Cruz, is formed of large blocks of highly-polished porphyry, and bears upon its front hiero- glyphic inscriptions and curious sculpture. Each side of its square base is 82 feet in length, and a flight of 57 steps conducts to its summit, which is 65 feet in height. The ruins of Palenque are said to extend 20 miles along the ridge of a mountain, and the remains of an Aztec city, near the banks of the river Gila, are spread over more than a square league. Their literature consisted of hieroglyphics; but their arithmetical knowledge did not extend farther than their calculations by the aid of grains of corn. Yet,


22.


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


notwithstanding all their varied accomplishments, and they were evidently many, their notions of religious duty led to a most demo- niac zeal at once barbarously savage and ferociously cruel. Each visiting, god instead of bringing new life to the people, brought death to thousands; and their grotesque idols, exposed to drown the senses of the beltolders in fear, wrought wretchedness rather than spiritual happiness, until, as some learned and humane Monte- zumian said, the people never approached these idols without fear, and this fear was the great animating principle, the great religions motive power which sustained the terrible religion. Their altars were sprinkled with blood drawn from their own bodies in large quantities, and on them thousands of human victims were sacri- ficed in honor of the demons whom they worshiped. The head and heart of every captive taken in war were offered up as a bloody sacrifice to the god of battles, while the victorious legions feasted on the remaining portions of the dead bodies. It has been ascer- tained that during the ceremonies attendant on the consecration of two of their temples, the number of prisoners offered up in sacri- fice was 12,210; while their own legions contributed voluntary victims to the terrible belief in large numbers. Nor did this horrible custom cease immediately after 1521, when Cortez entered the imperial city of the Montezumas; for, on being driven from It, all his troops who fell into the hands of the native soldiers were subjected to the most terrible and prolonged suffering that could be experienced in this world, and when about to yield up that spirit which is indestructible, were offered in sacrifice, their hearts and heads consecrated, and the victors allowed to feast on the yet warm flesh.


A reference is made here to the period when the Montezumas ruled over Mexico, simply to gain a better idea of the hideous idolatry which took the place of the old Boodhism of the Mound Builders, and doubtiess helped in a great measure to give victory to the new comers, even as the tenets of Mahometanism urged the ignorant followers of the prophet to the conquest of great nations. It was not the faith of the people who built the mounds and the pyramids and the temples, and who, 200 years before the Christian era, built the great wall of jealous China. No: rather was it that terrible faith born of the Tartar victory, which carried the great defenses of China at the point of the javelin and hatchet, who afterward marched to the very walls of Rome, under Alaric, and


23


HISTORY OF INDIANA.


spread over the islands of Polynesia to the Pacific slopes of South America.


THE TARTARS


came there, and, like the pure Mongols of Mexico and the Missis- sippi valley, rose to a state of civilization bordering on that attained by them. Here for centuries the sons of the fierce Tartar race con- tinued to dwell in comparative peace until the all-ruling ambition of empire took in the whole country from the Pacific to the Atlan- tic, and peopled the vast territory watered by the Amazon with a race that was destined to conquer all the peoples of the Orient, and only to fall before the march of the arch-civilizing Caucasian. In course of time those fierce Tartars pushed their settlements northward, and ultimately entered the territories of the Mound Builders, putting to death all who fell within their reach, and causing the survivors of the death-dealing invasion to seek a refuge from the hordes of this semi-barbarous people in the wilds and fast- nesses of the North and Northwest. The beautiful country of the Mound Builders was now in the hands of savage invaders, the quiet, industrious people who raised the temples and pyramids were gone; and the wealth of intelligence and industry, accumulating for ages, passed into the possession of a rapacious horde, who could admire it only so far as it offered objects for plunder. Even in this the invaders were satisfied, and then having arrived at the height of their ambition, rested on their swords and entered upon the luxury and ease in the enjoyment of which they were found when the van- guard of European civilization appeared upon the scene. Mean- time the southern countries which those adventurers abandoned after having completed their conquests in the North, were soon peopled by hundreds of people, always moving from island to island and ultimately halting amid the ruins of villages deserted by those who, as legends tell, had passed eastward but never returned; and it would scarcely be a matter for surprise if those emigrants were found to be the progenitors of that race found by the Spaniards in 1532, and identical with the Araucanians, Cuenches and Huil- tiches of to-day.




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