USA > Indiana > Noble County > Counties of LaGrange and Noble, Indiana : historical and biographical > Part 19
USA > Indiana > LaGrange County > Counties of LaGrange and Noble, Indiana : historical and biographical > Part 19
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190
HISTORY OF LA GRANGE COUNTY.
Nelson, 1841; John Poyser, 1845-50, 1850-52, 1855-63, 1872-76. (John Poyser is emphatically the Squire of Eden.) William T. McConnell, 1845-47 ; James Tumbleson, 1847-50, 1852-56, 1870-74; Peter Prough, 1866-70; Jacob Crusen, 1873-77; John J. Arnold, 1876-80; Isaiah Immell, 1878-82; Samuel Stutzman, 1881.
In the year 1880, at the time of taking the census, and according to the returns, there were then residents of the township the following persons who had reached the age of seventy-five or over: J. J. Bontrager, seventy-five; Mary Denny, eighty-three; Leah Morrill, seventy-five; John Thompson, seventy-seven.
The almost impassable swamps running through the township from north to south have prevented the building of many important roads. The Indians even left the swamps severely alone, and made wide detours to avoid them. Their trails, which were the first highways, ran from northeast to southwest through the Haw Patch, from Clearspring to Ligonier. These trails, of course, were only passable in places for walking or riding, and they were so snugly lined by sunflowers and stinging nettles, as high as a man's head, that travel was not at all pleasant. But the country about Haw Patch was so free from underbrush that roads were easily made. The first one was the Goshen road, which wound without regard to anything but convenience and the shortest cut from Benton and Millersburg, south of Big Marsh to Salem, and up by the Latta farm, passing north of the present Sycamore Corners, and on to Clear- spring and La Grange. One of the earliest regularly established highways was the State road, laid out several years before 1840, from Perry Prairie to White Pigeon.
In the spring of 1832, Benjamin Gale, William McConnell and Robert Latta viewed a road to run from the southwest corner of the county to Lima. This was afterward known as the Haw Patch road. These and later roads did not adhere to section lines at first, but have been since changed for that purpose.
Life in Eden before 1840 was from all accounts less enjoyable than exist- ence in the earlier Eden about the year one. The weeds seemed to defy the farmers ; they choked the grain and covered everything. It is said that horses and cattle were often lost in them. As if the weeds were not enough, the birds were innumerable, and they flocked to the little wheat patches, making music all day long and helping themselves for reward. Between the weeds and the birds, " what shall the harvest be," was a serious question. But in a few years the condition was changed, the wheat acreage began to yield twenty bushels, and the corn as much as fifty bushels, and the crops on the Haw Patch since then have been wonderful. There was no mill in the township and the grist had to be taken to Dallas' Mill in Clearspring, to Steinberger's in Noble, or to Jonathan Wayland's and other mills near Benton, in Elkhart County. The journey with fifteen or twenty bushels of wheat to Benton from the Haw Patch
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would occupy one day, and the next day would be taken up in the return. The earliest trading was done in Goshen and Lima, except such as was done at home with the Indians, who were always anxious to exchange something for " shuma "-silver coin.
The first birth in the county is believed to be Anna Mary Swartz, who was born about 1837. She was married to Jacob Collett and now lives in Iowa. A child was born to William Dempsey very early, which may contest the claim ; and Sophronia, daughter of Nehemiah Coldren, afterward the wife of William Walker, of Lima, was at least one of the very earliest natives of Eden.
In September, 1836, the County Commissioners selected the house of Obed Gaines as a voting place, and the first Presidential election in the town- ship was held there in November, 1836. Norman Sessions was Inspector. There were fifteen to twenty votes cast, and of these the Democrats had a large ma- jority. The township has usually had a Democratic majority of one or more ever since then, though during the life of the Whig party it sometimes carried an election.
The resident physicians who have practiced in the township have been Dr. John Brown, who lived near " Slabtown," and died in 1851. Dr. Waller, of about the same period ; Dr. Abner Lewis, who lived some time at Sycamore Corners and then moved to La Grange, and finally West, and for the last twenty years, Dr. John M. Denny, who has his office at the old Denny homestead on Section 35. The township, especially about the Haw Patch, has been healthy since the fever and ague days of the first settlement. There have been seasons which were exceptions, however, notably the epidemic of erysipelas in 1850.
A widely-spread gang of horse-thieves and general outlaws, in an early day, made the Haw Patch an unsafe and disagreeable place. To these maraud- ers the Haw Patch was indebted for a reputation as a lawless locality, which it required many years to overcome. Horses would be taken and sent out of the county by regular lines, along which the thieves and their harborers were per- manently stationed. Finally, the reign of crime became unendurable. The citizens organized themselves in police associations and resolved to take the law into their own hands. The Regulators for Haw Patch and vicinity organ- ized March 1, 1858, at the residence of Francis Ditman, in Clearspring, with the title of the Clearspring and Eden Detective Police. The President was Abner Lewis, and the Vice Presidents, Charles Roy, Francis Ditman, William Gibson and William Denny. John McDevitt was chosen Secretary and Haw- ley Peck, Treasurer. Then there occurred the great parade at Kendallville by the Regulator companies, when an immense crowd gathered, and one of the criminals was seized and soon after hung near Diamond Lake, in Noble County, and his body taken back to his wife. The criminal class was awed by the determined spirit of the Regulators ; arrests were speedily made, and in a very short time the country was quiet. Since then, the feeling of peaceful security has been disturbed only during the era of tramps.
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HISTORY OF LA GRANGE COUNTY.
The Latta family were Methodists and the McConnells Presbyterians, and this determined the denominational lines of the early efforts toward church organization. The first society to be organized was the Methodist, which had its meeting place at the residence of Robert Latta, Sr. James Latta, who had been for some years an itinerant preacher, and had settled in Perry Township, was the one who most frequently conducted the meetings. Among the mem- bers of this pioneer church were, besides the Lattas, Samuel and John Curl ; Laban Parks, wife and daughter ; Elizabeth Ramsby ; John Thompson and wife, and James Taylor. Rev. S. R. Ball was Pastor in 1835, and Revs. Robert- son, Boyd, Harrison, Posey and Allen, Dowd, Storex and Forbes, followed in very nearly the order given. In 1842, the society, aided by general contribu- tions, built a frame meeting-house on Latta's land, called Eden Chapel. A graveyard was opened west of the old chapel about this time, on an acre donated by Robert Latta. The first buried here was a child of Judge Stage. The grant of land was afterward enlarged to two and one-fourth acres. The old church was, after many years' service, torn down and a neat frame chapel, capable of seating about 300 persons, was erected on the west side of the churchyard, and dedicated in 1866. The building cost about $1.500 and was built by James Tumbleson. The churchyard is surrounded by a handsome wire fence, and the house and its surroundings kept in a manner which is in itself an index to the wealth and refinement of the neighborhood. A camp- meeting was also held for many years at a grove on Mr. Latta's land, and largely at his expense. He was generous in support of religious enterprises. The church is at present included in the Wawaka Circuit and Rev. James Johnson is the preacher in charge. There are some fifty members enrolled.
The Presbyterian Church was organized at the house of William McCon- nell, of which his family and Denny's, and the Cavens, of Perry Township, were the earliest members. Rev. James B. Plumstead was the first minister, some time before 1835. Rev. Christopher Cory also preached at this place in 1837 and 1838. The society was not long-lived, and the members were grad- ually drawn into the congregations of Salem Church and Ligonier.
The Baptist Church had a society, formerly meeting first at Sycamore Schoolhouse and then at Horner's. But since the death of Harvey Coldren, its most prominent member, the society has had very few meetings.
A Methodist Episcopal society was organized west of the Marsh in the winter of 1842-43, and met at John Poyser's house. The early members were John Poyser, Thomas Elliott, Andrew Elliott, John Mckibben and Isaac Sparks and their families, and Susan and William H. Poyser. The member- ship was from Elkhart and La Grange Counties. The congregation also met at the Eden Valley Schoolhouse, until their chapel was built in 1856. This building was erected by James Hart, and was, in dimensions, about 32x45. Rev. Lamb, of Goshen, was one of the earliest preachers, and it was included in the Goshen Circuit. During the war, when feeling was very intense and
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persons were divided in opinion about where preachers should draw the dividing line between politics and patriotism, a split was made in the church, and a con- siderable number, including some of the Virginian settlers, organized a Lutheran Church. This new society built a brick church just over the line in Clinton Township in 1877. The old meeting-house is still in' use by the Methodists.
The Amish Mennonite Church was organized in 1854 by German-speak- ing residents in the township. Before 1842, the settlement by members of this denomination had been begun by David Kurz, John Hartzler, Isaac Hartzler and Gideon Yoder. Later comers were Isaac Smoker, in 1843, and David Hartzler, in 1845. About 1860, a frame church was erected south of the vil- lage, on the county line road, and here Bishop Isaac Smoker and Revs. Joseph Yoder and Joseph Kaufman were the earliest preachers. In 1870, this build- ing was torn down and moved to Sycamore Corners, and a handsome brick church was erected, with a seating capacity of 300, at a cost of $2,000. The church was dedicated by Rev. John F. Funk, of Elkhart. The district now includes all of the Haw Patch, and contains something over one hundred and thirty members. The present preachers in charge are Bishop Smoker, who has now served in this church forty-two years, and Revs. Jonas Hartzler and George Buller .. The Amish people are in greater numbers in the northern sections of Eden, owning, in fact, all the upper half of Eden, east of the West Fork of the Little Elkhart. In this part, the first Amish settlers were John Bontrager, Christian Miller, Sr., and Joseph Yoder, about 1844. Most of this territory is included in the Newbury District. The other leading German denomination, the German Baptists or Dunkers, is represented by a flourishing society, organized in 1866, with a present membership of about one hundred and fifty. The society erected a commodious frame meeting-house at Haw Patch Village, in 1870. Rev. David Bare is the minister at this time.
The first school taught in the township was in the winter of 1834, when Kensell Kent organized a school in a log cabin a half mile west of Denny's Corners, at which the few children in the neighborhood found instruction. The big boys in those days were as unruly as in modern times, and a disturbance at one time arose in this school which compelled the attendance of a number of them at the court in Lima for several days. The first schoolhouse was a log building at Denny's Corners, where school was taught by Robinson Ramsby in 1836. Old Mr. Lucky, about 1837, also taught in this schoolhouse. It was a primitive affair; one end of the building was the fire-place; there was noth- ing in the way of chimney but a hole in the roof, and the rest of the building, it seems, was the hearth. Pins were put in the logs of the wall, and slabs laid on these were the desks. The seats were made from slabs, and were, of course, without backs. Achsah Kent, now Mrs. Nathan Frink, was one of the earliest teachers here. After the log house, there was a frame built upon the same spot, which has been gone some twenty years, and the location of the house to
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HISTORY OF LA GRANGE COUNTY.
take its place was on the east line of Section 26. A house was early built on the east line of Section 26, where school was kept for fifteen years. The site was then changed, and a brick house was built at the corners south in 1877, called the Haw Patch Schoolhouse. The Horner Schoolhouse, on Section 13, was built several years before the war, a rough frame, and was rebuilt about 1870.
About 1840, the first schoolhouse was built over the marsh. It was a log house in Elkhart County, near the chapel. Here Thomas Short was one of the earliest teachers. In 1845, the Eden Valley Schoolhouse was built within the township on John Aker's land. A new house has since been erected. In the old house, Margaret Bean was one of the first teachers. Noble County has built two schoolhouses within the limits of Eden, attended mostly by children of this township. The Sycamore School District, with the house in Clearspring, but including a portion of Eden, was organized in 1842, when Mahlon Hutch- inson was one of the trustees. The district receives its name from a tall syca- more of the Haw Patch, which used to stand at the corner until it was mis- chievously girdled.
From the latest school statistics it appears that the township has 288 children of school age, 190 of whom are in attendance each day upon the schools. The length of school is 142 days on an average. Nine teachers are employed at $1.55 and $1.39 per day. The revenue for the past year was $4,823.67, and the value of the school property is put at $5,890.
An important movement in the direction of popular culture is the Syca- more Literary Society. This was started about seventeen years ago as a debat- ing society at the schoolhouse. But in 1878, a wider field of usefulness was chosen, and a more permanent organization effected and a charter obtained. Ira Ford and J. N. Babcock conceived the idea of the society's obtaining a hall for its exclusive use, and the other members went into the project enthusi- astically. The old Dunkard Church, then for sale, was bought, torn down, moved and rebuilt, in 1879, upon land at the "corners," donated by Orvin Kent. The building as refitted is 30x52 feet, and affords a good auditory for 350 persons, and contains a stage and scenery. To do this work, the society borrowed $500 and was aided by donations. The debt is being paid from the proceeds of entertainments. The society at present has over forty members. J. N. Babcock is President and E. E. Stutsman, Secretary.
There are but few industries in the township besides farming and stock- raising. But two permanent saw-mills and one grist-mill are in operation. The first saw-mill and grist-mill were built near the center of the township in 1854, by Benedict Miller. The flouring-mill had two run of stones and did a fair custom work, but both mills were long ago burned down.
In 1877, John and Amos Schrock built a grist-mill with two run of stones, and a large saw-mill on Section 9, at which a great deal of custom work has been done. The mills were sold in 1881 to Tobias Eash. The only business
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place in the township is Haw Patch Center or Haw Patch or " Slabtown," as it has been variously called. The most popular name for some time has been Slabtown, which the saw-mill has the credit of giving the origin to .. This point was early selected as a site for trading. William McConnell, the first Postmaster, kept a small stock of goods near by at an early day. Timothy Hudson, Jr., kept a store on the Clearspring side of the street quite early, and also ran an ashery. The saw-mill, which is the most important part of Slabtown, was built by William and Timothy Hudson in 1856, and moved and rebuilt in 1874, by John Keim, who still runs it. About 1871, Jacob Crusen built a store in Slabtown, which was destroyed by fire two years later. John Keim then rebuilt upon the lot in 1877, and in this build- ing a general store was kept by Samuel Holland for a short time, and, since he retired, by Mr. Keim.
In 1878, a building was erected by Thomas Trittapoo, in which another store has since been kept. John Peck, in 1877, made a substantial addition to the place by starting a well-equipped wagon and blacksmith shop. A large harness shop and fine brick residence were erected, in 1881, by J. Zook, on the Clearspring side, at the place of the old Hudson store. These business places and the Dunkard Church are the only public buildings in the village. " Slab- town " has never had the distinction of being platted, but that is among the bright prospects of the future. The neighborhood expected speedy prosperity and a great impetus to the growth of the country when the Canada Southern Railroad extension was surveyed through here in 1872. There was talk of railroad shops being located here. Thomas H. Gale, of Michigan, purchased over a section of improved land at high figures, as a speculation, and the road seemed certain to come, but the panic of 1873 came instead, and there is now little hope of a railroad through the Haw Patch.
During the dry season of 1871, at the time of the Chicago fire, there was considerable danger to buildings near the marsh, and great loss in the way of fences and timber. About nine-tenths of the timber in the township was in- jured by the fires which swept over the swamp. Almost the entire marshes were burned over, and nothing but deep ditches, aided by persistent fighting of the fire, could check its course. That season of fire by night and clouds of smoke by day will long be remembered. But those few years, when the marshes needed some water, were exceptions. The great problem has been, generally, how to get rid of the surplus of water collected in these vast bogs. The first effort at drainage was the State ditch in the Big Marsh. Johnston Latta, at about the same time, a little before 1850, commenced the first private ditching, in the face of considerable discouragement from the neighbors, in the eastern branch of the swamp. The viewers and surveyors on these early ditches had a hard time of it in the trackless and bottomless bogs, and among the poison sumach. Since then, considerable attention has been paid to the drainage of the marshes, under the various laws of the State ; and it has perhaps resulted
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HISTORY OF LA GRANGE COUNTY.
in as much litigation as drainage. In fact, however, a great deal of land has been reclaimed. A larger ditch than has ever yet been dug is being surveyed on the line of the old State ditch, and is to be made by assessments.
The Eden of to-day is happy and prosperous. Part of the land is yet uninviting, but it is nowhere so bad as in the "New Eden " Dickens settled Mark Tapley upon ; a great portion of it is a beautiful garden, if not a para- dise ; at least, as near one as any spot in Hoosierdom. As for the people, they are intelligent, enterprising and cultured, and with a decided penchant for large farms and comfortable or even elegant homes, where a generous hospitality is always found.
CHAPTER XI.
BY WESTON A. GOODSPEED.
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-MONGOQUINONG FIFTY YEARS AGO-THE FRENCH TRAD- ERS-MORE OF THE GAGE AND LANGDON WAR-SAW-MILLS, WOOLEN-MILLS, DISTILLERIES, ETC .- INCIDENTS OF THE "HARD CIDER CAMPAIGN"-WILD GAME-TOWNSHIP ORGANIZATION-VILLAGE OF SPRINGFIELD-SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES-SPIRITUALISM-UNION HALL.
[THE first white settler in what is now Springfield Township was probably John B. Clark, who, according to his sister, Mrs. Judge Prentiss, located on the west bank of Turkey Creek, near the center of the township, some time during the autumn of 1830. He was, of course, a squatter, as were also all others before the fall of 1832, and, so far as known, was the only one before the spring of 1831. At that time, a man named L. K. Brownell, an enterprising settler, located a claim at what is now Mongoquinong. He had considerable money at command, which was immediately invested in the con- struction of a dam across Pigeon River. At the same time, he began the erec- tion of a two-storied grist-mill, completing both it and the dam during the summer of 1831; so that, in August of the same year, a fair article of flour was furnished by the mill. Two sets of buhrs were employed, one for wheat and the other for corn. Mr. Brownell was not a practical miller, but employed a man, whose name is not remembered, to manage the running of the mill. The vicinity of the mill, in years before, had been the site of a temporary encamp- ment of Pottawatomies, and, for a number of years afterward they continued to assemble there at certain seasons. As every one knows, they were extremely fond of whisky, and would resort to any means to get it. An Indian (unless pretty well civilized) does not sell his furs; he barters them for something he wants. He goes in for bulk, much as the Irishman did with the boots. The result was that they were easily cheated by unscrupulous traders, who obtained their peltries for a comparative pittance. French traders from Fort Wayne established themselves at Mongo, two of them being (as well as the writer can
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SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP.
spell their names), Druryeaur and Cuttieaur. The latter was in business in Fort Wayne, in the partnership of Comparet & Cuttieaur, while the former, so far as known, was not connected with them, unless in the purchase of fancy articles for the Indian trade, and in the disposal of the furs thus obtained. Druryeaur was at Mongo as soon as Brownell, and there he remained until late in the autumn of 1832, when so much hostility was shown him by every one, on account of his responsibility for the " Gage and Langdon war," that he found it unprofitable to remain longer, whereupon he removed his trading station, some say, to an Indian village in Michigan. Brownell, at the time he built his grist-mill, saw at once the profit to be realized from the sale of whisky to the Indians and the settlers ; and he, therefore, erected a large distillery build- ing near his mill, and employed a practical distiller to conduct the manufact- ure. His expectations were more than realized, as the most of his whisky (from thirty to forty gallons per day) was purchased and consumed almost as fast as it was made. The distillery and the mill together furnished a market for grain that the settlers appreciated. They could take their corn to the mill, get it ground, and then take it to the distillery, where it was either exchanged for so much whisky, or was brewed on shares. Druryeaur had a small trading- house across the river from the mill, where his furs were kept, and where he dealt out whisky to his red friends. As soon as the mill and the distillery were up and running, many persons searching homes were attracted to the spot. The place was certainly promising at that time, for there was the large encampment of Indians across the river from the mill ; there was the grist-mill furnishing flour and meal for a large section of country ; there was the abundance of large and excellent fish in the broad mill-pond ; there were the wild game and the furs of all kinds brought in by the Indians and the white trappers and hunters, and there was the market for grain. The mill and the distillery were no sooner up than a man named John O'Ferrell, a native of the " Emerald Isle," came to the place and erected a small storeroom, in which was placed a stock of goods worth about $400. The stock consisted mainly of those miscellaneous articles most needed in the backwoods. Some say that Brownell owned part of the stock, and it is very likely he did, as he would scarcely let the golden opportunity of deriving so excellent a profit pass easily into other hands. The facts, however, as to the ownership of the store are not clear. O'Ferrell was certainly the first store-keeper, and, while he was there, kept the post office for a short time. Arthur Burrows opened a hotel in 1833, paying $7.50 per annum license. At the same time, O'Ferrell was licensed to sell merchandise, paying therefor $10 per annum, and at the same rate for the time he had been selling before without a license. There was a blacksmith at the village, but his name is not remembered. This was the Mongo of 1833.
The originators or perpetrators of the Indian scare, known as the " Gage and Langdon war," were the Frenchman Druryeaur, the Irishman O'Ferrell, the Yankee Brownell, the German miller, and a few native Americans. Such
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HISTORY OF LA GRANGE COUNTY.
a unity of nationality could not fail to produce a sensation. All persons at the time were talking about the Black Hawk war, and speculating as to the probabil- ity of trouble with the Pottawatomies. Those easily frightened saw dreadful times ahead, and were ready for the scare. The details are told in the chapter on Greenfield. Langdon fled to Brushy Prairie, and told the few settlers there of the massacre at the mill. Men for miles around armed themselves and re- paired in haste to the spot, to assist in quelling the outbreak. Over one hun- dred assembled, though, for some reason unknown, no organization was effected. About seventy-five Indians were encamped near by. They thought the whites were going to attack them, and hung out the white flag. In truth, the settlers could hardly be restrained from firing upon them. It was not long before the truth became known, and then the perpetrators of the hoax were treated to an exhibition of wrath and indignation. So hostile were the settlers to the jokers that trade at the mill, the distillery and the store languished. Under this pressure, the Frenchman left the place; and very likely the early disappear- ance of O'Ferrell, and the sale of the property of Brownell were hastened, if not caused, by their perpetration of the joke. Do not say the story is magni- fied. When 100 men assemble, armed and prepared for fight ; when attempts are made to build forts and garrison islands in lakes, that section of country is in earnest and means business. Such are the facts, at least.
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