Historical hand-atlas, illustrated : containing twelve farm maps, and History of Jay County, Indiana, Part 20

Author: H.H. Hardesty (Firm)
Publication date: 1881
Publisher: Chicago : H.H. Hardesty
Number of Pages: 288


USA > Indiana > Jay County > Historical hand-atlas, illustrated : containing twelve farm maps, and History of Jay County, Indiana > Part 20


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67


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VERMONT AND MASSACHUSETTS.


History, Government, and Finances,-The first whito settle- ment in New Hampshire was made in 1724, hy some emigrants from Massachusetts, who erected Fort Dunmer, where Burlington now stands. About 1760, emigration received and impetus, and during the following eight years Governor Wentworth, of New Hampshire, granted 138 townships within the present limits of the State. He claimed the right to the soil by virtue of the New Hampshire charter. At that time the territory west of the Con- necticut was known as the " New Hampshire Grants." The Gov- ernor was amassing great wealth hy these grants, when a procla- mation was issued by the governor of New York, December 28, 1763, claiming Vermont under the grants from Charles II to his brother the Duke of York. The Sheriff was ordered to return the names of all persons who had settled west of tho Connecticut River under titles given them by New Hampshire. Ou March 13, 1764, Governor Wentworth sent forth a counter proclamation, declaring the New York claims obsolete, and defending bis juris- diction to the disputed land. An appeal was made to the mother country by New York, and New Hampshire not showing fight, New York was given jurisdiction to the Connectieut River. New York then attempted to eject the old settlers from their lands, and, through a corrupt judiciary, decided every case against tbem, This so exasperated the settlers, that they forcihly resisted the offi- cers of the law, and, under the leadership of Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, and others, every officer who tried to serve writs was tied to a tree and unmercifully whipped with beecben rods; and the consequence was that after a while nobody could he got to undertake the hazardous service. Governor Tryon, after ten years' strife, commanded Allen, Warner, and six others whom he named, to surrender themselves within thirty days, under pain of conviction of felony and death without benefit of clergy. Ho offered a reward of £150 for the capture of Allen, and £50 for each of the others. These men retorted hy offering a reward for the apprehension of the attorney-general of New York, The breaking out of the Revolution suspended the controversy. In 1777, Vermont declared her independence, and on March 4, 1791, after much hesitation and hickering by Congress, was admitted into the Union as a sovereign State. The land controversy was settled hy the payment, on the part of Vermont, of $30,000 to New York, and the relinquishment hy the latter of all claim to lands in the State.


Although Vermont was not a signer of the original compact, her "Green Mountain boys " distinguished themselves in the Rev- olution in several bard-fought hattles. Allen was taken prisoner and sent to England. The battle of Bennington was fought in this State, in which the Green Mountain boys took a prominent part. In the war of 1812 the Vermonters took an active part, and sustained their former prestige. On October 29th, 1864, a band of Southern refugees made a dash from Canada into the little village of St. Alhans, in the northwestern part of the State, near the Canadian frontier, and after robbing several banks and shooting several citizens, crossed over the Canadian frontier, taking with them some valuable borses. Some of the raiders were cap- tured and punished,


The State furnished 34,635 men to the national army in tbe late war.


A governor, lieutenant-governor, senate, and bouse of represen- tatives are annually elected by popular vote, The legislature meets hiennially. Tbe judiciary consists of a chief judge and five associates. There is a council of censors of thirteen persons elected every seven years, and holding office one year, It is their duty to see whether tbc constitution has been preserved inviolate during the six years preceding their election, and whether the legislature and the executive have faithfully discharged their duties. They are also empowered to investigate tho finauces of tbe State. Tbey bave the power to send for persons, books, and papers, order impeachments, and pass public censure.


Vermont sends two representatives to Congress, and casts five electoral votes.


The judiciary consists of a supreme court composed of three judges, county courts, and a eonrt of chancery. The circuit judges are appointed by the legislature, but two associate judges in each county are elected by the people.


Climate and Soil .- The climate is cold, with long and severe winters, hut healthful -the temperature ranging from -17deg. to + 92deg. The soil is a rich loam, and the country well wooded with hemlock, fir, spruce, oak, beech, sugar-maple, pine, hickory, elm, butternut, birch, cedar, etc. The hills are well adapted for pasturage. The chief products are wool, cattle, maple-sugar, but- ter, cheese, hay, and potatoes. The rivers are the Connecticut and its western branches, and the Onion, Lamoille, and smaller streams, affording abundant water-power, and falling into Lake Champlain, The State is studded with small lakes. Agriculture is much the most important industry.


Geology and Mineralogy,-The greater portion of the State is of primary formation. The valleys of the rivers are mostly alluvial, and the shores of Lake Champlain transition formation. On the western side of the mountains the rocks are chiefly old red sandstone, greywacke, limestone, sandstone, and granular quartz which contains iron ore and manganese. The body of the mountains is formed by hornhlende, mica, slate, granite, and gneiss. In the southern and northern part of the State surpentine occurs. There is a bed of clay slate along the Counecticut river. A bed of granite crosses this river at Bellows Falls. A large deposit of primitive limestone is met with in Caledonia county. The castern side of the mountains is composed chiefly of hornhlende rock, gneiss, granite, and clay slate.


Iron exists in this State in great abundance. Coal, lead, copper, zinc, titanium, oxide of manganese, magnetic iron ore, and plum- bago are found in various quantities. In Strafford, large quanti- ties of copperas are made from iron pyrites, or sulphuret of iron. Gold has been found in moderate quantities. Immense beds of fine marble, well adapted for building purposes, exist in various parts of the State. The Middlebury quarries are celebrated for their fine quality of marble. A block varioty of this marble is quarried at Swanton, on Lake Champlain. Slate, porcelain clay, lime-stone, steatite, talc, aud marl all exist in this State. Excellent wbite marble is met with all along the hase of the Green Moun- tains for fifty miles above and below Rutland. Manganese and slate quarries exist in the same vicinity. Beds of soapstone are found in many localities.


Products and Commerce. - Wool, live-stock, maple-sugar, butter, cheese, hay, hops, and potatoes are extensively produced. The State has a board of agriculture, manufactures and mining, which devotes itself to collecting and disseminating information and forwarding the industrial interests of the State.


Most of the commerce connected with navigation in this State is carried on by way of Lake Champlain, and mainly through the port of Burlington.


Education, etc .- Vermont bas a good common school system, There are three normal schools in the State-one at Johnson, one at Randolph, and one at Castleton. Every child between eigbt and tbirteen years is compelled by law to attend school at least three months in the year. Any parent or guardian violating the law is liable to a fine. A legislative enactment prohibits the employment of any cbild under sixteen in any manufacturing or mechanical trade, under a fine of fifty dollars.


The University of Vermont, located at Burlington, was founded in 1791, and has a medical department. Middlebury College, at Middlebury, in 1800; and Norwieh University, a classical institu- tion with a military department, was founded in 1834. There is a medical school at Castleton, ono at Woodstock, and one at Bur- lington ; also several theological institutions in different parts of the State. At Brattleboro there is an institution for the insane, and a State prison at Windsor. There is a reform school at Wat- erbury, and a house for destitute children at Burlington.


Burlington is the only incorporated city in the State, and has not quite 10,000 population. Montpelier is tbe seat of govern- ment, and the other leading towns are Rutland, Middlebury, St. Albans, etc.


The decennial population by counties since 1790 is as follows :


COUNTIES.


1880


1870


1860


1830


18-10


1830


1820


1810


1800


1790


Addison


23484


24010


26549


23583


24940


20169


19993


18417


6449


Bennington.


21325


191.6


18589


16872


17468


16125


15893


14617


12254


Caledonia ...


22217


21708


93595


21891


20967


16669


18730


9377


Chittenden. ..


36480


28171


29036


22977


21765


16272


18120


12778


7295


Essex ...


6811


5786


4650


4226


8981


3284


8087


1479


Franklin ...


80291


27231


28586


21531


24525


17192


16427


8782


Grand Isle


4082


4:276


4145


3883


8696


3527


9145


Lamoille


12418


12311


10872


10475


27283


24681


25947


18298


10526


Orleans


21045


16991


15707


13634


18980


6976


5830


1189


Rutland


40631


35916


39050


30699


81244


29975


29486


23813


15591


Windham


26036


26992


29069


27442


28748


28457


26760


24581


17570


Windsor ..


36063


87193


88330


4035G


40625


28233


8-1877


26944


15740


Total


330551


815098


314120


291948


280652


2359€6


217895


154465


85485


According to the census of 1870 Vermont has a population of 330,551, of wbicb 942 are colored, and 14 Indian,


MASSACHUSETTS.


MASSACHUSETTS, one of the original thirteen States, is situated between latitude 41deg. 15min, and 42deg. 53min, north, and longitude 69deg. 56min. and 73deg. 32min, west, and is bounded on the north by Vermont and New Hampshire, east hy the Atlantic Ocean, south by Connecticut and Rhode Island, and west by New York. It has an area of 7,800 square miles. Generally speaking, the country ascends according to the distance


Orange ..


28090


25455


2:296


27873


Washington.


265 8


27612


24654


23506


21378


11106


79


MASSACHUSETTS.


inland, the general slope being from west to east. The coast pre- sents a capacions, deep, and admirable hay, hetweon Cape Ann and Cape Cod; from which the State derived its name. A sandy and in some parts marshy plain extends several miles iuto the interior; this is abruptly succeeded hy a hilly country, which occupies all the central parts of the State, abounding with valleys of various extent, numerous rivers, and oxtensive pine plains. The valley of the Connecticut River separates this region from tho third, or mountainous, or most westerly division of the Stato. It is well watered, hut no large river rises within it, Next to the Connecticut the chief is the Merrimac, which runs through its northeastern parts, and falls into the sea near Boston. There are no large lakes, hut numerous ponds.


History, Government, and Finances,-The first permanent settlement was made at Plymouth, in December, 1620, hy the Pilgrim Fathers, the originators of the public school system, The settlers immediately began to build houses to protect them- selves against the inclement weather and the Indians. They made a treaty of amity with Massasoit and his trihe, hut were involved in occasional disputes with the other trihes. They very soon acquired great influence over the Indians. Captain Miles Standish, whose memory has heen immortalized hy a great Amer- ican poet, was a successful negotiator, and made himself feared hy them. . The colonists suffered many privations, many of them dying from exposure and had food.


A dispute hetween the mother country and the settlors was long maintained. Tho colonists were jealous of their liberties and resisted the encroachrnents of the crown hy strong moral force. In 1675 the King Philip war hroke out. The savages were des- perate, and carried on the work of destruction with great ferocity. Ahout 600 colonists lost their lives, and the same number of houses were burned. In the war hetwcen England and France for the possession of American soil, Massachusetts was a powerful aid of the crown, Some of the most stirring scenes of the Revo- lution took place in this State, which in fact saw its opening scenes. The ahominable Stamp Act aroused the people to the highest pitch of excitement. The Boston massacre, in 1770, and the destruction of the tea in the same year, are familiar to every school-hoy. The battles of Bunker Hill, Lexington, and Concord were fought on the soil of Massachusetts.


John Hancock was the first governor of the State under the constitution of 1780. In 1820 Maine, which had hitherto heen connected with Massachusetts, was separated from it. Two sons of the commonwealth have presided over the Republio- the two Adamses. Some of the brightest lights that have shone in the legislative halls of the nation came from the old Bay State.


She sent 33,427 men to the late war, of which 11,039 were disa- hled, and 5,518 fell in hattle.


The executive power is vested in a governor, who holds office one year, a lieutenant-governor, a secretary, treasurer, and receiv- er-general, an auditor, attorney-general, and an executive council composed of eight members, elected annually from the eight divis- ions of the State. The legislativo department consists of a senate of 40 members, and a house of representatives of 240 members elected annually,


Massachusetts sends eleven representatives to Congress and casts thirteon electoral votes.


The judicial authority of the commonwealth is vested in a supreme court, composed of one chief and five associate justices, appointed hy the governor and council, and holding office during good behavior; a court of common pleas, composed of one chief judge and six associates ; prohate courts for each county ; police courts, held in many cities and towns; commissioners of insolv- ency, and justices' courts. The supreme courts have exclusive jurisdiction of capital crimes, and exclusive chancery jurisdiction, In this State a hushand is not liable for his wife's dehts contracted before marriage; her separate estato alono is liable.


Climate and Soil,-The climate varies according to elevation, but is generally dry and healthy, and the atmosphere serene. The thermometer, during summer, often exceeds 77deg, Fahrenheit, and sometimes rises to 100deg. In some of the central and west- ern districts the soil is strong and rich; but in general it is poor rather than otherwise, though the active perseverence of the farmers, and good cultivation, have rendered it highly productive.


Geology, and Mineralogy .- In the geological formation of Massachusetts the primitive rocks are quite conspicuous, and are in some places covered with the older secondary formation. A belt of this kind, ten or fifteen miles in width, extends from Boston southwest to Rhode Island. The primary rocks extend in the north to the ocean, while the Connecticut valley rests on a hed of sandstone. The primary rocks of Massachusetts form some very good building-stone. And the gray granite of Quiney Hills is prohahly found in at least one of the public huildings of every farge city or town in the Union. The mountains of the western


part are composed of granite, gneiss, quartz, and other siliceous rocks, of mica and clay slates, limestone and hornhlende, The white marhle of Berkshire county is a fine building material, of which the Girard College, at Pliiladelphia, is partly constructed. The soapstono of Hampshiro county is extensively used for huild- iug. The other minerals are serpentine, ashestos, slate, some anthracite coal in the secondary formation, some copper in North- ampton and Southampton, plunhago, ochres, argillaceous earths, lead, and iron; the last is found in Plymouth and Bristol coun- ties, hut in greatest abundance west of the Connecticut River, Coal, iron, zinc, copper, and some other valuable minerals are found, though in no very liheral quantity, aud mining is the least in importance of all her industrial interests.


Products, Manufactures, and Commerce .- Massachusetts is pre-eminently a manufacturing Stato. She annnally consumes immense quantities of wool in the manufacture of coarse and fine woolen clotbs. Mdlions of dollars are invested in manufacturing stoek, of which a largo proportion is employed in Lowell, which, next to Pittsburg, is the chief manufacturing town in the United States, though Fall River is pressing it very closo. There are more than 300 cotton-mills, 150 woolen-mills, 13 carpet-mills, with many iron foundries, rolling-mills, nail-factories, and machine-shops. Next to cotton and woolen goods, hoots and shoes are the chief manufactured articles ; from 3,000,000 to 4,000,- 000 pairs are annually made at Lynn and other places in this State, principally for export to the Southern States and the West Indies. Spirits, leather, cordage, wrought and cast iron, nails, woolens, paper, straw honnets, hats, oil, and muskets, are the other principal manufactures. There is a large government estah- hshment for the manufacture of arms at Springfield. The whale, cod, and other fisheries of the United States center principally in Massachusetts, and are at once a principal employment and a most productive source of wealth. The chief exports of this State, exclusive of its manufactures and the produce of its fish- eries, are heef, pork, lumher, spirits, and flax-seed. Maize, rye, wheat, oats, harley, pcas, heans, huckwheat, potatoes, hops, flax, and hemp are the chief agricultural products. "Great quantities of cider are also made, and fruits and garden vegetables extensively grown, But, notwithstanding, Massachusetts is indehted to the Southern and Western States, especially to New York, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, for hy far the largest portion of her supplies of flour and corn; and to these and the other States she is indebted for cotton, staves, and coal. Beef, pork, hutter, and cheese are of excellent quality, and so abundant as to form a considerable article of export; the western part of the State is especially distinguished for its extensive dairies.


Education, etc .- Great interest is taken in the education of youth, and the educational system of the commonwealth is admi- rahle. The board of education consists of the governor and lieu- tenant-governor, and eight persons appointed hy tho governor with the advice and consent of the council, each to hold office eight years. This hoard has charge of the funds, as well as the general administration of the school laws. It elects its secretary, who is the personal executive of the school law in the State. The school fund is in charge of a hoard of commissioners. A special fund is provided for the Indians of the commonwealth. Teachers are required to undergo an examination hy the town school com- mittees. They receive certificates which must he filed with the selectmen before the opening of school. The Bihlo is required to he read in the schools, but without oral comment. Parents, how- ever, may interposo their conscientious scruples against their children's reading from any particular version. In 1870 a law was passed compelling every parent or guardian, having charge of a youth hetween eiglit and fourteen years old, to send him or her to some public school twelve weeks during each year, Truant officers are chosen to enforce its provisions. The penalty is a fine not exceeding twenty dollars. The schools are open to all with- out distinction of race or color.


Among the other educational institutions is Harvard University, which is the oldest educational institution in the United States, It is heautifully located at Cambridge, three miles from Boston. It was so named in recognition of the liberal endowment of about £700, left hy the will of the Rev. John Harvard, in 1638. It was founded in 1636. It has fourteen university buildings, and a library of ahout 125,000 volumes. Harvard is not only the lead- ing educational institution in America, but it ranks high among the best of its kind in tho world. It is modeled rather after the system of the German than of the English universities, aud in addition to its numerous faculty there are regular lectures upon almost every hranch of knowledge, The curriculum is compre- hensive and liheral, and adapted to the most technical or most liberal education. Williams College, Williamstown; Boston Col- lege, Boston; Tuft's College, Medford; College of the Holy Cross, Worcester; Amherst College, Amherst; New England


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