USA > Massachusetts > Franklin County > Deerfield > History of Deerfield, Massachusetts: the times when the people by whom it was settled, unsettled and resettled, vol 1 > Part 50
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At the above meeting of the "Inhabitants of Pocumtuck" on March 3d, 1718, the following action was taken respecting the Green River settlement, and it was confirmed by the Pro- prietors, March 20th :-
Whereas there hath been formerly several grants of land unto par- ticular persons upon ye Green River, and no place mentioned where it shall be laid out, we do therefore propose that Jeremiah Hull, Sam- uel Smead, William Brooks, Joseph Goddard, Robert Goddard, John Severance, John Allyn, Edward Allyn, Benoni Moore, Joseph Petty, Peter Evans, Michael Mitchell, Ebenezer Severance, Martin Kel- logg and Zebediah Williams Shall have their grants laid out begin- ning at or near ye brook called Brooks Brook, runing from ye Green River westwardly to ye swamp, and so in breadth to make up their compliment, that a Committee be chosen to lay out sª grants, and ye Rest of ye grants shall be laid out above and below ye abovsd Brook, as near as the Committee can to ye place where ye abovsd men pre- tend it should be, and ye aforsª Committee shall view and lay out a suitable quantity of ye lands adjacent to ye above alotments for Com- monage, and yt ye abovesd Grantees shall have their proportion of it with the rest of the proprietors according to the quantity of their abovsd grants of sª commonage, always provided that ye abovsd Grantees Doe Relinquish and throw up, and quit claim, to all former grants of land to them from ye Town upon sª Green River; further we propose that they themselves or some meet persons on their Be- half (whome the Towns men shall accept) shall within two years after ye Date herof, Build each man a Mansion house upon their house lots upon ye spot called the Town plat, and that they shall live upon sª lands 3 years after they have Built thereon, but if ye wars
500
POCUMTUCK PROPRIETORS. GRANT OF 1712.
shall drive them off before sd term be up they shall have five years after sd wars to make good their title.
Provided also, that ye abovsª Grantees Doe (together with these men that shall have lands laid out on ye west side of Green River) from time to time forever make and maintain a sufficient fence which shall prevent all creatures from passing to ye west side of ye Green River.
[At the Proprietors' meeting, March 20, 1718, ] It was granted that those men that have had grants of Lands upon the Green River shall out of the lands that shall be laid out or set apart for Common- age near to sd grants on Green River: draw for a twenty-acre right equal with four Common rights in the eight thousand acres and so proportionally to a greater grant.
The house and meadow lots each had six cow-commons, and each drew ninety-one acres of adjoining common land. On this basis the " Proprietors of the Commonfield " in Green- field were organized. They will be noticed hereafter.
March 26th, 1719, Samuel Smead recites in a petition to the Proprietors that he had forfeited a home lot and twenty acres granted him in 1686, and that he is "not very well able to perform" the conditions of the renewal of 1718, and asks the Proprietors to "Consider my Sircumstances and grant me twenty acres of land and home lot without any other condi- tion than that I make and maintain fence as others do."
This petition was granted ; and on the same condition Isaac Mattoon, Thomas Wells and Samuel Childs were each grant- ed twenty acres on Green river "without any commodities," and Thomas Wells, another twenty-acre tract, and a home lot for " sarvis in getting your bounds confirmed," on condi- tion he build, and live three years, on his house lot.
May 19th, 1719, voted that the "Proprietors' measurers should lay out a high way up the Green River to the Country farms."
May 9th, 1720, " The Proprietors agreed and voted that par- cel of Land lying upon Green River, already laid out, and that which shall be judged suitable for improvement be brought into a Common field and fenced according to each man's propriety." The owners of this tract of land became a distinct organization, with its own officers, and raised mon- ey on its own rate list by rights or shares. Their book of rec- ords was recently, and probably is still, in existence, contain- ing entries down to a recent period.
At the same May meeting a committee was chosen " to sell
501
GREENFIELD MEADOWS.
to Joseph Atherton a tract or tracts of land on Green River, to ye value of fifty pounds and to receive ye money for the propriety."
During Father Rasle's War nothing more was done towards settling Greenfield, but March 27th, 1727, the committee ap- pointed in 1718, reported in relation to the lands on Green River,-
Yt ye sª Lots be Settled and Returned after the following method : William Brooks ye first lot, bounded on Quintin Stockwell south, [the lot granted him in 1683, for boarding Mr. Mather, the minis- ter] abutting on ye west Line of ye township as Returned upon the Gen. Court Records, to wit: of ye contents of seven mile square [the seven-mile line] extending easterly 128 Rods.
acres. width. length.
I. William Brooks,
20
25
I28
2. Jno. Severance, abutting on sd line west,
IO
121/2
I28
3. Jeremiah Hull, Same
IO
1212 I28
4. Robard Goddard,
IO
121/2
I28
5. Joseph Goddard,
IO
121/2
I28
6. Jno. Allen,
IO
1212
I28
7. Edward Allen,
IO
1212
I28
8. Benoni Moore, abutting on Green River East running Westerly 128 rods,
15
1834
I28
9. Joseph Petty, Same
15
1834
I28
IO. Peter Evans,
I5
1834
I28
II. Michael Mitchell,
15
1834
I28
12. Samuel Smead,
20
25
128
Northward of Samuel Smead, twenty-acre lots were laid out successively to Isaac Mattoon, Thomas Wells and Samuel Childs, each lot being twenty-six rods, eleven feet wide, and running from Green River one hundred and twenty rods west. By a subsequent vote the holders of the lots from one to sev- en in the Upper Division, then called " Brooks Plain," were allowed to extend their lots westward, over the seven-mile line, probably to take in all the flat land to the foot of the Shelburne mountain.
I. In ye Lower Division ye first Lot to Jno Severance, bounded on land of Joseph Atherton, north, abutting on Green
River east, Running westerly 100 rods
IO
16
100
2. Jeremiah Hull,
Running westerly 100 rods
IO
16
100
3. Robard Goddard,
IO
16
100
4. Joseph Goddard,
..
..
IO
I6 100
6. Edward Allen,
IO
16
100
7. Ebenezer Severance,
30
43
8. Martin Kellogg,
96
30
50
96
9. Zebadiah Williams,
92 1/2
30
52
92 12
IO. Benony Moore,
80
15
31
So
II. Joseph Petty,
I5
31
So
12. Peter Evans,
15
31
80
13. Michael Mitchell,
I5
3I
80
..
IO
16
100
5. Jno Allen,
502
POCUMTUCK PROPRIETORS. GRANT OF 1712.
Ye List of names with ye buts and bounds of their Lots, together with ye number and order of sd lots as set forth in ye above written List shall be entered on Record for Standing buts & bounds to sd Lots.
The numbers of the Upper Division began at "Brooks' Brook," on a twenty-acre lot granted Quintin Stockwell in 1683, and ran north. Below Stockwell lay the land bought of the Proprietors in 1719 by Joseph Atherton, and from his lot the numbering of the Lower Division began and ran southward.
At a meeting of the Proprietors, May 7th, 1723, it was vot- ed to " Lay out to the Proprietors a tract of Land lying upon Green River, bounded north on the Country Farms, westerly on the Ridge of hill west of Green River, Running Eastward so far as the Land is Platted, and bound south against a Pine tree at the North east corner of Samuel Childs' Land." Lots were cast for drawing. The lines were to run east and west. The tract laid out under the vote was about four hundred and fifty rods north and south by two hundred in width, and contained five hundred and fifty acres. The lots varied in width from one rod one foot and five inches, to sixty-four rods, and in area, from one acre and ninety rods, to eighty- three acres and seventy-one rods. No. I was at the north end of the plot. The report of the committee which laid out the land was acted upon March 21st, 1726.
At this date, the following parties each held by grant a home lot on Green River street, now Main street, Greenfield, and twenty acres in the Meadows: Edward and John Allen, heirs of William Brooks, (three sons, Ebenezer, Nathaniel and Joseph,) Joseph and Robert Goddard, Jeremiah Hull's heirs, Peter Plympton's heirs, John Severance, Samuel Smead, Ebenezer Wells, Thomas Wells.
Others holding meadow lots, without accompanying home lots, were Samuel Childs, Isaac Mattoon and Thomas Wells, each twenty acres; Peter Evans, Martin Kellogg, Michael Mitchell, Benoni Moore, Joseph Petty and heirs of Zebediah Williams, each held thirty acres. David Hoyt held a home lot, and Joseph Atherton a large tract in the meadow by purchase.
March 29th, 1736, voted to divide "part or the whole of the undivided land north of Cheapside and east of Green River"
503
CHOICE PITCH LOTS.
at the rate of eight acres to the common. A new method for division was adopted, which was by choice pitch. There were fifty-nine Proprietors. Lots were cast for precedence. He that drew No. I had the right to take his pitch or allotment -not to exceed ten commons in a body-in any place within the division he might choose. No. 2 had the second choice, and so on to No. 59. Then a double corner was turned, and No. 59 had the first pitch in a second division, No. 58 the second, and so on. Each proprietor had one day in which to select his lot or lots in each division. No. I began April 22d, No. 2, April 23d, and so on, excepting Sundays, for fifty-nine days. "If by reason of wet weather, any one shall be pre- vented from Laying out his land on his own Day, voted that his putting in a pitch in wrighting to the Com'tee shall se- cure it to him." A committee of twenty was chosen to lay out the choice lots. An accurate survey and plan of each lot, signed by at least three of them, was necessary to give a ti- tle, the plan and description to be spread upon the Proprie- tors' book of records. These plans are an interesting study. While in the early chosen lots right angles are not uncom- mon, in the second division it was sometimes necessary to box the compass several times to get angles enough to out- line the pitch.
A tax of sixpence on a common was laid to defray the ex- penses of the Proprietors. Assessors, a collector and a com- mittee on accounts were chosen. A committee of six was chosen to lay out what highways they think necessary before any allotments be made. But one road was returned for rec- ord. That began "at Green River Street at ye west side of Samuel Dickinson's Lot running along by said lot, and is laid out ten rods wide." It ran northerly, crossed Mill Brook Falls at four hundred and sixteen rods, struck the " Edge of yeHill," at 1046 rods, ran eighty-eight rods by the " Edge of ye Hill," thence "North 33° east through ye bounds."
In pitching lots there was wide scattering. Jonathan Wells, No. 1, pitched his eighty-acre lot adjoining Samuel Dickinson's home lot. Judah Wright, No. 2, pitched his for- ty acres in "Grave Brook Swamp." Mehuman Hinsdale, No. 3, eighty acres on Green River, bounded north on the "Country Farm Lots." Samuel Barnard, No. 4, eighty acres "on Connecticut River, in the first intervale above Millers
504 POCUMTUCK PROPRIETORS. SHELBURNE LAID OUT.
Falls." Nos. 8 and 9 were laid out on Woodward's Brook. Nos. 12 and 13 were laid out on the Connecticut River "in ye Nook of ye Falls." As several of the Proprietors had more than ten cow-commons, there were in all ninety-three lots laid out. Edward Allen drew No. 91 in the first draft, and of course was No. 3 in the second draft. He pitched both lots, containing one hundred and thirty-seven acres, together, "joining to the country farm, and encompassing ye Otter Pond." This was the farm on which the Gill branch of the Allen family settled.
The surveyors who laid out the choice lots were Elijah Williams, John Catlin, Thomas Wells and Timothy Childs.
It must have been in the northeast part of Gill that Joseph Severance and John Arms secured by an arrangement with the Proprietors in 1723, a large tract, bounded "On the Great River East'ly, on ye road to Northfield West'ly, on a Brook at ye North end of fall hill North'ly, and so Extending one Mile and one-half Southwardly."
Joseph Brooks had taken possession of a lot of land with- out warrant, "near the head of Millers Falls in Deerfield," and for several years attempts were made by the Proprietors, with the aid of "the best Councell they can get," to eject him. He was finally dispossessed of the land about 1739. Several parties were prosecuted by the Proprietors about this time for cutting wood and timber on the commons.
Shelburne Laid Out. In 1742, the north half of the " Addi- tional Grant," now Shelburne, was divided " to each proprie- tor according to his Interest by Commons in sª Land." The tract was laid out into eight tiers of lots, each two hundred rods wide, except the seventh, which was two hundred and twenty-eight ; and cut into two divisions by a ten-rod road east and west across the middle. A six-rod road was laid on the north side, and another along the seven-mile line. Paral- lel to the latter, roads ten rods wide were laid between 2d and 3d, the 4th and 5th, the 6th and 7th, and one of six rods between the 7th and 8th tiers; so that every lot should front on a road east or west. Thirteen acres were allowed to a common, in each division, and proprietors might divide their commons into as many parts as they chose. The number of lots settled upon in each division was eighty. The number- ing in each case began at the southeast corner and ran across
505
HOOSAC AND WISDOM LAID OUT.
the tiers from left to right and right to left throughout, the last number being at the southwest corner of each division. At the south end of the fifth tier, in the north division, a lot of one hundred acres was reserved for the Proprietors; and one of one hundred and fifteen acres, made up of contribu- tions by individuals, was allotted Rev. Jonathan Ashley, the minister, in the south division. This drew No. 5, and the land is probably the same now held by his descendant, at the "Old World." The extension over the seven-mile line west- ward of the grants on Green River, and "the Division at the Country farm" made trouble and extra work for the com- mittee of eleven who had the matter in charge. A tax of "eighteen pence old Tenor" was laid on each common to de- fray expenses.
Petty's Plain, Wisdom Hills and Hoosac. In 1743 another division of land was made. The tract divided covers Petty's Plain and Wisdom above the meadows, and Hoosac to the Long Hill wood lots, and is described on the records as "all the ungranted and undivided Land lying between the Divis- ion of Land up the Long Hill on the South, and the west line of the Seven Miles Square on the West, and the Divided and Granted lands on the Green River on ye North, and on the Divided and Granted land, and on ye Country Road on ye East." A committee of nine was chosen to survey the tract, lay out all grants that had been made in it, and devise a plan for division. They reported Oct. 7th, 1743, that they "had taken a survey of ye Lands and drawne the plans, and find the whole contents to be 5569 acres, including the Grants that are made in said lands, and are of opinion that there may be seven and one quarter acres laid out to each common, and that it would be best to lay it out in two Divisions. That part of the land lying south of Deerfield River to be laid in two tear of lots running east and west, the first tear to begin at the South end of the plan and Extend itself from the Coun- try Road Two Hundred and Eighty Rods west, and then run north by the needle to Deerfield River. The Land over the river to be divided into two tear of lots until it comes to the south side of Petties Plain, and then be divided into three tear, until it come to the Green River land, and from there one tear until it come to the North end of the Land to be divided. The West tear on the North side of Deerfield Riv-
506
POCUMTUCK PROPRIETORS. SHELBURNE LAID OUT.
er, as also the middle tear to be 200 rods in length, easterly and westerly, and on the South side of the river, what Re- mains after the first tear is taken off." Three and a quarter acres were laid to the common in the first division, and four in the second.
Owing to the difficulty of having straight roads, none were laid out, but privilege of crossing each other's lots was re- served. The first division began "at the South East Corner of the Land by the Long Hill Lots [on wood lot of Thomas French] by the Country Road, and so take that tear of lots that is next the meadow, until that tear comes to the South End of the Middle tear on Petties Plain, and then take the middle tear until that be ended, then to begin at the South End of the East tear on Petties Plain, and proceed to the North End thereof." The second division began at the Green River lands and ran along the seven-mile line to the Long Hill wood lots. These tracts were afterwards known in records and deeds as the "First" and "Second Divisions of Inner Commons." The lines of division between the lots north of Deerfield River, all ran "West, nineteen degrees north."
As being of interest to holders of land on the tract, the re- sult of the drawing will be given. The numbering began at the south end of the first division and the north end of the second. The first column of figures in the table below shows the numbering of lots in the first division, the second the aeres, omitting fractions, the third the numbering of the lots in the second division, the fourth, the acreage :-
Nos.
Proprietors,
Acres.
Nos.
Acres.
I Samuel Bardwell,
43
12
56
2 Judah Wright,
13
45
17
3 Samuel Hinsdale,
II2
13
138
4 Ebenezer Williams,
IO
5
12
5 Joseph Severance,
41
48
50
6 Ebenezer Smead,
81
28
100
7
William Arms,
39
41
47
8
Thomas French,
50
42
62
9
Samuel Dickinson.
40
43
50
10
John Nims,
49
3
60
II
John Arms,
55
46
68
12
Samuel Smead, -
9
37
14
Mary Wells,
30
19
37
15 Daniel Arms,
75
7
94
16 Thomas Wells, 2d,
97
31
120
17
Daniel Belden,
22
32
27
18
Joseph Atherton,
IS
50
22
36 )
12
13
Sarah Smead,
507
THE STANDING COMMITTEE.
Nos. Proprietors.
Acres.
Nos,
Acres.
19 John Catlin,
32
53
36
20 Michael Mitchell,
6
54
8
21 John Hinsdale,
112
33
I38
22 John Stebbins,
75
II
93
23
Warham Williams,
14
17
15
2.4
Timothy Childs, 1
43
20 }
9
25
Stephen Williams, S
7
21
35
26
Joseph Clesson,
7
38
16
28
Ebenezer Wells,
31
56
38
29
Jonathan Wells, Esq., & Jonathan Wells, 2d, 91
44
I12
30 John Sheldon,
33
16
40
31
Elijah Williams,
34
27
42
32
Othniel
33 John Taylor,
37
9
45
34
Jonathan
10
35
Joshua Wells,
7
39
8
36
Ebenezer Sheldon,
41
23
51
37
Ebenezer Nims,
1.1
29
17
38
Obadiah & Nathaniel Frary,
33
47
40
39
Benjamin Munn,
49
30
60
40
Samuel Field,
IO
55
12
41
John Catlin, 2d,
33
35
40
42
John Amsden's heirs,
IO
6
12
43
Edward Allen,
27
22
5
45
Aaron Deniour,
7
2
S
46
Capt. Thomas Wells, Esq.,
151
34
187
47
Capt. Samuel Barnard,
146
49
178
48
James Corse,
7
51
S
49
Jonathan Hoit,
52
40
64
50
Dea. Samuel Childs,
26
4
35
51
Eleaser
24
52
Nathaniel & Hawks,
93
25
I13
53
John
26 )
54
Ebenezer Hinsdale,
137
15 & 52
155
55
Thomas Bardwell,
9
I
II
56 Samuel Belden,
IS
1.4
23
March 19th, 1747, the Proprietors voted to lease for five years the undivided land east of Sugar Loaf, to be sowed with wheat or rye.
Dec. 12th, 1748, four men were added to the "Standing Committee." The functions of this body are nowhere de- fined. They probably had a general oversight of the Pro- prietors' affairs, and transacted much business not on record. One case appears: In 1749, the heirs of "Mary Howard, alias Mary Judson," an original proprietor in the Dedham Grant, presented a claim to the undivided land belonging to her eleven cow-commons. The Standing Committee heard the evidence, and found the claim just, and it was allowed. Soon after a committee was chosen to "Search and Collect any Papers that belong to the Propriety, & Lodge them in ye Clerk's Office ;" and another committee chosen to run the seven-mile line.
51
44
Samuel Allen,
19 S
S
27
Jacob Warner,
13
508
POCUMTUCK PROPRIETORS. CONWAY LAID OUT.
March 19th, 1749, a committee to examine the state of the treasury, reported that they found "in the Treasurer's hands thirty-nine bushells three quarts & } a pint of wheat & a Bond payable June 1, 1750, for £119 8s, Old Tenor."
April 30th, 1750, a committee chosen to run the lines of the twenty-acre lots on Green River report that the dividing lines should run "East 21° 30'South," although they had been thought to "Run East but 20° South."
Town Sheep Pasture. Dec. 14th, 1753 "Voted that all ye Proprietors' Land Lying East of ye Country Road to Hatfield, south of Nathan Frary's Land be Sequestered for ye use of ye Town as a sheep pasture, for ten years; Reserving all timber on it not necessary for fencing it." A shepherd to have charge of the flock, was chosen by the town, but paid by the owners of the sheep, pro rata.
This pasture was an extensive tract of land about the Sugar Loaf range, and according to the custom in Old England, a turnip yard was established in connection. This enclosure became a permanent land mark, and when school districts were established by the town, the territory thereabout was named the Turnip Yard District. A sickly sentimentality, from which intelligent people are now happily revolting, has endeavored to change this characteristic and historic desig- nation of Turnip Yard to the stale and commonplace name of Hillside. Some of our foreign population change the i in the first syllable to e, and many ungodly natives are strongly tempted to do the same. If a descriptive, topographical name must be given, Hillridge, or Ridgepole, would be more ap- propriate to the locality.
Conway. Dec. 10th, 1750, "Voted to divide ye South half of ye West Additional Grant"-now Conway-and a com- mittee was chosen to "take a view" of the tract, and run and mark lines two hundred rods apart, "to run South 19° West."
Dec. 14th, 1753, John Blackmer was granted ten acres "in- cluding a place for a inill just before the crotch of South River," provided he can prove a right to as much as one common. Agents were chosen to prosecute trespassers on the commons, but proprietors were allowed to cut as much tim- ber as they would for their own use in building or fencing.
April 21st, 1760, a committee was chosen to run the nine-
509
FINALLY DIVIDED.
mile line, and establish the Ashfield bounds, the line against Hatfield, and mark the south line of Shelburne grants.
Ten years had now elapsed since the vote to divide the Conway land, and now, June 16th, measures were taken to lay it out to individuals. It was to be cut into seven tiers of 200 rods, each parallel to the nine-mile line, and an eighth tier, taking what was left to the seven-mile line, with four inter- secting roads. The next day lots were cast for the draft. But the last French War was still raging, and nothing further ap- pears to have been done towards effecting a settlement. The proprietors, most of whom lived in Deerfield, had land enough and to spare, and many of them sold out to speculators, or men desirous of settling on the territory. In 1763, the whole tract was in the hands of forty parties or estates, and more than one-half of this was held by seven men.
On the conquest of Canada the times were ripe for a change. The giant oak, the towering pine, the sombre hem- lock, which had for long ages held sway over the hills and valleys of Conway, were now to be crowded off by the slen- der, pushing grass, and the shining grain. In 1763, the ter- ritory was surveyed and alloted to the owners in severalty. The plan of 1760 was dropped, and it was laid in seven tiers, parallel to the nine-mile line; six of them, 240 rods deep; the seventh, lying on the seven-mile line, 150 rods. Thirty acres were laid to the common, and only five commons were to be laid in a body, except to accommodate small fractions. Prob- ably no lot was smaller than seventy-five acres. One hundred acres were reserved near the center for the " Minister's Lot." With these arrangements, there were drawn one hundred and forty-one lots. Of these, one hundred and two were 150- acre lots. The following table gives the ownership, the num- ber of the lots drawn and the acreage, the latter only approx- imately accurate :---
Owner.
Commons. Acres. Rods.
Nos. of the lots. Acreage.
Allen, Samuel
2
TO
40
15
S7
Arms, Consider
58
IO
37
IO-II-20-23-47-48-52
1767
56-90-100-118-134
125
12S
William
9
II
80
295
Atherton, Joseph's heirs
5
7
80
167
Baker, Noah
49
I3
2.4
2-46-51-70-71-1OI
1495
Bardwell, Thomas
4
IO
I2
S
142
Barnard, Joseph
5
O
0
29
150
Thomas & Jona
4
2
156
45-123 83
107-108-133-137
510 .
POCUMTUCK PROPRIETORS. CONWAY LAID OUT.
Owner.
Commons. Acres. Rods.
Nos. of the lots. Acreage.
Barnard, Samuel's heirs 44
5 91
21-24-42-67-72-81 1337
97-129-135
Belding, Samuel
5
8
120
119 167
Burt, David,
IS
O
0
53-92-94-98
540
Catlin, Joseph & Seth
51
2
18
64-68-80-99-103-110-III
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