USA > Michigan > St Clair County > History of the St. Clair County, Michigan, containing an account of its settlement, growth, development and resources.. > Part 106
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 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127 | Part 128 | Part 129 | Part 130 | Part 131 | Part 132 | Part 133 | Part 134 | Part 135 | Part 136 | Part 137 | Part 138 | Part 139
The first patentees of land in Township 5 north, Range 16 east, were Hartford Tingley, Sections 9, 10, 4; James Kennelly, Asa Gilbert, Section 9 (1825); H. R. Jerome, Sections 15, 22; Oliver W. Miller, Sections 15, 26, 27 (1826); Thomas Palmer, Section 27, (1827); David James and William Meldrum, P. C. Nos. 305, 306. 307, of 640 acres each claim, 180S. The land purchasers in the different sections from 1827 to the close of 1836, are names as follows: Section 1-Charles A. Cook, Henry Dwight, Chester Carleton. H. H. Graves, Cummings San- born, Samuel Hutchins, Abner Coburn, Franklin Moore, Reuben Moore, William H. Carleton. Section 2-James Byrne, Sr., H. R. Jerome, Abner Coburn. Section 3-J. M. Wilson, A. Coburn. Section 4-F. Wilcox, H. Chamberlain, N. Gilbert, Daniel Stewart, Hiram Ensign, A. Ceburn. Section 5-John S. Kimball, James Ogden, E. Smith, P. Blodgett, Benjamin Bissell, J. M. Wilson, F. Moore, R. Moore, C. Baxter, W. Steel, William Sweat, Joseph C. Cox. Section 6-Ira Porter, John Starkweather, R. & F. Moore, Blodgett, Bissell, and Smith. Section 7-H. B. Seymour, Baxter, Steele and Sweat, John Starkweather, Nathan Godell, Luke Hemingway.
In Township 5 north, Range 16 east. Section 8-F. & R. Moore. Thomas Palmer, George A. O. Keefe, Cyrus Moore, David F. Kimball, R. H. Waller. Section 9-Andrew J. Palmer, James Byrne, Harman Chamberlain. Dan Stewart, Abner Coburn. Section 10 -- Reed Jerome, H. R. Jerome, Everett Beardsley, J. M. Wilson, A. Coburn. Section 11-Eliza S. Gillett, J. M. Wilson, F. and R. Moore, A. Coburn. Section 12-J. S. Kimball, William H.
639
HISTORY OF ST. CLAIR COUNTY.
Carleton (1835). F. Moore, A. Coburn. Section 13-14-James MeClanan. Section 15-(. W. Miller, H. R. Jerome, Curtis Emerson, Otis W. Norton, James Halpine, James Dongal. Seetion 17 -- AAndrew JJ. Palmer, Luther Brown, N. H. Park, Charles Spoor, Baxter, Steele, and Sweat, Dan Lockwood, James McClannan. Section 18 -- Pendleton Ogden, Joseph Coffin, William Cox, Gideon Cox, Ed. Fay. Section 19-Chester Loomis, O. W. Norton, R. Bell (1837), Duthan Northrop ( 18IS). Section 20 -- Thomas Palmer and James McClanan. Sec- tion 21-Fred. J. Clute, John O'Connor, Benjamin Avery, James MeClanan. Section 22- H. R. Jerome, O. W. Miller, John O'Connor, James McClanan. Section 23-Daniel Lock- wood, James McClanan. Section 24-Henry B. Turner, Francis Thibault, F. Moore, R. Moore, Benjamin S. Hammond. Levi Beardsley and George Palmer. Section 25-Sargeant Heath, Clark & Warren. Sam D. Woodworth. Elijah J. Roberts. Thomas Barber, Jr., Nelson Barber, Tabor Beebe. Seetion 26-0. W. Miller, Clark and Warren, D. Lockwood, J. Me- Clanan. Section 27-Thomas Palmer, Nelson Tomlinson. Eben C. Holt. O. W. Miller. Sec- tion 28-William A. Pattin. Jesse H. Foster, Samuel W. Green. Section 29 -- James Me- Clanan. Section 30-Benaiah Barney (1837). This section was purchased between 1848 and 1860. Section 31-W. T. Westbrook, Baxter, Steele and Sweat, George Hasmer. Section 32 -- John Fitts, Thomas Palmer, Baxter, Steele and Sweat. Seetion 33-John Fitts, Benja- min F. H. Witherell, T. Palmer, Washington A. Bacon, Baxter, Steele and Sweat. Section 34-Nelson Tomlinson, Roswell Keeler, J. A. Van Dyke, Hepburn McClure, James Witherell, and Jesse H. Foster. Section 35-John Winder, Clark and Warren, the latter also made a purchase of 19 acres on Section 36, in February, 1836.
In Township 5 north, Range 17 east. Section 6-J. Henderson, P. Brakeman, Soloman Yaran (1832), Andrew Maek (1835). Section 7-Israel Carleton, Margaret Moore, Clarke and Warren (1833-36). Section 17 -Jonathan Kearsley, 1824. Section 18-Jean Marie Beaubien. Section 19 -- Rev. Gabriel Richard, J. M. Beaubien, F. Thibault, Alexander St. Barnard Franklin Moore and Reuben Moore. (1835-36). Section 20-Louis St. Barnard. Section 29 -- Rufus Hatch. Section 30-Stephen Maek, Samuel W. Dexter (1824), Everett Beardsley ( 1829), Chester Loomis (1831). There are three P. Claims in Township Nos. 255, 805, and 406, which were granted to the firm of Meldrum & Park in ISOS-12.
Germany is largely represented in the citizenship of the district. The customs and habits of "Fatherland" did not suffer by their passage across the ocean, and consequently are retained in a great degree socially and religiously. Some of the villages or settlements might pass for villages on the banks of the Rhine instead of the St. Clair or its tributaries. Yet an admixt- ure of these people makes a good community, and the district has grown and developed with com- mendable rapidity, as shown by the census of 1880.
It is fair to presume that there were a large number of these settlers, who scattered them- selves about in different parts of the country. Some of them, perhaps, are still living on the lands upon which they filed their claims. which were perfeeted by deeds from the President, and there is no doubt that many others, in a few years, when settlements got too thick for their notions of ease, comfort and freedom, sold out their possessions. "pulled up stakes, " and moved on after the Indians. Others, again, no doubt, paid the debt of nature and found a last rest- ing place near the homes they founded in the wilderness. And thus, one byone, of these, who were well known when they first came, dropped out of sight and out of memory, except the tore prominent ones who were spared to make their mark in their respective neighborhoods, or write their names in the "Old Settlers' record." It is not to be supposed that, in the absence of written records, every one who was here in 1835, nearly half a century ago, can be identi- fied and located by the few survivors of that period. It would be a remarkable memory that could do this - that could keep pace with the changes that years bring in the history of any community, particularly in a pioneer community, many of whom are of a restless, roving, dis- contented nature,
ST. CLAIR CITY.
This city and neighborhood may be justly called the site of the parent settlement of the county; for here the first immigrants pitehed their tents, and here the first improvements, that amounted to anything, were made, and for many years this point was a sort of commercial me-
640
HISTORY OF ST. CLAIR COUNTY.
tropolis or center for the entire adjoining districts. When the pioneers for the first time came to the old camping grounds of the Otchipwes on the bold and imposing bluffs extending along the west bank of the river, they beheld spread out before them to the west, as far as their vision could reach beyond the river, one of nature's most beautiful panoramas; a land to them then denied, which gave promise, through the perfection of its natural resources of a future, that some day would become excellent in every detail of civilization, if not celebrated in the annals of history. That condition, then only so dimly foreshadowed, has at last been realized; scarcely half a century has passed by, and the scenes that then only resounded to the savage cries of wild animals, and the blood-curdling yells of aborigines, now re-echo the piow-boys' whistle, the faithful call of domestic animals, the constant whirl of busy machinery, and the joyous shout of happy school children, or the laborer's voice. It is not much more than half a centary since the wild flowers bloomed in countless profusion and variety on these lands, and civilized man had scarcely invaded the precincts of virgin nature. Now all is changed; the whole country teems with the fruits of peace and industry, and thousand of houses dot the landscape, the dwellings of happy families. What a marvelous transformation is this, and how seem- ingly impossible: yet the country is almost aged already, so precocious has been its develop- ment. Very many of those who began the work of taming the wilderness, and thus gave the first impetus to the steps of infant progress, are now no more. Fortunately for them and their successors, history comes to the rescue and furnishes a mneed of praise, and perpetuates the record of their efforts and achievements for the instruction and entertainment of their pos- terity. When we pause to think of this beautiful country-now completely conquered by the white man's hand, and yielding abundantly the various productions needed to supply the de- mand of his growth-was but a few short years ago only a haunt for wild beasts and the nn- restrained sons of the forest, we can scarcely comprehend the change. Neither can the efforts of those who first invaded the land and turned up the native soil to the sun's mellowing rays be understood by the young of to-day. Only those who have been here from the first, and saw the gradnal progress which the passing years have wrought, can fully realize the change and appreciate the struggles and sufferings of nearly half a century in the past. Then, men here had almost to fight day by day for the barest necessities while they were making homes for themselves and their successors, and paving the way for a future of successful efforts in the work of utilizing nature's resources to supply man's necessities. Of the men who first came here in adventurous youth, but few remain to tell the tales of living in a cabin or lying down to sleep with the canopy of heaven for a covering, and the howls of wolves to disturb their slumbers. All the past seems but a phantom of the mind, a creation of some idle moment when compared with the realities of to-day: yet such is the history of progress and civilization almost every - where: the scenes of the past six decades' growth bere are but a repetition in the main of the vast work of development that has been going on for nearly three hundred years in this coun- try, and that even now is coursing onward through the mighty West. Those who first stuck claim stakes here were the French. Next came the Americans, or Yankees, a restless, advent- urous kind of people, who are ever fond of change and new scenes, and for whom a pioneer life is replete with a certain wild enjoyment. Many of these, disliking the restraints and incum- brances of the older civilization, as the country improves, go on further to the front, and finally end their lives far from the place of beginning, perchance, in a wild. new country. Had they but located permanently somewhere, and let the youth of their families do the advance work, they might have lived to see and enjoy the results of their early efforts. Yet, perhaps it is well that the country is large enough, and life broad enongh, to allow every man at this age to select a place to suit his fancy and convenience, even though his notion may not be pro- ductive of lasting good to himself, or those who may have to depend on him. More than the average number succeeded in life, and transmitted to their children not only the holy prece- dents of honest labor, but the home and wealth which that labor wrung from Time.
The city is handsomely laid out, well up above high water mark, and, with its manufact- nring establishments and business places, is attracting a thrifty population. The population is principally American. It has quite a number of French Canadians and Germans, who are an industrious class of citizens. The city has an advantageous location in many respects, with
041
HISTORY OF ST. CLAIR COUNTY.
remarkable booming and mill privileges. The schools and churches are quite in keeping with the enterprise of the people; one of the largest hotels in the West affords amplo accommodation to the traveler; a well-edited paper gives the local news; while the railroad and river naviga- tion place it within easy distance of the commercial capital of Michigan.
NOMENCLATURE.
The first name given to the settlement at the mouth of Pine River was Palmer, in honor of Thomas Palmer, who platted a portion of private claims 304 and 305, in 1828. Subse- quently its name was changed to St. Clair to perpetuate the name of the American General- Arthur St. Clair, and not that of Patrick Sinclair, of the British Army. Ten years previous to 1828, Arthur St. Clair died, but in the year just given, the people began to realize the value of Washington's deceased friend, and here, on the borders of civilization, both French and Ameri- can settlers joined in naming the location of their homes after one of the soldiers of the Rev- olution; even as the people of the entire connty previously adopted the name from the name of the lake.
One of the first names applied to this lake, was Triketo, on Lac de la Chandiere. Pere Henne- pin called it St. Claro; while in De L'Isle's map of 1700, it is written L. de Ste. Claire. The same geographer in his maps of 1703-18 calls it Lar Ganatchin on Ste. Claire. The present use of the word St. Clair is a barbarism. In recognition of the explorers and as a mark of courtesy we should continue the title which they gave to the lake, and which subsequently was applied to the entire district Ste. Claire. If the name should be anglicized, let the translation be used and the words written St. Clare not St. Clair.
The connection of Gov. St. Clair with the Northwest was highly beneficial. His visits and letters always reduced the savages to peace, and brought confidence to the early American settlers of the State. As the biography of this soklier-statesman must be instructive and interesting to a people who have selected his name as a fitting one for their city. it is thus given:
Arthur St. Clair was born in 1734, and, having entered the army, came to America in 1758. Ile was at the capture of Louisburg and Quebec, and at the latter place caught up the flag dropped by Wolfe, and so distinguished himself as to secure promotion. In 1760, he married at Boston a half-sister of Gov. Bowdoin, and two years later resigned his commission and settled in the Ligonier Valley, Western Pennsylvania. Hle served through the Revolutionary war as one of Washington's most trusted subordinates, and at the close of the war was a delegate to the old Confederation Con- gress, serving as President of that body from February to November. 1787. In February, 1788, he was appointed Governor of the Northwestern Territory, and held the office until November, 1802, when he was removed by President Jefferson. His term in office covered the period of organization of Indian t oubles, and of the intrigues incident to settlement and struggles for political mastery. St. Clair was a pronounced Federalist, and a steadfast friend of Washington and Hamilton, and carly came in contliet with the Western adherents of Jefferson and Madison. The bitterness of the political contest incident to the formation of new States for a time blinded the people to the worth of St. Clair's character and the importance of his work, and he died in poverty in 1818, at the age of eighty-four.
At a later date, a measure of justice was done the stout-hearted old Federalist, who made so courageous a fight against slavery, and who played so conspicuous a part in the formative period following the Revolution. The story of St. Clair's life has been frequently toll, but there is a pathetic side to the history of his carver that the many who have written simply as biographers have not cared to touch upon. At a critical period of the Revolutionary war, he advanced money to recruit soldiers, and at another period, when Governor of the Northwestern Territory. he went security for the Government to the contractor for supplies necessary to carry on a treaty with the Indians. These sums, although approved by the proper authority and pronounced justly due by Congress, were refused payment by the Government on the ground that the statute of limitations had expired. As a consequence of the non-payment of money due him by the Government, St. Clair became finan- cially embarrassed, and his property was sold under the hammer. In referring afterward to the executions which swept away his beautiful home and all his personal property, St. Clair said : " They left me a few books of my classical library and the bust of Paul Jones, which he sent me from Eu- rope, for which I was very grateful." What the old man had done to deserve this treatment the
4 1
642
HISTORY OF ST. CLAIR COUNTY.
record shows. When hostilities broke out between the colonies and the mother country, St. Clair was residing in the Ligonier Valley, happily situated. In 1775, he accompanied the Commissioners appointed by Congress to treat with the Indians at Fort Pitt, and suggested to them an expedition to surprise and capture Detroit with 500 mounted men, which force he proposed to help equip and lead. The Commissioners approved, but Congress hesitated, which was a fatal mistake, for with Detroit in possession, the Indians would undoubtedly have been prevented from joining the British.
St. Clair drew up the resolutions adopted at the first meeting of the patriotic Pennsylvanians, held at Hannastown early after the attack at Lexington, pledging support to the inhabitants of Massachusetts Bay.
It was in these resolutions, adopted on the 16th of May, 1775, that it was declared, " It is therefore become the indispensable duty of every American, of every man who has any public virtue or love for his country, or any bowels for posterity, by every means which God has put in his power, to resist and oppose the execution of it (the system of tyranny and oppression); that for us we will be ready to oppose it with our lives and our fortunes." St. Clair was made Colonel of the Second Pennsylvania Regiment, and marched to Canada to re-enforce the army there. He participated in the battle of Three Rivers, and after that untoward event, says Wilkinson, " by his counsel to Gen. Sullivan at Sorel, he saved the army in Canada." St. Clair was at Ticonderoga until November, 1776, when he was ordered to re-enforce Gen. Washington in New Jersey. Here began the friend- ship between Washington and St. Clair, which continued unabated as long as the former lived. The campaign on the Delaware, during the dark days of the ever-memorable winter of 1776-77, when the surprise of the British at Trenton and the brilliant battle of Princeton electrified the whole country and restored the fortunes of the Americans, claimed his services.
St. Clair's share in these exploits was brilliant, and won him promotion from Brigadier to Major General. Bancroft has denied that St. Clair suggested the strategic movement by which the American Army escaped from the cul de sac at Trenton, and won the victory at Princeton, but it is clearly proved by unquestionable authority. The courage and military skill of St. Clair are brought out prominently, and the important bearing this movement of abandoning untenable fortresses, and moving the forces into the interior, where the troops could obstruct the march of the enemy, had on the successful campaign on the Hudson which resulted in the surrender of Burgoyne, is clearly shown. While the uninformed public were clamoring over this giving up of the northern posts. St. Clair wrote to John Hancock in confident terms: "I have the most sanguine hopes that the prog- ress of the enemy will be checked; and 1 may yet have the satisfaction to experience that by abandoning a post I have eventually saved a State." Nothing in the long public career of St. Clair more clearly establishes his great qualities than his course at and subsequent to the evacuation. He had the courage to perform a public duty at the risk of his reputation, and when Gen. Schuyler, alarmed at the public censure, sought an escape, St. Clair magnanimously assumed all responsibility. Time vindicated him, and he won a place in popular favor next to that enjoyed by Washington and Greene.
In all of the subsequent campaigns of the Revolution, St. Clair participated, and was the trusty friend of Washington, whom he supported against all cabals. Among the papers of this period are plans of campaigns and military movements submitted by St. Clair to Washington at the request of the latter.
The suffering of the army at Valley Forge, the distress and demoralization on every hand during that long struggle of eight years, and the marvelous tact and ability of Washington, which alone made victory possible, are all graphically described. The correspondence here presented between St. Clair and Washington, and President Reed and Robert Morris and other heroes of the Revoln- tion, is of deep interest and of great historical importance.
After the war, St. Clair retired to private life. His large fortune had been spent in the service of the country, and he had now to cast about for means to support his large family.
Iu 1783, he was elected a member of the Council of Censors of Pennsylvania-a novel politi- cal body, unknown in any other State. St. Clair took high rank as a debater, and a plan of govern- ment, here presented, shows that he held wise views of what a republican government should be.
In 1786, St. Clair was elected to Congress, and in the following year was made President of that body, which proved to be the last Continental Congress. It was also distinguished as the Congress which passed the famous ordinance of 1787, which secured to freedom the vast territory
643
HISTORY OF ST. CLAIR COUNTY.
northwest of the River Ohio, of which the [Hinois country and Wisconsin were important parts. Under that ordinance, St. Clair was made Governor of the vast Northwestern Territory. From first to last he was the opponent of slavery, and spoke frequently against its extension. His convictions on the subject are shown in the following extract from a speech delivered at Cincinnati : " What is a Republican ? Is there a single man in all the country that is not a Republican, both in principle and practice, except, perhaps, a few people who wish to introduce negro slavery amongst us, and these chiefly residing in the county of Ross ? [Emigrants from Virginia.] Let them say what they will about Republicans, a man who is willing to entail slavery upon any part of God's creation is no friend to the rational happiness of any, and had he the power, would as readily enslave his neighbors as the poor black that has been torn from his country and friends." St. Clair, as has been said. was, like Washington, and Hamilton, a stanch Federalist. When the star of Adams had set, and Thomas Jefferson, the head of the young Democratie party, became President, an effort was made by the anti-Federalists (known as Republicans) to secure St. Clair's removal. This failed at first. but the political necessity of admitting a new State, and securing thereby more Republican electoral votes, finally accomplished the removal in November. 1802. This very curious political history is here correctly related for the first time. In bringing to light the real facts, the papers of Gov. Worthington, who was one of Mr. JJefferson's Lieutenants, were examined. Worthington wrote the letter to Jefferson, making the formal charges against St. Clair, and in all his course was extremely bitter. The order of removal was forwarded to St. Clair through his Secretary, who was his personal and political enemy. The Governor resented this by writing to James Madison, Seere- tary of State, a letter at once ironieat and severe. But to the people, when requested to become a candidate for Governor of the new State, Ohio, he said, in declining the proffered nomination : " I have received many injuries and been treated with blackest ingratitude. *
* The Governor disdains to revenge the injuries offered to the man." This was a reference to the fact that he had not removed men from office who worked persistently against him.
PIONEER HISTORY.
These beautiful lands were interlaced with silver rivulets that daneed to their own music. Amid these openings-nature's mighty parks-roamed the noble deer ; and over those prairies. which were like so many gorgeous pearls in richest settings, the soft wind played.
The first day of a pioneer family can well be pictured. It was in the season of the year when frosty nights were succeeded by sunny days ; when the crows crept into the woods as if they felt approaching May. The kittens ran around the cabin, and chased each other up the trees ; and the dog wandered along the riverside. for reasons best known to himself. The woodpecker tapped his drowsy music on the decayed trunks; the turkey peered from behind the roots of the upturned trees, where she had been waiting so long to hail the blessed warmth, and inquired, " What busi- ness have you here?" The squirrel pushed his nose out of the door of his castle, and, after looking cautiously at the intruders, threw his tail over his back, and, with an angry chirrup. trotted to the nearest stump ; and then. as the sunbeams pierced through the tangled woods, the blue-bird burst forth into a note of song. tuned the strings of her harp to the coming summer, and inquired when gentle May was coming, with her musie and her flowers.
"There are threads of beauty that pervade every household, wherever it may be, and whatever may be its lot. There are always pleasant thoughts, kind words and happy remembrances flying to and fro. How must the hearts of this family have rejoiced when, as the long shadows of evening were stretching over the landscape, some traveler, in his Kentucky-jeans coat and stoga boots, alighted from his shaggy old horse, and asked entertainment for the night. They looked upon it as a sort of angel-visit ; each one strived to outstrip others in acts of hospitality ; and though they could not otler him the luxuries of life, he soon felt that he was welcome to anything they had. The old fire- place, if it was winter, was soon piled with logs up to the very throat. and shook its shadows around the room in defiance of the winds that roared withont. If the traveler happened to have a paper a month old, their joy was at its height and the younger members of the family ransacked its columns with the greatest delight.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.