History of the town of Elma, Erie County, N.Y. : 1620 to 1901, Part 1

Author: Jackman, Warren
Publication date: 1902
Publisher: Buffalo : Printed by G.M. Hausauer & Son
Number of Pages: 344


USA > New York > Erie County > Elma > History of the town of Elma, Erie County, N.Y. : 1620 to 1901 > Part 1


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.


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


HISTORY


OF


ELMA N. Y.


Transit Road


101


96


91


Smelthe Road


102


97


92


86


NOS


Clinton


Street


Blossom


52


82


77€


72


67


3.4. 57 NOT ELMA


4


53


Kneab Road


68


63


Chair


83


75


73


Yee


69


64


54


4


59


10


N 89


84


Bullis


F


90


85


do 0 M.N.Y.


75


70


65


60


55


106 0 100


Blossom


95 station


OLD


TOWIN


LINE BETWEEN AURORA A!


$96


90


83


Pound


80


74


69


65


60 5


56


97


91


Rice


Sa


98


S. D H.


75


70


6 6


6%


57


53


49


99


P. O.


86


82


Kinsler Road


76


67 .9


62


518


54


50


92


87


101


93


77


A


Conley Road


Jamison


Road


102


88


72


79


59


55


U


2


95


89


North Star


Road


Northrup!


faz


34


30


25


Plank


24


23


18


Blood


7


Paxon 36 Road


3 3


3 /


M


Nº 5


25


22


19


28


Billington


Bild


37


32


26


21


2.0


AL


104


98


93


Winspear Road


Road


Part of Ebenezer


5.000 atre traet.


Road 9


99


94


R


Pond


SENECA.


ELMA


P. O. O


WEST


TranSt


85 Road


N210


81


71


BROOK.


Allroxa


R


68


HAMBURGH .


100


Northrup


creek


Bowen


Road


78


73


64


0


8. H


:


EAST


MAP of the TOWN LANCASTER.


6156514


81


76


71


66


63


Nº 6


et station.


NTRE


52


48


SPRING


Road


.R. P


Croaked


40018


94


35


Road.


62


5


standart


of ELMA.


TOWN Line Road


1 41


36


31


26


19


13


9


5


Road


Road.


42


37


32


27


20


43


35 acthyl


33 Rob


28


44


39


34


29


22


15- ..


11


Crea


3


16


ad


Nº2


45


40


35


24


17


12


8


4


25


18


LANCASTER.


13


20


400


36


32


280


Road


15


6


Road


22


16


2


Griffin


41


37


33


29


Road 23


17


Road 8


742


38


3 4


3005


24


Road


18


9


3


ART.


25


Do MINY


ASIT


ELMA


MISON 240


RO. O DSH


Distation


26


1


43 0 319,95


31


19


12


get Road


3


17


/12


11


9


Road


Además


7


5


2


16


e


(3


10


8


Riekerison


Road


6


4


1


Bakery Road


N.2 15


14


Salem


IRORA.


14


10


Buffalo


6


2


Marilla Town Line


21


Road


Hill


A


23


S. H.


LuTh/ O Chapter Woodard


or Road


Schultz


Bis But


Thompson


10


MARILLA.


27


Ostranderm


LISWOH


4


Barloo Road


williams


S.H


girdled


1 4


5 Road


30


ROSE


271029


ELMA


-


HISTORY


OF THE


TOWN OF ELMA


ERIE COUNTY, N. Y.


1620 TO 190I


BY WARREN JACKMAN


1


2)


AAAA


BUFFALO: PRINTED BY G. M. HAUSAUER & SON 1902


THE LIBRARY OF GONGRELY,


Two COPIES RECEIVED APR. 16 1902


COPYRIGHT ENTRY Kelly 8-1901 CLASS A XXX No.


12758 COPY B.


Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1901, by WARREN JACKMAN,


ia the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington, D. C.


C


-C


CCCC C


1.502


TO THE PEOPLE OF ELMA


When I commenced to write the History of the Town of Elma, there was no thought of financial compensation, or that it would ever be printed; but to please friends and to secure some records and items that might be helpful to some future writer of history.


I now make to the people of the town of Elma a free gift of the time, thought, study, and labor, which in the last four years have been devoted to gathering the information, arranging the items, and writing this history; trusting that a generous public will not be too severe in criticising the errors and omissions.


Elma, N. Y., Feb., 1902.


WARREN JACKMAN.


DEDICATION


This book is dedicated to James T. Hurd, James A. Woodard, Myron H. Clark and Louis P. Reuther, a Committee on Printing and Finance, who assumed the obligation to pay all bills for print- ing and expenses ; without this generous act on their part the proba- bilities are the History of the Town of Elma would never have been printed.


THE AUTHOR.


INTRODUCTION


Histories of nations and states, and even of some counties and cities are at hand in most of our public and private libraries ; but a history of a town is not often to be found. Why is this? Is it be- cause such a history is not necessary; because of the small area of territory; of the small and scattered population; of the ignorance, poverty, want of enterprise among the people; of the small impor- tance attached to the growth and development of the town, and the events to be mentioned; or is it because no person or persons have been able or willing to devote the necessary time to gather the facts and so arrange them as to make a history? This, last, is most likely the true reason.


Many times within the last twelve or fifteen years I have been entreated by several of my neighbors to write a history of the town of Elma. My reply "that I was not a historian," was met with the statement, "that being one of the early settlers in the town (coming in the spring of 1851), and having surveyed every road and almost every lot in the town, having been the first Town Clerk, after the formation of the town, and continuing as such Clerk for three years, thus becoming acquainted with every man then residing in the town, and having in my possession and within my reach books and papers that no other person in the town had, or could have, that I ought to give this information to the people, in the form of a history of the town of Elma."


After much thought and with many doubts and fears, at seventy- five years of age, being too old to be engaged at continuous hard labor, and thinking this might give employment for a few leisure hours I consented to write one chapter as an experiment; with the agreement that I should read that chapter at a meeting of the "Young People's Association of Elma Village." I thought when that chapter was read they would be satisfied that writing history was not in my line and that would close up the matter.


According to agreement I wrote what is here given as Chapter One, and read it before the Association on the evening of March 18th, 1897; but instead of saying that was enough, I was urged to go on and write a complete history of the town.


So I commenced on Chapter Two, thinking that it would take but a few pages to mention all that would be of interest, as the town had been organized but a few years; but I found that the recording of one incident introduced another that required men-


11


tioning, and that another, and so there grew to be a wider and more extended range of subjects, and so the work has been con- tinued until some of the incidents of the year 1901 are mentioned.


I have consulted, as helps in obtaining facts for this work, his- tories and encyclopedias as to the early settlement of the country, the histories of the Civil War by J. T. Headley and Horace Greeley ; and for other parts of the work, I have used the records in the Erie County Clerk's Office, the Records in the office of the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors of Erie County, N. Y., and of the Town Clerk's office of the town of Elma.


In addition to the above, from my own personal knowledge, (hav- ing kept a diary for many years) and from information obtained by correspondence and from persons who were on the ground and who knew whereof they spoke I have gathered and arranged the facts here presented.


Among the persons who have been consulted and from whom very much valuable information has been obtained, they being, or having been, most of them, residents of the town of Elma, and many of them having been among the first or early settlers of the town, and to whom I am under many obligations, and to whom I hereby tender especial thanks for the help they have rendered, are the following, viz. :


Mr. Chester Adams,


Mr. W. Wesley Standart,


Mr. John Quincy Adams,


Mr. Benjamin F. Stetson,


Mr. Harry Dingman,


Mr. Julius P. Wilder,


Mr. Edwin H. Dingman,


Mr. Thomas D. Williams,


Mr. William H. Davis,


Rev. William Waith,


Mr. John Estabrook,


Mrs. Wm. Baker (nee Lucia A.


Mr. Willard Fairbanks,


Mr. Wallace W. Fones,


Mr. Joseph Grace,


Morris) daughter of David J. Morris, Mrs. Daniel Ronian (nee Betsey


Mr. James J. Grace,


Mr. George W. Hatch,


Mr. Niles Hatch,


Mr. and Mrs. Jos. B. Briggs,


Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo C. Bancroft,


Mr. and Mrs. John Carman,


Mr. and Mrs. Scott Fairbanks,


Mr. Jacob Kock,


Mr. and Mrs. Wm. W. Grace,


Mr. George Leger,


Mr. and Mrs. Clark W. Hurd, Mr. and Mrs. Fowler Munger,


Mrs. Erastus J. Markham, Mr. Eli B. Northrup,


Mr. Stephen Northrup,


Mr. Harvey C. Palmer,


Mr. Christopher Peek,


Mr. John Scott,


Hatch) daughter of Leonard Hatch,


Mr. Conrad P. Hensel,


Mr. Cyrus Hurd,


Mr. Harry Jones,


Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Tillou, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Eron Woodard,


Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Young.


12


While I have been able to obtain much information from the above mentioned sources, there have been many incidents and conditions in the town of Elma within the last 70 years which would be of much interest to particular individuals and communities, and which would make large additions to this history could they have been obtained; but it was practically impossible for me to personally see and interview every person or family in the town and to thus obtain these items, so I have been obliged to omit that part which, however, may be written by some historian in later years.


Some may say that there is much that is no part of, and has nothing to do with the town of Elma; while admitting that these parts may not be absolutely necessary, there is such a strong con- necting link, that I thought it would make the whole chain more complete. It may be said that to some parts of the town more space is given, more items and incidents are mentioned than to other portions. To a certain extent this may be true, as in some parts of the town information was more readily given; and as great changes have been made in the resident population of the town, it was, in some places impossible to obtain the desired items, or to obtain correct and reliable information on the points desired.


In the History more than 8,000 times are individuals, places, sub- jects, and incidents mentioned, each having required from ten minutes to five or six hours of time.


When I first consented to commence this work had I realized the amount of time, labor and thought that would be required to obtain and arrange the items, and write the History, it is very likely that the Lion in the way would have appeared so large and terrible that I would have never begun the work; but I have always found the Lion securely chained, and the way open for my escape.


I have learned that the hardest thing to find in this world is exact truth; especially is this the case when the investigation has reference to incidents of past time; to the time whose actors are dead, and whose direct testimony cannot be obtained. To deal with these questions, and to get the truth when the opinions of the living conflict, becomes to the writer of history a matter of no small moment, and requires much thought and labor.


Perfection in the works of man being so exceedingly rare, and because of the inability to obtain at times the desired information, I cannot claim that this History in all its parts, is entirely perfect. That there may be found slight inaccuracies, and what some will say are errors or mistakes, is more than probable; but with the light, knowledge and help that has been within my reach, I have tried to reduce these to the lowest possible limit.


13


PLAN OF THE HISTORICAL PART


The first settlement in the town having been made on the Mile Strip (see Map), followed by settlements at East Elma and vicinity, at Elma Village and vicinity, and at Spring Brook and vicinity, a chapter has been devoted to each of these places from the date of settlement to the time the town was formed, December 4th, 1856; from that date the whole town is carried along together, year by year, to the close of the year 1900: my thought being to close the historical part with that date, but later I decided to add some of the incidents of the year 1901 in the town as an Appendix.


See table of contents for the subject matter and page of each Chapter.


Mention of any person, place or event can be readily found by the Index in the last part of the book.


WARREN JACKMAN.


14


CONTENTS


CHAP. PAGE.


1 Geography of the Town of Elma. 17


2 North American Indians. Five Nations 22


3 Rights and Jurisdiction of Nations 37


4 State Jurisdiction-Counties of New York 56


5 Looking Backwards 65


6 Western New York in 1797 and 1900- Settlement of Mile Strip in Elma 75


7 Estabrook Mill and Vicinity


87


8 East Elma 1837 to 1856. 96


9 Elma Village and Vicinity 1845 to 1856 104


10 Spring Brook and Vicinity 1834 to 1856 122


11 Town of Elma 1857-1858 133


12 Town of Elma 1859-1865 143


13 Presidential Election 1860. 157


14 Cause of the Civil War 170


15 Town of Elma 1866-1884. 197


16 Town of Elma 1885-1900. 217


17 Names and Description of Roads 250


18 Names of 560 Persons, with Date of Marriage. 257


19 Names of 400 Persons, with Age and Date of Death 269


20 Names of 420 Resident Owners of Real Estate in 1900. . 282 Names of 660 Registered Voters in Elma in 1900 289


21 United States and State Census of Elma. 296 Table of Town Officers 1857 to 1901 298 Table of Assessments and Taxes 1857-1900 300 Post Offices in the Town of Elma 301


Churches in the Town of Elma 302 Schools in the Town of Elma 307 Appendix for 1901 310


15


.


ERRATA


On page 122 the 14th line from the top track should be tract. On page 152 the 18th line from the bottom 1836 should be 1863. On page 177 the 13th line from the top Smith should be Scott.


16


CHAPTER I.


GEOGRAPHY OF THE TOWN OF ELMA.


W


HAT is History?


History is the record of important events so arranged as to show the changes that have taken place, and to consider the causes that have operated to produce these results.


In the town of Elma, State of New York, and the United States, its territory, matters of government, political influence, agriculture, arts, manufactures, commerce, wealth, etc., etc .- have these always been as we see them today? If not, then there have been changes, and these have been produced by certain causes. A record of these general and local incidents is our history.


The town of Elma is in the centre of the county of Erie, in the State of New York, in the United States of North America. A history of the town of Elma is therefore a history of a part of the County of Erie, and of a part of the State of New York, and also a history of a part of the United States.


As a corollary-the history of the United States is, in part, a history of the town of Elma.


The history of any region, nation, or locality, properly begins with its original inhabitants, with mention of the earliest events and incidents, which later on work out results which bring that par- ticular region into prominence. Then follows the life work in detail. So the history of the United States usually begins with an account of the earliest discoveries of the American Continent, and the claims to territory by Spain, France, England and Holland, with their efforts to plant colonies; and thus by possession, to hold the territory they each claimed.


More than four hundred years have passed since Christopher Columbus made his first voyage of discovery.


It took the nations of Europe one hundred and thirty years to plant four colonies as permanent settlements in what is now the United States.


17


INFANT PERIOD OF THE COLONIES.


The infant period of this country was begun by these early set- tlements; and the Pilgrims, on November 11th, 1620, before leav- ing the May Flower gave in their Constitution the key note or outbreathing of a spirit that was to grow and increase, until all the colonies should be permeated with its principles.


No magic wand was at that time passed over this land to sud- denly transform the wilderness into the rich and prosperous country as we now see it. Instead, these changes came through years of toil, hardship, privations, suffering, massacres, oppression, wars and long waiting. The difficulties with which the colonies had to contend-wars with the French and Indians; troubles with Great Britain which culminated in the Revolutionary war; the trials, dangers and doubts which attended the Confederacy; and later, the formation of a government by the adoption of the Con- stitution of United States in 1787, required all the wisdom and sagacity of the best statesmen the world ever knew to save the country from total wreck. This constituted the infant period of one hundred and seventy years of this nation. Then Brother Jonathan, or Uncle Sam, had reached the stature of a full grown man, ready to do business, and the United States became, in fact, one of the nations of the earth. The young man has been doing a prosperous business for more than one hundred years.


As patriotic citizens, we all love our country and have admira- tion and respect almost to reverence for all those persons who took such active parts in the early period of our history; and we take a great interest in all the events that have, to this date, worked together during these two hundred and eighty years, which has brought us from a wilderness inhabited by roving tribes of savages, into the possession of a continent extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the great lakes and Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, with more than seventy-six millions of people, and with all the vast resources and possibilities which have made us a great and prosperous and influential nation; the wonder and ad- miration of statesmen everywhere, and the leader among the nations of the earth.


We have in the well written histories of our country a full nar- rative of all these events and incidents with causes and results in minute detail; and as the history of the United States in general, is, in part, a history of the town of Elma, it is not necessary in writing a history of this town to mention these separate incidents only so far as they have a direct relation to this particular locality.


The name, Elma, was given to this town in December, 1856, when the town was formed from Lancaster and Aurora. The early his-


18


tory commenced many years before that date, and it may be well to here state that the name, "Town of Elma," and the local names as now known will be applied to any event affecting this locality, whether it has reference to a time before or after the actual organ- ization of the town.


BOUNDARY.


The town of Elma lies a little northeast of the centre of the County of Erie, in the State of New York and is bounded on the north by Lancaster, east by Marilla, south by Aurora, and west by East Hamburg and West Seneca, and is six miles in extent, east and west, about five and two-thirds miles north and south and contains twenty-one thousand three hundred and ninety acres of land for assessment of taxes, and is known on deeds and legal papers as a part of the Buffalo Creek Reservation, and also as Town 10, Range 6 of the Holland Land Company Surveys.


TOPOGRAPHY.


No causes are known, or are supposed to have existed since the Glacial Period, that would produce any general or local changes in the face of the country in this locality. We may therefore con- clude that the hills, the plains and the valleys are today practically as they have been for hundreds, and possibly thousands of years.


STREAMS.


The principal streams in the town are the Little Buffalo, the Big Buffalo, the Cazenove Creeks and Pond Brook.


The Little Buffalo Creek enters the town from Marilla about one and one-half miles south from the northeast corner of Elma, in a channel about twenty feet wide and three to five feet deep in a valley sixty to eighty rods wide; has a general northwest course and passes into Lancaster about seven-eights of a mile west from the northeast corner of Elma. The valley through which this stream flows is sixty to eighty feet below the general level of the country, with steep bluffy sides or banks.


The Big Buffalo Creek crosses the town line from Marilla about three-fourths of a mile north from the southeast corner of Elma in a channel eighty to one hundred and twenty feet wide and six to ten feet deep. This is a very crooked stream, its general, tortuous course being northwest for about one mile, thence northerly through East Elma, and on for about three and one-half miles, thence west- erly four and one-half miles passing through Elma village, thence north-westerly one and one-fourth miles through Blossom, into


19


West Seneca about one-third of a mile south from the northwest corner of the town of Elma. The valley of this stream is sixty to one hundred rods wide with steep banks, generally perpendicular walls of shale on one or the other side. The bed of the stream is thirty to eighty feet below the surrounding country.


The Cazenove Creek, named for Theophilus Cazenove, agent for the Holland Land Company, crosses the Aurora town line about one mile east from the southwest corner of Elma, in a channel eighty to one hundred feet wide, and six to ten feet deep, takes a general north course for two and one-half miles to Spring Brook, thence westerly one mile crossing into West Seneca about two and one-half miles north from the southwest corner of Elma. The valley of this stream is sixty to one hundred rods wide, with gen- erally steep banks sixty to one hundred feet high and perpendic- ular walls of shale on one or the other side.


Pond Brook has its name from large ponds at its head, which are in the town of Aurora just across the Elma town line and about one and one-half miles west from the northeast corner of Aurora. The general course of this brook is west of north for five miles, when it enters the Big Buffalo Creek at Elma village. Its channel is eight to twenty feet wide and two to four feet deep in a valley six to twenty rods wide, with banks eight to forty feet high.


GEOLOGY.


The lowest rocks are the Hamilton Shales succeeded by Tully limestone and Genesee slate.


The Hamilton Shales form the bed and banks of the Big Buffalo Creek from the west line of the town to where the Bullis Mills were located; the bed of Pond Brook, from the Big Buffalo Creek to where the William Standart saw mill was built, just north from the Bullis Road, and the bed and walls of the Cazenove Creek from the west line of the town to the Northrup Mills at Spring Brook.


The Tully limestone, so called because it is found near the top of the hills in the town of Tully in the south part of Onondaga County, is also called encrinal limestone because of the great number of fossil remains of Encrinites, the joints and stems of which are small calcareous disks, sometimes called fossil button moulds. This Limestone crobs out in the Cazenove Creek at the Northrup mills, and in Pond Brook just north of the Bullis Road, and again in the Big Buffalo Creek just north or below the Bullis Bridge.


The Genesee slate, lying immediately above the Tully limestone, forms the bed and walls of the Big Buffalo and Cazenove Creeks above the points named to the south and east parts of the town and frequently crops out on the hillsides in those places.


20


A ridge or elevation ten to twenty feet high extends in a north- east and southwest direction across the town a little north of the centre. That portion of the town lying north of this ridge is the same nearly level portion of the county that extends east and north from Buffalo, and in Elma is broken only by the valley of the Big Buffalo Creek and the gullies caused by its small branches. The soil is a clayey loam, resting on the Hamilton shales. South of this ridge the surface becomes more rolling; the highest hills in the southeast part of the town being one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet above the beds of the streams. The soil in this hilly part of the town is a drift formation of gravel and loose boulders. The soil in the valleys of the stream is alluvium.


FOREST.


This town was probably for many centuries, and to a time within the remembrance of many persons now living, a dense forest or wilderness with a very heavy growth of timber and was the home of wild animals and the wilder tribes of savages called Indians.


TIMBER.


The principal varieties of timber may be given as white and yellow pine, hemlock, white, red and black oak, white and black ash, sugar, rock, and white or soft maple, black walnut, butternut, shell bark hickory, basswood, whitewood, cucumber, bitternut, black cherry, iron wood and birch.


Pine and oak were found principally in the eastern, southern and central parts of the town. The other varieties were common everywhere.


It is only within the last few years that a white man has lived within the limits of the town.


INDIANS.


About thirty families of Indians were the only residents. These had their homes on the flats of the Big Buffalo and Cazenove Creeks or on the high banks near these streams. It was on these flats that they had small clearings of three or four acres on which they raised corn, beans, and gourds. The balance of their living they obtained by hunting and fishing and from the whites in the adjoin- ing towns.


These Indians have a history; and as they were the original owners and occupants of the lands, it is proper that we take them in review and in the next chapter give them a little notice as to their traditions, their history as we know it, their living here and finally, their selling out and moving away, giving place to the present residents of the town of Elma.


21


CHAPTER II.


NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS.


HEN the American Continent was first discovered, the voyagers everywhere, north, south, and east, on the coast, and in the interior, found the country occupied by a people they called Indians.


These Indians were generally roving tribes, chang- ing their places of residence as wars or hunting made the change necessary. A few of the tribes were permanently located, had villages, cleared fields and orchards, and some of the villages were enclosed with palisades as a protection against any attacking enemy.




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