USA > New York > Delaware County > Delaware County, New York, history of the century, 1797-1897, centennial celebration, June 9 and 10, 1897 > Part 8
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1. Jolm A. Savage 1821-21
2. Frederick A. Fenn 1824-26
3. Thomas Farrington 1826-27
4. Stephen C. JJohnson 1827 29
5. Robert Tolefree . 1829-30
6. William J. Monteith 1830 32
7 Rev. Orange Clark .. 1832-34
8. Rev. Ebenezer H. Cressy 1834-37
9. Rev. Daniel Shepard
1837 46
10. William R. Harper.
1846-47
11. Merritt G. MeKeon
1847 54
12. John L. Sawyer
1854 63
13. Rev. Silas Fitch
1863-67
14. Levi D. Miller 1867-69
15. William Wight 1869-75
16. Sherrill E. Smith . 1875-85
17. James O. Griffin 1885 90
18. Willis D. Graves
1890-98
The Delaware Literary Institute at the village of Franklin, was chartered by the legislature in 1835. The sum of $7,000 was raised to purchase a site and erect a building. It was of stone, eighty by forty feet, and four stories high. The following were the rates of tuition at the beginning: For arithmetic, English grammar, geogra- phy and other common English branches, $3 a term; for surveying. mensuration and other higher English branches, $4 a term; for Greek, Latin, Algebra and Geometry $5 a term, and for French $2 extra.
130
HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY.
Up to 1837 the male and female departments were conducted separately. Since that time they have been classed together. In 1838 the institution was received under the visitation of the Re- gents of the University and shared in the division of the Literature Fund. In 1851 a ladies' boarding hall was erected, of wood fifty- five by forty feet and three stories high. In 1854 the chapel was begun, eighty by forty feet and three stories high. In 1856 the original stone building was destroyed by fire, the insurance being $3,000. And in the same year the chapel building which was in course of erection was blown down, so that it was necessary to rebuild it from the foundation.
The Delaware Literary Institute has from its beginning enjoyed a wide popularity, and has been the pride of the people of Franklin. Below are given the names of the successive principals:
1. Rev. William Frazer 1836-38
2. Silas Fitch, jr 1838 46
3. Rev. George Kerr, D. D. 1846-60
4. Stephen Holden aud Rev. Milan L. Ward 1860 61
5. Oliver W. Treadwell 1862-65
6. George W. Jones. . 1865 68
7. Rev. Frederick Jewel. . 1868-69
8. George W. Briggs. 1869 74
9. E. M. Rollo 1874-77
10. Charles H. Verrill 1877 97
11. Elmer E. French 1897
The Fergusonville Academy is situated in the town of Daven- port, on the Charlotte creek. It was founded by Rev. Samuel D. and Rev. Sanford 1. Ferguson. Their residence in New York city led them to see the importance of providing sweet country school life for the growing boys and girls. The school was begun in 1848 and from the beginning was a great success. It was a purely boarding school, and the instruction was designed to train the
131
EDUCATION AND SCHOOLS.
boys and girls to habits of virtuous living. Both the founders were clergymen of the Methodist Episcopal church, and their wide ac- quaintance in their denomination brought to them in this beautiful spot an abundance of patronage.
In 1856 the Ferguson brothers retired from the school which they had founded and James Oliver became the proprietor and manager. The school is now closed.
An AAcademy was begun in Deposit in 1830, but the building was destroyed by fire in 1835. Again in 1851 -2 a seminary' was built and incorporated under State laws. But it was not financially successful, and it was sold under foreclosure. The buildings were utilized by the village for a Union School connected with the public school system. With this Union School there is connected an Academical department, where secondary education is imparted.
The Andes Academy was begun in 1847 by William Stoddard. Mr. Henry Dowie bought the building and enlarged it in 1857. In 1862 a stock company was formed to which Mr. Dowie trans- ferred the buildings and improvements. The principals have been in succession as follows:
1. William Wight, who served ouly a short time.
2. Rev. Peter Smeallie 1862-67
3. Rev. James Smcallic 1867-76
4. Rev. E. H. Stevenson . 1876-80
The Stamford Seminary was begun in 1849. A stock company was formed and a building fifty by thirty-two feet was erected. The school was opened in 1849 and John L. Murphy was appointed the first principal. He was a good teacher, but his financial man- agement was not successful. In 1852 E. W. Boies was made principal but he only continued six months. Then Charles G. Churchill bought the property from the corporation, and for a time conducted it as a private enterprise. He in turn sold the buildings to Rev. O. F. Gilbert who for several years conducted the school with success. But he determined to re-enter the ministry, and sold
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HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY.
the school in 1861 to Rev. John Wilde who had before boon connected with the Seminary at Deposit.
In 1866 Mr. Wilde soll the Seminary to S. E. Churchill, who made many improvements in the buildings. The school now was in a tide of success. In 1872 the Ulster and Delaware railroad was finished to Stamford, and everything connected with the little vil- lage had a boom. Mr. Churchill saw modes of making money more easily than by maintaining a boarding school. So he procured the incorporation of the institution in 1872 in order to enable it to receive the bequest of Sammel Judson for the establishment of a Free Library. The people of Stamford in order to continue their Seminary then raised a sum of money and erected a new and admirable building costing nearly $12,500. Here the Stamford Seminary has rested from its wanderings, and remains as the pride and delight of the little village. It is now a Union Free School.
The village of Walton has been active in providing itself with secondary education. In 1853 an association was formed for the establishment of an Academy. The sum of $3,500 was subscribed for the erection of a building. A site was donated and the build- ing erected. The school was opened in the fall of 1853. In the year 1854 it was incorporated by the Regents of the University. It continued as an incorporated Academy till 1868, when it was transformed into a Union School under the public school system, with an Academical department arranged to give secondary instruc- tion. The principals have been as follows:
1. Eli M. Maynard. 1854 57
2. Marens N. Horton. 1857-61
3. Sidney Crawford 1861 -64
4. Charles E. Summer 1864-67
5. Strong Comstock 1867-70
6. T. D. Barclay 1870 72
7. Strong Comstock, (second time). 1872 -92
8. James R. Fairgrieve 1892
XIII. Churches and Church Movements.
A COMPLETE history of the founding and building up of the several church organizations in Delaware county would be most interesting. It could only, however, be undertaken after a prolonged investigation of the records of each of the bodies, and would be best done by persons writing each for his own denomi- nation. What can here be attempted is to sketch the general movements by which the several denominations established them- selves in the new county. It is left to the town histories to give the accounts of the several churches which have grown up in them.
It may in general be safely asserted that all the carly pioneers were persons of religious convictions, and so far as possible brought with them their own church organizations and arrangements. With the New England settlers came the Congregational churches. which in many cases were transformed into churches connected with the Presbyterian body. From England and Scotland came many families who at home had been Presbyterians, and who in their new homes took measures to establish churches of their own kind. The "Great Awakening " which arose out of the preaching of George Whitefield, the Tennants and the Wesleys, had roused into activity the religions life of New England and the Middle States. And all who came from these quarters were imbued with a deep sense of dependence on an over-ruling providence. We leave it of course to the town histories to describe the special movements which led to the founding and development of particular churches. It will be sufficient here to give some general account of the principal religious bodies and the movements by which they be- came established in this county.
1333
134
HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY.
The Congregational churches with their peculiarities and politi- cal affiliations came with the emigrants from New England. Harpersfield, Franklin, Meredith, Walton and other towns. were settled in part by New Englanders and the establishment of Con- gregational churches followed soon after. Thus in 1787 a church which afterward became Presbyterian was founded in Harpersfield. It is now called a Congregational church. Others followed thus: in Franklin, 1763; Walton, 1793; Sidney, 1808; Deposit. 1812; Masonville, 1818; Davenport, 1825; Colchester, 1825; and Han- cock, 1831. There was for a long time a mutual agreement between the Congregational body and the so-called New School Presbyterian church to co-operate in their pioneer work. It fol- lowed therefore that churches founded under New England influ- ance often became connected with the adjacent bodies of the Presbyterian church. Presbyterian churches were founded as follows: In Delhi, the First Presbyterian church, 1805; in Mason- ville, 1820; in Delhi, the Second Presbyterian church, 1831; in Franklin, the Arabia church, 1832; in Stamford, 1831.
A elass of churches, which may be termed Scotch Presby- terian, has arisen in many parts of the county. These were connected with the Associate, the Associate Reformed, and the Reformed Presbyterian bodies. In 1858 the two former bodies combined to form the United Presbyterian church, by which name the body is now designated. The families who associated them- selves to form churches connected with these bodies were mainly from Scotland and the North of Ireland, who came into the county in the early part of the century. As has been explained this immigration began soon after the Revolutionary war and continued down as late as 1810. The Rutherfords, the Scotts, the Gladstones. the Fletchers, the Forests, the Murrays, the Elliotts, the Telfords, the Thompsons, the Archiballs and others all came from the South of Scotland; and the Lamonts, the MeGregors, the MeGib- bons, the MeLaurys also spelled MeClaughry, MeLaughrys, McFar- lands, McDonalds, MeCrackens, emigrated either from the North of
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CHURCHES AND CHURCH MOVEMENTS.
Scotland or the North of Ireland. They were all protestant and chiefly Presbyterian in their religious affiliations. Hence in Andes, Bovina, Delhi and Kortright, where these settlers chietly congre- gated, Scotch Presbyterian churches fast followed: At the Flats below Delhi in 1805. in Bovina in 1809, in Kortright in 1810, in Andes in 1833, and at Cabin Hill in Andes in 1835.
The Baptist church came without much external pressure. Whenever a few families of this faith found themselves within reach of each other they usually combined themselves into a church. The form of church government among the Baptists is congre- gational, so that it was possible for these little churches to spring up and flourish without dependence on any outside organization. The early Baptist churches may be mentioned as follows: In Colchester, soon after the Revolutionary war; in Harpersfield, 1792; in Franklin, 1793; in Masonville, 1810; in Deposit, 1812; in Rox- bury, 1816; in Sidney, 1817: in Meredith, 1818; in Tompkins, 1830; in Walton, 1833; in Delhi, 1842; in Hancock, 1858; and in Stam- ford. 1863.
The most numerous body among the churches in Delaware county is now no doubt the Methodist. They began the work of evangelizing in this region almost as soon as the Revolutionary war was ended. The machinery of the church is well adapted to the circumstances of thinly settled, poor and religious communities. The country to be covered is divided into cirenits in each of which there are a number of preaching stations, situated so that one or two preachers (or cirenit-riders) can visit them and preach to them as often as the number of stations will permit. Thus if a circuit contains ten preaching stations two circuit-riders are assigned to it ; and if each of the preachers were to give the full Sabbath to cach station, they would be able to visit every station once in five Sundays. With even these infrequent visits it would be possible to keep up the church organization, and stimulate it to a healthy activity and growth.
The work laid on these pioneer circuit-riders was most onerous.
136
HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY.
The long journeys required of them were chiefly made on horseback. They received so little pay that it was absolutely necessary for them to live and lodge at such homes as they could find among their own people. The circumstances connected with their long rides and their pressing services, made it impossible for them to read or consult books, or make any study of the original languages in which the scriptures were written. In the early days of Meth- odism it was rare to find scholarly men among the clergy. The character of their work made it impossible. They knew the English Bible, and this was alnost the only book with which they were familiar. This must not be interpreted as the times of an ignorant elergy. The men who became eminent as preachers in the Dela- ware county circuits in the early days, were only to be called unlearned in the bookish sense. In all other respects they far outranked the clergy of cities and pavements, of books and libraries. From the fresh woods through which they traveled, from the silence and solemnity of nature they learned lessons more profound than books can teach. From the unspoiled children of the pioneer settlements they imbibed experiences far more instructive than can be found amid the centres of culture.
The movements which led to the establishment of Methodist churches throughout the towns of Delaware county began, as we have said, soon after the close of the Revolutionary war. It would be impossible to trace these movements from that early time through the century which followed. Before the third decade of the eighteenth century was finished, Methodism had obtained a lodgment in almost every township. And during the two decades which next followed, the churches had acquired a standing which has ensured their permanent growth and prosperity.
It will be sufficient in ending what we have to say about this powerful body, to enumerate the times when the churches were founded in the several townships. The first movement of which we have any record was in Colchester in 1795: it was in this township that Brainerd the great Indian missionary once preached
137
CHURCHES AND CHURCH MOVEMENTS.
at a date even earlier than this, Then in 1800 Methodist churches were founded in Middletown, in Roxbury both at the village and at Moresville. Soon after this in 1802, and later in 1808 in conse- quence of the preaching of Nathan Bangs a church was beguu int Walton. In Harpersfield movements were begun in 1808, but a church was not founded until some years later. Subsequent steps were taken and churches founded: in Franklin in 1818, and Croton 1819; in Andes in 1820, but it was some years later before a church building was begun, which was occupied in an unfinished state* in 1830, and completed in 1838; in Masenville in 1822; in Tompkins and Deposit in 1830; in Hancock in 1831; in Davenport and in Hobart in 1834; at Fergusonville in 1836: in Delhi in 1839; and in Bovina in 1849.
The Episcopal church began in Hobart in 1791, the village itself having been called after the celebrated Bishop Hobart of New Jersey. The second township to found an Episcopal church was Delhi in 1819, and others in the following order: Walton, 1830; Deposit, 1860; Franklin, 1865. The only meeting-house of the Friends, which, however, has not continued to the present, was begun in Harpersfield in 1810. A considerable number of Roman Catholic churches have come into existence within the last half- century. These have arisen chiefly in connection with the Roman Catholic population, which has followed the construction and ad- ministration of the railroads which have penetrated the county.
It has already been said that the Scotch immigrants who came into Delaware county brought with them the bias in behalf of the schools and churches which they had enjoyed in their old home. Their first effort was always to establish a school where their children could receive the elementary and useful education of which they knew so well the value.
Next to schools they invariably sought to establish churches for themselves and their families. They brought with them, however.
* It is said that the work-bench was used as a pulpit and a potash-kettle
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HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTY.
all the church divisions that had arisen in Scotland. Within the little circle of Scotch friends, there were, for instance, the Associate church, the Associate Reformed church, and the Reformed Pres- byterian church, which latter body was commonly called the Cameronian church. Each of these bodies had its separate organi- zation and maintained a rigidly distinct system of worship. They did not exchange pulpits with each other. and never gave an invitation to the members of the other bodies to partake with them of the Lord's Supper. They all agreed in using the psalms of David for singing and the Westminster catechism for the instruc- tion of their children. And yet in spite of these marks of conformity, they were strenuously and sometimes even bitterly opposed to each other on account of disputes which had arisen in Scotland and which did not in the least relate to their doctrines or their discipline in this country. Thus the Cameronians hell that Christians ought not to take any part in sustaining or administer- ing a government which was not conducted on religious principles. Hence the members of the Cameronian church never voted or took any part in the elections which were held in America.
The church concerning which the following recollections are given was connected with the Associate body. It was the first church established in the town of Bovina; but was followed soon after by another Scotch church of the Cameronian persuasion. The building was as ugly as could be imagined. It was almost square, without ornaments or projections, or steeple. It was a frame buikling, clap-boarded, and had been painted of a snuff-brown color. The paint, however, had long since been washed away, and the boards left of a natural wood color. .
The inside, that is the galleries. the pews and the pulpit, was finished in unpainted pine. At the front of the church there were two doors from the vestibule into the open air. From the vestibule two uncarpeted stairs ascended to the galleries. Two doors led into the main body of the church, near which stood two stoves burning wood when the weather required them. The gallery
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CHURCHES AND CHERCH MOVEMENTS.
extended around three sides, and on the fourth side opposite the entrance stood a high pulpit. Directly in front of this was a second and lower pulpit for the precentor. The pews were partly narrow sittings and partly square boxes with seats around three sides. The services never being held in the evenings, there were no arrangements for artificial lighting either by candles or lamps.
The preacher in this church was a Scotchman who had immi- grated to America when he was still a young man, having just finished his theological studies. He was a man of fair abilities, and devoted to his work and his tlock. It is impossible to say how much salary he received, but certainly it must have been quite small. As he grew older and his children increased in number and size he found it necessary to purchase a farm on which he lived during the last years of his pastorate.
The church services began at ten o'clock and were of the ordi- nary Scotch Presbyterian character, consisting of singing, reading the scripture, extemporaneous prayers and a sermon. The whole service lasted about two hours, of which the sermon constituted quite one-half. The preaching was always without notes; as in- deed the preaching of all the Scotch ministers of that day was. At the close of the morning service there was an intermission of an hour; during which the people scattered under the trees and among the wagons in which they had come to church. They employed the hour faithfully in eating the luncheon which they had brought with them, in discussing the sermon, and in exchang- ing the harmless gossip of the week. There was a delightful, cool spring near the church, and nearly everyone took occasion to visit it during the intermission and to drink from it with a tin cup which was always kept there.
The afternoon service began at one o'clock, and lasted about an hour and a half. It was exactly like that of the morning with the exception that several of the parts including the sermon were a little shorter. The people scattered on foot and in wagons as they had come. The wagons were nearly always the lumber wagons
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HISTORY OF DELAWARE COUNTE.
which the farmers used on their farms. They were provided with a spring seat in front on which the driver and another sat, and then with board seats placed across the box of the wagon. I sup- pose that in very early times these wagons were sometimes drawn to church by oxen, but in my time only horses were used, and often very good horses at that.
The music in the church was of a very limited and old-fashioned description. There was no instrumental music allowed in any of the Scotch Presbyterian churches of that day; and to a great extent the same is true to this day. The human voice, in the opinion of these good people, was good enough for the praise of God in his sanctuary. The precentor who led the singing was a Scotchman who had learned what he knew about music before he left his native land. The number of his tunes was not large, perhaps a dozen in all. They were all Common Metre tunes except Old Hundred. They used Rouse's metrical version, in which all the psahns are rendered in common metre, except the one hun- dredth which is long metre. As far as I can remember the following tunes,* with others, were used: French, Coleshill, Bangor, Martyrs, Dundee, Newton, Elgin, York, Mears, Irish, Old Hundred.
The tune Ortonville was introduced during my day at the Scotch church. But it had the unpardonable fault of repeating the last line. This was contrary to the spirit of the New Testament and was a " vain repetition." So the precentor redneed Ortonville to orthodoxy by omitting the repetition of the last line.
A Sunday school was started in this Scotch church probably about 1840. It was the result of a general movement which was then taking place throughout the country in favor of the establish- ment of Sunday schools. It was held at the intermission, and the exercises were strictly in accordance with the doctrines and usages of the church. The children who composed the classes were
* My readers will remember the sketch of "Jeems the Door-keeper" in John Brown's Spare Hours. The tunes he used in his solitary family worship were French, Scarborough, Coleshill, Irish, Old Hundred, Bangor, and Black- burn.
Early Physicians' Outfit.
Reminders -f Early Day ..
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CHURCHES AND CHURCH MOVEMENTS.
required to commit to memory chapters of the Bible, the psalms in verso, and the Shorter Catechism. The parts of the scripture which were commonly learned were: the 12th chapter of Ecclesias- tes, the 53rd and the 63rd chapters of Isaiah, chapters from the Proverbs, chapters from the Gospels, and from the epistle to the Hebrews. As a matter of course the children also were required to repeat the Lord's Prayer, the Apostles' Creed and the Ton Commandments. These they had probably learned at home in accordance with the invariable Scotch custom. But many children who belonged to families who were indifferent to religious instruc- tion, obtained in this Sunday school the training which implanted in them the seeds of religious faith.
It remains to describe one of the peculiar institutions of the Scotch church as it had been derived from the practices in Scot- land. This was the celebration of the Lord's Supper. The usual custom in American churches of Scotch origin was to celebrate this ordinance twice in the year, in the spring and in the antunn. It was so extended and laborious a series of services that the minister of a church always sought assistance. And as this as- sistance could only properly come from ministers of the same body, it was sometimes no easy matter to obtain the help that was needed.
The first day of the celebration was Thursday which was kept as a Fast-day. Meat and foods of a similar kind were generally ab- stained from, but the day was not kept as an absolute fast. A ser- vice was held in the church in the morning, when a sermon was preached either by the pastor or by the minister assisting him. Then there was a service on Saturday morning, when another sermon was preached. After the service was over the members of the church passed in line in front of the precentor's desk, where one of the elders stood and gave to each a " token,' the possession of which entitled the holder to sit down at the Lord's Table. No general invitation was given to the members of other churches, and only members of this particular church were entitled to tokens. 8
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