USA > New York > Genesee County > Gazetteer and biographical record of Genesee County, N.Y., 1788-1890 > Part 44
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William Warn, a native of Massachusetts, came in 1816 to Byron. He. served in the Revolution, and died at the home of his son Warren, in By- ron, aged over 90 years. His four sons, William, Warren, Lyman, and Milo, came to the Holland Purchase as early or before the " cold season " of 1816, and were all farmers. Lyman Warn was born in Massachusetts in 1797, came to Byron in 1816, married Jane Gillam, a native of New Jersey, and settled on a farm in Byron. In early life he cut stone for the construction of the locks in the Erie Canal. In 1838 he removed to the farm where his son Horatio now lives, on road 6, where he died in 1871, aged 74 years. He was a Democrat. He was honest and industrious. His only son, Horatio, born in 1829, was educated in the common schools, and married Sarah E. Green, January 12, 1859, a native of Massachusetts, who was born in 1839. He settled with his father where he still resides. Mr. Warn is much like his respected father, a man of sterling integrity. They have two sons and a daughter, viz .: Francis G., born in 1861 ; Charles L., born in 1868 ; and Fannie J., born in 1873. All reside at home with their parents. Mandana Warn, the only daughter of Lyman Warn, was born in 1831. She married M. D. L. Carpenter in 1877, who resides at North Byron, and is a farmer.
Amasa Walker, son of Ebenezer, of Ashford, Conn., was born in 1767, and died in 1828. He married Martha Smith, and they came from Mas- sachusetts to Byron in 181I. £ He had 12 children. Achsah, a daughter,
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married Simeon Hosmer, a farmer, of Byron. Amasa, a son, married, first, Lydia Dwight, and second, in 1813, Lydia Nichols. He settled in Byron with his father. Asahel C., son of Amasa and Lydia (Dwight) Walker, was born in 1823. He bought the old homestead, married Sarah Ford, and resided there until 1868 He died in 1870.
Alpha M. Wh ton, M. D., was born in Royalton, Niagara County, in 1857. He entered the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia, and graduated from that institution in 1881. He also attended a course of special lectures at Jefferson College for two years, and passed an exami- nation of the medical faculty of the Homeopathic College of New York city. In July, 1883, he settled in South Byron, where he has since prac- ticed his profession. In the short time that he has been there he has gained the confidence of the people, and has, by his ability, industry, and close attention to his professional duties, built up a fair and successful practice Although he graduated with honor he thinks it essential to be a close student, and strives to keep pace with the improvements and dis- coveries in medical science.
DARIEN.
D' ARIEN was formed from Pembroke, February 10, 1832, and lies in the southwest corner of the county. The surface is hilly in the south and rolling in the north. Murder Creek flows through the town from south to north, in the eastern part. Crooked and Eleven Mile creeks are the other principal streams. The soil in the north is a sandy and gravelly loam, and in the south a clayey loam underlaid by limestone. The Buffalo, New York & Erie Railroad extends through the town from east to west, a little south of the center. The N. Y. C. & H. R. Railroad extends through the northwest corner. The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad runs through the center of the town from east to west, and the Geneva & Buffalo road will soon have its line built in the northern part of the town. There are four postoffices.
DARIEN CENTER (formerly called King's Corners) is a post village situated three-quarters of a mile north of the Erie Railroad, which affords easy transit from the place, good facilities for transporting produce to market, and enabling the farmers to send milk daily to Buffalo. There are at this place four stores of various kinds, an hotel, a school-house, a Methodist Episcopal Church, the usual complement of mechanics, and in all about 50 dwellings.
DARIEN village, or Darien City, as it is sometimes called, the name given it by some eccentric individual when there were only a few houses
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built, is situated towards the southeast part of the town, on Murder Creek (so-called from the supposition that a murder had been com- mitted near it at an early day), and near Griswold station (named from B. Griswold) on the Erie Railroad. Thevillage contains a Methodist Epis- copal Church, postoffice, school-house, blacksmith shop, saw and feed-mills, a wagon shop, and about 30 dwellings. Before the advent of the railroads it was a place of more active local trade and manufacturing than at present.
SAWENS (p. o.), so named in honor of the Sawens family in the near neighborhood, is situated on Murder Creek, in the northeast part of the town. This little hamlet contains a general store where the postoffice is kept, a saw mill and cider-mill, blacksmith shop, and about 10 houses.
FARGO (p. o.), on the Delaware & Lackawanna Railroad, in the north- west part of the town, contains a general store, cheese factory, blacksmith shop, and about 10 dwellings.
The first town meeting was held at Stephen King's inn (this being the first tavern reported in the town), April 3, 1832, and the following officers chosen : Hugh Long, supervisor ; Thomas Riddle, town clerk; Jonathan Durkee, James Sutherland, Adna Tenney, justices of the peace; William Thayer, William Williams, Thomas Miller, assessors ; Chilson Mullet, Price Mattison, overseers of the poor ; Lyman H. Seaver, Lewis Clark, William Kidder, commissioners of highways ; Daniel Carter, Constantine Gilman, Newton Haws, commissioners of schools; Daniel Kendrick, col- lector. When the division of the county was made, in 1840, the citizens of Darien were not disposed to submit to the new measure without resist- ance. The following resolution was unanimously adopted at a meeting of the citizens held in 1840 :
" That we, the legal voters of the town of Darien, do most earnestly remonstrate against any division of the county of Genesee, and that our representative in the Assem- bly be, and is hereby, requested to use his utmost endeavors to prevent any division of the said county."
Religion .- The earliest account we have of any religious services in Darien is by a Baptist minister, Elder William Throop, in 1820, who held services until about 1840. The First Congregational Society is on record as organizing May 9, 1823, at Darien Center, with 12 members, with Hugh Wallace as minister. In 1825 there were 18 members; in 1834, 13, with Rev. T. Baldwin, minister; in 1840, 76, with Rev. L. A. Skinner, minister; and in 1846. 40. They built a wooden building about 1839, which is still standing. The church edifice was sold about 1880 for a small sum, and there has been no preaching since 1860.
There is upon record a society of the first Methodist Episcopal Church organized March 18, 1833, but we can find no other information con- cerning it. The present church was organized in 1848, by J. W. Vaughan. Its first pastor was Rev. K. D. Nettleton, and there were 35 members. There are two churches : one in Darien, built of wood in 1848, and one in Darien Center, built in 1874, having a combined membership of 84 members, under the pastoral charge of Rev. H. A. Slingerland. The valuation of the properties is $7,500.
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The Advent Church of God was organized in North Darien, January 16, 1864, by Elder C. W. Low, with a membership of 40. The first pas- tor was A. C. Newell, and the church edifice was built in 1867. There are at present 50 members, with Elder George A. Streeter in charge. The house and grounds are valued at nearly $2,000. The Sunday-school has 40 scholars.
Laban H. Robinson's feed and saw-mills are located at the village of Darien, on Murder Creek, which furnishes the motive power. These mills were built by Mr, Robinson in 1881, on the site of the mills built in 1854 by Stephen Douglas. His mills and a succeeding set were de- stroyed by fire. Mr. Robinson does custom grinding, and deals in feed and grain. He also does custom sawing. His saw-mill is furnished with a circular saw and has a capacity for sawing from 5,000 to 8,000 feet of lumber per day. He grinds about 5,000 bushels of grain annually.
Harlow Brothers (Henry L., Jefferson P., and Charles J.) were ex- tensive manufacturers of carriages at Harlow's Corners. The older brother, Henry L. Harlow, began business in a small way about 1844, and as his brothers became of legal age he admitted them to partnership. This firm had a wide reputation, and had not only a market in this State, but in Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, and California. In the busiest season they sometimes employed as many as 35 men. The busi- ness was continued in Darien and Lancaster about 40 years.
Zeno Griswold's grist, saw, and cider-mills are located at the little hamlet of Sawens, on Murder Creek, which furnishes the power, with steam as auxiliary. He does custom grinding, sawing, and cidermak- ing.
In the sketches and reminiscences following will be found a complete history of the town as made up from the lives of its earliest and most prominent pioneers and families. When settlements were made several families, or members of the same families, would locate in a neighbor- hood. Hence we have in Darien the Colby settlement, the Wait settle- ment, and many others, so that the neighborhoods, with their appropriate names, retain their early designations to the present time.
The first settlement was made near Darien City by Orange Carter, from Vermont, in 1803. Isaac Chaddock, from Vermont, settled near Darien City in 1804. The first birth was that of Harriet Carter, in 1805. Ste- phen Parker kept the first inn, in 1808, at Darien City, and Stephen King the first store, at Darien Center, in 1815. The first saw- mill was erected by Amos Humphrey, in 1809, on Eleven Mile Creek.
In addition to the mercantile and other business interests that are noted in the biographical sketches we here group the business that was done in the town in 1869. At Darien Morganstern & Garegan were carriagemakers, and Theodore Young was postmaster and merchant. M. D. Bartlett kept an hotel and was a carriagemaker at Darien City. Amos B. Humphrey had a grist-mill, Kensie Brothers were grocers and proprietors of a cheese factory, R. O. Lewis had a grist and saw-mill,
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J. Nichols was a merchant, and H. N. Vickery was a physician at Darien Center.
The following is a list of many of the principal settlers prior to: 1820, in what is now Darien and Pembroke:
Benjamin C. Adams, Selah Carpenter, Alanson T. Fisher, Lott K, Griswold, William and Dexter Humphrey, Selvy Kidder, - Mullett, David Nay, Jesse Tubbs, Zina. Wait, Capt. Jonathan Woodward, and George Wright. In 1804, Isaac Chaddock and David Goss. In 1806, Rufus Kidder, Orange Carter, Saxton Bailey, Israel Doane, and James Day. In 1807, Capt. Jonathan Bailey, Benjamin and David Carter, and John and David Long. In 1808, John Lamberton, Abraham Matteson, Stephen Parker, Joseph Peters, and Samuel Carr. In 1809, S. D. Cleveland, A. L. Clemens, Owen Curtis, Amos Humphrey, Samuel Matteson, John Sumner, James G., H. G., and D. Tiffany, Maj. William Thayer, and Jonathan Vaughan. In 1810, Anna Horton, Daniel and Levi Jones, Jotham Sumner, Sally and Henry Salisbury, Dexter Bordwell, Orris. and E. N. Boughton, Maj. Jonathan Durkee, and John Jr., and Russell Waite. In 1811, John Ball, Peleg Brown, Nathaniel Jones, John Murray, Jerome Sumner, Joel Sutherland, and Harry Stone. In 1812, Ichabod and Alva Jefferson, Jonas Kinne, Winslow and. Tyler Sumner, David and John Sutherland, John Stickney, Daniel and Barzilla Carter, Frank Chapin, Abner C., Reuben, and Daniel Colby, and Ira J. Tisdale. In 1813, Anson Ackley, Harvey Butler, Hiram Hedges, Jonathan Hastings, John A. Lathrop, Josiah Lee, William and Thomas Vickery, John McCollister, and Thorp Wildman. In 1814, Daniel Marsh. William B. Garfield, Horace Sloan, Jonathan Vickery, and John Webb. In 1815, Ezra Clark, Baxter Gilbert, A. Hutchinson, Shadrach Harmon, Obadiah Jenks, Quartus and D. J. Lee. Elijah Lamb, Joshua Peters, Jr., Ephraim Sumner, and David Salisbury. In 1816, Col. Jesse Safford, D. Anderson, William Cole, Benajah Griswold, John L. Hoyle, Daniel C. Stoddard, John Seaver, and Julius Wildman. In 1817, John W. Brown, C. Dodge, Davis Huntley, Elisha H. Lathrop, Noah Winslow, and Hugh Wallis. In 1818, Elijah Lee, Philo Farnham, Lemuel Stickney, and Silas and Adna Tiffany. In 1819, James Booth, L. H. Colby, Justus. Fales, Oliver Harper, Samuel Harroun, Zebulon Jones, Stephen King, Anson and Caroline Lathrop, William Shumway, Benjamin Sloan, and John W. Willett.
Saxton Bailey came to Darien in 1806, with his son Joshua, and bought 600 acres of land where Charles C. Magry now lives. His family came in 1808. His son Daniel came in 1808, and served as a captain in the War of 1812. He was a Presbyterian, and built the church at the Center. Joshua Bailey was also an early settler. He was a farmer of much in- dustry and accumulated a great deal of property. He sold his farm and started a school at the Center. .
Benjamin C. Adams was a very early store-keeper at Darien City, and had the business all to himself for a number of years, or until about 1832. Dexter Bordwell, son of John and Mary (Edson) Bordwell, of Orange County, Vt., was born March 24, 1801. With his father he came to Darien in 1810, residing with him until 22 years of age. The labors of clearing the farm were so great that all were obliged to assist. The first school- house, of logs, Mr. Bordwell assisted in erecting. At this school he was educated, and proved himself a master of the spelling book. He pur- chased, in 1825, the farm where his only son, Aaron Bordwell, now lives, and borrowed $1 to pay for making out the contract. He married Tir- zah, daughter of Sullivan and Lucy Russ, in 1829, and by close economy, industry, and perseverance succeeded in paying for his place. He was an " old line Whig" and a staunch supporter of the Republican party. He died in 1885, and his wife in 1873. Their only daughter, an amiable
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lady of culture, came to her death by being thrown from a carriage, Jan- uary 7, 1850. Aaron, the only son, was born October 26, 1836, received an academic education, and September 28, 1872, married Libbie Bord- well, of Alden, Ill., and settled on the old homestead. Their only son, Clarence H., was born March 11, 1880. Mr. Bordwell is engaged in breeding fine stock, having a large flock of Oxforddown sheep, reported to be the best in the State, and upon which he has obtained many first premiums at State and international shows. He is also a breeder of fine high grade Holstein cattle. Mr Bordwell is a genial, courteous gentle- man, a lover of home and its surroundings.
Cyrus Brown, son of John and Abigail (Wright) Brown, was born in New Ipswich, Hillsborough County, N. H., May 20, 1785. In his boy- hood he removed with his father's family to Sharon, N. H. In Decem- ber, 1810, he married Milla Lawrence, and settled with his father in Sha- ron. In 1817 he removed to Pembroke, this county, and settled on the farm (then unimproved) where he resided the remainder of his life. He was three times elected to the chief office of the town of Sharon, and he held the office of supervisor of Pembroke seven years. Mrs. Brown, daughter of Benjamin and Rebecca (Woods) Lawrence, was born in Jaf- frey, Cheshire County, N. H., September IS, 1791. Mr. and Mrs. Brown had six sons and four daughters, and all but one lived to adult age. He died in 1846, and she in 1849.
Peleg Bowen, son of Peleg and Lenty Bowen, was born in Galway, Sar- atoga County, N. Y., May 26, 1790, and about 1811 came to Darien, then included in Batavia, and selected a home on the town line, where F. Timms now lives. He lived there till his death. He spent a year or two. inclosing and building, and married Eleanor Green. He was one of the sturdy pioneers who cleared out of the forest a good farm and made himself a comfortable home. In the War of 1812 he was a militiaman, and went for the defense of Buffalo when that city was attacked and burned. He was always a farmer, and a man of strict integrity, indus- trious, honest, a good neighbor, and a reliable citizen. He died in March, 1861. Mrs. Bowen died in December, 1858. They had eight children : David, a farmer residing in Alexander; Rufus, a retired farmer resid- ing in the village of Attica ; Olive (Mrs. J. Dunbar), whose husband is a farmer residing in Attica ; Florania, who married William Major, and is now a widow residing in Amsterdam, N. Y .; and Richard, who is the only one residing in Darien, Betsey M. married F. Curtis, is a widow, and resides in Wisconsin; Myra married Fernando Burk, and is a widow living in Meridian, Cayuga County; and George P. is a merchant in Bata- via. Richard was born December 18' 1828, and has a good practical ed- ucation, which he received, not in the common schools, but by a course of reading and observation. In October, 1853, he married Susan Curtis, of Alexander. They had three children, of whom Ellen and Flora are living and reside, unmarried, in Attica. Mrs. Bowen died December 9, 1864, and March 8, 1866, Mr. Bowen married Janette M. Lathrop, by
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whom he has a son, Charles B., born June 3, 1868, and a daughter, Nettie E., born May 7, 1872. Mr. Bowen is a Democrat, but not an " offensive partisan." He is giving his attention to the cultivation of his large farm, and the breeding of pure blood Oxforddown sheep and imported and registered pure blood Durham cattle. He is well and favorably known throughout the county.
Francis J. Bauer, born in Wurtemberg, Germany, October 8, 1837, emigrated to America in 1853, and in 1865 married Elizabeth Bauer. They had four children : Edward C., Frank J., Helen M. (Mrs. Milo Langworthy), of Pembroke, and Ida H. In 1876 they settled on a farm at Darien Center, where they now reside.
Charles F. Chick, son of George and Jane (Percy) Chick, who came from England in 1852, was born in Buffalo at the Cold Springs, Decem- ber 21, 1856. May 3, 1881, he married Carrie Welker, and in 1884 settled on the farm of 247 acres where he now resides, near the southeast corner of the town. Mr. Chick is an extensive dealer in half-breed Percheron horses and roadsters, mostly brought from Iowa. He also deals in cows from Canada, and in fertilizers, besides conducting his large farm and dairy of 35 cows.
Owen Curtis, a pioneer settler, was born in Warren, Conn., in 1789. He came to Genesee County in 1808, and selected a farm in the wilder- ness of Batavia, now Darien, on which he lived over 70 years. In 1815 he married Abigail Wait, of Washington County, and reared eight chil- dren. Mrs. Curtis died in 1848. and a few years after he married Mrs. Abel, who survived him. Mr. Curtis died in 1879, in his 90th year. He was not a man of forms and ceremonies, but lived within himself and minded his own business, conceding the same rights to others that he claimed and stubbornly maintained for himself. He was a man for home and peace, and made no effort for show or popularity. He was pro- verbial for his integrity, and was kind and neighborly. By fair dealing and prudence he accumulated a good property.
Orange Carter, born December 23, 1774, in Connecticut, married Bet- sey Rumsey, of Vermont, and settled on a farm in St. Albans. In 1806 he came to Darian (then Batavia), being the first settler in the north part of the town, near the Baptist Church. Harriet, his daughter, was ths first child born in 1806. Mr. Carter had previously spent several yeart assisting the surveyors on the Purchase. He received the deed of his farm in 1805, and in February, 1806, came with his family, occupying, until June, when his own cabin was completed, the log school-house at Stafford. His nearest neighbor in Alexander was three and one-half miles and the grist-mill six miles distant. Being robust, hearty, and courageous, pioneer life suited him. The next year his brother David came, and after that the settlement was increased by the arrival of Will- iams, Ackley, Clark, McCollister, Doane, Lathrop, and other families. Mr. Carter was a volunteer in the War of 1812. In 1838 he sold his farm, and in 1840 went to Wisconsin with his sons Ackley, Orange, and
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TOWN OF DARIEN.
William, living with the latter until his death in 1855, aged 81 years. Mrs. Carter was born in 1777, and died in 1847. They were the par- ents of 10 children, all of whom married. Daniel Carter, a son living in Corfu, is the only one remaining in the county. He was born in St. Al- bans, Vt., October 4, 1802, and married, first, Maria Matteson, by whom he had two children, both deceased. He married, second, Mrs. Martha Williams. Mr. Carter was always interested in the welfare of his town. He held the office of supervisor, and others. A gentleman of the old school, he is a man of sterling integrity and respected by all his acquaint- ances. He has always been a farmer, a great reader, well up on all the current topics, and a Democrat since 1840. He has resided in Corfu for 25 years, and has been street commissioner all the time but three years. In the exercise of his office he has given great satisfaction, giving the citizens an excellent roadway by using gravel from an acre of ground to the depth of eight feet. At the advanced age of 87 years he cultivates his own garden. He has been trustee of the Presbyterian Church for many years, and is a liberal contributor to its needs.
Brazilla Carter, born in Connecticut, married there, and in 1812 came to the Holland Purchase and settled in the woods in the town'of Darien, then included in Pembroke, on the place where his grandson, Riley Car- ter, now lives. He built his log cabin in the field, near a spring, about 80 rods north of the highway. He came from Connecticut with an ox- sled and cart, loading the cart when he found sleighing, and vice versa when the ground was bare. He was six weeks on the road. Five of his children were born in Connecticut and two in Darien. He died on the farm where he first settled, at about the age of 86 years. His son Will- liam, born in Connecticut in 1804, came with his parents to Darien. When 21 years of age he took charge of the farm, cleared it up, paid for his first 100 acres, and later added another 100 of cleared land. He was a stalwart man, six feet in height, and weighed over 200 pounds; honest and industrious. Mr. Carter was a clear-headed man, of good judgment, and accumulated a good fortune. He died in April, 1880, aged 76 years, highly respected by a multitude of friends. He married Harriet Hannan, who bore him six children. She died and he married Hannah Finch, of Wyoming County, who bore him one child. His son Riley, before mentioned, bought the original 100 acres at the death of his father, and is now an enterprising and successful farmer on the old home- stead. He married Frances Crossman, and they have a son and a daugh- ter. Mr. Carter is a decided Democrat and is doing his party good serv- ice. He is now assessor.
Abner C., Reuben, and Daniel Colby, sons of Daniel, came from Canaan, N. H., and settled in Darien in 1812. Their brother Aaron came in 1816. All took contracts for land at $3 per acre, with 10 years for payment. Their farms were contiguous and the settlement was known as the Colby neighborhood. With no roads, the nearest mill at Batavia, and with wild animals abundant, these pioneers were able to clear off their
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land, and convert the forests into cultivated fields. All died where they first settled, and the same farms are still occupied by Colbys.
Abner C. Colby, born May 2, 1776, settled where his son, Levi H. Colby, now lives. November 9, 1816, he married Nancy (Steward) Cutler. He died August 1, 1856, aged 80 years, and his wife in 1862. Their children were Levi H., Abner C., Hiram, and George. Levi H., the eldest, was born on the homestead January 6, 1819. He purchased the homestead from the heirs, and December 25, 1846, married Susan A. Root, by whom he had four children, three of whom died in childhood. The survivor, Dexter D , was born August 14, 1852, and is a farmer in Michigan. Mrs Colby died June 12, 1859, and Mr. Colby married, March 29, 1860, Elizabeth D. I incoln, by whom he had children as fol- lows: John L., born December 27, 1860, who is a farmer in Michigan ; Lib- bie G., born October 27, 1867; and Levi Henry, born November 8, 1869. The last two live at home. Mr. Colby is a Republican in politics, devotes his time to his farm, and is a highly respected friend and neighbor.
Joshua Colby, son of Reuben, was born in New Hampshire in 1808, and married Elizabeth Town in 1827. In early life he carried on an ashery, collecting'in one winter 3,000 bushels of ashes. He now lives on the Daniel Colby homestead.
Aaron H. Colby, son of Reuben, was born in New Hampshire in 1811, spent his boyhood in Darien, and went to the district school. He mar- ried Ellen Beardsley, and settled on the place where he now resides. He is a mason as well as a farmer, but leads a retired life, residing with his son Darius H.
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