Landmarks of Orleans County, New York, Part 67

Author: Signor, Isaac S., ed
Publication date: 1894
Publisher: Syracuse : D. Mason
Number of Pages: 1084


USA > New York > Orleans County > Landmarks of Orleans County, New York > Part 67


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).


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CARLTON STATION, situated near the center of the town, is a postal village cotemporaneous with the completion of the railroad, and contains a post office, two stores, a dry house, warehouse, fruit house, cooperage, and a small aggregation of neat residences and farm houses. The present postmaster is M. E. Maginn, who was appointed in May, 1894.


CARLYON, a station and post-office in the western part of the town, also dates its birth from the construction of the railroad, and like the two villages last mentioned contains a small cluster of buildings of an unusual tasteful appearance. The place has a store, two blacksmith shops, a dry house, and a fruit house. The postmaster is George M. Welch.


Lewis Rogar 9911


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ORLEANS COUNTY.


POINT BREEZE .- It has already been stated that a village was laid out near the mouth of Oak Orchard Creek at the time when settlement commenced there. A hotel was established on the east side of the creek at an early day, and a warehouse was erected in 1846. The hotel was enlarged and improved by Capt Jonathan Murray soon afterward, and the business of ship building was conducted by Murray & Sons during twenty years. The place began to assume some com- mercial importance in 1867, when an appropriation of $87,000 was made for the improvement of the harbor. Two piers, each 1,600 feet in length, were built, the channel was dredged to a depth of thirteen feet, a lighthouse was erected, lighthouse keeper's house was built, and an elevated walk over one of the piers to the lighthouse was constructed In 1866 Selheimer & Grear established a lumber yard here. Three years later the firm became Selheimer & Beckwith, and so continued during twelve years. The business has since been conducted by H. S. Selheimer. In 1876 the hotel was sold to Broadwell & Warner, who kept it four years. They made improvements on the hotel and grounds, and the place began to be something of a summer resort. In 1881 the hotel was purchased by Rogers & Crooker, and has since been kept by them. They have still further improved it, and the impor- tance of the place as a summer resort has steadily increased. An average of forty boarders are here during the summer. In 1888 a post-office was established here under the name of Point Breeze with H. S. Selheimer as postmaster, who continues to hold the position. The place also contains another hotel, a store, and a boat livery.


OAK ORCHARD-ON-THE-LAKE was until recently known as Lake- ยท view. A. V. Clark became the owner of some 400 acres of land at the mouth of Oak Orchard Creek, on the west side, at an early day. He built a hotel and kept it many years, till it was burned in 1850. At this time the place had come to be quite a resort for picnic parties. The hotel was at once rebuilt by Mr. Clark, and was kept by him till 1866, when it was purchased by D. F. Daniels, who conducted it about three years. In this time a race track was established near the hotel, but it had only a brief existence. The hotel again became the property of Mr. Clark in 1869. About 1870 this began to be a place of resort for boarders during each summer as well as for picnic parties and tran-


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sient pleasure seekers; and since that time its popularity has steadily increased. In 1883 people commenced the erection of summer cottages here, and there are nine of these that are occupied during each sum- mer. In 1888 F. E. Wood & Son leased the hotel and conducted it until 1892, when it was metamorphosed into sleeping rooms. At this time a syndicate was formed and purchased the Clark estate, 100 acres of which were surveyed into building lots, and these were placed on the market. This corporation, known as the Oak Orchard on - the-Lake Company, erected an imposing frame hotel with all the modern im- provements, having a capacity of 150 guests, and the place has acquired a wide prominence as a lakeside resort.


LAKESIDE .- The ground around the mouth of Johnson's Creek, after some transfers, became the property of Volney Wilson, who denuded it of its timbers and sold it to Alvin Greeley. He allowed another growth of timber to spring up and it came to be a resort for pleasure seekers and picnic parties during the summer months of each year. It was so used for a long time without any substantial improvements be- ing made. More than twenty-five years since Messrs. Coann and Sick- els, of Albion, leased ground here and erected a cabin which they used as a summer family retreat several years. In 1882 Bruce S. Hoag pur- chased a tract of land here and commenced the development of a reg- ular watering place. He erected a bridge across the creek near its mouth, built a hotel and surrounded it with cottages and other build- ings for the convenience of visitors, cleared and beautified a portion of the grounds, built a pier, and, in short, made all the improvements that now render it one of the most attractive summer resorts in Northern New York. He sold cottage lots upon which neat and attractive cot- tages have been erected, the number of these being now between twenty and thirty. Nearly fifty acres are utilized here for the purposes of this resort.


The Baptist Church .- On the 11th of February, 1832, at a meeting held in a school house a mile south from Two Bridges, Isaac Mason, Hervey Blood, Lemuel Willard, Abiel Cook, Jeremiah Newval, Will- iam Reed, Dolly Reed, Gracilla Blood, Laura Tilden, Eliza A. Tilden, Esther Mason, Rachel Newval, and Fanny Rice, members of the Baptist Church in Gaines, declared themselves a regular Baptist Church. On


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ORLEANS COUNTY.


the 11th of July the organization was recognized by a council held for that purpose. The membership of the church was widely scattered, and during many of the early years of its existence meetings were held alternately in the east and west parts of the town. In 1846 Jefferson Edmunds and wife, Leonard Wilson and wife, Henry O. Mills and wife, Albert Rich and wife, N. E. Ballou, J. T. Chandler, Lucinda Day, Lu- cinda Parish, and Phineas Hall withdrew and organized at Two Bridges. In the same year houses of worship were completed at East Carlton and at Two Bridges, and the two churches sometimes united in the sup- port of preaching, and sometimes they were destitute of pastors. Pre- vious to the separation the church was served by :


Revs. Hervey Blood, B. Beckwith, Franklin Woodward, and T. E. Inman. Since the division the church at East Carlton has had as preachers Revs. J. F. Fuller, R. T. Smith, H. G. Mosher, E. Savage, John Halladay, E. J. Glazier, William Sawyer, L. P. Merrili, R. H. Weeks, J. L. Smith, Cantine Garrison, M. Forbes L. S. Stowell, G. C. Walker, L. B. Albert, H. H. Emmett, G. M. Sears and Amnos Meyers.


At present the church is without a pastor.


The society has about 100 members and a Sunday school of some seventy scholars under S. W. Beardsley as superintendent. In 1883 a parsonage was purchased at a cost of $1,500.


The church at Two Bridges has been served by :


Revs. Cantine Garrison, R. T. Smith, H. G. Mosher, William Mridge, John Halladay, W. A. Wilcher, L. R. Murrill, J. L. Smith, R. H. Weeks, Cantine Garrison again, M. Forbes, S. Kingsley, H. H. Emmett, G. N. Sears, L. P. Lappeus, and Rev. Mr. Mills. The society is now without a pastor, but still maintains an organization and has services occasionally.


The Methodist Episcopal Church .- It has already been stated that a Methodist clergyman named Steele, from Canada, was the first who preached in the town of Carlton. No society or class was formed till 1815, when Rev. Mr. Shepherdson, a preacher on the Ridgeway circuit, commenced holding services near Kuckville monthly. Revs. P. Buck- land and B. G. Paddock followed Mr. Shepardson on this circuit. In 1818 a class numbering about fifty was formed at Kenyonville, of which Barber Kenyon was the leader. In 1821 a class consisting of George Kuck, leader, Electa Kuck, Sarah Foster, Mary Hunt, John Gifford, Sarah Gifford, Anna Shipman, Sally Senter, Anna Root and James Dunham was formed. A class of which Robert Rackham was 83


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the leader was early formed at Waterport and during many years serv- ices were held in the school house there. A house of worship was erected at Kenyonville about 1833, at Kuckville in 1835, and at Water- port about thirty years since. No records of the period between 1825 and 1846 are known to exist, but it is remembered that :


Revs. John Copeland and Mr. Herrick were preachers here in 1826. Since 1846 this charge has been served by Revs. F. W. Conable, H. M. Ripley, J. McCreary, T. W. Eaton, S. M. Hopkins, N. Jones, A. L. Backus, J. Hager. G. H. Dubois, T. F. Parker, W. H. McCartney, C. W. Swift, Daniel Clark, A. A. Craw, Ward B. Pickard, E. J. Whitney, and F. E. King since the fall of 1893.


The Waterport Church edifice is owned by the Union Society, con- sisting of the Congregationalists and Methodists, but no organization of the former exists there. The M. E. Society has 100 members and a Sunday school with an average attendance of seventy scholars under A. W. Woods as superintendent. The Kenyonville Church has a mem- bership of thirty five. The edifice is owned jointly by the M. E. and the Free Methodist Societies, and is valued at $1,500. The Sunday school has forty scholars with Mrs. Kate Rowley superintendent. The Kuckville Society, having 110 members, owns a neat frame church edifice and lot valued at $4,500, and the Sunday school has 120 scholars with Miss Hettie Clark superintendent. The first Sunday school in town was formed May 29, 1825.


The First Presbyterian Church of Carlton was organized June 10, 1831, with Montgomery Percival, Samuel Baldwin, Lewis W. Gates, Silas Joy, Chasen Miles, Mrs. Sarah Goold, Mrs. Abigail Fuller, Mrs. Eunice Steele, Mrs. Abigail Baldwin, and Mrs. Eunice Percival constit- uent members. The first elders were Silas Joy, Montgomery Percival, Samuel Baldwin, and Chasen Miles; the first deacons, Silas Joy and Samuel Baldwin; and the first trustees, Selah B. Beardslee, Samuel Baldwin, and Robert M. Brown. This organization soon became ex- tinct.


The First Congregational Church of Carlton was organized March 31, 1841, by Rev. Robert W. Laird, with Chasen Miles, George F. Beck- with, Nicholas Garbutt, Mrs. Jane Fields, Mrs. Lucretia Wheelock, Jasper M. Grow, Mrs. Ann Miles, Mrs. Mary Garbutt, Mrs. Jane Grow, Mrs. Susan L. Beckwith, and Francis Miles as constituent members.


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ORLEANS COUNTY.


February 27, 1848, this church resolved to adopt the Presbyterian form of government, and on June 26, 1849, it was received by the Presbytery of Niagara. The first session consisted of E. H. Garbutt, George F. Beckwith, and Chasen Miles. Of the second organization the following are remembered as pastors :


Revs. Milton Buttolf, Roswell Brooks, A. D. Olds, A. B. Peffers, Philander Griffin, Samuel F. Bacon, Henry Carpenter, N. Foster Browne, George Strasenburgh, Vahn K. Beshgetoor, and N. Foster Browne, the present pastor.


The society has about thirty five members and a Sunday school of seventy-five scholars with E. K. Beckwith superintendent. M. P. God- frey has been an elder in this church over thirty years.


CHAPTER XXV.


THE TOWN OF KENDALL.


Kendall was erected by an act of the Legislature on the 7th of April, 1837, from the north part of the town of Murray. It was named in honor of Amos Kendall, who was at that time postmaster-general of the United States ; the name being suggested by Webster & Pearsley, then merchants at Kendall village. They were active Democratic politicians, and largely instrumental in procuring the passage of the act of incorporation. The town lies in the northeast corner of the county and within the northern portion of the Connecticut or Hundred Thou- sand Acre tract. Its southern boundary is from half a mile to two miles north from the Ridge, and in a former geologic age its entire surface was covered by the waters of Lake Ontario, the shore of which now bounds it on the north. On the east is Monroe county, on the south is Mur- ray, and on the west is Carlton.


At the time of settlement a swamp, or " swale," lay at the base of the Ridge in this part of the county, and extended some two miles north from the southern boundary of the town. This was covered with a heavy growth of black ash, elm, and other varieties of timber and vege-


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tation which flourish on wet land.1 In wet times it was often covered with water, sometimes four or five feet deep. This part of the town was not, therefore, an inviting region for settlers, and for many years they avoided it. The clearing away of the forest and the draining of the land have converted it into a good farming locality.


Between this swamp and the lake the surface was covered with a dense growth of timber of those varieties that usually grow on uplands. This region was, in early times, called the "black North " and it has been surmised that this name was given because the thick foliage of the timber almost shut out the light of the sun. It is said that at an early town meeting in Murray the question was asked who represented the Black North. It was answered by Capt. H. D. Bates, a pioneer there, who then stated that the region thus derisively spoken of would yet become the best part of the town, which literally proved true.


The surface is usually level, sloping slightly toward Lake Ontario. The principal drainage is afforded by Yanty Creek, which rises in the southwest corner of Kendall and flowing northeasterly through the center of the town, flows into Bald Eagle Creek, which empties into the lake a little east from the middle of the northern boundary ; and Sandy Creek, which flows in nearly an easterly direction through the south- east corner of the town. This latter stream affords excellent mill privi- leges. Grain and fruit form the staple productions. Apples, pears, etc., are largely -grown in all parts of the town, while in the northeast corner peach raising has lately become an important industry. There are also a few fine vineyards which have proven very successful.


At a meeting held in accordance with the provisions of the act of in- corporation, at the tavern of John S. Winn, in Kendall village, on the third Tuesday in May, 1837, the organization of the town was com- pleted by the election of town officers. Ryan Barber, a magistrate, pre- sided, and the following officers were chosen : Alanson Whitney, super- visor ; Theron Soule, town clerk ; Henry W. Bates, William R. Bassett, and Thomas W. Ellis, assessors; John W. Crandall, sr., Peleg H. Bas- sett, and Willard Stearns, commissioners of highways ; Moses B. Gage, Daniel McConlee, and Alfred Biggs, commissioners of common schools :


1 In fact the whole of the county north of the Ridge was within the memory of many now living so densly covered with timber that the entire region was known as the North Woods.


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ORLEANS COUNTY.


Jacob Hardenbrook, Dr. Walter R. Sanford, and Jonathan Wilsea, in- spectors of common schools ; Alfred Riggs, Trumann Spicer and Paul Kendrick, justices of the peace ; Jacob Hardenbrook and Alexis Crane ; overseers of the poor ; William Griswold, collector ; William Griswold, Join Keeler, and Rodney Webster, constables ; and Solomon Webster, sealer of weights and measures. The supervisors of Kendall have been as follows ;


Alanson Whitney, 1837, '51 ; Joseph Mann, 1838, '43, '44; Ryan Barber, 1839, '40, '41; Henry Higgins, 1842 ; Levi Hard, 1845, '46 ; Abram Odell, 1847, '48; William R. Bassett, 1849, '50, '53, '54; Reuben Roblee, 1852 ; Pierre A. Simkins, 1855, '62, '75, '76, '81, '82; Philo F. Prosser, 1856, '57, '58, '59; Marvin Harris, 1860, '61 ; William K. Townsend, 1863; Nathaniel S. Bennett, 1864, '65; Augustus W. Barnett, 1866; Gideon Randall, 1867; Oscar Munn, 1868, '69, '70, '72 ; William O. Hardenbrook, 1871, '77, '78; Levi Barrows, 1873, '74; Samuel A. Bates, 1879, '80; Irving E. Wellman, 1883, '84, '91: Ira B. Bates, 1885, 86; Cornelius Fenner, 1887, '88; David L. Jones, 1889, '90; Hiram Acker, 1892, '93; Charles S. Bridgeman, 1894.


The Board of Health was organized in 1882. August 9, 1884, many of the town records were destroyed in the fire which burned the store of J. H. Lotz, where the town clerk's office was then located.


The town of Kendall, as previously stated, lies wholly within the Hundred Thousand Acre tract, which was owned jointly by the Pultney estate and the State of Connecticut. No records of articles or contracts with settlers on these lands are accessible, but the original deeds were granted as follows Commencing at the northwest corner of the town, and proceeding from west to east and from north to south, regardless of chronological order.


Lot 1, deeded to Joseph Corbin, 78, 83 acres, Sept. 15, 1834.


L. 2, John L. Preston, 51, 24 a., Nov. 25, 1844; William Ross, 51, 24 a., Nov. 15, 1852.


L. 3, Hiram Acker, 50 a., Dec. 26, 1848.


L. 4, William H. Ward, 157, 75 a., May 9, 1827.


L. 5, Dennis Densmore, 22, 96 a., May 6, 1857 ; Ethan Graham, 25, 47 a., May 7, 1857 ; David Jones, 32, 39 a., May 7, 1857; Jacob Odell, 29, 63 a., May 7, 1857.


L. 6, Elisha Rice, 27 a., Nov. 13, 1855.


L. 7, John Curtis, 10 a., Nov. 20, 1846 ; H. La Munion, 10 a., Jan. 28, 1840; John Curtis' 20 a., Nov. 20, 1846 ; Geo. Smith, 72, 94 a., Sept. 2, 1850.


L. 8, Andrew A. Smith, 105, 30 a., Dec. 26, 1848.


L. 9, William H. Ward, 114, 91 a., May 9, 1827.


L. 10, Edson Wilson, 60, 21 a., March 22, 1858; Justin Day, 50 a., Oct. 19, 1852.


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LANDMARKS OF


L. 12, William H. Torrey, 150, 36 a., Dec. 8, 1820.


L. 13. Gilbert Forbes, 161, 93 a., May 1, 1845.


L. 14, Marvin Harris, 101 a., Oet. 1, 1853 ; Minerva Lyell, 55 a., Nov. 1, 1858.


L. 15, Ole Johnson, 17, 55 a., Nov. 1, 1846.


L. 16, William H. Ward, 101, 10 a., May 12, 1809:


L. 17, William H. Ward, 97, 70 a., May 12, 1829.


L. 18, William H. Ward, 104, 68 a., May 9. 1827.


L. 19, Charles B. White, 52, 53 a., Aug. 28, 1844; Zebulon Rice, 52, 84 a .. Oct. 3, 1843.


L. 20, William T. Torrey, 106, 56 a., Dee. 8, 1820.


L. 21, William H. Ward, 106, 37 a.


L. 22, Gilbert Forbes, 54, 95 a., March 1, 1847 ; Jasper W. Odell, 34, 95 a., July 1, 1854 ; Willard M. Stearns, 20 a., May 1, 1845.


L. 24, Patrick Burnett, 188, 14 a., June 1, 1841.


L, 25, Ole Johnson, 50 a., June 1, 1849 ; Marvin Wilson and others, 124, 34 a., Oct. 1, 1855.


L. 26, Gideon W. Burbank, 100 a., Oct. 1, 1847.


L. 27, Levi Ward, 178 a., Nov. 1, 1850.


L. 28, (107, 13 a., and L. 29, 101, 21 a.,) Levi Ward, jr., May 12, 1829.


L. 30, Benj. G. Morse, 53, 44 a., Sept. 2, 1853 ; Edwin D. Hanks, 53, 44 a., May 29, 1850,


L, 31, Edward Mulford, 104, 06 a., Jan. 5, 1847.


L. 32, Abijah Reed, 101, 26 a., Jan. 29, 1846.


L. 33, Ethan Graham, 100, 87 a., Sept. 20, 1836.


L. 34, Willard M. Stearns, 50, 37 a., Dee. 1, 1837 ; Ethan Graham, 50, 36a., April 1, 1836.


L. 36, Francis Massett, 99, 04 a., June 13, 1823.


L. 37, Ole Herbrandson, 48, 34 a., Nov. 1, 1845; H. Higgins, 11, 96 a .. Jan. 1, 1857 : Henry Higgins, 35, 08 a., March 1, 1860


L. 38, Ira B. Carey, 100, 20 a., Jan. 1, 1835.


L. 39, Elizabeth Breckons, 112, 52 a., Nov. 1, 1855.


L. 40, 101, 41 a., (and L. 41, 92, 83 a.,) Levi Ward, jr., May 12, 1829.


L. 42, Edwin H. Dunks, 49, 18 a, May 29, 1850.


L. 44, William T. Torrey, 49, 24 a., Dec. 8, 1820; Abijah Reed, 49, 24 a., Jan. 29, 1846.


L. 45, David Jones, 96, 52 a., April 5, 1831.


L. 46, William Plocker, 47, 85 a., Oct. 1, 1846; Roxana Barber and others, 47, 85 a., Nov. 1, 1855.


L. 47, Theron Soule, 43 a., Oct. 1, 1835. Isaac Sonle, 49, 98 a., May 7, 1844.


L. 48, Theron Soule, 92, 74 a., Oct. 1, 1835.


L. 49, Henry Hervig, 39, 80 a., Nov. 1, 1850; Orlando M. Green, 50, 10 a., Nov. 1, 1855.


L. 50, Philo Prosser, 43, 33 a., June 1, 1853.


L. 51, Philo F. Prosser, 100, 72 a., Nov. 1, 1845.


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ORLEANS COUNTY.


L. 52, 101, 41 a., and L. 53, 96, 86 a., William H1. Ward, May 12, 1829.


L. 54, Harvey Rosecrantz, 51, 28 a., June 23, 1846 ; Levi Harris, 51, 28 a., April 29, 1856.


L. 56, Elias B. Holmes, 50, 27 a., Aug. 18, 1862.


L. 57, Daniel Requa, 98, 68 a., Dec. 9, 1836.


L. 58, Ryan Barber, 102, 25 a., June 1, 1844.


L. 59, A. Soule, 8, 12 a., July 1, 1850: Theron Soule, 51, 65 a., Oct. 1, 1835.


L. 60, Gideon Soule, 49, 90 a., Oct. 1, 1851.


L. 62, Ira Mason, 82, 50 a., Nov. 1, 1850; George S. Pierce, 15 a., Oct. 1, 1847.


L. 63, George W. Holmes, 100 a., Nov. 1, 1845.


L. 64, Alvin Ogden, 49, 22 a., May 20, 1836 ; Daniel Fenner, 24, 80 a., Aug. 20, 1855 ; Daniel Fenner, 24, 80 a., Jan. 7, 1848.


L. 65, John W. Crandall, 46 72 a., Nov. 9, 1850.


L. 66, Thomas W. Allis, 48, 36 a .. Sept. 2, 1840 ; David James, 24, 44 a., March 14, 1844; Oliver G. Allis, 12, 44 a .. Oct. 30, 1848 ; Nelson Coe, 12 a., Oct. 13, 1848.


L. 67, William Warren, 99, 01 a., May 8, 1854.


L. 68, Zebulon Rice, 48, 53 a., June 20, 1836; Elisha Rice, 48, 53 a., April 12, 1837,


L. 69, Daniel Requa, 98, 50 a., Dec. 9, 1836.


L. 70, Harry D. Weed, 95, 36 a., June 1, 1347.


L. 71, Henry Higgins, 98, 76 a., Oct. 1, 1835.


L. 72, Henry Higgins, 48, 86 a .. Oct. 1, 1835; Irving and Ephraim J. Crane, 49, 36 a., Jan. 1, 1856.


L. 74, Joseph Mann, 48, 05 a., Nov. 1, 1844; Joseph Mann, 48, 05 a., March 1, 1847. L. 75, Joseph Mann, 55, 93 a., Oct. 1, 1835; Archibald Fuller, 55, 69 a., Dec. 1 1846.


L. 76, Carman Southworth, 50 a., June 12, 1832 ; Daniel Fenner, 52, 76 a., Aug, 20, 1855.


L. 77, Reuben McDonald, 49, 28 a., Jan. 28, 1840; Thos. W. Allis, 49, 28 a., May 12, 1834.


L. 78, Thos. W. Allis, 50 a., Apr. 16, 1834 ; Oliver G. Allis, 51, 26 a, Apr. 16, 1834. L. 79, Oliver G. Allis, 49, 24 a., Apr. 16, 1834 ; Alanson Coe, 24, 24, a, Sept. 17, 1845; Zebulon Rice, 25 a., Apr. 12, 1837.


L. 80, Mary McDonald, 20 a., Apr. 30, 1833.


L. 81, James Weed, 52, 12 a., Sept. 30, 1835.


L. 82, Byron Densmore, 35 a., Feb. 1, 1837 ; Dennis Denmore, 66, 82 a., March I, 1855.


L. 83, James Weed, 51, 75 a., Jan. 28, 1826; Heny Higgins, 51, 50 a, Sept. 1, 1837.


L. 84, William Griswold, 51, 43 a., Nov. 1, 1858 ; Sarah Powell and others, 51, 43 a., Oct. 1, 1846.


L. 85, Elias B. Holmes, 105, 40 a., March 1, 1836.


L. 86, Edward Jenkins, 50, 45 a., Nov. 1, 1858; Elisha P. Davis, 50, 82 a., Apr. I, 1842.


L. 87, Jesse and Betsey King, 100, 53 a., Nov. 1, 1850 ; Daniel Clark, 14 a., Sept. 1, 1837.


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LANDMARKS OF


L. 88, Jonathan Webster, 50, 44 a., July 4, 1852 ; Samuel Crandall, 55, 44 a., Sept. 1, 1845.


L. 89, Samuel Crandall, 57, 26 a., Oct. 1, 1835; John W. Crandell, 52, 26 a., Oct. 1, 1835.


L. 90, Albert G. Ralph, 25, 82, March 23, 1861; Allen Bennett, 25, 31 a., May 1, 1852; Thos. W. Allis, 35, 91 a., Oct. 1, 1835.


L. 91 Elisha Rice, 52, 34 a., Jan. 1, 1839 ; Steuben S. Forbes, 51, 85 a., Nov. 1, 1858.


L. 92, Jacob Hardenbrook, 57, 20 a., Oct. 1, 1855 ; Asa Baker, 52, 98 a., Oct. 1, 1846.


L. 93, James Whitehouse, 106, 76 a., July 1, 1837.


L. 94, David Jones, 97, 21 a., Dec. 1, 1846.


L. 95, Norman Roblee, 50, 51 a., July 1, 1848.


L. 96, Albert Burnett, 19, 37 a., Feb. 1, 1853; Roswell S. Burrows, 49, 37 a., March 1, 1853.


L. 97, Jonathan Russell, 51, 69 a., March 1, 1849. Caleb A. Barnum, 25, 84 a., March 1, 1851 ; Lucinda Hawkins and others, 25 a., Nov. 1, 1845.


L. 98, Gideon W. Burbank, 25 a., Oct. 1, 1846; James Austin, 75, 36 a., March, 1, 1855.


L. 99, Edwin H. Dunks, 90, 19 a., Oct. 1, 1840; Henry W. Bates, 20 a., Apr. 1, 1836.


L. 100, Gideon Hard, Hiram S. Goff, and I. U. Sears, 101, 77 a., Sept. 1, 1835.


L. 101, Amos Cowell, jr., 47, 98 a., Apr. 1, 1851 ; David Weeks, 47, 98 a., Nov. 1, 1843.


L. 102, Edward Hooker, 101, 89 a., June 1, 1838.


L. 103, Hannah Weed and others, 102, 16 a., Aug. 1, 1840.


L. 104, James Whitehouse, 103 a., Apr. 2, 1860.


L. 105, Morey Elmore, 52, 57 a., Apr. 1, 1836 ; Jonathan Whitehouse, 25 a., Feb. 1, 1836; Morey Elmore, 32 a., Apr. 1, 1836.


L. 106, James Weed, 104 a., Ang. 19, 1831.


L. 107, Abm. M. Schermerhorn, 25 a., Apr. 2, 1839 ; John H. Thomas, 25 a., June 20, 1836; John H. Thomas, 59, 35 a., Apr. 5, 1831.


L. 108, Reuben Roblee, 25 a., June 12, 1832 ; Reuben Roblee, 78, 31 a., July 6, 1854.


L. 109, Caleb H. Barnum, 55 a. ; William Thomas, 55 a., Oct. 6, 1854.


L. 110, Peter Bush, 52, 02 a., Apr. 10, 1835; Jacob Thomas, 52, 02 a., Apr. 1, 1829.


L. 111, Henry W. Bates, 77, 03 a., Sept. 3, 1828; Henry W. Bates, 40 a., Sept. 28, 1832.


L. 112, Gideon Hard, H. S. Goff and Isaac U. Sears, 109, 16 a., Sept. 1, 1835.


L. 113, Hard, Goff and Sears, 52, 18 a., Sept. 1, 1835; John W. Crandall, 51, 52 a., Nov. 2, 1840.


L. 114, Harlow Willard Wells, 106, 33 a., May 1, 1841.


L. 115, James H. Forbes, 53, 76 a., Apr. 1, 1853 ; Jonathan Thompson, 50 a., Nov. 1, 1833.


L. 117, James Weed, 108, 90 a., March 5, 1831.


L. 118, James Weed, 101, 13 a., Apr. 6, 1826.


L. 119, Orrin J. Smith, 25 a., Nov. 1, 1850; N. M. Requa, 10 a .; Geo. S, Pierce, 12 a., Apr. 18, 1849 ; Henry Higgins, 22 a., Jan. 2, 1833; Geo. S. Pierce, 27, 82 a., Oct. 30, 1847 ; R. Roblee, 5 a.


ORLEANS COUNTY. 665


L. 120, Ezra Spicer, 4 a., Ang. 21, 1855; A, M. Schermerhorn, 44, 34 a., April 2, 1839 ; Phebe N. Evarts, 25, 71 a., Apr. 5, 1831.




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