USA > Ohio > Columbiana County > History of Columbiana County, Ohio, with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers > Part 52
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The members worshiping here number about 70, and have at present the following official board : Stewards, Hugh McCoy and Alvin Thomas; Trustees, John Huston, Alvin Thomas, John Baxter, Martin Thomas, Isaac Huston, James Fitzsimmons, and J. C. Billingsley ; and Sunday- School Superintendent, Martin Thomas.
THE FAIRVIEW METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH,
near the southwest corner of section 31, was built in 1869 by a committee composed of John Hollinger, Wm. Rudi- baugh, George Reininger, Levi Williams, John Lonas, Jo- seph Henry, and Stephen Hickman, most of whom also con- stitute the present board of trustees. The society worship- ing in this house was organized in Madison township, and, until the date ubove given, was known as the Williamsport charge, the first place of worship having been in that vil- lage. Both churches have the same ministerial supply. In early times this was furnished by a circuit which embraced nearly the entire county ; in 1840 the eastern part of the county was formed into the Liverpool circuit, and embraced these appointments ; and since 1860 they have been a part of the Elkton circuit. Since 1820 these circuits have been regularly supplied by the Conferences to which they had been attached, but it is probable that the Methodist mis- sionaries visited these parts and preached before they were taken up as appointments. It is believed that the appended list of ministers embraces the names of nearly all who pro- claimed Methodism in the township. The years given are the dates of their appointments by Conference : 1820, Revs. Jacob Hooper Dowler ; 1821, Wm. Tipton, Trescott, Henry Knapp ; 1822, Wm. Tipton, Samuel Brookonier ; 1823, Dennis Goddard, B. O. Plympton ; 1824, Ezra Booth, Al- bert G. Richardson ; 1825, Samuel Adams, Robert Hop- kins; 1826, John Knox, Wm. Henderson ; 1827, Edward Taylor, John Somerville; 1828, B. O. Plympton, Na- thaniel Callender; 1829, George Brown, Winans ; 1830, Wm. Henderson, Alfred Bronson ; 1831, John Craw- ford, Jacob Jenks; 1832, John P. Kent, W. Summers ; 1833, L. M. Weakly, D. Gordon; 1834, Alcinus Young, John Meacham ; 1835, Alcinus Young, P. S. Ruter ; 1836, Daniel Sharp, John McLean ; 1837, Daniel Sharp, J. W. Auld; 1838, George McCaskey, J. Montgomery ; 1839, George McCaskey, Joshua Monroe; 1840, I. Dallas, Joshua
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Monroe ; . 1841-42, Henry Wharton, Cornelius Jackson ; 1843-45, James M. Bray, W. P. Blackburn; 1846-47, Nathaniel Callender, J. K. Miller ; 1848-49, Robert Cun- ningham, T. W. Winstanly ; 1850-51, Wm. C. Hender- son, A. J. Dale; 1852-53, John Huston, Warren Long; 1854-55, David Campbell, John R. Roller ; 1856-57, An- drew Huston, John Ansley; 1858-59, A. W. Butts, H. W. Baker ; 1860, M. W. Dallas, A. W. Taylor; 1861-62, M. S. Kendig; 1863, Warren Long; 1864, Louis Payne; 1865, John Wright; 1866-67, G. D. Kinnear; 1868-70, A. J. Lane ; 1871, John Huston ; 1872-73, J. D. Leg- gett; 1874-75, W. Bedall; 1876-78, James M. Bray ; 1879, A. J. Culp.
THE BURT METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCHI.
When the Rev. Brookonier was on the circuit, before described, in 1822, the Rev. John Burt, a local Methodist minister, persuaded him to preach at his house, on section 1. As a result of his occasional labors at this point a society was formed, which had among its members the Burts, Eatons, and Bartons, who, some years after, built a small meeting-house near Father Burt's home. In this worship was maintained until 1867, when the appointment Was given up and the interest transferred to the village of East Palestine. The meeting-house has been demolished. The charge was changed frequently from one circuit to another, but, in the main, has been served by the ministers before named.
Two other members of this society, Isaac and Samuel Eaton, became local Methodist preachers, and their brother, M. M. Euton, became a member of the Pittsburgh Confer- ence.
THE HAZELVILLE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
In the summer of 1850, Samuel Thomas, Jared Marluee, and Joseph Scott, acting as a board of trustees for a society formed previously, erected a small meeting-house in the southeastern part of section 5, which has since been known as the Hazelville church. The persons worshiping there at that period belonged principally to the Grey, Sunds, Thomas, Marinee, and Scott families, and had for their first minister the Rev. Wm. Ferrall. Subsequently, the minis- ters preaching here have been the Revs. Fast, Crayton, Waldorf, Turner, Bonewill, Fraver, Dilley, Booth, Bowers, Perkins, Slusser, Deihl, Randall, Lower, Faulk, Low, Beg- ley, Singar, and Kettering. There are at present about 25 members, with Henry Barton as class-leader, and John Marlnee, Enos Seachrist, and Joseph Richardson as trus- tees of the meeting-house. A Sunday-school of 40 mem- bers has Enos Seachrist for superintendent.
THE UNION BRIDGE CHAPEL OF THE UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
For the accommodation of the United Brethren living in the central part of the township, a class was formed in that locality in 1864, and preaching was supplied in con- nection with the Hazelville charge, the meetings being held in the school-house. In 1871 a neat frame edifice was erected by a committee, composed of Andrew Wurd, John Gorby, Aquilla Ward, Culbertson Addis, and C. Huston,
on the western part of section 15, which was dedicated in September by the Rev. B. F. Booth. This property is now under the trusteeship of John Gorby, Gustavus Gorby, and S. S. Duke.
The members comprising the society number about 60, and have the same pastors as the Hazelville and Fairfield churches. S. S. Dyke is the leader of the class, and Alvan Huston superintendent of the Sunday-school. Mrs. Lu- cinda Marlnec was licensed as a local preacher in 1870, and still holds that relation in the church.
THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF CLARKSON.
This society was formed in the spring of 1839, and was composed chiefly of a number of persons who had formerly belonged to the congregation at Middle Beaver, and when that body was dissolved came to this locality to establish a place of worship, the remaining members going to Madison. Among the members who constituted the congregation of Clarkson were John McCammon, James W. Guston, Joseph Steel, John G. Gaston, Mathew Lyon, Hugh Gaston, Ma- thias Shirtz, Wm. Steel, James Provines, ITugh Sebring (and their wives), Morgan Lyon, Elizabeth Knight, Nancy McCammon, Elizabeth McCammon, and Mary Keep.
A frame meeting-house was built that year, a little south of the village of Clarkson, on a lot of ground given for the purpose and for a cemetery by Thomas Ashton and George Fcazle, which was used until 1877, when it was displaced by the present edifice. This is a very neat though plain frame, and was built by a committee composed of Daniel G. Souder, T. J. Conkle, and P. Gaston. The grounds are inclosed by a fine fence, giving the place an inviting ap- pearance. The board of trustees controlling the property in 1879 were J. W. Hollinger, T. R. Wilson, Samuel Crawford, T. J. Conkle, and John Wallum.
Two of the ruling elders of the old congregation con- tinued to discharge the duties of that office for the Clark- son congregation,-namely, Hugh Gaston and John McCain- mon; a third elder was soon after chosen in the person of James Guston. The other elders of the church have been John Souders, Hiram Hollinger, David Swaney, Edward Crawford, James Armstrong, Stephen Clark, William Ross, Henry Creighton. Wm. B. Sherman, Francis Scott, Wm. M. Crawford, Daniel G. Souders, and John Hollinger, the three last named holding that office at the present.
The Rev. William O. Stratton was the first pastor, re- maining until 1843; and, after the lapse of a number of years, the Rev. William Dalzell also served the congregation a short time in that capacity. The other ministers have been connected as supplies, and have been as follows: the Revs. William D. McCartney, Thomas McDermott, John B. Graham, R. Lewis, William Reed, Robert Armstrong, George Johnson, J. R. Miller, W. Gaston, J. R. Dundas, and the present, J. N. Wilson.
The congregation has about 130 members and maintains a good Sunday-school, which is at present superintended by J. B. Bell.
THE ASSOCIATE PRESBYTERIAN CONGREGATION OF CLARKSON.
Some time about 1854 a small congregation was formed at Clarkson from the Roseburgh, Logan, Wilson, Finney,
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HISTORY OF COLUMBIANA COUNTY, OHIO.
and other families who held the doctrines of the Associate Presbyterians. Meetings were occasionally held in the old church, the preaching being supplied by the Rev. S. W. Clark, of St. Clair; but after a few years the congre- gation disbanded. Before the formation of the above congregation, the Free Presbyterians established them- selves in this community, receiving membership from the Gaston, Moore, and other families, ultimately to the num- ber of forty. Meetings were held in the church, school- house, and Hugh Gaston's barn, by the Revs. Bradford, Robertson, Jamison, and McElhaney, which were attended with considerable interest. The union of the various Pres- byterian bodies of the country was followed at Clarkson by the formation of
THE UNITED. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
In the spring of 1862, Samuel R. Roseburgh was chosen to bear a petition to the Presbytery, asking that a congregation might be duly formed by an accredited person at Clarkson. That body appointed the Rev. S. W. Clark, and on the 5th
of July of that year he discharged this mission, uniting in church fellowship the following persons: S. R. Rose- burgh, Jane Roseburgh, Samuel Henderson, Mary Hen- derson, Jane Walter, Ellen Crawford, Mrs. Henry, Charity Gaston, W. C. Wilson, Margaret Wilson, Surah E. Logan, John R. Chain, Elizubeth Chain, Mary J. Wilson, Andrew Cavatt, Martha Cavatt, William Glenn, Louisa Glenn, John P. Finney, John, Esther, and Margaret Roseburgh, Samuel C. Saint, Mary Saint, and William H. Gaston.
Samuel R. Roseburgh, William Glenn, John R. Chain, and W. C. Wilson were elected the first ruling elders. These offices are at present filled by John R. Chain, Samuel C. Saint, and John G. Gaston. The meeting-house was built in 1863. The pulpit was first supplied by the Revs. S. W. Clark, Martin, Melvin, and in 1868 the Rev. A. T. Houston was installed pastor, remaining four years. Since then the clergy have been the Revs. Alexander, McElhaney, and Patterson, there being at present no regular supply. The congregation numbers but 28 members, and the church is not so prosperous as in former days.
PERRY.
This is the central northern township of the county, and was constituted from four sections taken from each of the townships of Butler, Greene, Goshen, and Salem.
The village of Salem was incorporated prior to the erec- tion of the township, and is the only village in its territory. The surface of the land is generally undulating, without any prominent physical features.
The water-courses are few and small, among which the principal are the middle fork of Beaver Creek, which rises in the southern part of the township, flows in a south- easterly course, and leaves the township a little west of the southeast corner; and the head-waters of Buffalo Creek, one branch of which rises in the village of Salem, and one in the southwest corner of the town. These branches unite a little west of the north part of the village, on section 36, and flow northerly, passing out of the township about a mile and a half east of its west boundary.
EARLY SETTLEMENT.
The Friends began to push their way to the West from Pennsylvania and Virginia soon after the trouble with the mother-country had ceased and the territory of the North- west had been organized.
Jacob Painter, from Virginia, in the year 1802, with his wife and children,-David, Saml., Abigail, and Robert, -came into this part of the country and located on section 32, township 16, range 3, and built on the farm where John Pow now lives. They first put up a tent made from the wagon-cover, which they used while building the log cabin. The days of Mr. Painter were mostly passed on the farm. His sons settled principally on the same section.
Elisha Schooley, also from Virginia, located in 1801, and built a log cabin, which in a few years he replaced with a frame dwelling. His sons settled on a part of the section.
In 1803, Samuel Davis, a sturdy follower of William Penn, a man of strong individuality, indomitable persever- ence, and withal eccentric, who was born in New Jersey, and had lived several years in Pennsylvania, where he mar- ried, set out to make a settlement in this part of the country. After pushing his way along the New Lisbon road, he reached the undulating lands which occupy the northern part of Columbiana County, and determined to re- main. He cut his way through the dense woods about a mile, and located on section 31, township 16, range 3, which he afterwards purchased of Samuel Smith, whose assignec he was.
Mr. Davis received a deed direct from the government, signed by Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States, and dated Aug. 9, 1806. He also later received a deed of section 33, township 16, range 3, dated March 10, 1807, and another of section 20, township 17, range 4, dated Nov. 1, 1808. The certificates for these sections had been granted some years previous. He commenced a clear- ing, planted wheat, and built a log cabin on the spot where, a few years later, he built the large brick house now owned by his granddaughter, Mrs. Hiddleson. At this time commenced the wondrous change which transformed the almost unbroken wilderness into cultivated fields, and built up a thriving village, vocal with the busy hum of mia- chinery whose productions reach to the farthest ends of the earth.
Whether Mr. Davis remained during the winter is not
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known; but in the spring of 1804, his family, consisting of his wife and children,-Rebecca, Mary, Samuel, William, Elizabeth, Rachel, and Joshua,-removed to this place, and settled in the new home. Soon afterwards others of the Society of Friends gathered about them, and in a few years constituted a considerable settlement. In 1806, Mr. Davis presented to the settlement two acres of land on which to build a meeting-house, situated on the north side of Main Street, at the corner of Ellsworth. In 1815 he laid out the tier of lots on the north side of the street. His time in later years was devoted to the management of his land.
Mr. Davis was an excellent judge of human nature, and settled more law-suits by conciliation between disputants, in the last few years of his life, than did the courts, and assisted often, financially, in adjusting compromises, his love of humanity leading him to prevent resort to "legal suasion," as he termed suits at law. Samuel Davis died April 15, 1836, at the age of seventy-three years; Mary, his wife, died April 27, 1842, aged eighty-three years.
He was always on the alert for the ludicrous, and many bits of humor are told of him, one of which is as follows: A Dutchman went out beside a spring to indulge in a private drink from his bottle; he there encountered Davis, whom he invited to partake. Davis at first declined, but when urged appeared to consent, remarking that he "couldn't take it undiluted." He thereupon suggested that the whisky be poured into the "run," while he drank fromn it just below. The Dutchman complied, and, as Davis con- tinued to drink and called for more, the Dutchman continued to pour until the bottle was empty. All too late to save a portion for himself the Dutchmun discovered that he had been duped, and that Davis had taken only water "straight." He afterwards declared, "I never had no Yankee come it over me or cbeat me so pad as Sammy Davis."
The first wedding which occurred in the town was that of Rebecca, the oldest child of Mr. Davis, and David Scofield. The marriage was solemnized in the small log church which stood on the north side of the street, near where the town-ball now stands. The intention of the happy couple had been duly published at the Middleton Monthly Meeting. David saw Rebecca for the first time when she was in a clearing helping her father roll and haul loga. Almost every person in the neighborhood was invited to the wedding.
The following certificate is recorded on page 1 of the Friends' Church Record of that day, and is a verbatim copy of the marriage certificate, now in possession of Joseph Holloway, a son-in-law of Mrs. Schofield :
" David Schofield, of Columbiana County, and State of Ohio, son of David Schofield, of Campbell County, State of Virginia, and Rachel his wife, and Rebecah Davis, daughter of Samuel Davis, of Columbiana County, and State of Ohio, and Mary his wife, having declared their intentions of taking each other in marriage, before several monthly meetings of the people called Quakers, in the county of Columbiana and State of Ohio, the proceedings of the said David Schofield and Rebecah Davis, after due enquiry and deliberate con- sideration, were allowed by the said meeting, they appearing clear of all others, and haring consent of parents and parties concerned.
"Now these are to certify whom it may concern, that for the accom- plishing their said marriage, this twentieth day of the eleventh month, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and five, they,
the said David Schofield and Rebecah Davis appeared in a public assembly of the aforesaid people, and others, in their meeting-house at Salem, and he the said David Schofield taking the said Rebecah Davis by the hand, did openly and solemnly declare as follows, or nearly 80 :
"'In the presence of this assembly, I take this my friend Robecah Davis to be my wife, promising, with Divine aid, to be to her a loving and faithful husband till death shall separate us.'
" And the said Rebecah Davis did then and there in the said assembly declare as follows :
"' In the presence of this assembly, I take this my friend David Schofield to be my husband, promising, with Divine aid, to bo to him a loving and faithful wife till death shall separate us.'
" And the said David Schofield and Rebeonh Davis (she according to custom of marriage assuming the name of her husband) as a full confirmation thereof, and in testimony thereto did then and there to these presents set their hands.
" DAVID SCHOFIELD, " REBECAH SCROFIELD.
"We, who were present among others at the above marriage, have also subscribed our names as witnesses thereto, the day and year aforesaid :
"Elizabeth Right, Samuel Davis, Rachel Schooley, Jesse Hollowny, Unity Stanley, Abram Warrington, Abagail Hunt, Joseph Curl, Joseph Black, James Shore, Hannah Morris, Enoch Warrington, Rachel War- rington, Jonathan Evans, Deborah Schooley, John Straughan, Mary Test, Israel Gaskell, Benjamin Test, Price Blake, John Schooley, Zac- cheus Test, Robert French, Hannah Test, Anthony Morris, Mary Davis, Zilpah Gaskell, Mary Shinn, Mary Reeves, Elisha Schooley, Elizabeth Evans, Caleb Shinn, Judith Townsend, John Isenhour, Mary Isenhour, Keziah Woolman."
David Schofield kept store in Salem for many years where Dr. Kuhn now lives.
Mary, the second daughter of Samuel Davis, married Ben- jamin Hawley, who came from Middleton in 1820, his father having come to that place from Chester County in 1801. Mr. Hawley built the brick house where the ex- press-office now is, and lived there until 1831, when he bought the old Davis place from Joshua Davis. It con- tained about 100 acres, which he laid out in lots and streets. He sold all the lots except the home lot, which is still in possession of his daughter, Mrs. Hiddleson. He Was a carpenter by trade, was justice of the peace a number of years, and transacted business as an adjuster of claims and conveyancer. He was one of the earliest friends of the present school system, and did much to promote its accept- ance. He was one of the most useful citizens, and an honest mun. Mr. Hawley died Feb. 27, 1875, aged eighty- five years.
About the year 1805, John Webb, with his family of seven sons and four daughters, moved from Hartford Co., Md., to what is now Perry township, and settled on the northeast quarter of section No. 30, where William Dunn now lives. His children were as follows : Thomas, James, John,* Ann, William, Richard, Elizabeth, Mary, Abraham, and Isaac. Of these, there is but one survivor, Isaac Webb, who is a resident of Salem, being now about eighty-seven years of age. He married Ann Jennings, daughter of Levi and Rebecca .Jennings.
Levi Jennings was born in New Jersey, May 15, 1764; married Rebecca Everly, of Everly Bottoms, Va., in 1789.
. John Webb built the first brick dwelling in the township and kept it as a hotel, which was afterwards known as the " Jennings House." Col. Thomas Webb, his son, was born in Salem, and kept the Union Hotel, on Arch Street, between Third and Fourth Streets, Philadel- phin, for ten years, also the National Hotel, on Courtland Street, New York. He now lives in Massillon, Ohio.
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In 1808 he moved into Columbiana County, and settled on the south west quarter of section No. 26, now in Perry town- ship, where they lived to a good old age, having raised a family of four sons and four daughters,-Simeon, Levi, Sarah, Jesse, Mary, Ann, William, and Rebecca, of whom none but Ann (Mrs. Isaac Webb) and William survive. The elder son, Simeon, was in some respects a remarkable man. He was born Nov. 7, 1791, and at his death, which occurred Oct. 30, 1865, left an estate of over one and a half millions of dollars.
The eldest daughter of Ann and Isaac Webb married Uriah Wilson, and the youngest married Leonard Schil- ling, who came to Salem in 1847, and entered the store of J. T. & I. I. Boone. He is the oldest living merchant in the town, having had a business experience, without inter- mission, of thirty-two years.
Levi Jennings was township treasurer in 1812, '13, '16, and '23. Simeon Jennings was clerk in 1814, '15, and 16.
Abram Warrington, with his wife, Rachel, and brother Enoch, came from New Jersey in 1804, and settled in what is now Perry, on the farm where Stacy Cooke now lives. He was supervisor of the township in 1812. One daughter married William Fisher, another married Nathan Hunt.
Job Cook, from New Jersey, came to this part of the county in 1804, in search of land upon which to settle. Meeting John Straughn,* the two went to Steubenville, where Mr. Cook entered section 1, and, having the choice of position, chose the south two-thirds, where Henry Cook, his grand- son, now lives (1879). He had four children,-Jacob W., Thomas, Job, who lives in Goshen, and Mary. Mr. Cook died in 1841, at the age of ninety-three years.
John Straughn came from Bucks Co., Pa., to Sulem in 1804, where, meeting Job Cook (as previously mentioned), with that gentleman he entered the whole of section 1, taking for himself the north third. Mr. Straughn stopped at the cabin of Samuel Davis for a few days until the completion of his own, which was situated on the south part of a lot now owned by James G. Brown. He lived in this cabin about a year, when he sold it for $1, and built a hewed- log cabin, now owned by Robert Tolerton and R. V. Hampson. In this more pretentious domicile he lived until 1849, when he built the brick house now occupied by William Jennings, where he died in 1858, aged eighty- one years.
Mr. Straughn, with Zudock Street, laid out the village of Salem in 1806. His children were Ann, Eliza, Joseph, Sarah, and Jesse. Ann (now Mrs. Larwell) and Eliza (now Mrs. Day) reside at Wooster. Jesse is a civil engi- neer at Fort Wayne, Ind.
Hugh Burns, a brother of John Burns, who settled in Butler in 1803, settled at the same time in the southwest part of what is now Perry township, where Eli Fawcett lives.
Zaccheus Test located a section of land in Butler, now Perry, in 1803. The section in Butler he divided between his sons, Isaac and Samuel.
Jonas Cattell entered section 36, in what is now the
township of Perry, in 1803, and the next year sold to George Baum the southwest quarter of the section, and to Elisha Hunt-a brother of Nathan and Stacy Hunt-the southeast quarter of the section, which passed afterwards to Robert French.
Enoch Cattell, a son of Jonas Cattell, came from Brownsville, Pa., in 1812, and settled on the north half of section 36. Jonas D. Cattell, now living on the farm his grandfather purchased, was born the next year after they came. His father and mother died in 1814. He lived with Thomas French during his boyhood. When Enoch Cattell first came to Perry, David Venable and Stacy Strat- ton were on the farm as tenants.
Thomas French came with Zadock Street, from the same place, and located in or near Damascus, where he built a brick house. A year or two after the death of his brother- in-law, Enoch Cattell, he came to Salem and took charge of the farm Enoch had occupied. He was appraiser of prop- erty in 1812. He had five brothers,-Thomas, James, Robert, John, and Barzilla.
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