History of Madison County, Ohio : its people, industries and institution with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families, Part 18

Author: Bryan, Chester Edwin
Publication date: 1915
Publisher: Indianapolis, Ind. : Bowen
Number of Pages: 1150


USA > Ohio > Madison County > History of Madison County, Ohio : its people, industries and institution with biographical sketches of representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families > Part 18


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David Watson was born in Maryland, October 17, 1783, and, with his father, Walter Watson, and his family, became settlers in Ohio in 1806. In 1807, with Mr. Helpenstine and family, David Watson came to Paint township and here was married to Mary Helpenstine, for whom he formed a special attachment when she was but ten years of age, while residing in Virginia.


George Blougher, of German descent, came with, or about the same time as, Robert Hume, in 1804. He worked one year for him, clearing his land, for which service Mr. Hume deeded him one hundred acres of land, upon which he settled and remained throughout life. About 1810-12, a Mr. Harpole settled on the Hume land and became owner of quite a large amount of land; but little is known of him.


James Withrow, born in Pennsylvania, emigrated to Madison county in 1807 and settled on Walnut run, in Paint township, and, in the following year, removed his family to his new home in the wilderness. Here he took up two hundred and fifty acres of land. He had but three neighbors, David Watson, Jonathan Minshall and Peter P. Helpenstine. Mr. Withrow was a man of wide experiences and of great influence. He served as a major in the militia for several years. He built a saw-mill on Walnut run about 1815, which was the first mill in this vicinity and one of the first in the county. The power for this mill was furnished by the stream. It remained in operation for ten or twelve years. He was a man of great firmness of character. All his life he was an active member of the Presbyterian church. They had a family of seven children: Ann married Abraham Phifer, and died about 1873; Margaret died unmarried; David married Mary Harvey, and settled in the township, where he died without issue; Isabel married John Stroup, by whom she had five children: Robert married Ann Carr; Washington married Catharine Truman and settled on the home place; Samuel married Charlotte Rankin.


John Stroup settled on the Buffenberger land about 1810, where he remained through- out life. He was a native of Pennsylvania.


John Phifer, a native of Virginia, came to Madison county about 1810, and located on Paint creek, also on the Buffenberger lands. He was a blacksmith by trade, which business he followed, along with farming, throughout life. He raised a family of three sons and four daughters. George Phifer, his son. who 'married Tabitha Dean, was also a blacksmith by trade and followed it for several years. Soon after marrying, he moved to London, where he became a prominent and successful business man. Abraham Phifer, another son of John, and a brother of George, married Ann Withrow and settled near his father. He devoted his life to farming, at which he made a great success. John, the third son, died when very young. The daughters were Dolly, Clara, Betsey and Nancy. All married, had families, and became prosperous and good citizens.


Peter Buffenberger, a native of Virginia, came to this county when a young man and, about 1810, located on Paint creek, in this township, and entered largely into the stock business. About 1816 he fenced in a large tract of these prairies. He married, at the advanced age of seventy-five years, Angeline Hutson, by whom he had two children, Eugene and May. Mr. Buffenberger died a few years after his marriage, leaving his family four thousand two hundred acres of fine land. besides seven hundred acres which he had previously deeded in fee simple to his wife. .


About 1810 George Linson, a native of Virginia, settled on Paint creek, just below the Buffenberger tract of land. He had married in Virginia, and came here in very limited circumstances. He entered upon the stock business, was very successful and made money rapidly, becoming the owner of over two thousand acres of excellent land.


George Chappell, who was a resident of this township until his death, settled near Walnut run about 1810. He was a native of Virginia. He married Margaret Green and


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had four sons and two daughters. He served in the office of justice of the peace for several years.


Rev. William Sutton, a minister in the Methodist Episcopal church, it is believed, was born in Virginia, but became a settler of Paint township about 1810, locating on the Hume land. He married Hannah Coberly. He resided here but a few years, when, as a Methodist minister. he had to adopt an itinerant life; but the greater part of his life was spent in the service of the ministry within Madison county. Lewis Higgins, a native of Virginia, settled on the Hume tract about 1811. Reuben Gregg, a native of Virginia, emigrated to Chillicothe in 1810, and to Madison county in 1811, locating in Paint township, about half a mile below where the village of Newport is now situated. He married Phoebe Harpole, and remained a resident here until his death. Thomas Coberly, also a native of Virginia, emigrated to Ohio and, about 1810, purchased one hundred acres of land in Paint township, upon which he located and where he resided until his death. James Chapman was born in Frederick county, Virginia, in 1801. In 1816 he became a settler of Paint township, and later married Ann Chapman, likewise a native of Virginia, by whom he had nine children.


EARLY SCHOOLS.


The first schools in Paint township is thought to have been held in a cabin on Jonathan Minshall's land. Samuel Harvey being the first teacher, or one of the first. This school, like all other pioneer schools, was supported by subscription, the teacher receiving about fifteen dollars a month for his services. The first school house was of the pioneer type-round logs, puncheon floor, slab seats and greased-paper windows. The first public school house was erected on the ground now embraced in the cemetery. This was a hewed-log house, and was then considered quite neat and comfortable. This house was succeeded by a frame one, erected on the same ground about 1847. It was used for school purposes until about 1872, when it gave way to a brick building, erected at the cost of about fifteen hundred dollars.


CHAPTER XII.


PIKE TOWNSHIP.


Pike township was one of the early constituted townships of Madison county, as upon the commissioners' records we find the following account of its erection, bearing date September 5, 1814: "At a meeting of the commissioners, present Joshua Ewing and William Gibson, ordered, that the following bounds comprise a new township, to be known and designated by the name of Pike. Beginning where the state road intersects the north boundary of Madison county and running from thence with the said road, so as to include the same till it intersects the Urbana road; thence southwardly on a line half a mile east of Little Darby, till it intersects the Jefferson township line at Mark's survey ; thence to Peter Paugh's southeast corner; thence westwardly with Deer Creek township line to Champaign county line, and with said county line to the northwest corner of Madison county, and thence with the line between Madison county and Dela- ware to the beginning."


In the erection of Union county in 1820, a portion of the above described territory was embraced in that county, and consequently the north boundary line was changed and Pike township made smaller in territory. Again, on March 4, 1839, another change was made in the township of Pike, as follows: "At a meeting of the commissioners of Madison county, ordered that the following bonndaries compose the township of Pike (as surveyed January 24, 1839, by William B. Irwin), to wit: Beginning at the north- west corner of Madison county, thence running on the line between Madison and Union counties, east by the variation six miles to an elm, corner to Darby township, Madison county ; thence with the line of Darby township south three miles and one hundred and six poles to four elms; thence south eighty degrees west (by the needle) six miles and thirty poles, to the original southeast corner of Pike township, in the line of Champaign county ; thence with the said line north four miles to the beginning."


After the permanent boundaries had been fixed, it was one of the smallest of the fourteen townships comprising Madison county. It is also one of the most regular town- ships in the said county, its contour and general form being nearly a perfect parallelogram. while nearly all of the other townships of the county are remarkable for their irregu- larity of shape. This township occupies the extreme northwest corner of Madison county and is bounded on the north by Union county, on the west by Champaign county, on the south by Monroe and Somerford townships and on the east by Darby township.


SURFACE, SOIL, ETC.


The surface of Pike township is level, except along the streams and small creeks. much of it being prairie and oak openings. All that portion between Little Darby and Barron run. extending to the north line of the township, is very level and a beautiful country ; also, all west of Barron run and between that stream and Spring fork is also level. On the Little Darby and along Barron run and Spring fork, the surface is quite uneven and in a few places there are small hills. The soil of the level and prairie por- tions of the township consists principally of a black loam, with here and there a stretch of clay and loam. The soil is very deep and rich, naturally producing an exuberant growth of grass and vegetation. Along the creeks and streams the soil is principally clay, but very strong and productive, so that throughout the township the soil may be


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said to be very rich and fertile. The subsoil is clay and gravel, with, usually, a third strata of blue clay and disintegrated limestone. . This township, from its first settlement, has been peculiarly adapted to raising live stock, and that business has always received a large share of the attention of, the farmers and most wealthy citizens, who have given considerable attention to the improving and bettering of fine blooded stock. But as the lands become divided up into smaller farms, as the tendency is from year to year, and the soil better ditched, tiled and drained, it becomes better adapted to the cultivation of all the grains. There have been quite a few tile factories in this part of the state, which furnish the farmer with drain tile at a low rate and make it within the reach of every farmer to drain his farm and in this way make it better and more productive. Much of the low, flat prairie lands, which a few years ago were almost useless from the great surplus of water in them ; in which stock would almost mire, and in which it was never attempted to run the plow or cultivate for grain, are now, by this process of tiling. becoming the best wheat and corn-growing lands in the county. This township, which, as late as the seventies, scarcely produced enough grain for home consumption, is now exporting vast quantities of corn and wheat.


The forests and timber of Pike township are similar to those of other townships in the county. It was generally heavy timbered along the streams and creeks. On the creek bottoms were considerable quantities of walnut, and back from the creeks and on the rolling lands were white, black, red and burr oak, with some considerable hick- ory and a less amount of white oak, elm and a few other varieties. One noticeable and peculiar feature of the timber of this township, which appears to be a common con- dition of most of the county, composed largely of prairie and timber, where the general course of the stream is south southeast, is, that for a short distance on the east side of the creeks, the timber was a much heavier and denser growth than on the west side of the same. On the east side of the Darby, in particular, was where the beech and a few other varieties were found, and not much in other localities. It is quite probable the principal reason of the timber, being less heavy and dense on the west side of the creeks was in consequence of yearly fires which swept over the prairies and which destroyed the undergrowth and more or less checked the growth of the larger timber ; as these fires usually raged from west, to east, these streams and creeks served as a barrier which the fire could not overlap, or if it did, it was so checked in its power that it would burn with much less violence and destructive power until it would get some distance again from the creek, where the ground was drier, when, from being fanned by the breeze and finding no more combustible matter, it would again sweep forward with great velocity and violence until again checked by another stream, or the lack of combustible matter to keep up the flame.


Although Pike township was not settled quite as early as some of the other por- tions of the county, yet, as is the case, in all, swampy country, we find the settlers tak- ing possession of the lands along the streams, where the more elevated and drier lands were tillable. But many of these were mere "squatters"; being possessed of no means, they did not purchase the land in this locality, but remained here a short time and enjoyed the pleasure of hunting, where there was an abundance of deer, turkey and other game. Sometimes they made some small improvements and quietly enjoyed their possessions without any great amount of investment. Finally, as , other settlers came in and purchased the lands with a view of becoming permanent residents of the locality, or as the "squatters" became dissatisfied, they moved away to enjoy other homes and hunting grounds. Some of these "squatters," though not owners of their homes or possessed of wealth, were moral and religious men and women and good citizens, and exerted quite an influence in forming and molding the general character of the com- munity. Many of these having resided here but a short time, and the older of the


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pioneers, who at that time knew them well, having passed away, there is but little information whereby the good of these early squatters can be exactly ascertained. The dates of these early settlements cannot be learned, but they were such important factors in the early development of this township that their lives should be sketched, even if it does border on the traditional.


THE PIONEERS.


The first of these "squatters" to be mentioned are Oliver and Harris Jaynes. It is believed that they were among the first, if not the first, who came into the township. They made their settlement on the Little Darby, a short distance from where Henry King afterwards settled. A family named Keyes settled a little farther up the Darby, near the northeast corner of the township. The first settlement on Barron run was made by two brothers, Edsel and Samuel Carr. The latter was quite an active man and a moral and upright citizen. He was a leading and active worker in the Methodist church in its first organization in Pike township. A family by the name of Whitman, the head of which is believed was Solomon, settled later on Barron run. They never purchased land there and, a few years afterward, moved away to parts unknown. Three brothers, Samuel, Isaac and Daniel Allen, settled on Barron run about this time, and later purchased small tracts of land. Samuel was a local preacher in the Methodist church and quite a prominent and influential man in that day. They moved into Union county about the year 1830. Mr. Burrell, a blacksmith by trade and the first of this profession in the township, was also a very early settler on Barron run, but only resided there a short time. A Mr. Dockum, believed to be a native of Canada, settled near the mouth of Barron run, at a very early date, and resided there until his death, his body being interred upon the place. This was probably the first burial in what is now known as the Weaver burying-ground. There were five children of this family: William, who married Nancy Jones, and settled adjoining the home place, but later moved west; James, who married a Miss Clement, settled in this township and later removed to Darby town- ship, Union county ; Boardman, who married Miss Tullis and settled in this township, where he remained until his death; one daughter married Mason Jones, and finally settled near California, Madison county ; and a younger daughter, who married Allen Jones, resided in this county several years, thence moved west. Another early settler on Barron run was John Rathburn, who was a Methodist preacher and also practiced as a steam doctor. It is thought that he was the organizer of the Methodist church that existed at an early date on Barron run, but later died out. He was the main pillar and support of this church for a number of years. He had the following children: Charles, who studied medicine and moved west to take up his profession; Levi, who was for some time a merchant in Mechanicsburg and later moved west; Nelson, who was called to the pulpit and resided in Iowa ; Abigail, who died at an early age; Harmon, who settled in Iowa, and Sarah, who married Luke Clemens and settled in the south part of the county.


The first authentic dates obtainable of early settlements was in 1812. This was the settlement of John Erwin, who located in the northwest corner of Pike township. He purchased land here and the deed records of the county show his deed was recorded in September, 1814. Erwin came to Madison county from the southern part of the state, and was probably the first settler in the west part of the township. He remained a permanent settler of the township until his death. Mr. Erwin was a farmer and stock raiser and a substantial and worthy citizen. He was a man of excellent character, plain and unassuming in his habits, a devout member of the Presbyterian faith and good neigh- bor. He had a large family, but that dreaded disease, consumption, claimed a large num- ber of them early in life. One son, Amzi or Amazi, however, settled on the home place and lived to quite an advanced age, dying on May 14, 1879, at the age of eighty. On the building of the railroad from Springfield to Delaware it passed through a corner of


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this township and a part of Mr. Erwin's land, a station being established there, called Erwin. Joseph Mitchell, a native of Vermont, emigrated to Ohio with his family, and settled in the southwest part of Pike township, on land later known as the Farrington farm. This was in the year 1812-13. He purchased nine hundred acres of land, became an extensive farmer and stock raiser and resided here until advanced in years, when he removed west. He was a leading, active man in the Methodist Episcopal church and a minister in the same during a greater part of his life. He devoted much of his time to itinerant work, traveling over many different states, and was a companion of Lorenzo Dow for several years. He was the father of four children, Joseph, Newman, William and Abner. The latter served in the War of the Rebellion.


Claudius Mitchell settled in this township about the years 1815-16. He was a brother of Joseph Mitchell and a son of Ensign, of Champaign county, Ohio. He settled on a tract of land on the Urbana and Liverpool pike, near the west line of the township. As Mr. Mitchell was a typical pioneer and endured the hardships and privations which befell all the early settlers in this state, and as an illustration of the early life in the township, we give a full account of his life. This is a true picture of pioneer life. Claudius Mitchell was born in Vermont in 1794. He was the son of poor, but respectable, parents, who, after a few years, removed to the state of New York; thence to Pennsyl- vania ; later. to Kentucky and thence to southern Ohio. In the year 1815 they emigrated to Madison county. During these years of pioneer itineracy. Claudius reached his majority, but these were years of rough, yet full of pleasant, experiences for him. He enjoyed, with his faithful dog and unerring rifle, the sports of frontier life, the chase for. or in mortal combat with, the wounded bear or stolen cub, and often came hand-to- hand contests with the wild buck deer of the forest, which then abounded with all kinds of wild game and animals. In consequence of the poor facilities and constant moving about, Claudius had no opportunity of obtaining even a common-school education, and did not even learn to read and write. The first pair of pants he ever wore were made by his faithful Vermont mother, who manufactured them out of the hair combed from their own cow in the time of spring shedding, mixed and carded with common flax tow. all done by hand, and spun on an antique wheel and knit into a pair of pants. The first pair of shoes he ever wore was when he was ten years of age, for which he earned the money to pay for them by taking his ax and hand-sled, with which he cut and hauled wood a distance of several miles. He was able to perform a man's task at the age of ten, in clearing the forest or working at the Kanawha salt works. In 1816, the year after emigrating to Madison county, he married Nancy Lambert, of Brown county. On the first day of February, he took leave of his home and parents and commenced life for himself. The first day's work for himself, he took his ax and maul, and cut and split three hundred and fifty rails, for which he received twenty-five cents per hundred, but this was not given in cash and he had to take it out in corn, at twenty-five cents per bushel. which gave him three and one-half bushels of corn. The second day he made two hundred and fifty rails. and took his pay in tallow and fat meat. On February 7. he took a lease of land on Spring fork, and at once commenced to build a cabin, with the snow then six inches deep. He soon had his cabin up and a roof on the same, and the next day he and his young wife moved into it, cleared away the snow and built a fire on the ground: then, to work they went in earnest to fit up the new home. At a late hour that night they laid down some loose clapboards on the snow, on which they spread their scanty bedding, and then, before retiring to rest, they knelt down by two blocks, their only chairs, and there offered their songs and prayers to the God of the Universe. The only utensil they had for cooking was an old iron pot, and their tableware consisted of two broken knives and forks and two old pewter spoons. He had one two-year-old heifer, upon which the tax was eight cents, and he had more difficulty in raising this


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small sum with which to pay that tax than any tax he subsequently paid. Mr. Mitchell resided in this township for many years. finally removing with his family, into Cham- paign county, where he remained until his death, which came in his nintieth year. He was twice married. There were seven children born to the first union, Sarah, Lavina, Elizabeth, Nancy, Alvira, Chandler and Joshua. His second wife was Mary Ann Reed and to this union one child was born. ' The life of this early pioneer was one of honesty, Integrity and Christianity.


George Van Ness, a native of New Jersey, married Eleanor Van Lear, a native of Holland, and they emigrated to Ohio prior to its becoming a state. They first settled in Butler county, but, in January, 1$13 or 1814, they removed to Madison county and settled on the Little Darby, in the northeast corner of the township. He was a true pioneer and experienced the rough side of life. Indians at that time were his only neigh- bors, and deer, wild hogs and game of all kind were found in abundance. About 1820, Mr. Van Ness erected a grist-mill, which was a three-story frame, run" by water-power. The mill only ran about three years, when the dam washed away and was never repaired or used afterwards. Mr. Van Ness served throughout the War of the Revolution, and was with General Washington at historic Valley Forge. He was the father of the fol- lowing children : John. Susannah, Catharine, George, Judith, Peter, Cornelius, Daniel and Mary.


George Jones, a native of Virginia, settled in Pike township about the year 1815-18. Ile was a leading and active man in the Methodist church; was quite a politician, and after the Morgan trouble in New York he became an active anti-Mason. He served in the War of the Revolution. His children were the following: Elizabeth, who married Michael Roseberry ; William, who was a miller in Mechanicsburg for a number of years ; Mason and Allen, who moved west : Nancy, who married William Dockum and settled in the West, and Charles.


Henry King was a native of Pennsylvania and first settled near Chillicothe; thence, about 1818-20, removed to the west bank of the Little Darby, 'here he resided until his death. He was an intelligent and well-educated man, a wheelwright by trade and a skillful mechanic, and to this trade and also farming he devoted his life. He was a kind and worthy neighbor and always ready to assist in time of need. His children were, Joseph, who married Amanda Tarpening, and remained on the old' home place; William. who married Miss Bigelow, daughter of Doctor Bigelow, of Plain City; Hannah, who married Daniel Brooks and settled 'in Darby township, where they resided until the spring of 1882. when they removed to Kentucky; Henry J., who married a daughter of John Mitchell and settled in Darby township, Union county, but later removed to Marysville; Benjamin, who married Miss Keyes and settled in Darby township, Madison county, where he 'died at an early age; Sarah K .. who married Newton Hunt, and 'another daughter, who died young.




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