USA > Ohio > Mahoning County > History of Trumbull and Mahoning counties with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, Vol. II > Part 2
USA > Ohio > Trumbull County > History of Trumbull and Mahoning counties with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches, Vol. II > Part 2
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1803-Abisha Chapman, Jonathan Sprague, Dr. Pardee, Benjamin Yale, William Chapman, Bradford Waldo, Wilder Page, Cook Fitch.
1804-Zeba Loveland, Archibald Johnston, and probably many others.
1805-Herman Canfield and wife, Ebenezer Bostwick and family. This year began the Ger- man settlement. Henry Yager, Jacob Ritter, Jacob Wetzel, Henry Ohl, Conrad Neff, Peter Lynn, John Lynn, George Lynn, Daniel Fink, Adam Blankman and Philip Borts arrived during this year; some of them, perhaps, a year earlier. All, however, did not settle in Canfield, but those who did formed an important addition to the population and did much toward developing the agricultural resources of the new settlement.
There are others whose names should have been included in the above lists, could the pre- cise date of their coming have been ascertained. Azariah Wetmore, Jonah Scofield, John Everett and others were among the very earliest settlers.
Many of those whose names appear above remained but a few years, some of them but one
M.G. Doms.
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TRUMBULL AND MAHONING COUNTIES, OHIO.
season; and of those who remained and died here information has not always been obtainable.
Nathan Moore was the surveyor of the party which came out in 1798. After his settlement here in 1800 he remained a few years then moved away with his family.
James Doud settled two miles east of the center. He had several children who lived here until they were men and women and then moved. His sons were Herman, James, William, and Samuel. His oldest daughter, Lydia, married Judge Bingham, of Ellsworth ; Anna became Mrs. Hall, of Ravenna. Mr. Doud was a drover. He passed over the mountains many times with droves of cattle, but on his last trip he was taken sick and died.
Ichabod Atwood settled in the northwest of the township and afterward moved to Springfield. He had several sons and daughters, none of whom settled here. He built quit a nice frame barn at an early date.
Eleazer Gilson settled east of the center in 1801, afterwards moved to Turner street. His son Samuel was also an early settler. Isaac, Lizzie (Everett), Cynthia, and Maria (Beeman) were the names of others of this family.
Jonah Scofield in 1800 or 1801 settled a short distance west of the center, where he lived and died. His son William went South and died. Pamela married Edward Wadsworth. Frances married John Reed. Both of these resided in Canfield.
Aaron Collar died in 1813 at the age of forty- nine. Lavinia, his wife, died the same year aged forty-six. Several of their descendants still re- side in this township. An epidemic in 1813 carried off a large number of the settlers.
James Bradley lived on the farm afterwards owned by Philo Beardsley, and now owned by Noah Lynn. Ariel Bradley removed to Portage county in 1805.
William Chidester came out in company with Tryal Tanner. He settled one and one fourth miles west of the center. He died in 1813, aged fifty-seven. His sons were Hezekiah, Philo, Erastus, Rush, Velorus, Julius, and Royal- Chloe and Betsey were his daughters. Chloe became Mrs. Smith and settled in Ellsworth. Hezekiah married Lizzie Buell, resided in Can- field and reared a large family. Philo also passed his life in this township. Erastus lived
here several years, then moved west. Rush went to Medina county. Velorus died the same year with his father. Julius moved to Medina county. Royal occupied his father's old farm, and died there. He married the widow of Jarvis, who is still living on the old place. William Chidester, the father, was a man of good ability. He was the first justice of the peace in Canfield, and solemnized many marriages in this and surrounding townships in early days.
Ira Spague settled one mile south of the cen- ter. His son Augustus occupied the farm after him. Henry Sprague, son of Augustus, is now living on the place.
Reuben Tupper settled on the farm which David Hine purchased later.
Several members of the Sackett family settled in Canfield very early. Simmons Sackett lived in this township until 1863, when he died at the age of seventy-five.
Some of the old settlers attained a remarkable age. Esther, the wife of Captain Philo Beardsley, died at the age of ninety-one. Ethel Starr, a comparatively early settler, died in 1861, aged ninety-two years. John Everett died in 1819, at the age of ninety-two.
Abishai Chapman settled in the northwest of the township, but sold out and moved.
William Chapman owned two lots near the center. He died in 1813, at the age of thirty- six, and was buried the same day as Squire Chid- ester. His widow married a Mr. Merwin and went to Palmyra to live.
John and Sarah Everett were early settlers. They had but one child, a daughter-Mrs. Sprague. They were old people when they came here and died in early years.
Matthew Steele settled southeast of the center. The family were all grown before the memory of old residents.
Bradford Waldo remained few years in this township, then moved to Portage county. He was noted as a wit, and had a gift for making impromptu doggerel verses, which were some- times extremely amusing.
Herman Canfield, Sr., brother of Judson Can- field, married Fitia Bostwick. In October, 1805, they settled in Canfield. Six children were born to them, viz : Herman, William H., Elizabeth, Cornelia, and Lora. Lieutenant colonel Her- man Canfield died at Crump's Landing, April 7,
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TRUMBULL AND MAHONING COUNTIES, OHIO.
1862, while in the service of his country. He was a lawyer of ability and worth, served as State Senator from Medina county, and held other important positions. William H. Canfield was born in 1806, and died in Kansas in 1874. He studied law in the office of Hon. Elisha Whit- tlesey. In 1866 he removed to Kansas, and in 1870 was appointed judge of the Eighth Judicial district of that State, and held the position until his death.
James Reed settled in the western part of the township in 1805, moving from Ellsworth. After his settlement his father, also named James, came out and lived with him. He died here at the age of about seventy, and was the fifth per- son buried in the center graveyard. During the War of 1812 Mr. Reed set up a distillery, and furnished the army with whiskey, which then formed a part of soldiers' rations. James Reed died in 1813; Mrs. Reed survived until 1860, and reached the remarkable age of ninety-eight years. Her children were: Mary (Bowman), born in 1791, still living, in Goshen township; Rosanna, born in 1793, died in 1813; Jemima (Rudisill), born in 1797, died, aged seventy-five; James, Jr., born in 1799, lives in Michigan; Rachel (Turner), born in 1801, resides in Can- field; Eleanor (Turner), born in 1803, lives in Summit county ; Anna, born in 1806, died, aged three and a half years; John C., born in 1809, died, aged forty; Hiram, born in 1811, killed when two months old, his mother being thrown from a horse with the babe in her arms; Joshua, born in 1812, resides in Alliance. Mr. Reed, while living in Canfield, attempted to dig a well upon his farm, and came near losing his life in it on account of the "damps" or foul gases there. A colored man known as Black Tobe, hearing that Mr. Reed had abandoned the well, came to him, and urged that he be allowed to finish the job. He was told of the danger, but would not listen, and was finally allowed to enter the well. Before those attending him, became aware of his state, he was overcome and sank down in a suf- focating condition. He was lifted out, but all attempts to revive him proved ineffectual, and he died the victim of his rashness.
John and Magdalena (Neir) Harding came to this township about the year 1805. Their sons were John, George, and Jacob, all of whom died in this county. The daughters were Mollie
(Harroff), Katharine (Ohl), Mary (Neff), Betsey (Kline), Sarah A. (Oswald), and Rebecca (Hood). Mrs. Kline and Mrs. Oswald are the only surviv- ors of this family.
Jacob Oswald was among the early settlers of the township, located on what is now the Samuel Stitel farm. He moved to Liberty township, Trumbull county. His son Charles returned to Canfield in 1826, and passed his life in the town- ship.
The Lynns of Canfield and other portions of this county, are descended from Nicholas Lynn, who emigrated to America from Germany pre- vious to the Revolutionary war. He was a sol- dier in the war, and after its close married and settled in Berks county, Pennsylvania. It is said that he was the father of fourteen children, but the history of only eleven can be traced-five sons, Philip, Jacob, Peter, George, and John, and six daughters. Philip and four of the daughters, Mrs. Snyder, Mrs. Reaser, Mrs. Shei- bly, and Mrs. Kock, remained in Pennsylvania, and their descendants are numerous in Berks, Perry, Lehigh, and other counties, ranking high in social and civic positions. The family of the oldest son, Philip, consisted of three sons and several daughters. One of the sons, John, came to Canfield and resided near Cornersburg. Af- ter living here several years, building a saw-mill, etc., he sold out and returned to Pennsylvania. One of his grandsons, Solomon W., is a resident of Austintown.
Jacob, the second son, came to Ohio about 1830, and died in this township in 1837, at the age of seventy. His sons were Jacob, Jesse, John, and Philip ; his daughters, Mrs. Jacob Heintzelman, Mrs. Christian Heintzelman, and Mrs. Miller. Two are now living, Mrs. Jacob Heintzelman, and Jesse, the second son.
The three younger sons of Nicholas Lynn came to Canfield in 1805, and settled on adjoin- ing farms. George died in 1833, aged fifty-eight ; John in 1835, aged fifty-six, and Peter in 1858, at the age of eighty-six. Peter Lynn had three sons, Adam, William, and Peter, and three daughters, Mrs. Fullwiler, Mrs. Shellabarger, and Mrs. Infelt. All are dead excepting Adam Lynn, Esq., for many years a justice in this township. George Lynn's family numbered five sons, David, John, George, William second, and Levi, and two daughters, Mrs. Nathan Hartman,
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TRUMBULL AND MAHONING COUNTIES, OHIO.
and Mrs. S. W. Lynn. All are living except William, who died in 1851, aged thirty-five. His son, William C. Lynn, a resident of the Black Hills region, is six feet eight inches tall, and correspondingly well developed. John Lynn, youngest son of Nicholas, had three sons, John N. O., David second, and G. W., and three daughters, Mrs. George E. Harding, Mrs. Joseph Hartman, and one who died young. Three mem- bers of this family are living.
Barbara, youngest daughter of Nicholas Lynn, came to Ohio about 1806. She married Abra- ham Kline. Her husband soon died, and she lived a widow fifty-seven years, until death called ber home. She was a woman of great benevo- lence, and having gained a competence, be- stowed it freely upon religious and charitable organizations. Among other bequests, she gave $1,000 to Heidelberg college, Tiffin, Ohio. She died in 1873, aged seventy-eight.
Susanna, also a daughter of the Revolutionary ancestor, married a Mr. Bailey and settled in Ohio about 1820. She had three sons and two daughters. One of the daughters married John Corll, and another, Samuel Rupright. Only one of Mrs. Bailey's children is now living, her son, Jacob, now a resident of Indiana. The Lynns are thrifty and worthy people, friends to law and order, and zealous in the support of ed- ucation and religion. In 1804 David Hine, from Warren, Litchfield county, Connecticut, came to Canfield on foot; purchased land and began some improvements upon it, in 1806. The same year he brought his family with an ox team. His farm was situated one and one-half miles west of the center. In 18to Mr. and Mrs. Hine returned to Connecticut to visit their friends, and remained until the spring of 1811, when they again came to Canfield. David Hine died in 1859, in his sev- enty-eighth year. His wife, Achsah (Sackett) Hine, died in 1832, aged forty seven. Their family consisted of seven sons and three daugh- ters, namely, Myron, Warren, Chester, Benjamin, Charles, David, Jr., William, Cynthia, Mary, and Betsey. All arrived at maturity. Three sons and two daughters are still living, Warren, in Canfield ; Charles, in Warren, Connecticut; Wil- liam, in Canfield; Cynthia, wife of C. S. Mygatt, Canfield ; and Betsey, wife of William Cum- stock, Canfield.
In 1806 came Elisha Whittlescy, doubtless the
greatest accession the township ever had. He was in public service almost constantly from the date of his settlement until his death, in 1863; and all trusts, whether of town, county, State, or Nation, were discharged in a manner which never failed to please and satisfy. His biography, and likewise that of his honored and esteemed as- sociate, Judge Eben Newton, will be found in this work. It may be proper to mention here the names of a few distinguished men who were students in the law office of Mr. Whittlesey: Hon. Joshua R. Giddings, Hon. Benjamin F. Wade, W. C. Otis, General Ralph P. Buckland, and Columbia Lancaster, afterwards of Oregon, re- ceived a portion of their legal training in Can- field.
In 1806 the Turner family came to the north- western part of the township. The road on which they lived was long known as "Turner street " and is frequently mentioned thus by old residents at the present day. Adam Turner and his wife Margaret came from New Jersey. They had five sons and three daughters, viz: John, Elsie, Conrad, Mary, James, George, Robert, and Charity. John settled in Canfield for a time, bat moved to Sharon, Medina county, where he died at the age of eighty-six. Elsie married Giles Clark and resided in Hubbard, Trumbull county; died in Clarksville, Pennsyl- vania. Conrad bought his brother John's farm in the northwest of the township; sold out, moved to Medina county, and died at the age of eighty-two. Mary married James Reed, form- erly of Pennsylvania, and died in this township.
George died in Medina county, and Robert in Michigan. Charity married Henry Edsall, and resided in Canfield. Of these eight children there are no survivors. James, the third son, was born in 1796, and died July 17, 1873. In 1819 he married Rachel Reed, who is still liv- ing. She bore five children, four of whom arrived at maturity. Three are still living. Fidelia married Ward E. Sackett, and after his death became the wife of Julius Tanner, of Can- field. Charles R. married Flora Sackett for his first wife. She bore three children, two of whom, Jemima Estella and Hattie S., are living. For his second wife he married Harriet Sackett, who bore one son; he was accidentally shot by a playmate at the age of nine years. Charles R. Turner was born in 1822 and died in 1874.
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TRUMBULL AND MAHONING COUNTIES, OHIO.
James C. resides on the old homestead in Can- field. Betsey M. is the wife of Judson W. Can- field.
Benjamin Manchester, whose ancestors came from England to America in 1638, was born in Newport county, Rhode Island, in 1786. Thomas Manchester, the progenitor of the Man- chester family in this country, was one of the company that purchased the Island of Aquiday, afterwards called Rhode Island, from the Indian sachem, Miantonomah, in 1639. Benjamin Manchester moved with his parents to Washing- ton county, Pennsylvania, in 1797. In 1805 he married Phebe Hannah Doddridge, born in 1788. In April, 1809, they.settled on a farm in the southern part of Canfield township. They reared four children, three of whom are now living: James, born in 1806, resides in Illinois; Philip, born in 1808, resides in Indiana; Isaac, born in 1810, now living in Canfield; and Mary Ann, born in 1812. She married George Ranck, of Wayne county, Indiana, and died in 1852. The wife of Benjamin Manchester died in 1813. In 1821 he married Margaret McGowen, who also bore four children-Phebe Jane, Eliza, Robert, and Martha. Eliza and Martha are dead. Phebe Jane, the widow of Elijah Jones, lives in Missouri. Robert resides in Canfield. Benjamin Manchester was a soldier in the War of 1812. He held various township trusts, and was one of the township trustees twenty-seven consecutive years. He was a man of the strictest morality and integrity. He died in 1857.
TAXES IN 1803.
Thirty-six dollars and ninety-three cents was the amount of taxes raised in the township of Canfield in the year 1803. Many who paid less than a dollar doubtless lived to see their taxes increased, "some thirty, and some sixty, and some an hundred fold." The list is as follows:
CANFIELD, RANGE THREE, TOWN ONE.
Amount of Tax.
Atwood, Ichabod.
$ .50
Bradley. James 1.04
Bradford, James, .64
Bissel, Warren .20
Collar, Aaron. 1.52
Crane, Calvin. .52
Chidester, William .54
Chittenden, Timothy .53
Chittenden, Charles. .58
Doud, James. .56
Doud, Polly .25
Everett, John.
.53
Faulkner, Henry. .25
Gridley, Nathaniel .82
Gilson, Samuel. 1.IO
Gifford, James. .IO
Gifford, Peregrine P
.IO
Gifford, Richard.
-38
Hollister, Joshua
. 14
Hulbert, Raphael
1.06
Harrington, Jacob.
.24
Hine, Homer.
.03
Johnson, Archibald
.80
Loveland, Zeba
.12
Merwin, Zebulon
.52
Miner, Champion
.20
Moore, Nathan
.48
Neil, John.
.21
Page, Wilder.
.56
Pardy, David.
.03
Pangburn, Joseph.
.22
Reed, Phineas .58
.47
Steele, Matthew
2.30
Scovill, Jonah.
.24
Simcox, John
.IO
Sprague, 1ra. .24
Tobias, Calvin .28
Tupper, Reuben .52
Tanner, Tryal.
1.60
Wilcox, I
.52
Wadsworth, Elijah
15.26
Waldo, Bradford .144
Yale, Benjamin. .02
Total. . $36.93
FIRST EVENTS.
The first burial in the township took place July 21, 1798. A little child, the daughter of Champion Minor, was buried in lot forty-four, second division, about three-fourths of a mile east of the center. Two rude stones mark the head and foot of the grave. The first person buried in the cemetery east of the center was Olive, the wife of Charles Chittenden. She died September 30, 1801.
The first male child born in the township was Royal Canfield Chidister, born June 22, 1802, about three rods east of the center of the town- ship.
The first log-house built in the township was on the southeast corner of lot fifty-one in the second division. The first clearing was made on lot fifty-two, second division.
The first frame house in the township was built in 1802-3 by Elijah Wadsworth. It was two-story, 30 x 40 feet.
The first marriage ceremony ever solemnized in this township was that of Joseph Pangburn
Reed, James
Henry Van tyning
---
Mas Sophin Beardsley.
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TRUMBULL AND MAHONING COUNTIES, OHIO.
and Lydia Fitch. They were married April 11, 1801, by Caleb Baldwin, Esq., of Youngstown.
February 11, 1800, Alfred Woolcott, surveyor, led to the hymenial altar Mercy Gilson, daugh- ter of Eleazer Gilson, of this township. For want of some person qualified by law to solem- nize the ceremony, they were obliged to go to Pennsylvania to be married.
POST-OFFICE.
In 1801 the first mail route to the Reserve was established through the influence of Elijah Wadsworth, who was then appointed postmaster at Canfield. He was again postmaster in 1813.
THE FIRST MILLS.
The first saw-mill in the township was erected on lot number three in the fourth division, in the northwestern corner of the township. Work was begun in the spring of 1801, by Jonah Sco- ville. In the summer of the same year he sold it to Ichabod Atwood, who completed the mill during the succeeding fall and winter, and com- menced sawing in the spring of 1802.
The second saw-mill was erected in 1802, on the southeast corner of the "Brier Lot." It was owned, one-half by Elijah Wadsworth, one- fourth by Tryal Tanner, one-eighth by William Sprague, and one-eighth by Matthew Steele. Jared Hill came from Connecticut to build it. Sawing was commenced in 1803. The land on which the mill stood belonged to Judson Can- field, from whom it was rented in 1802, by Mr. Wadsworth, for seven years. The consideration for the use of the land was thus expressed in the lease: "One pepper-corn yearly, to be paid if demanded."
In 1810 a carding machine was erected by a company. The machinery was propelled by horse-power. Wool was sent to this mill from Cleveland, Painesville, and other distant points.
A saw-mill and grist-mill was in operation in 1828, on the stream known as the "South run." It was run by a man named Oister.
PHYSICIANS.
The first of these useful members of society who ministered unto the sick and afflicted in Canfield was Dr. David Pardee. He came to the settlement in 1803, but remained only a short time. Little is known concerning him except that he was considered very much of an oddity.
In 1807 Dr. Shadrach Bostwick moved from Deerfield to Canfield. He was born in Mary- land, in 1769; moved to Massachusetts, and thence to Deerfield, Portage county, in company with his father-in-law, Daniel Diver, in 1803. He held two important positions, physician and Methodist minister. In both he was earnest and faithful. Though by no means deeply skilled in the healing art, he always strove to the best of his ability to effect cures, and the patient always knew that the doctor's sympathies were with him. For many years Dr. Bostwick continued to give both medical and spiritual advice to the people of Canfield and adjoining settlements. When he arrived in the township there was but one Methodist family among its inhabitants, but he lived to see a large and prosperous society as the result of his labors. He died in Canfield in 1837.
Dr. Ticknor was a physician in Canfield as early as 1814. He married Getia Bostwick, and practiced here with good success several years. He held some kind of a naval commission and was subject to orders to leave at any time.
Dr. Ira Brainard came to Canfield about 1817 and died here in 1825. He studied medicine with Dr. Allen in Kinsman, and had a large prac- tice in this region.
Dr. Chauncy R. Fowler, whose long and ex- tensive practice in this county has secured a wide reputation, was born in Poland, this county, September 25, 1802, being a son of Jonathan and Lydia (Kirtland) Fowler, the first settlers in the township of Poland. He studied medicine with Dr. Manning, of Youngstown, and in Octo- ber, 1823, commenced practice in Poland, where he continued until 1826, when he removed to Canfield, where he has since resided. Dr. Fowler was married in 1826 to Mary D. Hol- land, daughter of Benjamin Holland, of Youngs- town. She died in 1865, having borne four sons and one daughter, viz: Dr. Charles N. Fowler, of Youngstown; Henry M. Fowler, editor of the Dispatch, Canfield; Russell C. Fowler, who died in 1858; Dr. Jonathan E. Fowler, who died in 1870, and Hannah Jane, wife of Dr. A. W. Cal- vin, of Canfield. Dr. Fowler has been actively engaged in the practice of medicine in this county longer than any other physician, his prac- tice in Canfield and adjoining townships cover- ing a period of more than fifty-five years. That
3+
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TRUMBULL AND MAHONING COUNTIES, OHIO.
he has been successful the high esteem with which he is regarded by the large community which has employed him affords most convincing evidence.
Dr. J. M. Caldwell has been engaged in the practice of medicine in Canfield for about forty years past. He was also in the drug and grocery business for some time. Dr. Caldwell was born in Ireland, attended medical lectures in Phila delphia and graduated there over fifty years ago.
Dr. Lewis D. Coy, eclectic physician and sur- geon, is a native of this county, and though a young man is fast gaining a lucrative practice. He settled in Canfield in 1879.
Dr. A. W. Calvin, for several years an esteemed physician of Canfield, died in 1881. A sketch of his life will be found elsewhere.
Dr. E. K. Prettyman, eclectic physician, is a native of Delaware. He practiced in Pennsyl- vania some years and settled in Canfield in 1880.
FORMER MERCHANTS.
The first store was established in 1804 by Zalmon Fitch, in partnership with Herman Can- field. This is said, on good authority, to have been the second permanent mercantile establish- ment upon the Reserve. Mr. Fitch continued the business in Canfield until 1813, when he moved to Warren. While in Canfield he also kept tavern.
Comfort S. Mygatt, one of Canfield's earliest merchants, was born August 23, 1763. About the Ist of June, 1807, from his home in Dan- bury, Connecticut, he dispatched a team con- sisting of two pair of oxen and two horses, with a large wagon loaded with household goods, for Ohio. One week later he started with his family with four horses and a fifth horse to hitch on when necessary, which was often the case. He overtook the first team in Shippensburg, Penn- sylvania, and from there the two journeyed in company. On the 4th of July all were in Pitts- burg together, and on the 7th they arrived in Canfield, the first team having been five weeks on the road and the one which brought Mr. My- gatt and family four. The family, at the time of their arrival, consisted of Mr. Mygatt and wife, four daughters, two sons, and two step-sons -ten persons in all. July 16, 1807, a son was born-Dr. Eli Mygatt, now an honored citizen of Poland. Soon after reaching Canfield Mr. Mygatt entered into partnership with Herman
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