The history of Madison County, Ohio, Part 54

Author: Brown, Robert C; W.H. Beers & Co., pub
Publication date: 1883
Publisher: Chicago, W.H. Beers & co.
Number of Pages: 1180


USA > Ohio > Madison County > The history of Madison County, Ohio > Part 54


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Betts, Thomas B.


Bird, Dennis S.


Paine, George. Phifer, George.


Boswell, George.


Mowell, Emanuel.


Blake, William.


Rouse, Willlam A.


Potee, Claudius.


Coberly, Andrew J. Stephenson, R. B.


Corporal, George Hann.


Corporal, Samuel Sidener.


Corporal, J. W. Curd.


Sergeant, James T. Arnett.


Second Lieutenant, Levin Willoughby.


Sergeant, T. H. Kennelly.


Sergeant, G. W. Bodkin.


Sergeant, Auburn Smith.


Sergeant, Samuel W. Suver.


COMPANY I.


Horn, Elijah.


On the announcement of the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee at Ap- pomattox, the people of Madison County became almost frantic with joy. All the bells in London, as well as the other towns in the county, were brought into requisition, flags displayed, and the streets thronged with peo. ple, congratulating each other at the prospect of the return of peace once more. About 9 o'clock in the morning, on the 10th of April, 1865, the day the news was received, the business men closed up their establishments for the day. The evening of April 12 was set apart by the citizens as a season of rejoicing over the recent Union successes. Shortly after dark, nearly all of the houses on Main street in London were brilliantly illuminated, and a six-pound cannon belched forth its thunder tones from a vacant lot on Main . street. Then followed a long procession of torch-lights, parading the prin- cipal streets, after which a grand display of fire-works from the public square, which lasted for more than an hour. The town was full of people from the adjacent country, and every one seemed jubilant and good-hu-


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


mored. The demonstration was kept up until a late hour, and nothing oc- curred to mar the proceedings of the evening.


Friday, April 14, the day set apart by Gov. Brough as a day of thanks- giving and rejoicing in honor of the victories above mentioned, was appro- priately observed in London. Business houses were closed, and divine services were held in the Methodist Episcopal Church in the morning. The exercises consisted of the singing of patriotic songs, and addresses by Revs. Levi Cunningham and C. W. Finley. The happiness and rejoicing, how- ever, were short-lived, for that very night the news flashed over the wires that President Lincoln had been assassinated at Ford's Theater, Washing- ton, D. C. The joy was turned into grief, for he was the beloved of the nation, and deep was the sorrow at his martyrdom in the great cause of hu- man liberty. April 19, 1865, was observed by the citizens of Madison Coun- ty as a day of mourning. The business houses were closed, flags displayed at half-mast, dwellings and other houses were draped in the insignia of grief, while appropriate services were held in the churches and a universal feeling of gloom pervaded the people of all classes. Thus ended the greatest war in modern history. Mighty hosts had met in the fierce struggle for supremacy, thousands of lives were sacrificed, millions of treasure freely spent in the contest; but the God of battles was on the side of the great nation whose Government stands upon the basis that all men are created free and equal, and endowed with the inalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


CHAPTER XV.


RESIDENT LAND OWNERS OF MADISON COUNTY IN MARCH, 1819-THE SICKLY SEASONS OF 1822-23-CAUSES-SYMPTOMS-TREATMENT -THE BLALOCK TRAGEDY.


THE people of to-day hardly realize or appreciate what they owe to the large-hearted pioneer fathers and mothers, who, with their children, braved the perils of the wilderness; who reared their families in the fear of God, and implanted within them all the virtues necessary to the welfare of humanity, and passed away, leaving to them an inheritance that is invalu- able and that should ever be cherished and kept in sacred remembrance. The record of Madison County would be incomplete without some notice of these pioneers, who, by reason of their limited sphere of action, could not become conspicuous in the great drama of pioneer life, but whose busy hands and conscientious regard of duty made them great factors in the es- tablishment of the solid foundation upon which the society of to-day rests. It is a little thing to preserve their names in the pages of history; yet it is about all that is left to do. Their lives were much alike; they met the stern necessities of the hour, and were content in the consciousness of duty nobly done.


In March, 1819, the Commissioners of Madison County prepared a du- plicate of all the resident land-owners of said county at that time, and while hunting through the musty pages stored away in the court house vaults, we fortunately discovered this record. It consists of a few sheets of paper sewed together, but without back or cover; yet for more than sixty years it has preserved in its pages the names of those men who settled and built up the rich and prosperous county of Madison. It reads as follows:


" London, Commissioners' Office, March, 1819. - Duplicate of resident land proprietors for the tax of 1819, with all new entries and transfers made in this office. Madison County, Ohio." John Adair, Jr., John Ar- buckle, Charles Atchison, Jonathan Alder, Paul Alder, John Adair, William Alkire, Leonard Alkire, Samuel Alkire, Jacob Alkire, Abram Alkire, Robert Alkire, Samuel Adair, Samuel Adams, Charles Andrews, William Akins, Francis Ayres, Annanias Allen, Jacob Blougher, Samuel Baskerville, John Beetley, Hezekiah Bayliss, William Blaine, Norton Bailey, Vestal Blair, Daniel Brown, Jonas Bradley, Jonathan Burgess, Peter Buffenburgh, Fran- cis Brock, John Baird, James Bowls, Peter Baker, Thomas Baldwin, Will- iam Buffenburgh, Elisha Bidwell, Isaac Bidwell, Joseph Bidwell, Stephen Buckman, Uri Beach, Ambrose Beach, Thompson Cooper, William Cum- mings, John Clements. Peter Cutright, Andrew Cypherd, Philip Cryder, Abijah Cary, Luther Cary, Calvin Cary, William Chard, James Criswell, James Cowen, Elizabeth Cary, James Curry, Samuel Colver, Levi Cantrel, Thomas Clark, Henry Coon. Louis Coon, John Caruthers, James Collins, Jeremiah Converse, Joshna Cope, Abner Chapman, John Carpenter, William Creath, Ashel Cleveland, Samuel Carroll, David Colver, Levi Churchill, Otho W. Delashmutt, Joseph Downing, John Downing, James Dines, James Doug- lass, E. L. Delashmutt, George Deeds, Francis Downing. Judah Dodge,


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


Thomas Davidson, John Davidson, William Dakin, David Dennison, Wal- ter Dun, Jesse Dungan, James Dungan, John Erwin, Joshua Ewing, James Ewing, Edward Evans, William Erwin, Reason Francis, Daniel Francis, John Fifer. William Frankabarger, Lewis Foster, David Foster, Joshua Fos- ter. William Fleming, Isaac Freeman, Abram Fresher, Jacob Fairfield, Benjamin Garrett, Daniel Gamble, Nehemiah Gates. Thomas Gwynne, D. Gwynne, Fergus Grimes, John Grimes, James Grimes, David Groves, William Rennick, Henry Goodall, George Hoover, David Harris, Michael Harpole, Peter P. Helphenstine, Skinner Hudson, Amos Howard, Moses Huffman, Martin Humble, Levi Humble, Cornelius Humble, Samuel Herrod, Israel Heath, John Heaton, William Howsman, Mary Holbert, Philip Hol- baugh, Elisha Hard, John Irwin, Jacob Johnston, Mary Johnston, William Jameson, John Johnston, Andrew Jameson, Stephen Johnston, John Kelso, William Kirkly, Benjamin Kirkpatrick, James Kent, John Kent, Baltzer King, Thomas Kilgore. Nahum King, William King, John Lane, John Littler, William Linton, Dennis Lane, William Lapin, Elias Langham, William Lewis, Joshua Littler. George Linson, Nathan Low, Joseph Melvin, John Marquis, Jonathan Minshall, John Mozer, Hugh Montgomery, John Melvin, James McDonald, William Mann, Samuel Mitchell, David Mitchell, Samuel Mitchell, Jr., Moses Mitchell, David Mitchell. Jr., John McDonald, - Mathews, William McCoy, James Moore, James Marquis, Gabriel Markle, William Marquis, Roger Moody, John McNeal, Jacob Mozer, Rowan McCaully, Sally Moore, Jesse Mckay, John Mills, S. McDonald, Reuben Mann, Samuel Mann, Robert Nelson, An- drew Noteman, Ann Noteman, Robert Nicholson, Usual Osborn, George Prugh, William Patterson, Robert Powers, John Pepper. John Phoebus, Peter Paugh, Thomas Patterson, Samuel Powell, Samuel Pearce, David Park's heirs, James Pringle, George Phifer, Robert F. Pringle, Andrew Rea. Daniel Ross, Henry Roby. Thomas Robinson, James Robinson, Sam- uel Robinson, John Robinson, Thomas Reed, E. Reynolds, John Rathburn, John Simpkins, William Starnes, John Stroup, John Smith, Tobias Shields, Robert Soward, George Sutherland, John Sutherland, Abram Shepherd, Frederick Sager, Christian Sager. Samuel Sager, Philip Sidener, Jacob Sidener, John Selsor, Henry Smith, William Sharp, Benjamin Springer, Silas Springer, John Scott, Jacob Steele, George Sager, Henry Shover. Charles Sterret, Abram Sager, Henry Sager, Thomas Stoddard, John Stafford, David Sidener, Isaac Smith, Gibson Savage, John Taylor, William Taylor, Daniel Taylor, Richard Taylor, John Troxel, Alex-


ander Thompson, Enoch Thomas, Jacob Trumbo, Isaac Troxel, Joshua Thompson, Jonah Toppin, William Thomas, Robert Thomas, Phineas Trussel. Peter Vandevender, George Vanness, Joseph C. Vance, Jacob Van- devender, John Warner. Walter Watson, David Watson, James Withrow, John Williams, James Whitesides, William Woods, Jane Wingate, Isaac Williams, Delashmutt Walling. Valentine Wilson, James Wright, Daniel Wright. George Weaver. Joseph Wiley, William Wilson, Joseph Ward, Samuel Watson, Joseph Warner, William Warner and David Witter.


In giving this list, we cannot vouch for its accuracy, or that it contains the name of every land-owner residing in Madison County in March, 1819. We have copied the list verbatim, and presume that such a record would be correct. Our only object in printing it is to try and preserve the names of many who have long since been forgotten. If this has been accomplished, our purpose is attained, and we feel that the reader may derive some infor-


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


mation from a careful perusal of a list of pioneers who assisted materially in building up the leading stock county in Ohio.


THE SICKLY SEASONS OF 1822-23.


In 1873-74, a series of articles were contributed to the Plain City Press, by Dr. Jeremiah Converse, of Darby Township, in one of which he gives the following graphic description of the malarial epidemic that spread desolation over the eastern part of Madison County sixty years ago. He says: " In 1822-23, this country was visited with a terrible epidemic, which struck down many of the hardy pioneers and laid them low in the dust. There are those yet in our midst whose minds will instinctively go back, upon the mention of these years, to the sorrows'and sufferings expe- rienced by themselves, and the inroads and devastating raids of death over a large scope of territory, upon neighborhoods and families. There was scarcely a family in all this great scope of country (Darby Plains) in which death had not marked one or more of its members as its victim. Children were made orphans. the wife a widow, the husband deprived of his companion, parents rendered childless, and in some instances every member of the family was stricken down by the fell monster.


" No tongue can describe, no pen portray, to the mind or imagination of the reader, the scenes of suffering witnessed and experienced by these early settlers. All business transactions ceased, gloom brooded ever the minds of the people, and many stout hearts were made to tremble in awe of the impending doom that seemed to await them. Death reigned supreme. Men and women who were not prostrated with disease were busy day and night ministering to the wants of the needy, mitigating the sufferings of the sick, and consoling the grief-stricken widow and orphan children, whose de- pendence had been ruthlessly torn from their embrace. The condition of


inany of these sufferers was heart-rending. Away from the homes of their childhood, separated from kindred and friends by a vast intervening dis- tance of forest, mountain and river, with no kind parental voice whispering consolation to the broken-hearted, no loving mother to imprint the kiss of affection or check the fast-flowing tear-drops on the fevered cheek, wipe the cold perspiration from the brow of her dying child, or bid a last farewell to the remains of her loved one. Truly here was ' pestilence that walketh in darkness,' and a 'destruction that wasteth at noonday.' Many were the bitter tears of anguish wrung in these two years; many a household was hushed in the stillness of death; and still many were the families where one or more of the little group were laid low by the king of terrors.


" Some of my readers, perhaps, may think that I have overdrawn the picture, but this description is but an imperfect ontline of the realities that were experienced in those days. Many, no doubt, would have been saved could they have had proper care and attention; but where should they look for help? Scarcely a family but what had their sick or dying; the few that were not prostrated with disease were worn down with constant watching; yet these messengers of mercy visited each day all the sick that were as- signed them in their division, to administer to the wants of the living and prepare the dead for burial.


" One instance among the many miglft be given of loneliness, mental and physical suffering; where the wife, prostrated on a bed of sickness, un . able even to help herself to a cup of water, had three small children crying to their mother to attend to their wants for food and drink. In another part of the room, the husband and father lay in the cold embrace of death.


Charde Chelles


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


For twenty-four hours this helpless group of sufferers was shut out, as it were, from the world, with no visible hand to minister to their wants or whisper consolation to their bleeding hearts, surrounded by the stillness of death, occasionally broken by the children's cries of 'Mother, mother,' and the deep, heavy sighs of that mother as she looked upon the helpless forms of her babes. This is but one among the many cases of privation and suf- fering that was experienced by the early settlers of this country. So threat- ening were the consequences from this terrible malady that many of those who had the means at their command left this part of the State to escape the desolation that seemed as if it would spare none; but a large majority of the inhabitants were compelled to remain. Some were so poor that to pro- cure means would be impossible, while others again had invested all their money in land, which, at that time, under the threatened depopulation. could not be sold at any price. Thus they were compelled to stay and un- dergo whatever might await them. Sickness reigned so universal that but few were in attendance to pay the last tribute of respect to the dead, or fol- low them to their last resting-places. There were a few instances where the father was compelled to make the rude coffin, dig the grave and deposit beneath the clods of the valley the loved form of his child.


" We talk about suffering, hard times, privations! Just let the reader take a stroll to the cemetery south of Plain City, and, with pencil in hand, mark the number whose tombstones make these years the eventful period in its history; and in addition to this, the scores where no slab marks the rest- ing-place of the silent sleeper beneath. Again there were other cemeteries and cities of the dead that were largely peopled during these sickly years, besides the many that were buried on the farms, which could not be removed to far-off burial-grounds. Then again, the abandoned cemeteries, one of which is barely discernible, on the farm now owned by Joseph Atkinson. The most of the sleepers there fell in 1822-23. Sum this all up, and you have a faint conception of the reign of terror and death. It has been care- fully computed that, in what was then called the 'South settlement,' one. half of the inhabitants died during these two years.


" Between Chuckery and Homer, on a farm subsequently owned by John Smith, but then held in smaller farms, there were seventeen deaths. In what was known as the 'Converse settlement,' not more than one-fourth of the people died. The territory invaded by this epidemic extended for a short distance east of Big Darby, and perhaps about the same distance west of Little Darby. All of the territory lying between these points seemed to generate the poison that produced the disease, whatever that may have been. There was an unusual amount of sickness all over Madison County, as well as in a large portion of Clark, but the deaths were comparatively few, ex- cept in the district mentioned.


CAUSES.


" The exciting causes which led to the development and breaking-out of the disease in question may be, and perhaps are, shrouded in mystery. The condition of this county previous to and at the breaking-out of the epi- demic, to a careless observer, would present no material changes to that of former years. In many portions of the prairie country, it was no unusual thing for large bodies of stagnant water to remain upon the surface until late in autumn, exposed to the scorching rays of a summer sun. Up to this time, but little attention had been paid to the drainage of the country. The rich soil produced annually enormous coats of vegetation. which, prior to


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


the settlement of this county, and for many years afterward, were destroyed by the fires that swept over the prairies every autumn. Neither of the years above mentioned were unusually rainy or wet seasons, but they were characterized by dense fogs, extending all over this country, commencing very early in the season and continuing until the beginning of winter. There can be no question in the minds of scientific men that the primary or exciting cause of the disease was the result of malarious influences: but why it should be generated so copiously, and attended with such poisonous effects that scarcely a human being was proof against its powers, is a diffi. cult question to settle satisfactorily. Scientific researches and experiments have established the fact that, when our large cities have been visited by malarial epidemics, the free use of lime or alkaloids in the filthy alleys and gutters acted as an antidote toward the freeing of these places from malaria. Taking this view of the subject, we may be able to approximate to a certain- ty the exciting causes which led to the development of the disease in ques- tion.


" If we were to call to our aid the fact that, prior to and during the early settlement of this part of Ohio, the prairie fires annually destroyed the greater part of the luxurious growth of vegetation that grew on the prairies, leaving the residue of ashes strongly alkaline in principle, which, according to more recent researches, would act as an antidote to malarious development, we shall understand one of the exciting causes of the epidemic of 1822-23. The great amount of sickness during these years was not alone confined to the Darby country, but other portions of Madison, Franklin and Clark Counties were visited by this disease in a milder form. In a recent conversation with an aged gentleman, who, at that time, lived in Clark County, information was elicited that even there an unusual amount of sickness pervaded a large portion of the county.


" For a few years prior to the years in question, this part of Ohio was rapidly settled by emigrants from the Eastern States. As a consequence. houses and barns were built, fields were fenced, orchards were planted, and all the necessary means made use of to make home comfortable. By rea- son of these improvements, it became necessary to arrest the prairie fires, which, prior to this period, annually swept over the country. The conse- quences resulting from arresting these fires was that a large portion of the luxuriant growth of vegetation was subject to decomposition, which, in con nection with the heat of the sun, increased the development and poison of malaria. The arrest of those annual fires took away the purifying agent, or alkaloid, which, hitherto, had rendered malaria comparatively inert. This course of reasoning would lead to the detection of the causes which produced the sickly seasons of 1822-23.


SYMPTOMS.


" The precursory or incipient stage of the disease was announced by a feeling of lassitude, indisposition to exercise, loss of appetite, nausea, thirst, a dry skin, constipated bowels and chilly sensations experienced by the patient. Sometimes these symptoms would continue for several days; in others, there were no precursory indications; but eventually the disease was announced by a severe rigor or chill. the patient suffering from the in- tense sensation of cold. The whole body was brought under its influence, in which the muscular and nervous system participated. There was a marked livid and purple appearance of the skin, with accelerated respiration, and a quick, feeble pulse, evidently indicating severe congestion of the in -


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


ternal organs. This condition of the patient would frequently continue for several hours; but these symptoms subsequently gave way by the usher - ing in of a sensation of severe heat, a frequent and full pulse, great thirst, severe headache, nausea and vomiting. while sometimes delirium would su- pervene. In children, during this stage of the disease, it was no unfrequent occurrence for the patient to be attacked with convulsions. This latter con- dition would continue for several hours, when they would gradually sub- side, and the patient experience a degree of comfort and freeness from suf- fering that would induce him to a delusive opinion that the disease had given way and convalescence began; but his hopes would be sadly disap- pointed in finding the succeeding day ushering upon him all the symptoms. in an aggravated form, that were experienced on the preceding one. In the second attack, there were unmistakable evidences of the existence of severe internal congestion. There seemed to be less power in the system to bring about re-action, and regain the equilibrium in the action of the heart and arteries. Many instances occurred where the patient sank into an inflam- matory type of fever, which ran its course from seven to fifteen davs, but more frequently ended in death on the eighth or ninth day of the inflam- matory stage. Taking all the symptoms of this disease into consideration, and the great amount of malarial poison existing in the system, may we not safely conclude this to have been a pernicious fever or sinking chill epi- demic?


TREATMENT.


" The attending physicians during the epidemic in the region of the Darby country were Dr. Lorenzo Beach and Dr. James Comstock. So nu- merous were the patients, and protracted the epidemic, that these men be- came worn down from labor, exposure and anxiety; but the great responsi- bility resting upon them, and the urgent appeals from suffering humanity, so stimulated their nerve power as to render them impervious to the malari- ous poison that was prostrating those around them. At least, they were preserved by an overruling Providence from the ravages of the disease.


" The general outline of treatment made use of by the profession to arrest the disease and produce convalescence was that recommended by Eberly and other writers of his day. If the patient was seen in the first stages of the disease, an emetic was administered, and perhaps bleeding was resorted to. After the patient had recovered from the effects of the emetic, an active cathartic was given. composed of calomel and jalap. This active process so reduced the patient that he became an easy prey to the next par- oxysm. These cathartics were administered almost daily, with the view of freeing the system from pent-up bilious matter. The anti-periodics made use of by the profession were then in a crude state. Quinine or any of the extracts were unknown; consequently, the only available anti-periodic med- icine to be relied upon was the Peruvian or "Jesuit's" bark. In conse- quence of the enormous doses required to check the paroxysms and nauseous taste, but few stomachs could retain the medicines in sufficient quantities to arrest the progress of the disease. But then, what could be done? The physicians evidently saw that their medicines were powerless, and that death was not stayed by their efforts. This was truly a pitiable condition, to see our fellow-creatures prostrated by disease, suffering from the dire effects of an epidemic, and yet powerless in rendering material aid to their plead- ings for help. But such were the facts, and such were the sufferings expe- rienced by the early settlers who located on the rich prairies of Madison County."


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY.


THE BLALOCK TRAGEDY.


There are few pioneers of Madison County now living, who have any vivid recollection of the intense excitement caused by a deed of blood which occurred in what is now Canaan Township, on the 29th of September, 1822. There lived in the township at that time a school-teacher named Levi Phelps, a man of so much influence that, upon its erection in 1819, it was, in honor of him, called Phelps Township. Near where Mathias Slyh's farm is lo cated resided George Blalock and family, and with him lived a Miss Sallie Whitney and Levi Francis. It became the current report that Blalock and this woman were living together as man and wife, although not married. At that time, the settlements were quite scattered, and the settlers became quickly excited at any offense against the morals of the community, deem- ing immediate justice the best and cheapest punishment under the circum- stances. So it appears that this case so shocked the early residents of that portion of the county that many thought it expedient to put a stop to such licentious conduct. A meeting was held, and it was determined to notify Blalock that if he continued any longer such an immoral example to the settlement, he would be treated to a coat of tar and feathers and driveu from the community. Blalock was either innocent or defiant, as he paid no attention to the threat.




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