USA > Pennsylvania > Luzerne County > Wilkes-Barre > A history of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania : from its first beginnings to the present time, including chapters of newly-discovered early Wyoming Valley history, together with many biographical sketches and much genealogical material. Volume I > Part 87
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"Now your Honnours Petisioners pray that your Honnours would Errect & Establish a County here on this River and appoint and Commissionate all nessesserry officers as in the other Countys in this Colony ; or in some other way Grant Releif as your Honnours in Wisdom shall think best : Whereupon your Honnours Petisioners beg lieve to seigest that if your Honnours should grant releif in the Present Distressing Circumstances it would not onely be the Effectual means of holding and securing to your Honnours Peti- sioners their Just Rights and Previledges But greatly accommodate the further settlement of the Vacant Lands in this westward part of the Colony and no doubt be a means of Christianizing the several Indian nations in this western part of the Colony and spreading the Gospel amongst them ; therefore pray your Honnours that we your Petisioners and the Proprietors of sd Lands as above sd may be taken under your Honnours wise Con- sideration so that proper authority may be Granted to us as your Honnours shall think best & your Honnours Petisioners in Duty bound shall ever pray-
Jnº Durkee,
Benedick Satterlee,
Jabez Fish;
Isaac Tripp, Stephen Gardner, John Smith,
Cyprian Lothrop,
Asa Gore,
Silvester Chesebrough,
David Whittlesy,
Noah Read,
Ozias Yale,
Benjamen Sheomaker,
Philip Weeks,
Joshua Whitney,
Thomas Dyar,
Ebenezer Heberd,
Peter Comstock,
Vine Elderkin,
Jordan Hopson,
Elijah Shoemaker, .
John Jinkins, Chrisº Avery,
Josiah Dean,
Samuel Gaylord,
Silas Park, Moses Hebard,,
Thomas Olcott, Philip Goss,
Stephen Hungerford,
Jonathan Corey, Stephen Hurlbutt, Elisha Avery,
Nathaniel Goss,
John Brokaw, Benjamin Follett,
Obadiah Gore Jun
Sam11 Wibron,
William Gallup, William Buck,
Henry Dow Tripp,
James Nisbitt, Nathan Denison, Oliver Smith, Silas Birgom,
Daniel Brown, Abel Smith, Silas Gore,
Robert Hunter,
Thomas Knights,
Ebenezer Stone,
Joseph Gaylord,
Sam! Millington,
Ebenezer Norton,
Solomon John Johnson, Elijah Lewis, John Shaw, Charles Walworth,
Amos Briggs,
James Atherton,
John Bud, Peter Ayers,
Daniel Hayns,
Timothy Smith,
Ephraham McKoy,
Job Weeks,
Theophilus Westover, Daniel Gore, Dan Murdock, Thomas Gray,
Jedidiah Olcott, Isaac Barra, Ezra Buell,
David Mead,
Stephen Manning,
Samuel Marvin,
Edward Johnson,
Andrew Durkee,
James Ray,
Henry Strong, Daniel Brown,
John Comstock,
John Murphy, John Wylie, Zopher Ted, William Park,
Jonathan Carrington, Benjamin Matthews, Asher Herriott, Jabez Cooke, Joshua Haul, William White, Joseph Frink,
510
John Kinyon,
Daniel Angell,
Peter Harris,
John Lee, John Baker,
Parshall Terry, Ephraim Arnold,
Aaron Walter,
Asa Edgerton,
George Babcock,
Benjamin Hewit, Zebulon Hoxsie,
Isaac Bennit,
Jonathan Hebard,
David Marvin,
Jonathan Orms, Jun ,
Moses Hebard, Jun! ,
John Holly,
Timothy Force,
Benj. Hewit,
John Skids, John Talle,
Daniel Holly,
Abel Peirce,
John Franklin, [Sr.],
Roasel Franklin,
Joseph Arnold,
Micael Seely,
Jabez Robbords,
William Wallworth,
Robert Hopkins,
Oliver Post,
Hickman Dole,
Nathan Beach,
Stephen Miels,
Abraham Sawitz,
Balcher Fredrick,
William Walworth,
Prince Alden,
Jeheial Franklin,
Nicholas Uplinger,
John Walworth, Uriah Marvin,
John Groves,
Thos Bennet,
Thomas Suttun,
Elisha Babcock,
Marvin Clark,
James Forsyth,
William Heberd,
Richard Brockway,
Ebenezer Stearns,
Simeon Draper,
Stephen Cooke,
Ebenezer Gray,
Elijah Witter,
Amos Morgan,
Joshua Lanpher,
Timothy Hopkins,
Joshua Maxwell,
Lem11 Smith,
L. Humius,
Eliphalet Jewell."
[Paper endorsed :] "The Petision of John Durkee and others for a County on Sus- quehannah River. Octr 1769."
This petition is in the handwriting of Ebenezer Gray, Esq. (men tioned in the note on page 292), and attached to it are the names of 169 men who were of mature age-neither women nor youth having signed it. The names of some persons were signed by the writer of the petition (presumably by direction of those particular persons), thus accounting for the unusual spelling of certain names. This docu- ment, which has never before been printed, accurately represents the number and names of the New England settlers in Wilkes-Barré at the date mentioned. A number of names to be found in the list on pages 497 and 498 are missing from this, but that is because the men were absent from the settlement; some having resigned their rights, and others being temporarily away on furlough-as for instance, Capt. Zebulon Butler and Capt. Harris Colt, who had gone to Connecticut be- fore the signatures were attached to the petition. The original of the pass* issued to them, and herewith reproduced, is in the handwriting of Major Durkee, and is now in the possession of the present writer.
With barre 30 th augh 17 kg the Bara Cop's Lebulun Katter & Com.
When i to Return to this place in forty Days
Captains Butler and Colt-who were residents and neighbors in the town of Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, and whose respective
* It reads as follows :
"Wilkesbarre 30th Augt 1769 "the Barers Capt. Zebulon Butler & Capt. Harris Colt are permitted to Return to Windham & to Return to this place in sixty days ---
"pr. JNO. DURKEE, President."
Stephen. Jenkins, Youngs Morgan, Benjamin Rennals,
John H. Dageor,
Asahel Lee,
Phins Stevens,
Isaac Tracy,
Joseph Palmer,
Stephen Hinsdale,
John Dorrance,
Elizer Carey,
Enos Yale,
Hezekiah Linkon,
511
families were still settled there-went to Windham at this time to at- tend the adjourned meeting of The Susquehanna Company to be held on the 6th of September, and to report the condition of affairs in Wyo- ming. The meeting was duly held, and among other matters of busi- ness transacted the following votes were passed :
"Voted, That Col. Samuel Talcott be agent for the Company to assist in the suit at
Easton. If he cannot go, then the General Committee to appoint some one. Voted, That the persons that are bound over to answer at the Court at Easton this month shall receive three dollars to bear their expenses on their way there. Voted, That £10 be paid to Maj. John Durkee, John Smith, Esq., and Mr. Stephen Gardner, Committee at Sus- quehannah, for the purpose of defraying the necessary extraordinary expenses of the Com- mittee-to be used at their discretion. That £18 be paid to Isaac Tripp, Benjamin Fol- lett and John Jenkins, as a committee, to be equally divided and paid to the several per- sons now bound over to the Court at Easton, and that shall set out on their journey to said Court-to be paid to each one in equal proportion to the distance of the way each one lives from said Court-for the purpose of defraying their charges in said journey. And that there be paid into the hands of said committee forty shillings more for each of said persons bound over, and that shall appear there-for the making necessary provision for their support at Easton ; said committee to be considered as three of the persons for whose benefit said money is granted. Voted, That Humphrey Avery, Isaac Tripp, Elizur Talcott and Colonel Dyer be appointed to confer with Col. Samuel Talcott and request him to go to Easton as agent for the Company, to assist the proprietors now bound over to Court to be held this month, and take care of said cause-he to be paid a handsome reward for his said service."
Two days after the aforementioned meeting was held the following item of news-probably derived from Captains Butler and Colt-was printed in The New London Gazette :
"By late advices from Wyoming, on Susquehannah River, we learn there are about 200 settlers there under the conduct of Maj. John Durkee of Norwich, and that they have secured 500 loads of good hay, and sown 200 acres with wheat, and are yet sowing. The most of their Indian corn is very good. The several mobs raised by the Pennsylvanians to dispossess the settlers have proved abortive. And we further learn that Major Durkee so behaves and conducts that he hath got the universal esteem of all the settlers ; and notwithstanding the disadvantages he is under of not having any law, either civil or martial, to govern the people by, yet he quiets all their uneasinesses, and they are well united, and do not only love and fear, but honor and obey the Major, who is superiorly accomplished for such an undertaking. He is steady, affable, mild and gentle, but reso- lutely determined to defend their just rights against their unjust opposers, and hath hitherto succeeded to the great terror of those evil-doers ; which gives us great hopes, by the blessing of God, of the settlement of this Colony being greatly enlarged, and thereby a door opened for the spreading of the glorious gospel among the natives of this land, so that the wilderness shall blossom as the rose, and the desert become a fruitful field."
September, 1769, was a busy month at Wyoming. On the 20th of the month, at Fort Durkee, a petition was drawn up and signed, reading as follows :
"To the HONOURABLE GENERAL ASSEMBLY of the Collony of Connecticut to be holden at Newhaven on the second thursday of Octor nexte.
"The memorial of us the Subscribers Inhabitants of the Province of Newyork humbly sheweth that whereas we your memorialists being greatly opprest by Quit Rents, and under great necessity for lands for ourselves and children, and having understood that your Honours having large extension of lands to the Westward of Susquehannah, by your Charter grant, we your memorialists therefore pray that your Honours would grant to us the Subscribers a small tract of land lying to the westward of the Lands known by the name of the Susquehannah Purchase. We your memorialists therefore humbly Pro- pose that if your honours would grant unto us your memorialists a Township of six miles square of lands lying westward of said Susquehannah lands a quit claim of all your Right and title to sd lands which you have by your Charter grant, at your present sessions, your memorialists will give an honourable Price for the same in Cash or Good Security suffici- ent to the satisfaction of the Collony. And your memorialists shall in Duty Bound ever Pray &c.
"Dated at Wilksberry Sept. 20th 1769 .-
"KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS that we the Subscribers Inhabitants of the Province of Newyork do hereby Constitute and Appoint our trusty Friend JEDIDIAH ELDERKIN Esq. of Windham in the Collony of Connecticut our lawfull attorney on the within memorial, in our name and stead to appear at the General Assembly for us to act as though we was Personally present. Granting unto our said attorney full
512
Power of Substitution In and about the Premises. In Witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this 20th Septr. 1769-Wilksbury on Susquehannah.
"Present-
"Jno. Durkee,
"Chriso Avery,
"Thomas Knights,
"James Nisbitt,
"Richard Knights,
"Zopher Teed,
"John Franklin,
"Solonion Teed,
"Parshall Terry,
"Thos Sutton,
"Benjn Matthews, Junt
"Amos Woodworth,
"Aaron Aspenwall,
"Nathan Beach,
"Benjn Matthews."
The writer of the foregoing appears to have been uncertain as to how the new name of the settlement should be spelled, and so he spelled it in two different ways-"Wilksberry" and "Wilksbury." On the 11th of September a petition similar in form and substance to the foregoing had been drawn up and signed by Lazarus Young, John Espy and Will- iam Young, who described themselves as "of the Province of Pennsyl- vania," and appointed Jedidiah Elderkin their attorney. On the 12th of September a petition of the same character as the aforementioned, but dated "Province of New York, September 12, 1769," was signed by the following-named (who set forth that they were "inhabitants of the Province of New York," but who were actually at Fort Durkee at that time): Simeon Draper, Peter Harris, William Buck, Elijah Buck, Richard Brockway, David Mead, James Atherton, Oliver Smith, John Wallworth, Asahel Lee, Stephen Miels, Eleazar Carey, James Stark, Christopher Stark, Jr., Aaron Stark, William Stark, Nathan Kees, Will- iam Reynolds, William Wallworth, Amos Stafford, John Stafford, James Smith, Jr., John Groves, Isaac Barra, Zebulon Hoxsie and John Kinyon. On the 15th of September William Holly, John Holly, Michael Seeley and William Leonard-describing themselves as "of the Province of East New Jersey"-signed at Fort Durkee a petition similar to the fore- going, in which they named Jedidiah Elderkin as their attorney. The following, dated the 18th of September, is a copy of a power of attorney intended to accompany one of the abovementioned memorials.
"Know all men by these that we the Subscribers, inhabitants of the Colony of Rhode Island, do hereby constitute and appoint our trusty friend Jedidiah Elderkin, Esq., of Windham, in the Colony of Connecticut, our lawful attorney on the within memorial, in our name and stead to appear at the General Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut to be holden at Newhaven on the 2d Thursday of October next-for us to act and transact, as though we were personally present, accepting what our said attorney shall lawfully do in and about the premises ; granting unto our said attorney full power of substitution. In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands at WILKESBARRE ON THE BANKS OF THE SUSQUEHANNAH RIVER, this 18th day of September, 1769. "Present --
"Peter Harris, "John Groves,
"Stephen Jenkins, "Silvester Chesebrough, "Daniel Angell, "James Hopkins, "Robert Hopkins."
These several memorials and powers of attorney, together with the memorial dated the 29th of August, and set forth in full on pages 508 and 509, were delivered into the hands of Christopher Avery, who, about the 1st of October, set out for Connecticut. It was expected that the petition of The Susquehanna Company for "a lease and release" of their lands by the Colony of Connecticut would be taken up and finally acted on at the October session of the General Assembly, to which the
513
matter had been continued-as noted on page 470-and it was intended that these later documents should be laid before the Assembly at the same time. They were duly presented to the Assembly-presumably by Major Elderkin-and the originals are now to be seen in the volume of manuscripts referred to on page 29. The following is a reduced photo- reproduction of the power of attorney last mentioned, which is in the handwriting of Major Durkee.
Vous all men by these that are the futuretiens Inhabitants ofthe Colony of Rhode Island) So hardly Conflitto
lownachricht our Lawful attorney's on the Melhorar in our Name & flad to appuse of the Member of the Colony of Connections to the RoQ. . on the of the day of och Nave for on Danach of the we have personally being
Heat on daw attorney hill Lawfully Do we
I fulltitution in withey, where fischer As our hands al willy basse on the Banks
Silvester Chesbrough Daniel Angell James hop kemp
Samuel Avery, at Norwich, Connecticut, under date of October 25, 1769, wrote to Major Durkee as follows* :
*
* * "Christopher Avery is now at the Assembly. He has been very industri- ous to promote the affair and to gain all the interest and influence in his power. We do not know whether he will return here from the Assembly, or go directly to you. We are very agreeably entertained with your conduct and character there, which every one that come from you are full of. * * * I understand it is the advice of many, and even some of the leaders of the Company, and even some of the committee of the Company here, for the settlers all to quit their possession and come off if the Assembly act nothing in your favor."
Christopher Avery returned to Fort Durkee from Connecticut about the 1st of November, with the dispiriting report that the Assembly had taken no action on the memorials which he had carried to New Haven, and that upon the Company's memorial, previously mentioned, a com- mittee of conference had again been appointed.
Parshall Terry, in his affidavit mentioned on page 403, states "that some time in the month of September [1769],t a small part of the [Wyoming] settlers, being at work at some distance from their block- houses, were attacked by a party of men, said to be commanded by the Ogdens, and several of the settlers were beat and wounded." Col. Eliph- alet Dyer, Samuel Gray, Esq., Maj. Jedidiah Elderkin and Nathaniel
* The original letter is in the possession of the present writer.
+ It was Friday, September 22d.
·
514
Wales, Jr., Esq., in a long communication made to Governor Trumbull in March, 1771, relative to the affairs of The Susquehanna Company, stated* :
"In September [1769] Amos and Nathan Ogden, with twenty-six others, armed with pistols and clubs, assaulted and wounded sundry of our people, whereby their lives were endangered .; The same month thirteen of our people, in three canoes loaded with wheat and flour, about sixty miles below Wyoming were met and robbed of their canoes and loading by thirty armed men who came from Fort Augusta, about one-half mile away. In the same month came on the [adjourned] trial of many of our men at Easton. The charge against them was riot. *
* In the course of the trial challenge was made to a juryman for having some time before expressed an opinion openly against our people -but neither that nor any other exception would prevail. The jury were treated with wine by the King's Attorney before verdict, which verdict was brought in against the prisoners, and they condemned to pay a fine of £10 each, with large costs, in which was included the cost of the wine the jury were treated with."
Messrs. Dyer and Elderkin, in their joint-affidavit mentioned on page 475, state with reference to the trial of the settlers at Easton in September that "they were convicted and punished accordingly with fines and costs to the amount of about sixty dollars each. Some made payment, and others being impoverished were committed to prison, where they remained until they made their escape."
Colonel Talcott having been either unable or unwilling to go to Easton to act as counsel for the New Englanders, Colonel Dyer was sent in his stead, with authority to employ a Philadelphia lawyer to assist him in the case. He accordingly secured the services of Richard Peters, 2d, later Judge Peters (mentioned in the note on page 262), and together they proceeded to Easton and defended the twenty "rioters." David Hayfield Conyngham of Philadelphia, an intimate friend of Judge Peters, wrote many years later in his "Reminiscences"} the following paragraph relative to Judge Peters' connection with this case. "The Gaol [at Easton] then being built of logs could only hold from twenty to thirty persons, and the Judges and lawyers not knowing what to do with so many demanding daily of the Sheriff bread and quarters, he [Peters] told me he went among them and advised them to go home ; and, meeting Col. E. Dyer, asked him to walk out with him to talk over the business they had in hand ; and, returning, went to the prison, when the Sheriff told them that the whole party of Yankees had gone off." The escape of the prisoners occurred in the evening of Sunday, September 24th, and the next day the Sheriff prepared an advertisement which was printed some days later in the Pennsylvania Gazette at Phil- adelphia, and probably in other newspapers. It read as follows :
" £60 REWARD !"
"Easton, September 25, 1769 .- WHEREAS, in the night of the 24th inst. the follow- ing persons made their escape out of the goal at Easton, viz .: Benjamin Follett, William Buck, Samuel Gaylord, Richard Brockway, Timothy Smith, Timothy Peirce, Ezra Beld- ing, Silas Bingham, Stephen Harding, Elias Roberts, Rudolph Brink Vanorman and
* See "Pennsylvania Archives," First Series, IV : 401.
¡ The Moravian missionaries at Friedenshütten (Wyalusing) recorded in their journal, under the date of October 23, 1769, the following (see "Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society," I : 200): "We cautioned the Indians not to hunt at Wyoming, as intelligence reached us of a collision there between the New England settlers and the Pennsylvanians." News traveled slowly in those days.
Relative to the preparations which had to be made to bring about the "collision" abovementioned, and as to the expense attending the same, we get some information from the previously-mentioned "Penn-Physick MSS.," III : 89 and IV : 227 and 229. September 15, 1769, Charles Stewart paid Joseph Morris and John Dick each £10, 15sh. "in full"-presumably for services. The same date William Ledlie was paid £1, 12sh. 7d. for stores. September 19, Charles Stewart paid Thomas Craig, Jr., "for himself, horse and expenses, four days, riding and summoning men to go to Wioming, £2, 5sh." Same date, "paid George Wolf for himself and expenses going over the mountain, five days, to provide necessaries for the people summoned to Wioming, £1, 7sh .; paid Conrad Teeter for a beef cow, £2, 6sh." In October, 1769, Receiver General Physick paid to Charles Stewart £220, 11sh. 1d., "in full for his account for stores, wages for sundry people, and for dividing [into lots] Sunbury and Stoke Manors."
# See the "Proceedings and Collections of the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society," VIII : 231.
515
Nathan Denison-being a company from Connecticut who were lately convicted and im- prisoned for committing a riot at Lachnawanock, on the East Branch of the River Sus- quehanna ; which said escape was effected by the aid and assistance of one Thomas Dyer, who, being at liberty, had free access to his companions. I, the subscriber, do therefore hereby offer the above reward for all the said delinquents, or £5 for each of them that shall be taken up and secured in any of His Majesty's goals within this Govern- ment, &c.
[Signed] "JOHN JENNINGS, Sheriff."
None of these twelve "delinquents" was captured, for, as expe- ditiously as possible, they proceeded to their respective homes, beyond the jurisdiction of Pennsylvania Courts and the grasp of their processes.
About the middle of September, 1769, arrangements were made by the "Committee of Settlers" at Fort Durkee with respect to the locating and laying out of the five "gratuity," or "settling," towns, or townships, provided for by the resolutions of The Susquehanna Company, as de- scribed on pages 465 and 466. It was decided that the three authorized by the Company to be located together should be surveyed on the east side of the Susquehanna, and the remaining two on the west side. David Mead, one of the settlers, who was a practical surveyor, was selected to run the lines, and "Deacon" Timothy Hopkins, Capt. Eliph- alet Whittlesey, Capt. Prince Alden, John Smith, Esq., and Christopher Avery, Esq., were appointed "a committee to reconnoiter and view the ground for the townships, and to assist the surveyor in laying out and pitching them." Nathaniel Wales and Andrew Metcalf assisted the aforenamed in laying out one or more of the townships. What surveyor Mead was paid for his work we have not been able to learn, but each member of the committee named above was paid four shillings per day for his services. Twelve days were occupied in doing the necessary work, which was completed by the first of October. However, the boundaries only of the five townships were surveyed and laid down at that time, the work of subdividing each township into "divisions" and "lots" being done in 1770 and subsequent years.
The first township to be surveyed comprehended the settlement of the Yankees at Fort Durkee and that of the Pennamites at Mill Creek, and it formally and immediately received the name which, some weeks previously, had been bestowed by Major Durkee upon the Yankee set- tlement-"Wilkesbarre." South-west of and adjoining "Wilkesbarre" there was surveyed a township which included the former site of the village of the Nanticoke Indians, and also the whole or a part of the township of Nanticoke which had been laid out by the Pennamites in April, 1769, as mentioned on page 487. To this township the Yankees gave the name "Nanticoke"; but a year or two later-as is more fully related hereinafter-"Hanover" was substituted for the original name by the then proprietors of the township. Adjoining "Wilkesbarre" on its north-eastern boundary the third township was surveyed, to which, subsequently, the name "Pittstown" was given-later changed to "Pitts- ton." Passing over to the west side of the river the surveyors laid out for the "First Forty," in the locality previously selected by those settlers, the township to which they were entitled. This township was known and referred to as the "Forty Township" until the Summer of 1771, when it received the name "Kingstown," subsequently changed to "Kingston." Adjoining the "Forty Township" on its south-west boundary the fifth and last of the settling towns was laid out. To it, later, was given the name "Plymouth." The relative locations of these five townships are fairly well shown on the map facing page 468.
William H. Sturdevant, Civil Engineer.
Specially prepared for this work, from original data, by
WITH RELATION TO THE MANOR OF STOKE.
PLOT OF THE ORIGINAL TOWN, OR TOWNSHIP, OF WILKES-BARRÉ,
+
NAVON
SOUTH
Manour
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