USA > Vermont > Lamoille County > Gazetteer and business directory of Lamoille and Orleans counties, Vt., for 1883-84, pt 1 > Part 20
USA > Vermont > Orleans County > Gazetteer and business directory of Lamoille and Orleans counties, Vt., for 1883-84, pt 1 > Part 20
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Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39
GEOLOGICAL.
The science of geology is ever an interesting study, and as related to this county it is exceedingly so, for here the record of the changes, or "foot- prints," that time has left in the succeeding ages since the earth was created, are numerous and well developed. Before mentioning the several rocks that enter into the formation of the territory, however, it may not be superfluous to briefly note the fundamental principals of the science.
Among men of science, it has become the common, if not the prevailing opinion, that in the beginning all the elements with which we meet were in an ethereal, or gaseous state-that they slowly condensed, existing for ages as a heated fluid, by degrees becoming more consistent-that thus the whole earth was once an immense ball of fiery matter-that, in the course of time, it was rendered very compact, and at last became crusted over, as the pro- cess of cooling gradually advanced, and that its interior is still in a molten condition. Thus, if the view suggested be correct, the entire planet, in its earlier phases, as well as the larger part now beneath and within its solid crust, was a mass of molten fire, and is known to geologists as elementary or molten. Following this came another age, in which this molten mass began to cool and a crust to form, called the igneous period. Contemporaneous with the beginning of the igneous period came another epoch. The crust thus formed would naturally become surrounded by an atmosphere heavily charged with minerals in a gaseous or vaporous condition. As the cooling advanced this etherealized matter would condense and seek a lower level, thus coating the earth over with another rock. This is named the vaporous period. At last, however, another age was ushered in, one altogether different from
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those that had preceded it. The moist vapors which must of necessity have pervaded the atmosphere began to condense and settle, gathering into the hollows and crevices of the rocks, until nearly the whole surface of the earth was covered with water. This is called the aqueous period. As these waters began to recede and the "firmament to appear," the long winter that inter- vened while the sun was obscured by the heavy clouds would cover the earth with mighty ice-floes and glaciers, forming what is known as the drift, or glacial period. A great difference also exists in the consolidation and structure of the rocks thus formed. The very newest consist of unconsoli- dated gravel, sand, and clay, forming alluvium. A little farther down we come to the tertiary strata, some of which are hardened into rock and others left more or less loose and soft. Next below the tertiary is found thick de- posits, mostly consolidated, but showing a mechanical structure along with the crystalline arrangement of the ingredients. These are called secondary and transition. Lowest of all are found rocks having a decidedly crystalline structure, looking as if the different minerals of which they are composed crowded hard upon one another. These rocks are called metamorphic, hy- pozoic, and azoic.
The principal portion of the rocks of this territory are azoic, and known as talcose schist and calciferous mica schist, the former underlying the western portion, and the latter the eastern portion of the county. Both, however, are cut by beds and veins of other formations. Talcose schist proper consists of quartz and talc, though it has associated with it, as integral parts of its formation, clay slate, gneiss, quartz rock, sand-stones and con- glomerates, lime-stones and dolomites. In Coventry there is a remarkable bed of conglomerate rock associated with the formation. In Newport there is much of the novaculite, the hone-stones from Lake Mempheremagog being well known for their excellent sharpening properties. In Troy the rock con- tains many small rounded pebbles. Jay Peak is a coarse talcose schist, with numerous small, irregular masses of pure chlorite, and an irregular vein of white quartz. The rock is also often highly charged with crystals of mag- netic iron ore, often so as to powerfully affect the compass.
The calciferous mica schist, which underlies so great a portion of the east- ern part of the county is supposed to have originally been a limestone for- mation, charged with a good deal of silex, and perhaps with silicates and organic matters, and that in the process of metamorphism the carbonated or alkaline water with which the rock had been charged has dissolved and ab- stracted a good deal of the carbonate of lime and formed silicated minerals, such as mica and feldspar, which have more or less, and sometimes entirely, changed the rock into mica schist and gneiss.
In the region of the Missisquoi valley, extending through Lowell, Westfield, Troy, and Jay, are long, narrow veins of steatite, clay slate, and serpentine. Extending through the central part of the county, from Lake Memphrema- gog south, are two large veins of clay slate and upper Heilderberg limestone,
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forming a dividing line between the two schist formations. In the eastern part of the territory, extending through Glover, Barton, Brownington, Charles- ton, Morgan, and Holland, is a narrow vein of hornblende schist. The ex- treme eastern part of the county is entirely granite, and in the southern part there is another large bed of the same rock, lying partly in the four towns of Greensboro, Glover, Albany, and Craftsbury, while small beds of the rock are found in a number of the other towns, affording an excellent building stone.
Small deposits of gold have been discovered in the region of the Missisquoi, though it is believed no deposits of value exist. Ores of iron and manganese are found in several places. Mountain manganese occurs in Coventry and Albany. In Troy an immense vein of magnetic ore was discovered about 1830, and a blast furnace was constructed and the deposit worked for a num- ber of years. The ore contains titanium and a trace of manganese, and is difficult to smelt unless mixed with hematite or bog ore. The iron is well adapted for making wire, screws, etc., having great strength and tenacity. Several beds of chromate of iron have also been found in the serpentine of Jay, Troy, and Westfield. Sulphuret of copper exists in small quantities in Newport, on a hill two and one-halt miles southwest from the lake.
Numerous evidences of the aqueous period are met with throughout the State, and evidence so conclusive that there can be no doubt that Vermont at least was once the bed of a mighty ocean. Perhaps the most positive of these are the many marine fossils that have been brought to light, for instance the fossil whale found in Charlotte, in August, 1849, and many others that might be mentioned. In this county are many deposits of marine shells found in connection with the beds of marl that are so plentiful in the southern and eastern parts. Ancient sea beaches, found in different parts of the county, also point to the same conclusion. They consist of sand and gravel, which have been acted upon, rounded, and comminuted by the waves, and thrown up in the form of low ridges, with more or less appearances of stratification or lamination. The manner in which they were formed may be seen along the sea coast at any time in the course of formation, as they have the same form of modern beaches, except that they have been much mutilated by the action of water and atmospheric agencies since their deposition. In Greensboro there is one of these formations, the top of which is 1,240 feet above the ocean. In the valley of Memphremagog there are several. One on the western side of the lake, in Newport, is 365 feet above Memphrema_ gog, or 1,060 feet above the ocean. One or two are on the east side of the valley, in the southern part of Derby and in Brownington, at the heights of 276 and 579 feet above the lake, or 971 and 1,274 feet above the ocean. Craftsbury common, 1, 158 feet above the ocean, is also a good specimen.
Evidences of the drift or glacial period are left here by hugh bowlders scattered over the county, by drift scratches and moraine terraces. Drift scratches are grooves or scratches worn in the rocks by glaciers, or vast rivers
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of ice, which, starting from the summits of the mountains, moved slowly down the valleys as far as the heat of summer would permit. Though they rarely ever advanced more than two feet a day, their great thickness and the weight of the superincumbent snow caused them to grate and crush the rocks be- neath, leaving marks that ages will not efface. On Jay mountain are many such scratches, and also on the rocks in the valley of Black river. Mo- raine terraces are elevations of gravel and sand, with correspondent depres- sions of most singular and scarcely describable forms. The theory of their formation is that icebergs became stranded at the base and on the sides of hills, and that deposits were made around and upon them, and that they would have been level-topped if the ice had remained, but in consequence of its melting they became extremely irregular. Good specimens of these are found in the southern part of Westmore and in the eastern part of Greensboro. Huge masses of rocks were also carried along by these float- ing islands of ice, which, as the ice melted were dropped to the bottom of the ocean. One large bowlder in Greensboro, upon the farm of Alexander McLaren, is forty feet long, thirty feet wide and twenty feet in height.
Following these records, then, that old ocean has graven on the rocks and sands of Orleans county, it is not difficult for the mind to revert through the remote past, to the time when this portion of the continent was sufficiently submerged to allow the waters of the ocean to extend over it, forming a broad inland gulf, with the Green Mountain range for its eastern shore, and the Adirondacks for its western limit. The broad valley of the St. Law- rence would form the passage to this inland sea, or perchance only the higher portions of New England rose above the water.
SOIL AND STAPLE PRODUCTIONS.
The soil differs materially in different parts of the county, and in general is not inferior in fertility to any in the State. The cultivated lands of Hol- land, Greensboro, Craftsbury, Westmore, and a portion of Glover, have an altitude varying from 1, 100 to 1,500 feet above the ocean, while on the rivers the altitude varies from 700 to 900 feet, the table lands between the streams being usually of a quality excellent for purposes of cultivation and grazing. In the talcose schist regions, where the rocks have very little carbonate of lime and decompose very slowly, the soil is deficient in lime, except on the intervale of drift soil. In the extreme eastern part of the territory, where the deposits are of a granitic character, the rocks decompose very slowly, yet sufficiently rapid to afford new materials of value to the soil. The portions of the county embraced in the calcareous mica schist region, where rocks of the limestone, clay, and hornblend formations are found interstratified, all of which are inclined to very rapid decomposition, the soil is constantly enriched by the addition of lime and other materials of the rocks as they disintegrate. In the northern part of the county the soil is generally a deep loam, resulting from drift agency, which brought it from regions of purer limestone in the north,
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and is thus rich in salts of lime and very highly productive. Troy, Newport, Coventry, Craftsbury, Derby, Charleston, and Holland, contain many thous- and acres of this variety of soil. Grazing and stock-raising occupies the attention of many of the farmers, the interest in this branch of husbandry seeming to be steadily increasing. Large quantities of sugar are manufactured from the maple. A good idea of the staple productions may be derived, however, from the following statistics, taken from the United States census reports of 1870. . During that year there were 196,456 acres of improved land in the county, while the farms were valued at $8,949,310.00, and pro- duced 56,462 bushels of wheat, 3,017 bushels of rye, 54.589 bushels of Indian corn, 369,319 bushels of oats, 21,376 bushels of barley, and 38,796 bushels of buckwheat. There were owned throughout the county 5, 184 horses, 14, 125 milch cows, 1,961 working oxen, 22,432 sheep, and 3,636 swine. From the milk of the cows were manufactured 1,738,526 pounds of butter and 67,079 pounds of cheese, while the sheep yielded 110,476 pounds of wool.
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.
The first agricultural society organized in the county depended upon a membership fee for a revenue with which to meet expenses. Several annual fairs, of one day each, were held on level fields adjoining the several villages of the county, the society selecting each year the village that afforded the most encouragement in the way of yards, pens, sheds, etc. Finally a company was organized which fenced in a fair ground and made a half-mile track about a mile southeasterly from Barton Landing. Horse-racing was intro- duced as an attraction, and an admittance fee charged. The attendance, however, did not prove sufficiently large to warrant a permanent financial success, so the enterprise was abandoned. For about a dozen years previous to 1867, no active society existed and no fairs were held. During this year, however, after considerable discussion of the subject through the papers, a meeting was called to "consider the advisability of organizing a county agricultural society." This meeting resulted in the formation of a society, with Hon. Josiah B. Wheelock, of Coventry, president ; Zenas E. Jameson, of Irasburgh, secretary ; and Hon. I. N. Cushman, treasurer, with a board of trustees, consisting of one member from each town.
The dominant feeling called for a fair that autumn, so with only about a month for preparation, a successful fair was held, on the old fair-grounds near Barton Landing, the receipts of which amounted to a sum sufficient to meet the general expenses, pay all premiums awarded, and leave about $130 in the treasury. The object of the society professedly was to promote agricultural interests, household manufactures and mechanic arts in the county. Accordingly, by advice of the directors, the secretary issued blanks to every school district clerk, asking questions the replies to which would give a very correct knowledge of the extent of all the products of the coun-
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ty, but only about seven hundred farms were reported. One item resultant, however, is worthy of mention : the average area of corn planted was less than one-half acre to each farm.
At the second election, Mark Nutter, of Barton, was chosen president, and the subject of a permanent location for the grounds was earnestly dis- cussed. There were in the county, aside from the old fair-ground, a track and sheds enclosed as a trotting park on Indian Point, in Derby, and a track upon the grounds of Amasa Randall, in Craftsbury. While the directors were considering the respective merits of these localities, several citizens of Barton village, with commendable public spirit, organized a Fair Ground Company which offered to enclose a suitable plot with a high board fence, make a track and erect all necessary buildings, and give their use and con- trol to the society for holding a two days' fair each year for five years. The proposal was accepted by the society, and the site chosen for the ground was upon the west side of the river valley, about three-quarters of a mile from the village, a spot easily accessible, always dry and pleasant, and so un- der the lee of the hill as to be sheltered from the westerly winds, yet elevated sufficiently to afford a charming view of one of the most picturesque and fertile valleys in Vermont, a part of whose fertility was obtained, and a great degree of notoriety, when Runaway pond took its mad course over it.
The fairs and races at Roaring Brook Park, for such it was named, gained an excellent reputation and were well attended ; but after seven an- nual fairs were held, the society failed to make satisfactory terms for another. The Fair Ground Company, however, has continued the annual exhibitions until this time, constantly increasing their efforts to enlist the support and approval of the farmers of this county, and of the towns of Sheffield and Sutton, in Caledonia county. The expenses are paid from one treasury, though there are two full boards of officers. The president of the Fair Ground Company at the present time is Duncan McDougal. J. C. Oliver, of Charleston, is president of the Agricultural Society, C. P. Owen, of Glover, secretary, and J. W. Hall, of Barton, treasurer. Among the attrac- tions at different times have been two balloon ascensions and an oration by Horace Greeley.
MANUFACTURES.
With the exception of the manufacture of lumber in its various branches, this is not what might be termed a manufacturing county, and as the manu- factures are spoken of in detail in connection with the respective towns wherein they are located, we will pass this subject with the following statis- tics from the census returns of 1870 : There were then 106 manufacturing establishments in the county, operated by four steam engines and eighty-one water-wheels, giving employment to 251 persons. There were $229,775.00 invested in manufacturing interests, while the entire product for the year was valued at $403, 825.00.
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COURTS AND COUNTY BUILDINGS.
It was not until 1799, that the legislature established courts in Orleans county, making Brownington and Craftsbury half shires, courts being held al- ternately in these towns, meeting in March and August. John Elsworth, of Greensboro, was appointed chief judge, and Timothy Hinman and Elijah Strong assistant judges. On the 20th of November, 1799, they met at the house of Dr. Samuel Huntington, in Greensboro, and properly organized the county by electing Timothy Stanley clerk, and Royal Corbin. treasurer. From this day dates the independent existence of Orleans county.
The first session of the county court was held at Craftsbury, March 24, 1800, with Timothy Hinman, chief judge, and Samuel C. Crafts and Jesse Olds, assistants. Neither of these men, though they were educated, had been bred to the law ; but on the second day of the session, Moses Chase was admitted to the bar, the first lawyer in the county. Timothy Stanley, of Greensboro, was the first county clerk ; Joseph Scott of Craftsbury, the first sheriff ; Joseph Bradley, first State's attorney ; and Ebenezer Crafts, of Craftsbury, first judge of probate. Courts continued to be held at Brown- ington and Craftsbury until August, 1816, when they were held at Browning- ton for the last time, in the old town-house, the cellar of the house now occupied by Mr. Burroughs being then used for a jail. In 1812, the legisla- ture passed an act constituting Irasburgh the shire town, providing the inhabi- tants of that town would erect a court-house and jail at their own expense. Nothing appears to have been done towards erecting the buildings, however, until 1815, when they were completed so that court was held there for the first time in 1816, where the supreme court still meets on the fourth Tuesday in May, and the county court on the first Wednesday after the first Tuesday in September, and first Tuesday in February.
In 1847, the old court-house was removed and a new one erected on its site, at a cost of $4,000.00, at the expense of the town. The first jail was built of logs or hewn timber, ceiled with three-inch hardwood planks. This structure did service until 1838, when it was taken down and a stone build- ing erected on its site. This jail was eighteen feet square on the ground, two stories high. This building was after a time considered inconvenient and unsafe, so the legislature of 1861, authorized the county judges to borrow $3,000.00 for the purpose of erecting a new jail. Harry Hinman, Jonathan Elkins, and E. P. Colton were appointed a committee to erect the building. In 1862, the work was completed, giving the county a well-arranged granite jail 26 by 36 feet, two stories in height.
The county seems never to have been very prolific of crime, no serious outrages ever having disturbed the even tenor of its way. On the 14th of June, 1846, a male child a year old was murdered by its mother, Hannah Parker, alias Stickney, by throwing the infant into the Black river, near the bridge that crosses the stream in the North neighborhood of Coventry. The women had been married once or twice, but there was considerable uncer-
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tainty as to the paternal parentage of the child, and as she had no home nor means of support, the child was an hindrance in the way of her procuring as- sistance or employment. These circumstances, it is supposed, overcame the maternal instinct and persuaded her to the murder of her offspring. She was arrested and committed to jail, and in due season was indicted, and, on the second trial was found guilty; but exceptions being taken to some of the rulings of the court, the judgment was reversed. After remaining in jail about eight years, she was allowed to go at large, the long confinement being regarded as as severe a punishment as public justice required to be inflicted on an offender, who, in great weakness of mind and extreme desperation of cir- cumstances, had committed crime.
Samuel Lathe was convicted of murder at Irasburgh, February 7, 1852, and sentenced to be executed after one year. His sentence was commuted by the legislature, in November, 1852, to fifteen years imprisonment, and he was finally pardoned by the Governor, November 24, 1856.
The following is a list of the assistant judges, State's attorneys, admissions to the bar, etc., since the organization of the county :--
ASSISTANT JUDGES OF THE COUNTY COURT.
Samuel C. Crafts 1800-09
Jesse Olds . 1800-01
Timothy Stanley . 1802-03
George Nye. 1810-14
Nathaniel P. Sawyer 1814
Timothy Stanley 1815-23
Samuel Cook
1815-20
Nathaniel P. Sawyer 1821-24
John Ide. 1824
Samuel C. Crafts
1825-27
William Baxter 1825-26
Ira H. Allen
1826-32
William Howe 1827
Jasper Robinson 1828-29
David M. Camp 1830-32
David P. Noyes 1833-35
Isaac Parker 1833
David M. Camp 1834-35
Portus Baxter 1836
Alvah R. French 1836-38
John Kimball 1837-38
Isaac Parker 1839-42
Charles Hardy
1839
John Boardman 1840-41
Jairus Stebbins 1842
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A. R. French.
1843
David M. Camp. 1843
Elijah Cleveland 1844-46
Harry Baxter 1844-46
James A. Paddock
1847-48 1847-48
John Harding
Solomon Dwinell
1849-51
Loren W. Clark.
1849-51
Nehemiah Colby
1852
William Moon, Jr.
1852
John M. Robinson
1853
John D. Harding
1854
Sabin Kellam
1854
John W. Robinson
1855
Fordyce F. French
1855
Sabin Kellam
1856
Durkee Cole
1856
Emory Stewart
1857
John Walbridge
1857-58
Samuel Cheney
1858-59
Henry Richardson
1859
John D. Harding
1860-61
E. G. Babbitt
1860-61
Amasa Paine
1862-64
Simeon Albee
1862-63
William J. Hastings
1864-65
Josiah B. Wheelock.
I865-66
Benjamin Comings
1866-67
E. O. Bennett
1867-69
James Simonds
1868-70
Lyman P. Tenney
1869-72
A. C. Joslyn
1870-72
Orrin Taylor 1872-76
Horace S. Jones 1872-76
Emery Cook. 1876-78
David Hopkinson 1876-78 Levi Rowell. 1878-80
George E. Bradley . 1878-80
S. R. Fletcher 1880-82
N. C. Hoyt. 1880-84
Amasa P. Dutton 1882-84
STATE'S ATTORNEYS.
Joseph Bradley. 1800-01
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ORLEANS COUNTY.
William Baxter 1802-14
David M. Camp 1815
Joshua Sawyer 1816-23
Augustus Young. 1824-27
E. H. Starkweather. 1828-29
George C. West 1830-31
Isaac F. Redfield.
1832-34
E. H. Starkweather.
1835
Charles Story . 1836-37
Samuel Sumner 1838
Jesse Cooper 1839
Samuel Sumner
1840-41
Jesse Cooper.
1842
John H. Kimball.
1843-44
Nathan S. Hill.
1845-46
Henry F. Prentiss. 1847-48
John L. Edwards.
1849
Norman Boardman
. 1850
William M. Dickerman.
1851-52
Samuel A. Willard. 1853
H. C. Wilson 1854
John P. Startle
1855-56
J. E. Dickerman 1857-58
H. C. Wilson.
1859
A. D. Bates.
1860-61
N. T. Sheafe.
1862-63
William W. Grout. 1864-65
Lewis H. Bisbee 1866
J. B. Robinson . 1867-69
B. F. D. Carpenter 1869-72
Walter D. Crane 1872-74
Lafforest H. Thompson 1874-76 William R. Rowell. 1876-78
Theophilus Grout 1878-80
F. W. Baldwin. 1880-82
C. A. Prouty 1882-84
COUNTY CLERKS.
Timothy Stanley 1800-03
John Ellsworth
1803-16
Ira H. Allen 1816-35
Samuel C. Crafts.
1835-39
Henry M. Bates. 1839-50
Hubbard Hastings 1850-53
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ORLEANS COUNTY.
Sylvester D. Kimball 1853-54
George W. Hartshorn 1854-55
Norman W. Bingham 1855-61
Isaac N. Cushman. 1861-SI
Henry B. Cushman
1881
ADMISSIONS TO THE BAR.
Moses Chase 1800
William Baxter 1801
Ezra Carter 1803
Jesse Olds. 1805
Henry Works.
Hezekiah Frost
1806
Charles Reynolds
Joseph H. Ellis
1807
Horace Bassett. 1809
Roger G. Bulkley
Joshua Sawyer
1810
John Wallace
1811
Peter Burbank 1812
Chester W. Blass 1813
William Richardson.
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