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1882 COUNTIES OF
LaGRANGE and NOBLE INDIANA HISTORICAL and BIOGRAPHICAL
Chicago F.A. Battey and Company Publishers 1882
GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP
By: Weston A. Goodspeed
Greenfield Township- The First Settlement on Pretty and English
Prairies-The Gage and Langdon War-Appearance of Industries-Villagers of
Vistula and Lexington-The First School and Teacher-Educational Growth-Revival
of 1840-Religious Societies-The Spiritualists
The lands in Southern Michigan were in market
some years before those of Northern Indiana, and were, of course, purchased
and occupied by sturdy pioneers who had come from the East. Many of these
men soon became dissatisfied with their new homes, as the land was covered
with an almost unbroken forest, which must
be removed before the soil could be cultivated. This promised many
years of unremitting toil, and the outlook for
those who had just come from Europe, or who were unused to to the ways
of the woods, was cheerless and discouraging. During the year 1829 there
came to near White Pigeon, Mich., the following men and their families:
Amos
Barr (who arrived in the spring), John Anderson, Samuel Anderson,
William
Miller, Benjamin Jones, John and Felix Miller (brothers),
Jesse Huntsman, Ephraim Seeley,
Jacob Croy, and perhaps
others. Some of these families came from Ohio- a number from the same neighborhood-
while others were
directly from Europe, or from the Eastern or Middle States. They were
not all in the same vicinity in Michigan,
but, during the year, they all became aware of the fact that, in what
is now northern LaGrange County, several
rich, extensive and beautiful prairies were to be found where the soil
needed no preparation for grain save the action of the plow. But at that
period these prairies were not yet marketable, and, in order to secure
a right to the land "claims" were located, and the settlers prepared to
enjoy a squatter's life until the prairie claims could be bought. It is
well authenticated that the above-named men located claims on Pretty and
English Prairies during the year 1829. The first to do this cannot be known.
From the fact that Amos Barr was by several months the first
to reach Southern Michigan, it may be presumed that he was at least
(if not the first) one of the first to establish a
claim in Greenfield Township. A few of the men- as William Miller
and Benjamin Jones- did not reach Southern Michigan until late in
the fall of 1829, and, of course, their claims on the prairies were not
made until that time. Claims in the woods were established by blazed trees;
those on the prairies by stakes or by plowed furrows. So far as known,
Amos
Barr was the first man to erect a cabin in the township, this being
done in the fall of
1829, but the building was roofless and floorless, and was probably
erected to more fully establish the right to the claim,around which (the
prairie portion) a furrow was plowed before cold weather set in. Often
during the winter of 1829-30, these men (who resided in Southern Michigan)
visited their claims to see that others had not usurped their rights. Thus
the winter was passed. Quite early in the spring of 1830, William Miller
and Benjamin Jones (who had spent the previous winter, either in
the same cabin or in two that were close together) loaded their
goods in probably the same wagon, tore the roof off the cabin in which
they had lived and placed it on the wagon, and then moved with their families
to near the present site of Lexington. Small tents were improvised until
two
rude cabins (perhaps they do not deserve so dignified a name) had been
built. Miller's cabin was located
southwest of the village, while Jones' was near the northern
part of the same. This occured in April or May, and these were, so far
as known, the first families in the township. During the same year (1830),
there settled mostly
on the prairies of Greenfield, the following men and their families:
Amos
Barr, Thomas Burnell, John
Emerson, John Olney, Mr. Sutford, Jesse Huntsman,Felix
Miller, James Miller, Jesse Champlin, Samuel Anderson,
Ephraim
Seeley, Jacob Croy, Mr. Wolgamott and several others.
During the next
year or two, all the prairie land was "claimed," and by the time the
county was organized, in 1832, at least twenty-five families resided in
the township (in what is now Greenfield). Some of these families were those
of McKal, William Brumley, Samuel Robinson, Mr.
Leeper, Samuel Fish, Jacob Miller, Silas Thrailkeld,
Amasa
Norton, Edmund Littlefield, Milton and Oliver Smith,
Thomas
and Samuel Parham (1836),
Samuel Bradford, Harlo and William Hern, Mr.
Switzer, Mr. Gale, William Legg, Mr. Stead, Mr.
Wade, Thomas Lozenby, Jacob Vandeventer, D.
Lewis (colored), John Leak, William Adair, George
Donaldson, John Safely, Samuel and James Burnside,
David
and Otis Stevenson, Samuel Gawthorp, David Allen,
John
Kelley and a host of others who continued to come in very fast.
At the organization of the county in 1832,
it was divided into two townships-Lima and Greenfield- the latter including
all that part of the present county as lies east of the middle of Range
10 west, together with portions of Noble and Steuben Counties. Ephraim
Seeley was appointed Assesor for the then Greenfield Township, and
an election was ordered to be held on the second Saturday of June, 1832,
for the selection of two Justices of the
Peace, Jessie Champlin receiving the appointment of Inspector
of Election. The Commissioners also appointed Ebenezer Fish and
William
Miller, Fence Viewers; John Anderson and Samuel Burnside,
Overseers of the Poor. At this first election, Mr. Seeley was elected
one of the Justices, but the name of the other is forgotten, as are those
of the other officers elected at the same time.
Improvements went on very rapidly during the
years 1830, 1831 and 1832. Nearly or quite all the prairie land was broken
up and fenced off into farms, and homes were established in the surrounding
woods. At last, when the township was surveyed and the land thrown into
market, a great rush was made by an army of anxious squatters to secure
the land they had partially improved, and upon which they then lived. It
was during the Black Hawk war (summer of 1832) that the citizens of Greenfield
and surrounding townships were thrown into a fever of fear by what is remembered
as "The Gage War." Two men, named respectively Gage and Langdon,
went one day to the mill in the northern part of Springfield Township.
Before this, considerable talk had been indulged in concerning the
probability of the Indians arising in war against the settlers, as
large bands were then in the county, and the border struggle farther west
was not unknown to them. This talk prepared the minds of the settlers for
what was to follow. Gage, Langdon, the miller and others
at the mill renewed the gossip, continuing it until late at night, when
the former two retired with some serious misgivings in their minds. After
they had gone to bed, it was resolved by
three or four at the mill to give them an "Indian Scare" early the
next morning. Two or three, or perhaps more, assisted by several Indians,
dressed themselves in full Indian war costume, with war paint and blanket
and tomahawk, etc. The next morning, while Gage and Langdon
were talking in front of the mill with the miller, a
large Indian suddenly showed himself from behind a tree near by, and,
raising his rifle quickly, fired, and the
miller fell to the earth apparently in the agonies of death,exclaiming,
"My God, the Indians! I'm shot!" The Indian who had apparently shot the
miller and one or two others came leaping forward, swinging their tomahawks
and yelling like demons. Gage and Langdon instantly fled
from the scene at the top of their speed, Gage going north in the
excitement, and Langdon south. They made excellent time across the
country, informing every one they
saw that the Indians were coming, that they had shot all at the mill,
and were sweeping out through the surrounding country. The result may be
readily imagined. The most intense excitement prevailed, and families fled
in every direction. Gage reached Lexington, and the families in
that neighborhood gathered at the blacksmith shop of George Donaldson,
into which the women and children were thrust, while the men began to fell
trees and cut logs, for the purpose of hastily building a fort (afterward
called Fort Donaldson). Families living in the western
part hastily resolved to fortify the island in Cedar Lake. There they
fled, and began the work of constructing the fort. Many very interesting
incidents occured, but,within a day or two, the delusion was dispelled.
The logs
cut for "Fort Donaldson" remained at the spot for many years.
More of this interesting event will be found in
other chapters.
Industries sprang up at a very early day. Orrin
Howard was a chairmaker in the northern part, his power
being a horse-lathe. It is said that he turned out 300 chairs a year.
Milton
Smith was an early blacksmith, but George Donaldson was the
first vulcan in the township. The large stone lying near the shop of the
latter was hauled there by Samuel Bradford, to be prepared by Donaldson
for the grist-mill that was afterward erected in
Springfield Township. A small "corn-cracker" was erected at Lexington
in a very early day. It did not amount to much, and was soon abandoned.
Milton
Smith was also a tool-maker; could make axes, chisels, adzes, grubbing-hoes,
etc. A post office was at Howard's house for a number of years.
Warren
Barney, in the northeastern part, manufactured, by means of a horse
lathe, large and small spinning wheels, and other
wooden articles. Daniel Waite made tables, stands, bedsteads,
bureaus, etc. The early settlers in the northern part got their whisky
at a distillery just across the line in Michigan. The road running north
and south across the western end of the township was early known as "Smoky
Row," from the numerous log cabins that were built thereon very early;
for on winter mornings, when a fire was started in each house, the settlers
on the opposite side of the prairie were furnished a fine sight-a smoky
row. Pretty Prairie is said to have received its name from the following
circumstance: Several men, just from Ohio, were standing at the residence
of William Miller, on the south side of the prairie. Looking northward,
they saw a beautiful picture. The long expanse of prairie land spread
its bosom of green velvet to the autumnal sun, and stretched away until
terminated by clusters of oak and maple, dyed in gorgeous colors by Nature's
hand that crowned with beauty the higher lands on the north. The strangers
were delighted, and one of their number asked, "What do you call this?"
"O-o-h," replied Mr. Miller," we
don't call it anything." "Well," said the stranger, "it's a mighty
pretty prairie. You might call it Pretty Prairie." The
name circulated, became popular and is now permanent. "English Prairie"
received its name from the fact that
many of the first to locate there had just come from England. People,
in speaking of the place, called it by that name. It is also permanent.
Many of the English retained for a number of years their foreign customs.
"Old Tommy" Burnell wore knee-breeches and long stockings, as did
some of the others. Mr. Burnell brought with
him from his temporary home in Michgan two small sashes, in which were
three or four panes of glass. These
were used in his old log cabin. Samuel Burnside, in about the
year 1834, erected a saw-mill in the northeastern corner, on Crooked Creek.
This mill, with many alterations, numerous owners, and stoppages from time
to time, has been in operation ever since. At times, it has done excellent
and extensive work. As nearly as the writer could
learn, Burnside owned the mill until about the year 1845, when
it and the farm on which it stands were sold to Peter Bisel. It
is possible that Burnside sold to another, and the latter sold to
Bisel. The facts could not be learned. In about the year 1846, Bisel
erected the gristmill on the same water-power. This mill is yet running,
and has done a vast amount of grinding in its day. It is a large frame
structure, has passed through many hands,
and has fed thousands. Bisel, in about 1847, placed a stock
of goods at the mill, and soon afterward a post
office was established there. Bisel was quite a wealthy man
for that day, and put a great deal of money on the
mill site to improve it, and render permanent the excellent water-power
there. The money in many ways was not judiciously expended; at least, Bisel
became embarrassed, and, in about 1854, sold the entire property to
Amos Davis; since then others have owned it. Goods have been sold
there the most of the time since. A small town
grew up about the mills-a very small one.
In the year 1836, Elisha U. Shepard
and Bazaleel Alvord secured the services of a surveyor and laid
out a village which was named Vistula, on Section 25, on the banks of Wall
Lake. The village on paper was a beautiful place, and the plat was taken
East and exhibited, and several men there were induced to buy blocks and
corner lots. When they came West to sell their property at a handsome profit,
or to erect thereon fine buildings, their wrath became fiery and volcanic.
In short, they had been deceived, as not a house was standing in the village,
nor ever was. The lake was a nice place, with walls of earth and gravel
formed by the agency of ice surrounding it.
The village on its banks was a "paper village"- nothing more.
In July, 1836, John Kromer, surveyor,
laid out twelve blocks of eight lots each, and four blocks of six lots
each, on Sections 25 and 30, for Abraham K. Brower and Joseph
Skerritt, who named the village Lexington. Very soon after this, Peter
Bisel erected a store building there, and began selling from a stock
of goods valued
at $2,000. The stock subsequently increased until worth about $6,000,
at which time the owner enjoyed an extensive and profitable trade. Abraham
Brower was at first his clerk, but later his partner. A few years after
Bisel began, Chancey Adams also opened a store, but his business
was not as extensive as that of the former.
In 1847, there were seven or eight families residing in Lexington.
Bisel was in the Crandall storeroom; Adams was in
a building opposite. Ira Crandall was the proprietor of a small
hotel. A shoemaker and a blacksmith were there. In 1848, H. R. Crandall
bought the Bisel store building and residence, together with three
lots. He began selling from $3,000 worth of goods, the stock being slowly
increased as the years went by, and continued until his death in 1870,
since which time his widow has successfully conducted the business. Bisel
was probably the first Postmaster; but, in 1847, Adams was. Since
1848, the Crandalls have had the office, except for a short time,
when George Donaldson handled the property of Uncle Sam. In 1848,
Adams sold out to George L. Gale, who erected the Long storehouse.
Gale continued about five years. Robert Dayton owned the
property for a while. Other merchants have been H. J. Hall, Andrew
Davidson, Shope, Scripture Weidler, Wade and Long
& Shut. Wade owns a small grocery now, and James Mix
is conducting a small broom factory. "Brighton" is
the name of the post office. Dr. Charles Pritchard was at the
village early, as were Drs. Patterson and Reynolds. In 1849,
Dr. Delos W. Rupert located there, remaining until the war broke
out, when he became Surgeon of the Thirtieth Infantry Volunteers, but died
at Nashville, Tenn., in 1862.
Volunteer transcription by Pati Blowers May. Material for transcription
gathered by Barbara Henderson.
On to Greenfield
Township Part 2
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