The following history of Forest County is transcribed from

The following history of Forest County is transcribed from

"History of the Counties of McKean, Elk and Forest, Pennsylvania"

This book was published by J. H. Beers & Co. Publishers, Chicago, 1890.

FOREST COUNTY.

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CHAPTER IV.

COURTS AND BAR.

FIRST COURT HELD IN FOREST COUNTY, 1857 -- PROCEEDINGS FROM 1857 TO 1860 -- FIRST COURT HELD AT TIONESTA, 1867 -- ADMISSIONS TO THE BAR FROM 1857 TO 1889 -- FOREST BAR ASSOCIATION -- IMPORTANT CIVIL AND CRIMINAL CASES -- DESPERADOES.

 

THE first court of Forest county was held at the school-house, Marienville, on the third Monday in December, 1857, Judge John S. McCalmont presiding, with Cyrus Blood and Milton Courtright, associate judges.  W. P. Jenks, Lorenzo D. Rogers and B. F. Lucas were admitted to the bar, Thomas B. Mays was appointed crier, and William Walton, tipstaff.  On December 21 the rules of the Jefferson county court were adopted, and court adjourned until February, 1858.  Tavern licenses were granted to William Shields, Rachel Murray and C. M. Robinson, and later to Peter G. Reed.  Very few transactions were recorded in  1859, but in May, 1860, commissioners Andrew Cook, Thomas Porter and A. L. Seigworth were enjoined against executing the contract of December 22, 1858, with B. Dobbs and J. M. Lyle for the erection of county buildings outside the town of Marienville.

The first session of court held at Tionesta was opened February 25, 1867, by Judge James Campbell with W. R. Coon and John G. Brandon, associate judges.  A number of the attorneys named in the following list were admitted at this term. 

The lawyers admitted to the bar of Forest county, from December, 1857, to May, 1889, are named as follows:

William P. Jenks

L. D. Rogers

B. F. Lucas, Dec. 1857

A. A. McKnight, Feb. 1858

John Conrad, May, 1858

E. A. Brooke, Sept. 1858

Richard Arthurs

C. Heydrick

F. B. Guthrie

J. R. Clark, May 1859

B. J. Reid, Sept. 1859

W. W. Wise, Dec. 1860

W. W. Barr, Jan. 1861

C. L. Lamberton

Jackson Hodges, May, 1861

A. L. Gordon

James Craig, Sept. 1861

George W. Andrews, Dec. 1861

Isaac G. Gordon

George A. Jenks

Amos Myers, May 1862

William H. Fetzer, May 1863

George W. Lathy

David Lansing, Sept 1863

William L. Corbett May 1865

J. H. Patrick, Dec. 1865

Charles Dinsmore

W. E. Lathy, Sept 1866

J. R. Mechling

Sam. D. Irwin

C. E. Taylor

A. B. McCalmont

William McNair

W. V. Perrine

William G. Grange

H. C. Johns

Isaac Ash

Arch. Blakeley

John Dailey

E. L. Keenan

J. D. McJunkin, Feb. 1867

F. D. Kinnear

J. D. Hancock

A. W. Barry

Darius Titus

Sam. Plumer

J. B. McAllister

S. B. Myers

J. W. Osborn

Hugh C. Graham

William J. Galbraith

R. Brown, May 1867

S. C. T. Dodd

John L. McCalmont

W. W. Mason

S. P. McCalmont

T. C. Spencer

Joseph Shippen

Roger Sherman

T. S. Zuver

J. K. Hallock

J. A. Neill

C. W. Stone

O. O. Trantum

James M. Bredin, Sept 1867

J. G. Elliott

J. H. Osmer

H. B. Plummer, Dec. 1867

J. S. Myers

C. W. Gilfinnan

William R. Dickenson

Samuel T. Neil, May, 1868

Miles W. Tate

J. W. White, Sept 1868

Nelson B. Smiley

G. B. McCalmont

J. W. Lee

David Barclay, May 1869

John M. Thompson

F. D. Reeves

Julius Byers

Isaac Myer

S. N. Pettis

Laurie J. Blakeley, Sept 1869

Henry Souther

William D. Brown

G. M. Osgoodby, Dec. 1869

B. S. McAllister

L. D. Wetmore, May 1870

G. S. Berry

A. B. Kelly (student), July 1870

James Boggs

G. W. Allen

Daniel D. Fassett

W. P. Mercelliott, Sept 1870

M. C. Beebe, Feb. 1871

DeWitt C. McCoy

James B. Knox, May 1871

George F. Chester, July 1871

Theo. S. Wilson, Sept 1871

E. H. Clark, Dec. 1871

A. S. Moore

manly Crosby, May 1872

R. G. Lamberton

George F. Davenport

H. E. Brown

George T. Latimer (student), Dec. 1872

John P. Parks, Feb. 1873

H. A. Miller

Charles H. Noyes, May 1873

A. B. Richmond

David Sterritt

James H. Bowman

R. Mackwood, Dec. 1873

C. O. Bowman

Harry White

L. S. Morton, May 1874

William H. James

A. W. Covell, Sept 1874

J. B. Agnew

J. A. Stranahan

E. L. Davis, Dec. 1874

Charles Corbett, Feb. 1875

S. P. Brigham

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Henry McSweeny, May 1876

S. A. Craig

Thomas A. Morrison

P. M. Clark (student), Dec. 1876

Samuel Grumbine

James Q. Sweeny (student) Sept 1877

Wiliam A. Hindman

James A. Beaver, Feb. 1878

William Schnur

W. W. Wilbur, May 1878

T. J. Van Giesen

Samuel Miner, Dec. 1878

D. J. Ball, Sept. 1879

S. W. Calvin, Dec. 1879

W. M. Lindsay, Feb. 1880

Joshua Douglass

Mark J. Heywang, May 1880

J. D. James

M. A. K. Weidner

Joseph Buffington

L. R. Freeman

T. F. Ritchey, Sept. 1880

B. W. Lacy, Oct. 1880

F. P. Ray, May 1881

George A. Rathbun, June 1881

John B. McKissock, May 1882

A. S. Davenport, Sept 1882

A. C. Bowers, Feb. 1883

W. G. Trunkey

H. N. Snyder, May 1883

George A. Sturgeon

P. M. Clark, Sept 1883

George W. Higgins, Dec. 1883

R. D. Campbell, May 1884

H. W. Fisher, June 1885

C. W. Benedict

M. C. Benedict, Sept 1885

C. M. Shawkey, Feb. 1888

W. H. Ross, Sept 1888

W. E. Rice, Dec. 1888

M. E. Elliott

George F. Roberts

F. J. Moffatt

John S. Ferguson, May 1889

C. McKay Agnew, son of J. B. Agnew, was admitted to practice in the several courts of Forest county at the February term of 1890, on motion of S. D. Irwin, president of the board of examiners.  Mr. Agnew passed a very creditable examination.

In November, 1884, the Forest Bar Association was organized with S. D. Irwin, president, and P. M. Clark, secretary.  E. L. Davis, J. B. Agnew, M. W. Tate, T. F. Ritchey, Samuel Calvin, T. J. Van Giesen, and the officers named were then the resident attorneys of the county.

Many important civil suits have been begun before the Forest county courts, such as the suits in re title to oil territory, and some heavy criminal cases tried here.  Matthew Turner was murdered by William Barnhart, in Howe township, in September, 1871.  He was tried at the December term of court, before Judge Wetmore, adjudged insane, and sent to the asylum, to be held there during his insanity, at the expense of Forest county.  He entertained a hatred against red-haired men and women, and even after imprisonment tried to kill a red-haired guard.  Turner served in the Civil war, under another name..... J. A. Mexley was shot and killed by Ed. S. Walton, outside Reyner's store, at Marienville, February 9, 1886.  He was tried for this crime in May of that year, and sentenced by Judge Brown to $200 fine, the costs of prosecution, and two years and four months' solitary confinement in the penitentiary, at labor.  M. W. Tate, J. B. Agnew, Richmond and District Attorney Clark represented the State; E. L. Davis and Osmer defending the prisoner. ....Mrs. Jane Gilfinnan and Mrs. Jemima Everhart were murdered in sight of Lickingville, in March, 1886, but fortunately the deed was not perpetrated within the boundaries of this county.

In November, 1884, the curtain dropped on the last scene of the celebrated Ford and Lacy case.  The case was completely closed, deeds delivered, papers exchanged by the contending parties, and the money paid.  After over five years of war, during which over $50,000 of the $250,000 at stake were spent in litigation, a treaty of peace was consummated.  The case has an interesting history, which is dotted with many points peculiar in their nature.  The case first came into prominence in the middle of May, 1883, when judge Brown of Forest county, who had appointed S. V. Davis receiver, made an order, which virtually placed the management of the estate in dispute in the hands of Samuel Lewis, the receiver appointed by the Allegheny county court.  On June 8, 1883, Judge Brown reversed that order, and thus brought the two county courts into conflict.  The fact that both receivers had full sway over the vast amount of property involved resulted in bringing them in contact with each other and complicating matters very much.

On June 15, 1883, Samuel Lewis filed a petition asking that an attachment be issued against Davis for contempt.  The petitioner stated that his appointment had been sustained by the supreme court, but that by some legal proceedings in Forest county, Davis and several defendants had entered into a collusion to keep him from performing his duties as receiver.  An answer was filed by the opposing counsel, but on June 22 Judge Stowe ordered the issue of an attachment against Davis.  The question then arose whether, since Forest county had endorsed and complied with the Allegheny county court in appointing Davis, the sheriff or his deputies could not have prevented him from serving the attachment.  A strategic movement was then planned.  The writ was placed in the hands of Detectives Harrison and Snyder, who after lounging about Warren for a couple of weeks, seized Davis at the depot one evening, and rushed him off on a train.  Davis' friends got a writ of habeas corpus from Judge Brown, and started in pursuit on a special train.  The news had been telegraphed ahead to Kane, and when the two officers arrived there were attacked by a mob, and their prisoner taken from them.  A deputy from Forest county afterward came to Pittsburgh to arrest the officers for the attempted abduction, but only succeeded in arresting Snyder, Harrison escaping by jumping out of the window of the mayor's office.  Snyder was soon after released.

A few months before the final settlement, the parties to the suit, seeing that the litigation would be endless, petitioned the common pleas court of Allegheny county to issue an order allowing a settlement by amicable agreement.  The order was allowed, the settlement was made, and, as stated, all was completed.  The sum paid by the Lacy party, in consideration of the deeds and papers involved was $75,000.

In September, 1889, was begun the trial of Aquilla Mong and his son "Sic" for complicity in the noted Wagner burglary, which occurred in Tionesta township about three years ago.  During the fight that ensued, in which the Wagner boys successfully vanquished the burglars, McClary, one of the attacking parties, was killed.  Thomas Haggerty and Sheldon Wilson were tried, convicted and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.  These prisoners were brought from the western penitentiary on a write of habeas corpus to testify against their confederates.  The story of the participants of the inception, attempt and failure of this heinous felony was eagerly listened to.  So great was the desire to see and hear, that the crowd pressed forward into the bar of the court.  According to the evidence of these convicted men, Aquilla Mong, the father, planned the burglary, and the son "Sic" assisted in the actual attempt.  It was the latter that held old Mrs. Wagner with a pistol pressed against her head out in the yard during the fracas.  The Mongs denied all complicity in the matter; declared they had never seen either Haggerty or Wilson in their lives, and set up the dfense of an alibi.  The jury, however, brought in a verdict of guilty against both defendants.  The father was sentenced to eight years' and the son to ten years' imprisonment.

George W. Lacy, of the lumber firm of Lacy Brothers, was shot by a boy named Charles W. Hewitt in October, 1889.  The wound proved fatal.  Hewitt was tried for the murder of Lacy in December, 1889, found guilty and sentenced by Judge Brown to a ten years' term in the penitentiary.  The State was represented by District Attorney Clark; Agnew and Davis, of Tionesta; Ritchey, of Oil City; John W. Reed, of Clarion, and A. B. Richmond, of Meadville.  Messrs. Bible and Osmer defended the prisoner.

A gang of desperadoes came under the rule of Sheriff Sawyer recently, and more recently, still, escaped from that rule; but his energy caused the return  of most of the alleged criminals to Tionesta, there to await trial.  In Chapter II, and in other parts of this work, references are made to pioneer litigants, pugilists, and others who became familiar with the rules of court in the old counties.


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Linda Blum-Barton