CHAPTER IX


YORK TOWNSHIP

 

Organization—First Settlers—An Early Election—Some of the Original Land Entries—Jonestown—Incidents of Pioneer Life—Pioneer Recollections.

 

York township was set off as a civil township at a meeting of the Board of County Commissioners held at Van Wert, June 3, 1837, and the qualified electors were ordered to meet at the house of Sylvester. R. Woolery on the 15th of June for. the purpose of electing township officers.

 

FIRST SETTLERS.

 

John Arnold was one of the earlier settlers in York township, having settled south of Venedocia in 1836 on what is now known as the Alban farm. Among the early settlers at that time were Lewis Culver, Asa Culver, John Keith, Joshua Goodwin, Jacob Goodwin, David Walters, William Morman, Leonard Varner, John Powers , James Wilson, Sylvester R. Woolery, Samuel Moore, Robert Thomas, Furman Jackson, John Heath (father of William Heath), John Bevington, John McCollum, Evan B. Jones, Joshua Bridenstein and George Reece.

 

Edward Smith came from Champaign county in 1838. He served in Company M, Second Indiana Heavy Artillery, during the War of the Rebellion. Robert Thomas came to Van Wert County in 1836. Jesse Atkinson was one of the early settlers, coming here in1836. He was one of the first county commissioners.

 

John M. Jackson was born in Madison County, February 2, 1835, and came with his parents to this country in 1836. His father was a chairmaker and found sale for his product at Fort Wayne, where he took his chairs on rafts. John Bevington was born September 22, 1807, came to this county in 1832 and died July 19, 1841. He had seven children.

 

John F. Baxter came to this county with his parents (Thomas and Nancy Baxter) in 1848. On July 21, 1862, at the age of 18, he enlisted in Company A, 52nd Reg., Ohio Vol. Inf., and served until the close of the war, being mustered out June 17, 1865: Alexander W. Brown was born December 26, 1826. In 1846 he came to York township, where he spent the rest of his life in farming.

John Heath became a resident of Mercer County at an early clay. His son, William Heath, was born while his parents were occupying an Indian camp in Mercer County. William Heath is a resident of York township at a good old age and lives on some land that his father entered in 1835.

About 184o to 1847 the families of John Rich, Jesse Tomlinson, Daniel Burris, Jacob Miller, Levi Row land, Thomas Broadnix, Sam-

 

AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS - 161

 

uel Curl, John W. Conn, Andrew Putnam, Jonas Harp, William Carter, Jesse Clark, Jesse Atkinson, Conrad Hunstead and John Houtser came to York township.

 

The first grist-mill was a horsepower mill on the north bank of Jennings Prairie, and was owned by Mr. Clark. It was afterward removed by Lewis Culver and remodeled. The second one was built by William Bebb near Venedocia. The first gunsmith was John Heath. The first couple married were Lewis Tomlinson and Rachel Boroff. The first school house was built on the land of Jesse Atkinson.

 

AN EARLY ELECTION.

 

At the election for State and county officers held October 18, 1840, the number of qualified electors was 23 ; their names were as follows: Francis Elliott, Robert Thomas, John McCollum, David Walters, Jesse Atkinson, John Arnold, Joshua Goodwin, Joseph Clark, Jacob Ross, Jacob Miller, Joseph Moore, James Walters, William Marrs, John Heath, Lewis Culver, Josiah Clink, Jesse Tomlinson, John Keith, Tobias Moore, Joshua Bridenstein, William Morman, Adam Wolford and Sylvester R. Woolery. The judges of election were John Arnold, Sylvester R. Woolery and Joshua Goodwin. The vote is shown on a preceding page, in Chapter V.

 

SOME OF THE ORIGINAL LAND ENTRIES.

 

SEC

NAME

ACRES

YEAR

1

James McCray

163

1836

1

John Zimmerman

173

1836

1

John Weikart

60

1836

1

Alex. Cheevers

80

1836

1

Michael Todd

80

1836

2

Michael Yoakman

87

1836

2

Fred Cary

87

1836

2

James H. Young

160

1836

2

Andrew Foster

160

1836

2

H. D. V. Williams

174

1841

3

Daniel Canfield

80

1836

3

John F. Edgar

334

1836

3

Robert Edgar

254

1836

4

Samuel D. Edgar

334

1836

4

James Donaldson

334

1836

5

Henry Zimmerman

174

1836

5

John Gongway

160

1836

5

John M. Donaldson

40

1836

5

Alex. Biddle

174

1836

6

Samuel Painter

332

1836

6

Joseph Nofzgar

348

1836

7

Andrew Cochel

80

1836

7

Theo. B. Thomas

80

1836

7

Levi Rowland

328

1836

7

James Casteel

124

1837

7

Evan B. Jones

41

1839

8

Evan B. Jones

120

1836

8

John Weikart

40

1836

8

James G. Donaldson

320

1836

8

Alex. Biddle

160

1836

9

Evan B. Jones

560

1836

9

A. Cochel & H. Tolerton

80

1836

10

James Hooper

320

1836

10

Samuel Francher

160

1836

10

Peter Bevelthymer

160

1836

11

James M. Young

160

1836

11

Andrew Foster

80

1836

11

David Cook

160

1836

11

George McMarrian

80

1836

12

Robert Lisle

640

1835

13

Lewis Culver

200

1833

13

William Morman

240

1835

13

John Arnold

120

1836

13

John L. Harter

80

1837

14

Benjamin Strothers

320

1836

14

Samuel Stiles

160

1836

14

James Walters

40

1836

14

Christian Woods

80

1837

14

Philip Scrock

40

1839

15

Andrew Cochel

160

1836

15

Daniel Arnold

160

1836

15

Joseph Saint

240

1836

15

James Wilson

40

1839

15

John Williberg

40

1841

16

Robert McQuoron

80

1839

16

George Clouse

80

1839

16

Jacob Dibert

80

1839

16

Francis Feltus

80

1839

16

F. C. Elson

80

1839

16

Robert Wolcott

80

1839

17

Evan B. Jones

320

1836

17

John M. Donaldson

160

1836

162 - HISTORY OF VAN WERT COUNTY

SEC

NAME

ACRES

YEAR

17  

Hugh Lynn

160

1836

18

Evan B. Jones

361

1836

18

Henry Newman

165

1836

18

Josiah Casteel

40

1836

18

James Ross

82

1836

19

Henry Newman

165

1836

19

George B. Ellis

246

1838

19

John Hughes

80

1838

19

James Clingan

160

1839

20

John Heath

80

1836

20

Andrew Coil

120

1836

20

Joseph Heath

40

1836

20

George Reece

80

1836

20

Henry Newman

160

1836

20

James Lavin

160

1836

21

John Towns

200

1836

21

Robert Thomas

40

1836

21

Thomas Towns

40

1836

21

James Lavin

40

1837

21

John Powers

80

1838

21

Tobias Moore

80

1839

21

John Cunningham

40

1839

21

George Knox

80

1839

22

Reuben Waites

80

1836

22

William McClure

40

1836

22

Levi Saint

240

1836

22

William Lynn

40

1836

22

Mary E. Reed

80

1839

23

Levi Culver

80

1836

23

Samuel Stiles

40

1836

23

Alex. McVickers

120

1836

23

John A. Freeman

160

1836

23

Lantz Shannon

160

1836

23

James Mitchell

80

1836

24

Washington Mark

320

1832

24

Wesley Rush

200

1833

24

Ebenezer Culver

80

1834

24

Lewis Culver

40

1834

25

Washington Mark

120

1832

25

John Keith

240

1832

25

Jacob Goodwin

40

1837

25

John Keith

80

1838

25

Isaac Miles

80

1838

25

Edward Williams

40

1839

25

Jacob Goodwin

40

1851

26

Samuel McClain

320

1836

26

John Smith

320

1836

27

William McClain

480

1836

27

Samuel McClain

160

1836

28

Robert Thomas

80

1835

28

Samuel Moore

120

1836

28

Jesse Miller

40

1836

28

Sylvester R. Woolery

80

1836

28

John Towns

40

1836

28

Joshua Bridenstein

160

1836

28

Daniel Barris

40

1837

28

Jesse Atkinson

40

1835

28

John Cost

40

1846

29

Jesse Atkinson

80

1836

29

Sylvester R. Woolery

80

1836

29

John McCollum

40

1836

29

John Sherwood

240

1836

29

Henry Newman

160

1836

29

C. Elliott

40

1839

30

John Stacts

167

1836

30

Abram Rankin

160

1836

30

Wesley Miner

160

1836

30

Eli M. Deniston

83

1837

30

George M. Ells

83

1837

31

Jesse Tomlinson

80

1834

31

John Heath

242

1835

31

John Sheets

246

1835

31

Francis Elliott

82

1838

32

John Tomlinson

160

1835

32

Jesse Atkinson

120

1835

32

John McNeil

80

1836

32

Furman Jackson

40

1836

32

J. W. Morton

80

1836

32

William Carder

40

1837

32

John Ross

40

1837

32

John McCollum

40

1839

32

Elizabeth Bevington

40

1851

33

James Mark

240

1833

33

Sarah Mark

40

1834

33

Thomas Hughes

160

1849

33

L. Bawe

80

1849

33

John Griffith

80

1850

33

John Morris

40

1850

34

Lucinda Mark

80

1833

34

James Mark

120

1833

34

Matilda Mark

40

1835

34

George Vanemon

120

1836

34

William Lake

120

1836

34

A. McClung

40

1837

34

John House

80

1838

34

Washington Mark

40

1839

35

Robert Leslie

320

1835

35

Jonathan Vanemon

160

1835

35

James Edgar

160

1836

36

William Marrs , Jr

240

1835

36

Robert Stram

80

1836

36

William Farris

320

1836

 

JONESTOWN

 

Or Tokio, as the postoffice is called, is a

 

AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS - 163

 

small village on the "Clover Leaf" Railroad, located in a good farming section.

 

INCIDENTS OF PIONEER LIFE.

 

Samuel Arnold, of Ridge township, a son of John Arnold, says that the wolves were plenty at that time and he recollects that one night, after they had butchered, they were cutting up the hogs within a couple rods of the house when the wolves came close up to where the men were working and howled and he was afraid to go to the house which was only two rods away. He says Clarissa Gleason was his first school teacher-that was in 1839 or 1840—and that he has a card of merit that she gave him, which is in her own handwriting.

 

A short time after Levi Rowland settled in York township he had a dream that in crossing the prairie he had been attacked by a wolf. The next day he started out to hunt his cows. Hearing the bell on the opposite side of the prairie, he had gone a short distance, when he recalled his dream. Going back to the woods he cut a heavy hickory club and started out in the tall grass after the cows. He had gone but a short distance when he came upon a large wolf that showed fight, which Mr. Rowland killed with his club. He always felt that the dream had been sent as a warning.

 

In 1840 the Bickfords settled in York township. They had provided themselves with two barriels of flour and other provisions in proportion. Frank says that if it had not been for what they brought with them they would have starved. Their nearest neighbors, with the exception of one family, were three miles distant. After they had been here some time, the boys became very tired of salt meat. One evening Levi Rowland came to their house with a saddle of venison on his shoulder, and told Mr. Bickford that he had put the forequartersin the fork of a tree, and that if the latter would go and get it he might have it. But Mr. Bickford was no woodsman and, being afraid that he might get off the trail, would not venture. But Frank and his brother Will wanted some fresh meat and said they would go. Frank was 8 and Will was 12. They took a butcher knife and found the venison. Each cut a shoulder and started for home. It was then past sundown. They had gone but a short distance when they heard the wolves coming. They did some "tall" running and the wolves followed them almost to the door, but they saved the venison.

 

PIONEER RECOLLECTIONS.

BY J. B. BRODNIX.

 

So far as history of York township in the early days is concerned, there is but little of it speaking after the manner of men. There was not much in the township except primeval forests filled with bear, wolves, deer, raccoons, porcupines, wild cats, catamounts, etc.

 

My father was born and raised in the "City of Brotherly Love." In 1836 with his family he left Philadelphia for Dayton, Ohio, crossing the Alleghany Mountains in a Virginia schooner, drawn by a team of mules, and proceeding from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati on a boat on the Ohio River. From Cincinnati to Dayton, and from there to Yellow Springs in Greene County, the journey was made in wagons, finally going from Yellow Springs to the Long Prairie in York township, Van Wert County, in 1839. The family lived in a pole pen on the farm of Evan B. Jones, while a log cabin on the east half of the southwest quarter of section 3, York township, was being built.

 

When we were unloaded on the Long Prairie, father and mother both cried, and offered the man that moved them all that they

 

164 - HISTORY OF VAN WERT COUNTY

 

had—$25—to take them back to Dayton where he lived. This the man refused to do on account of the terrible roads.

 

With the assistance of neighbors living 10 miles away, my father built a log cabin 18 feet square in a dense forest, without a road to any place. The nearest neighbors was two and a half miles away; David W. McCoy and Daniel Beard, three miles; Evan B. Jones, three miles; Levi Rowland, four miles; John Arnold and Leonard Varner, three and a half miles each. There was a village of Wyandot Indians on the Little Auglaize a mile and a quarter from us. They were very kind and hospitable.

 

In December we moved into the log cabin, half of it floored with puncheons and with a bed quilt serving for a door. There was a fireplace five by seven feet in dimensions, a mud-back wall and a stick chimney. When night would come, the wolves would approach the house and scratch and howl until we could hear nothing else. For 10 years between the months of November and February, from sunset until sunrise, nothing could be heard except the howling of the wolves and the hooting of the owls.

 

If men and women had had the same kind of religion then that they have now, my father and mother and their family would have starved. But in those days all things that men had were in common. No one said that aught that he had was his own. While one had a peck of corn meal or a pound of pork, all had.

 

At Piqua was the nearest mill. Many a bushel of corn we pounded on an oak block with an iron wedge and made it into a dodger or mush and ate it with a chunk of venison or pork. Then Aaron Hipshire got a two-burr hand-mill and with hard work two men could grind two or three bushel a day. Then John Pool put up a horse-mill and two horses could grind a bushel an hour. That was good. In 1844 Daniel Walters built a little water-mill where Venedocia now stands, the then outlet of the Coil Prairie. That was fine. He could grind wheat, but one had to bolt it by hand.

 

As for schools, there was not one in the township until 1843, and then only one for the whole township. In 1839 the heads of the families in the township were Levi Rowland, Evan B. Jones, John McCollum, John Heath, Jesse Tomlinson, R. Ross, Leonard Varner, George Wooten, Robert Thomas, Benjamin Griffin, Lewis Culver, John Arnold, \V. H. Peasely and John W. Conn. Daniel Bickford came in 1840. Many and trying were the hardships in those days, much harder for us than for others. Father was a French Huguenot and had never done a day's work ; mother was Scotch and was also raised in the city. Many were the sacks of meal and chunks of pork and other things given us by David W. McCoy, Daniel Beard, Thomas Pollock and others. Newer were there truer, braver and kinder men settled in a county than the early settlers of Van Wert county. In the early history of the county they were bound together as one man. Above all, religion was supreme; there was preaching in the little log cabins, but no religious discussions. A calico dress and sunbonnet was the finest apparel for a woman; a linsey wammus and a coonskin cap for a man. There was more genuine heartfelt religion at one of those old pioneer meetings than there is in a whole year now. People would go for miles to attend meeting, frequently taking a sack of jerk, a chunk of pork and some meal and staying two and three days. They would sing and pray and shout—I can hear them yet singing, "Sing on, pray on, we are gaining," "0 Hallelujah! the power of the Lord is coming clown. 0 Hallelujah!" If we had more old-time religion today we would be a happier people.

 

In those clays hunting and fishing were the

 

AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS - 165

 

chief pursuits of life, for game and fish were abundant. To raise a crop some member of the family had to stand guard from sowing to gathering, or the deer, coons, squirrels, turkeys and birds would get it all. But when such men as the Gillilands, Hills, Stacys, Kings, Ramseys, McCoys, Beards, DeCamps, Pollocks and their wives and many others that space will not permit me to name settle a country, it must prosper. As far as I know, the heads of those families of 1839 are all gone to their rewards. Some of their children, like myself, are yet lingering on the brink. Nearly if

not all, like myself, have reached their three score and ten. It is no more the scenes of our boyhood—I am led to say, "Backward, turn backward, O time in thy flight, make me a boy again just for tonight." With all the hardships, many and dear are the fond recollections of those days.

 

The great majority of my early associates have crossed the mystic river, a few are waiting to join the mighty throng on the other shore. Time and space would fail me to tell the many thrilling incidents that occurred in the clays when this region was being reclaimed.