
"This
city is beautifully located on Otter Creek, at the falls on that stream,
and is seven miles from Lake Champlain. Otter Creek, at this place,
is about 500 feet wide, and, at the falls, is separated by two islands,
which form three distinct falls of thirty-seven feet. These falls produce
a great hydraulic power, rendered more valuable by being situated in the
heart of a fertile country, and on the navigable waters of the lake.
The creek,
or river, between the city and the lake, is crooked, but navigable for
the largest lake vessels. During the late war [of 1812], this was an important
depot on the lake. Here was fitted out the squadron commanded by the gallant
McDonough, who met the British fleet off Plattsburgh, N.Y. on the 11th
of September 1814, and made it his.
The first
settlement within the present limits of Vergennes was made in 1766 by Donald
M'Intosh, a native of Scotland who was in the battle of Culloden. He came
to this country with Gen. Wolfe's army, during the French war, and died
July 14, 1803, aged eighty-four years. The emigrants who subsequently located
themselves here, were principally from Massachusetts, Connecticut and the
south parts of the State."
Gazetteer
of Vermont, Hayward, 1849.
HISTORY
OF THE CITY OF VERGENNES
For many years Vergennes has been waiting to see her history in
print, and the question has often been asked, Why is not the history of
Vergennes written? Most of the towns about us have one, but not Vergennes.
Even the indefatigable Miss Hemenway failed to procure one. Any one who
has attempted to gather up any fragments of her history knows that the
answers to this question are numerous. The territory of Vergennes had been
inhabited by white men twenty-two years before she had a corporate existence.
A fraction of three towns, her records were not her own, and the records
of Ferrisburgh, which gave her the largest territory of any of the three,
were burned in October, 1785. The men who made the history of Vergennes
had no leisure or inclination to write out for posterity the description
of the scenes and events that transpired here. The population of Vergennes
has been so changeable that tradition cannot do much for us, and only by
the most patient searching of the few records left can we form an idea
of her condition in the past, of her business interests, or the character
of her people; even the names of the men who did most for the founding
and settlement of our city are passing out of the memory of the present
generation. To recall some of those names and some of the scenes in which
they were actors is the most that we can do now; and we only repeat that
we cannot present a picture of their daily life in their business and social
relations.
It should be remembered that the history of Vergennes must be different
from that of a farming town. A different class of people located here.
Their pursuits and avocations were different. With only 1200 acres in her
territory, the farming interest within her limits was of small moment.
Those who expected to live by farming settled elsewhere. Manufacturers,
merchants, and professional men, with such mechanics and laborers as were
needed, composed her population. Of course, when the numerous ready-made
tools, building materials, vehicles, clothing, and other conveniences now
found in our stores had to be made by hand in mechanics' shops, a large
number of mechanics were needed; but as a class they have left but little
record of their doings or of their families.
The records of real estate conveyances and of town officers elected,
with very slight traditional recollections, form the only basis for a statement
of incidents and events in the forgotten past. A complete history of Vergennes
can never be given, because much of it is lost beyond recall. A few disconnected
facts may be gleaned, but their narration must read something like a chronological
table or a page in the dictionary.
During the French War, from 1755 to '60, many, soldiers and scouting
parties passed from the older New England States to and from Canada. There
were two routes, one up the Connecticut River and thence to Lake Memphramagog;
the other in the vicinity of Vergennes. To cross Otter Creek, over which
there were no bridges or ferries, made it desirable to find a place where
they could ford the stream, and doubtless some kind of a trail leading
to the fords was known to them, or the bearings from the mountains enabled
them to find their way through an unbroken forest of a dense and heavy
growth, with neither red man nor white man found to break this awful solitude
of nature. Noah PORTER, grandfather of George W. PORTER, of Ferrisburgh,
once said that he crossed Otter Creek, in one of those years, with a scouting
party on the rocks at the head of the falls (the deep channels have since
been blasted out), and he and his party were so impressed with the wild
and chaotic features of the scene that they spent some time in viewing
the falls. He said the west channel appeared very small and was so filled
with floodwood you would hardly notice there was any channel there; that
there were several beaver houses built on the floodwood.
The reports of soldiers aroused the love of adventure incident to
pioneer life, and an excitement was manifested in Connecticut and Massachusetts
and on the banks of the lower Hudson, to secure an interest in the cheap
lands and rich hunting grounds of the northern wilderness. In 1761 sixty
towns were chartered in Vermont. New Haven's charter bore date November
2, 1761; Panton, November 3, 1761, and Ferrisburgh, June 25, 1762. These
are the three towns from which Vergennes was taken. New Haven and Panton
were chartered to citizens of Litchfield county, Conn., and Ferrisburgh
to men of Dutchess county, N. Y.
In 1762 Deacon Ebenezer FRISBIE, of Sharon, Conn., assisted by John
CLOTHIER, Isaac PECK, and Abram JACKSON, surveyed the lines of the town
of Panton. Beginning at a walnut tree on the bank of Otter Creek (about
two rods above the west end of the bridge over Otter Creek) and running
due west to the lake; thence six miles south; thence seven miles east;
thence down Otter Creek to the place of beginning. They were paid for fifty-three
days' service.
This first surveying party that was ever in Vergennes found that
the distance to the lake was less than seven miles; and it also appears
that the north line run by them was about eighteen rods south of the south
line of Ferrisburgh, leaving a strip between the two towns not covered
by any charter.
In October, 1788, the Legislature of Vermont granted to WHITELAW,
SAVAGE, and COIT the three islands near the falls, as land not heretofore
chartered. By agreement the line between Panton and Ferrisburgh was fixed
to run from the corner of New Haven just above the east end of the bridge,
and a broken cannon was placed in a cleft in the rocks to mark the spot,
and is there now, although buried out of sight.
In running six miles south they covered a large tract claimed by
Addison, and, as Addison's charter ante-dated Panton's, after a long controversy
it was settled by compromise, Addison holding the territory claimed. Probably
nothing was done in 1763 toward settlement. Ferrisburgh was also surveyed
in 1762 by Benjamin FERRISS and David FERRISS, but no settlement effected.
It appears from the proprietors' records of Panton that in 1764
James NICHOLS, Griswold BARNES, David VALLANCE, Timothy HARRIS, Joseph
WOOD, Captain Samuel ELMORE, William PATTERSON, Eliphalet SMITH, Zadock
EVEREST, Amos CHIPMAN, Samuel CHIPMAN, etc., to the number of fifteen,
did go to Panton and do some work on fifteen rights.
The statement in Swift's History of Middlebury gives from
tradition the following version, fixing the date two years later than the
record. He says that:
"Fifteen young men from Salisbury, Connecticut, and adjoining towns, started
for a home in this region, with some tools and effects in a cart drawn
by oxen. They followed Otter Creek from its source to Sutherland Falls,
cutting a way for their cart as best they could. They found no house north
of Manchester. At Sutherland's Falls they dug out a large canoe and put
in it their freight, and some of them as rowers started with it, towing
their cart behind the canoe. The rest of the party, with the oxen, went
on by land. John CHIPMAN stopped at Middlebury; the others came on, drawing
their canoe with their oxen around all the falls. Some of the party stopped
to prepare a place for permanent settlement in New Haven above the falls,
the others went on and settled on the lake shore. They all returned to
Connecticut in the fall.
"The charter required that five acres should be cleared and a house built
not less than eighteen feet square on each right within five years from
date of charter; but this was not accomplished. In accordance with a contract
made with the proprietors, Isaac PECK, Jeremiah GRISWOLD, and Daniel BARNES
began to build a saw-mill at the falls in the fall of 1764, but did not
complete it that year. In December, 1765, a bargain was made with Joseph
PANGBORN to build a good grist-mill at the falls, to do good service by
the first of May, 1767, for which he was to have a water power and fifty
acres of land adjoining, and the mill when built. It is uncertain whether
this mill was built by him, for in the summer of 1766 Colonel REID took
possession forcibly of all the property about the falls, claiming under
a New York grant all the land on Otter Creek, three miles wide from the
mouth to Sutherland's Falls. An entry in the Panton records makes it certain
that REID came in 1766, for at a meeting on the third Tuesday in November,
1766, they recite that Colonel REID had taken possession of the mill at
the falls which they had built.
"In 1769 the proprietors of Panton revoked the grant of a mill lot and
water power to the men who built the saw-mill, because they had not completed
it by the time agreed, and had allowed Colonel REID to wrest it from their
possession. In Slade's State Papers, pages 30, 31, and 33, in the copy
of Governor Tryon's letter, and answer of committee to same, signed by
Ethan ALLEN, clerk for said committee, and dated August 25, 1772, it appears
that 'more than three years previous Colonel REID took possession of the
saw-mill, one hundred and thirty sawlogs, and fourteen thousand feet of
pine boards, and did at that same time extend his force, terrors and threats
into the town of New Haven, and so terrified the inhabitants (about twelve
in number), that they left their possessions and farms to the conquerors,
and escaped with the skin of their teeth. The committee's letter
also states that 'not long after, the original proprietors of said mill
did re-enter and take possession thereof, but was a second time attacked
by Colonel REID's STEWART with a number of armed men . . . and obliged
to quit the premises again,' and the letter admits that not long previous
to the date of the letter, a small party did dispossess Colonel REID of
the saw-mill, which seems to have ended the controversy."
|
The romance and embellishment of this affair, which may be true,
is more interesting than the naked facts. It is said that Colonel REID
came here with a few men -- Donald MCINTOSH, a native of Scotland, who
was in the battle of Culloden, being foreman -- and took possession of
the mill; entered the house of Joshua HYDE, a settler in New Haven, just
above the falls, and took him prisoner, and crossed the creek; on landing
he managed to escape and recross in the boat of his captors, and disappeared;
that some friends of HYDE negotiated with REID, who paid for HYDE's crops,
etc., and HYDE gave him no further trouble at that time. After a few years
Ethan ALLEN and a party of Addison and Panton settlers visited the falls
and routed REID's men and put Pangborn in possession. That about one year
later Ira ALLEN was passing from his settlement on Onion River to Bennington,
and reaching the falls on a stormy evening, he thought to stay with his
old friend Pangborn. On knocking at his cabin door he was met by a stranger
with a drawn sword and threatening attitude, who, after some parleying
and explanations, admitted ALLEN and gave him a night's lodging. ALLEN
learned that Colonel REID had previously come on with a dozen Scotch immigrants,
who had been led to believe it to be a military movement, and they kept
up the regulations of a military camp, after driving off Pangborn and his
associates. In the morning ALLEN pursued his way to Bennington, but about
ten days afterward he, with one hundred men, appeared to the Scotchmen
at the falls, who found resistance to be useless and were secured while
the company under ALLEN's direction burned every hut that REID had built;
destroyed the grist-mill built by him, and broke the millstones and threw
them in pieces into the river. ALLEN then explained to REID's men how they
had been deceived, and most of them left and settled in the valley of the
Mohawk. Donald MCINTOSH and John CAMERON remained. Joshua HYDE, who had
been driven from his farm by REID, was with ALLEN's men, and doubtless
enjoyed the adventure. He had sold his farm, however, and settled in Middlebury.*
In a petition to Governor TRYON by the adherents of New York in 1772 it
is said that there were about fifteen families on Colonel REID's tract.
* It is
stated that at this time Allen built a block-house fort near the falls;
the exact location is unknown. It is certain a fort was built previous
to 1778 and called New Haven Fort. |
Nothing more is found of record in regard to the falls until July
9, 1776, when Joseph PANGBORN deeded to David REMINGTON the fifty acres
given him by the proprietors of Panton. David REMINGTON was afterward convicted
of Toryism and his property taken to the use of the State, and sold by
the commissioner of confiscation to Gideon SPENCER and others. SPENCER
became the sole owner in 1786, the consideration in the deed being £500
($1,666).
In 1777 many inhabitants left their homes upon hearing that BURGOYNE
was coming up the lake and the Indians and Tories of his army were making
plundering excursions all along the lake shore, and when CARLETON came
with his army in 1788 nearly every settler abandoned his farm and business,
and the families scattered, some to Pittsford and the southern towns of
Vermont, and others went back to the towns in Connecticut and Massachusetts
from which they had emigrated to Vermont.
The Council of Safety sitting at Bennington on the 6th of March,
1778, issued a letter of instructions to Captain Ebenezer ALLEN to raise
a sufficient number of men and proceed to New Haven Fort, where he was
to take post and send out scouts to reconnoitre the woods to watch the
movements of the enemy and report them to this council or the officer commanding
the Northern Department (probably at Rutland). They say, "as there are
some few inhabitants north of the fort, should you judge them to be disaffected
to the interest of the United States of America, you will confine him or
them and secure his or their estate for the use of this State until such
person or persons may be tried by a Committee of Safety next adjacent to
the offender, etc."
Under date of March 19, 1778, a letter of Governor and Council,
ratified by General Assembly, to Captain Thomas SAWYER, at Shelburne, congratulates
him on his victory, laments the loss of Lieutenant BARNUM and men, [Lieutenant
Barnabas Barnum, of Monkton, who was surprised by a party of Indians and
British soldiers, and killed.] and says: "Viewing your dangerous and
remote situation, the difficulty in reinforcing and supplying you, do therefore
direct you to retreat to the blockhouse in New Haven. Bring with you the
friendly inhabitants. You are not to destroy any building, wheat or the
effects. You will remain at said blockhouse until relieved by Captain Ebenezer
ALLEN or Captain Isaac CLARK."
A letter to these captains directs them to repair to his relief
without loss of time; to assist the inhabitants, and, if possible, to secure
the wheat at Shelburne, and such other effects as in their power, but not
to burn any buildings or other effects.
On May 22 following, Governor CHITTENDEN writes to Captain BROWNSON
that David BRADLEY, in behalf of the inhabitants of New Haven and Ferrisburgh,
applies to this Council for liberty for their inhabitants to remain in
their possessions at present, as by reason of the situation of some of
the women it was impracticable for them to remove. He was directed to allow
such indulgence as necessity required.
In March, 1779, the line of the northern frontier was established
at the north line of Castleton and the west and north lines of Pittsford,
and all the inhabitants north of said line were directed and ordered to
immediately move with their families and effects within said lines, and
that the women and children go even farther south, and the men work on
their farms in "collective bodies with their arms."
It is generally supposed that no inhabitants remained in the territory
that is now Vergennes, from the fall of 1778 till peace was declared in
1783, when they began to return to their farms.
It was probably in the fall of 1778 that Eli ROBURDS and his son
Durand were taken prisoners and carried from their farm (lying between
G. F. O. KIMBALL's and Willard BRISTOL's, and extending back to the Beaver
Meadow) by a band of Indians, Tories, and British soldiers, and imprisoned
for three years or more. It is said that they were exchanged; that while
prisoners they were sent under guard to labor, but that Eli refused to
work for the British, and was so free in his remarks on the subject that
he was not allowed to leave as soon as his son.
Writers have pictured the sufferings of the prisoners thus taken
from their peaceful homes to endure the hardships of a British prison;
but we should not forget the sad condition of their wives and small children,
helplessly witnessing their husbands and elder sons forced away from them,
while their houses were burning and everything they had that was of value
being carried off by the plunderers. A more pitiful sight, indeed, it must
have been to see those stricken mothers carrying their infants and leading
other children, with scat clothing or food, through the woods on foot,
to the southern towns in Vermont! Knowing how dark the future and how sad
the present, their courage and fortitude seem almost without a parallel
in history.
After a few more years of war and suffering, the struggles of a
people few in numbers and weak in resources, against the power and wealth
of Great Britain, brought triumph and peace, a result that can be explained
by only one word -- providence. With returning peace the attention of the
people was again turned to their personal interests; and as the obstacles
to the settlement of their forsaken farms were removed they began, in 1783,
to return to the new settlements.
In May, 1783, the Panton proprietors met at the inn of Captain WILLARD,
in Pawlet, and, among other things, voted "to sequester ten acres of land,
together with the privilege of the falls on Otter Creek, for mill building,
to John STRONG, lying at the northeast corner of Panton, on condition said
STRONG build a good saw-mill at the above mentioned place by the 20 of
November, 1783, and a good grist-mill by the 20 of August, 1784, that shall
run at the times above mentioned," etc. Evidently the old mills had been
destroyed at this time. Spencer's lot (that was formerly given to Pangborn)
of fifty acres and STRONG's ten acres had not been marked out, and in 1786
it was arranged between them, Spencer taking the west part up to within
seven rods five links of the bridge, and Strong taking his ten acres above
that point.
In March, 1784, Asa STRONG, eldest son of John STRONG, of Addison,
Beebe PANGBORN, and Elkanah BRUSH lived near the falls on the west side.
Asa STRONG's house was where the south end of the Shade Roller Company's
dry house is. In this year it is said that Gideon SPENCER, then living
in Bennington, built a saw-mill, and in 1785 built a grist-mill near the
middle of the channel, between the island and the west shore. All above
the mill, up to the landing above the Shade Roller Company's factory, was
filled with floodwood, a part of which they had to cut out to get water
for the mill. In the summer of 1784 some fourteen families settled in Willsboro,
N. Y., on the patent of Wm. Gilliland, and got the lumber for the buildings
at Vergennes. Donald MCLNTOSH, who had been in Canada through the war,
returned to his farm on Comfort Hill about this time.
In October of this year Ethan ALLEN, of Bennington, deeds to Alexander
and William BRUSH, of New Haven, six acres of the governor's lot of five
hundred acres, in the northwest corner of New Haven, of which Allen had
become the owner. Judge ROBERTS's present home is near the corner of the
six acres.
In 1785, while New Haven retained all her territory extending to
the head of the falls, the Legislature imposed a tax on New Haven to build
one-half of the bridge over Otter Creek at the head of the falls, and the
next spring the proprietors of New Haven, in public meeting called for
that purpose --
1st, Chose Luther EVERTS moderator;
2d, Voted that there be a tax of one penny on each acre of land in New
Haven, for the purpose of building a bridge across Otter Creek near the
falls;
3d, Chose Andrew BARTON collector;
4th, Luther EVERTS, treasurer;
5th, Eli ROBURDS and William BRUSH a committee to oversee the building
of bridge aforementioned;
6th, Chose Bezaliel RUDD, William ENO, and Robert WOOD committee of inspection;
7th, Voted every common laborer should have four shillings and six pence
per day, and a yoke of oxen, 2 shillings 6 pence;
8th, Voted the Committee purchase a Barrel of Rum, and more if needed for
the business;
9th, Voted that every man have 1/2 pint of Rum per day;
10th, Voted, that the Committee purchase a Grindstone for the benefit of
the workmen.
|
|
1785 -- Ethan Allen deeds to Widow Ruth BRUSH
seven acres from the northwest corner of the governor's lot, running from
the bridge in the direction of the present plank road (so called) and then
to the creek.
In October of this year the Legislature passed an act establishing
the county of Addison from Rutland county to the Canada line, which boundaries
were changed to nearly the present limits when Chittenden county was organized,
in 1787. County officers were appointed in 1785 for Addison county, William
BRUSH being one of the judges.
Timothy ROGERS, of Danby, Vt., a large landholder, came into this
vicinity this year. He moved in October from Button Bay to near Barnum's
Falls, on Little Otter Creek. He was proprietors' clerk of Ferrisburgh;
at the time of removing, the records of Ferrisburgh were burned. He said
that he landed from his boat at the foot of the falls on a rainy evening
and attempted to build a fire that they might light torches to guide the
women and children to his house, but the rain put out the fire, as they
supposed. He carried his goods out of the boat and left them on the shore
for the night. In the morning his men told him, what proved too true, that
the fire had not been put out, but had revived and spread, and burned some
of his effects--among them a chest of drawers in which were all the records
and public papers, as well as his private deeds for about 6,000 acres of
land, and notes and bonds for about $2,000.
On the 30th of May in this year Ethan ALLEN was in New York city,
and conversed with the French consul about a city that was to be incorporated
about the falls. This was more than three years before the date of the
charter, and is the earliest allusion to the project. At that time there
could not have been twenty families on the territory.
1786 -- Gideon SPENCER, of Bennington, who
had already built mills on the falls, moved to Vergennes and became identified
with the interests of the place, and an active and successful operator.
The records show that he was engaged in building and running mills and
iron works, buying and selling water power, and timber, and farming lands.
He was evidently a far-seeing and sagacious man. Unfortunately for Vergennes,
he encumbered most of the water power on the west side of the creek with
a long lease, which is still in force. He had several sons, who became
men of property and influence in the vicinity. His son Gideon, jr., lived
on the farm and built the brick house afterward owned by Samuel P. STRONG,
and then by Samuel P. HOPKINS. Soon after he came to Vergennes he built
a large gambrel-roofed house on the east corner of Andrew CRADY's present
house lot, and kept a tavern. A fine spring of water in the street in front
of his house supplied the neighborhood, until the supply was cut off by
digging wells and cellars in the vicinity.
In December of this year the town plot of Ferrisburgh was surveyed
by Timothy ROGERS, surveyor, and a committee appointed for the purpose,
consisting of Abel THOMPSON, Gideon SPENCER, Wm. UTLEY, and Wm. HAIGHT.
They surveyed lots enough in the most desirable locations to give one to
each proprietor, five rods by six rods; then a second division of the same
number of the next most desirable lots; then all the remainder in a third
division. The "green" and public lots were designated, and the principal
streets. There was a small triangular piece above and near the bridge which
they called the "handkerchief lot," " for a gift of s'd Proprietors to
any man that will settle and continue the malting business on s'd lot two
years, to the advantage of himself and the public." Major Wm. GOODRICH
accepted it and afterwards deeded it with the stills, worms, tubs, etc.
The first session of Addison County Court was held in March of this
year, in Addison; John STRONG, chief judge; Ira ALLEN, Gamaliel PAINTER,
Wm. BRUSH, and Amos FASSETT, assistant judges. Samuel CHIPMAN, then living
near the falls, was appointed county clerk. He was the first lawyer that
settled in Addison county, and remained in Vergennes about eighteen years,
with fair success as a lawyer; but his forte seems to have been speculating
in real estate. He declined serving as clerk after one year, and Roswell
HOPKINS (grandfather of our present Dr. HOPKINS) was appointed and held
the office sixteen years, all of which time he was a citizen of Vergennes
and conspicuous in public affairs in town, county, and State. He was clerk
of the House of Representatives from 1779 nine years; he was secretary
of State fifteen years, and declined further nomination in 1802, when about
to remove from the State. He was one of a committee of distinguished men
to revise the laws in 1797. He was a man of fine talent, well educated,
and possessed of most agreeable social qualities; he became one of the
most popular men in the State.
The following lines, written by him, are found on a blank leaf of
a book in the county clerk's office:
My
friends, some deference is due,
To
every man, both me and you;
But
this respect in due proportion
Pay
to every man as is his station.
I,
of Vergennes, am alderman;
Yea,
more, a common councilman.
In
the office of county clerk I am put
And
clerk of the County Court to boot;
Of
State I'm also secretary,
A
justice, too, which none will query.
Isn't
more respect to me due, then
Than
almost any other man.
In
titles numerous and great,
Heaped
on me here and through the State.
Be
careful, then, due deference show,
Both
here and where'er else I go.
-Ros.
HOPKINS,
Clerk.
He was called "doctor" sometimes. He explains it as "doctor of conviviality."
In 1787 he was granted by the State a tract of land, 11,264 acres, in Hopkins's
Gore. In 1803 he thought Vergennes was becoming too crowded, and he moved
to St. Lawrence county. The town of Hopkinton was named in his honor. In
1789 he bought for a trifle two hundred acres of land (what was lately
the American House stands almost in the center of the south line of the
lot), and later owned the BOTSFORD farm and occupied a house near the site
of Botsford's house.
1787 -- In this year several business men came
into Vergennes and business was prosperous. The Legislature took some measures
to secure reciprocity with Canada, and Ira and Levi Allen were instrumental
in procuring the admission of timber, lumber, pot and pearl ashes, and
other products free of duty from Lake Champlain, and thus opened the way
for a business which assumed large proportions, and was a great boon to
all dwellers in this region. Great rafts of spars, square timber hewed
in the woods, were taken to Quebec, and much of it there loaded into ships
and taken to England. The ships in that trade were constructed with port-holes
in the stern, and long timbers were slid from the rafts into the holds
of the vessels. The raftsmen lived in houses built on the rafts. Potash
was also carried on the rafts.
In January of this year at a town meeting in Panton they voted that
"they are not willing to have no part of the town taken off for a city
at the northeast corner of the town." In February of this year Wm. BRUSH
resigned his office of assistant judge. Roswell HOPKINS was appointed county
clerk and Seth STORRS State's attorney.
At the session of the Governor and Council at Bennington, Ethan
ALLEN presents his letters from the French consul relative to the name
"Vergennes," and other matters. The plan of forming a city about the falls
had become publicly known at this time.
1788 -- This year was an important era in the
history of Vergennes. It is perhaps impossible to give a faithful picture
of her situation and business at that time. Several saw-mills and one gristmill
were in operation, a small forge on the east side of the creek and some
small potash establishments, a brewery, and blacksmith shops. There were
a few framed houses, mostly gambrel-roofed, the frames covered with upright
planks, nailed with handmade wrought nails and clapboarded, but seldom
painted. Most of the dwellings were of logs surrounded by the stumps and
small clearings, with the forest in close proximity. One hundred and fifty
to one hundred and seventy-five inhabitants were on the territory.
In June of this year Jabez FITCH, a man then fifty-one years old,
with two sons, went from Connecticut to Hyde Park, Vt., and passed through
Vergennes. In a journal kept by him he writes, under date of June 5, 1788:
"A
little after sunset we arrived at one SMITH's, a little north of Snake
Mountain, where we put up for the night and found comfortable entertainment.
We are now within about six or seven miles of New Haven falls. I lodged
with one SAMSON, a Tory, but hope I have not caught the infection. Friday,
June 6, we took breakfast before we started and our landlord went with
us as far as the falls. We soon came into the town of Panton and traveled
about five miles through the woods before we came to a house. At about
nine o'clock we arrived at the falls and crossed the creek in a canoe,
but our horse and dog were obliged to swim. We made some stop at this city.
I was in at Colonel BRUSH's to leave some letters and at about ten set
off on our way again. We soon came into the town of Ferrisburgh and found
the road extremely muddy. We called at one Tim ROGERS', about noon in hopes
to obtain horse-baiting, but were disappointed and were obliged to travel
about five or six miles further, most of the way without a house. About
two o'clock we arrived at one COGSWELL's in Charlotte."
|
It is not clear why he had to swim his horse and dog; perhaps the
bridge built in 1786 was out of repair. There was no post-office in Vergennes
at that time and none nearer than Rutland. Before the Congress of the old
thirteen States would admit Vermont into the Union, Vermont had in her
splendid career as an independent State sovereignty, in March, 1784, appointed
a postmaster-general (Anthony HASWELL, of Bennington) and established five
post-offices--one in Bennington, one in Rutland, one in Brattleboro, one
in Windsor, and one in Newbury, and established the rate of postage to
be the same as it was in the United States, and provided for post-riders
to make weekly trips; and the people congratulated themselves on their
liberal mail facilities. The next year after the admission of Vermont into
the Union Congress established a post-office in Vergennes on June 1, 1792.
On the records of the Governor and Council at Manchester, October 23, 1788,
the following entry appears: "A constitution of the city De Vergennes having
passed the general assembly was read and concurred with two amendments,
which was agreed to," and, October 24, "an act granting the city of De
Vergennes town privileges having passed the General Assembly, was read
and concurred." This was an act permitting Vergennes to organize as the
towns about her did, with selectmen men, etc., for four years (afterward
extended to six years) before electing city officers.
The misnomer in the record quoted above was the error of the scribe.
The Legislature was sitting at the time at Manchester and consisted o Governor
Thomas CHITTENDEN, twelve councilors, and eighty-four members. Gideon SPENCER
was a member from Panton, Alexander BRUSH from New Haven, and Abel THOMPSON
from Ferrisburgh. The act of incorporation received Governor CHITTENDEN's
approval the day it was passed, in which the corporate name is, "the Mayor,
Aldermen, Common Council and Freemen of the City of Vergennes." Thus Vergennes,
with and because of her splendid water power and commanding situation,
regardless of her small population, became a city--the third in New England
in point of time, Hartford and New Haven having been chartered in I784.
The origin of the name given to the city is explained in a correspondence
between Ethan ALLEN and the French consul, Hector ST. JOHN DE CREVECOUR,
a French nobleman who had been educated in England and came to America
in 1754 and settled on a farm near New York city. In 1780 he went to Europe,
and in 1783 returned to New York as consul for France. He then became acquainted
with Ethan ALLEN, to whom he writes from New York, under date of May 31,
1785, a long letter in which he suggests the idea of Vermont showing her
gratitude to the French patriots of the Revolutionary War by naming some
new towns after distinguished Frenchmen, and says: "I would propose that
the town to be laid out on the first fall of Otter Creek be called the
town of Vergennes or Vergennesburgh; this in honor of the Count DE VERGENNES,
French minister for foreign affairs.” In a letter from France a few
months later he alludes to the name of Vergennes again. On the 2d of March,
1786, ALLEN wrote to St. John from Bennington that the Governor and part
of the Council met at Bennington to consult about the various propositions
of St. John and were well pleased with them. The council concluded to recommend
to the Legislature that "on the land contiguous to the first falls on Otter
Creek they would incorporate a city with certain privileges and infranchisements
and have already named it De Vergennes, to perpetuate the memory of your
prime minister in America to all eternity."
In September, 1788, the following bond was executed in Vergennes,
but no record appears of its enforcement:
"Land owners in Vergennes.--Bond for a twentieth part of their lands in
the city.
"Know all men by these presents.--That we, the persons hereunto subscribing
land owners in the district prayed to be corporated as the mayor, aldermen
and corporation of the city of Vergennes, to be set off from part of the
towns of Ferrisburgh, New Haven and Panton, do each of us separately bind
ourselves in the penal sum of one hundred pounds lawful money of the State
of Vermont, to the treasurer of said State, and his successor in said office,
to be paid within two years after the district above prayed for shall be
corporated by the Legislature of the State of Vermont, for the true payment
of
which sum we, the persons subscribing and ensealing these presents, do
each of us separately bind ourselves, our and each of our heirs, executors
and administrators, firmly by these presents. Sealed with our seals and
dated this twenty-ninth day of September, A. D. 1788.
"The condition of the above obligation is such that if the persons above
obligated shall well and truly make and execute good and sufficient deeds
of conveyance of one-twentieth part of the lands they each separately own
in the district above prayed to be established, as above, to the corporation
of said city of Vergennes within two years after the same shall be legally
appointed and established by the Legislature aforesaid for the sole use
and benefit of said corporation so long as they may or shall legally exist
as a corporation aforesaid, to be put to such use or uses as said corporation
may from time to time direct, then this obligation to be void and of no
effect. But if any person or persons obligating as above shall refuse or
neglect to make out such deed of conveyance, then this obligation to be
and remain in full force and virtue on such obligator or obligators respectively
and separately; which sums when collected by the treasurer of the State
of Vermont aforesaid, after deducting all needful expenses which may accrue,
shall by said treasurer be transmitted to the corporation aforesaid to
be for the sole use and benefit of the corporation forever. And it is hereby
provided that the lands given shall be at the option of the giver to say
where and the value shall be appraised by the corporation.
"William BRUSH, L. S.; Eli ROBURDS, L. S.; Alexander BRUSH, L. S.; Timothy
ROGERS, L. S.; Charles SPENCER, L. S.; Ebenezer MANN, L. S.; Jacob KLUM,
L. S.; William HAIGHT, L. S.; Solomon BEECHER, L. S.; Jared PAYNE, L. S.;
Abel THOMPSON, L. S.; Gideon SPENCER, L. S.; Sam'l WOOD, L. S.; Roswell
HOPKINS, L. S.; Jabez G. FITCH, L. S.; Richard BURLING, L. S.; Sam'l CHIPMAN,
L. S.; Israel WEST, L. S.; David BRYDIA, L. S.; William GOODRICH, L. S.;
Jon'thn SEXTON, L. S.; Donald MCINTOSH, L. S.; Wm. UTLEY, jr., L. S.; Asa
STRONG, L. S.; Ebenezer RANSOM, L. S."
|
The limits of Vergennes by the first act of incorporation were fixed
as follows: Beginning on the line of Ferrisburgh and New Haven at the southeast
corner of the town plot in said Ferrisburgh; from thence running north
320 rods to a stake and stones; thence west 400 rods to stake and stones;
from thence south across Otter Creek 480 rods to stake and stones in Panton;
from thence east across Otter Creek 400 rods to stake and stones; from
thence north 160 rods to bounds first mentioned, comprising 1,200 acres
of land and water; about 655 acres from Ferrisburgh, 300 acres from Panton,
and 245 acres from New Haven.
November 1, 1791, a large tract was taken from the remainder of
New Haven and annexed to Vergennes; but in October, 1796, this last act
of annexation was repealed and the tract annexed in 1791 was now formed
into a distinct town by the name of Waltham. The freemen of Waltham, however,
at that time were not allowed a representation in the Legislature, and
were directed to meet with the freemen of Vergennes in said city for election
of State officers and representatives. They were first allowed a representative
in 1824. In 1788 David BRYDIA, who lived at the mouth of Otter Creek (Fort
Cassin), sold to Nathaniel STEVENSON for $10 lot No. 45 (A. T. SMITH's
house lot), and STEVENSON soon built a large gambrel-roofed house on the
lot.
Alexander BRUSH deeds to Stephen R. BRADLEY, of Westminster, for
$20 the lot where Amos WETHERBEE now lives.
1789 -- George BOWNE, a merchant of New York city, buys the falls
on the east side, with ten acres, at a tax sale, for ten shillings and
two pence. In October, 1789, Rogers deeds one-half of the same to Jabez
G. FITCH, with all the mills, buildings, iron works, and privileges of
falls for £800--$2,666. Jabez FITCH also bought of Rogers lots 13
and 14 (Methodist Church lot and part of the Franklin house lot).
Jabez G. FITCH, who came to Vergennes in 1788 or '89, was one of
a large and enterprising family in the vicinity of Norwich, Conn. He quickly
engaged in active business in Vergennes and bought real estate largely;
was engaged in the Quebec trade in lumber and potash. He was a live Yankee,
capable of doing any kind of business; could build a saw-mill or make an
elegant clockcase, as he did for Thomas ROBINSON, and which now stands
in the town clerk's office in Ferrisburgh. He was not, however, a cautious
man; his business was extended and he became embarrassed. In his latter
days he was poor, and somewhere about 1820 his body was found in the creek
at the foot of the falls. It was supposed that he fell from the bridge,
the only railing of which was a square timber on the sides.
In 1790 the following return was made by James ATLEE, deputy sheriff,
on a writ against Jabez G. FITCH, in favor of John, Frederick, and Samuel
DE MONTMELLIN, merchants in Quebec:
"I attached the following property: one dwelling house, the residence of
said Jabez, with the lots numbers 13 and 14 (Methodist Church and Franklin
House lots), one storehouse on lot number 8 (where the probate office now
is), with two other lots adjoining; one dwelling house, the residence of
SPINKS, bloomer; one frame barn, two sorrel horses, one eight the other
nine years old, with one gray horse seven years old, with two yoke of oxen,
three brown and one black, two potash kettles with the house thereto belonging
with 1000 bushels of ashes; one forge with every implement necessary for
carrying on the same in said forge and apparatus thereto belonging, one
coal-house, one blacksmith shop, one dwelling house, the residence of Woodbridge,
one grist-mill with all the mill work therein complete, five sawmills with
the buildings belonging to the same, one fulling-mill, with the falls,
dams, flumes and conveyances thereto belonging; likewise all the lots said
buildings stand on, the whole situated in Vergennes, the property of the
within named Jabez G. FITCH." |
ELECTION
OF OFFICERS
In the charter of Vergennes the time of the first meeting for the
election of city officers was fixed to be in July, 1792 (afterwards extended
two years), and an act passed empowering the people to adopt a town organization
and elect town officers, as towns in the State did, until the time arrived
for
electing city officers.
Under this act on the 2d of March, 1789, William BRUSH, justice
of the peace, signs a warning for all the inhabitants that live within
the limits of the city of Vergennes to meet at the dwelling house of William
Brush, to elect officers, etc. At this meeting, on the 12th of March, it
being the first town meeting ever held in Vergennes, William BRUSH was
chosen moderator; Samuel CHIPMAN, town clerk; Dr. Ebenezer MANN, Richard
BURLIN, Colonel Alexander BRUSH, selectmen; William BRUSH, treasurer; Captain
Durand ROBURDS, constable; Timothy ROGERS, Samuel CHIPMAN, jr., Jabez G.
FITCH, listers; Eli ROBURDS, leather sealer and grand juror; William GOODRICH,
Ebenezer RANSOM, surveyors of highways; Asa STRONG, poundkeeper; Jacob
KLUM and William HAIGHT, with some of the above named, petit jurors.
The grand list of 1789 contained thirty-three names, three of them
nonresidents, showing thirty resident citizens. The names not previously
mentioned as elected to office were Gideon SPENCER, Ambrose EVARTS, David
ADAMS, Donald MCINTOSH, William UTLEY, Benjamin GANSON, Charles SPOOR,
Ebenezer HUNTINGTON, John HACKSTAFF, Israel WEST, Job SPINKS, Solomon BEECHER,
Aaron BRISTOL, Josiah HIGGINS, Jacob SMITH, Roswell HOPKINS, Nathaniel
STEVENSON.
1790 -- This year thirteen new names are added
to the grand list; those most prominent are Azariah PAINTER, James ATLEE,
Robert LEWIS, Albon MANN, Jonathan SPENCER, David BRYDIA.
In 1791 are added Samuel DAVIS, Abram BALDWIN, Thomas TOUSEY, Enoch
WOODBRIDGE, John W. GREEN, Roger HIGBY, Timothy GOODRICH, and others. The
list now contains fifty-seven names. The list of 1792 is not found, but
in the list of 1793 the names of Thomas BYRD, Justus BELLAMY, Stevenson
PALMER, Thomas ROBINSON, Jacob REDINGTON, Josias SMITH, and Azariah TOUSEY
are found; and in the list of 1794 the names of Jesse HOLLISTER, Benjamin
G. ROGERS, and Samuel STRONG appear, and Job HOISINGTON, who bought the
late Philo BRISTOL place of Josias SMITH for £25. Until 1797 the
residents in what is now Waltham are included. In 1797, after Waltham had
been separated from Vergennes, seventy-three names appear. After Vermont
was admitted to the Union in 1791 a census was taken by the government,
and the result gives 201 inhabitants. Taking the lists as a basis of calculation,
in 1797 there were 360 inhabitants. By the census of 1800 the population
was 516.
THE
FIRST CHURCH
In June, 1794, the Rev. Daniel C. SAUNDERS was settled in the city
as a minister of the gospel. He lived in a large framed house just west
of judge ROBERTS's homestead, until August, 1799, when he was dismissed
to become the first president of the University of Vermont. He writes in
May, 1795, in speaking of Vergennes: "Where so lately was the foot of the
savage, there is now the church and the altar. Divine goodness has caused
the wilderness to blossom as the rose. Future successive ages may have
a laudable curiosity to know the history of the beginning of this particular
church of Christ first established in the infant city of Vergennes. To
gratify them the following remarks are submitted to the eye of the candid
and the inquisitive:
"The population of the place was rapid, beyond the most sanguine calculations.
In a very few years they had members to make a respectable congregation.
Circumstances obvious in a new, uncultivated country prevented them from
having any regular preaching of the Word for some time. In the year 1790
they procured a regular candidate for a short period. They had little regular
preaching till the year 1792, in the month of May, when a candidate, Mr.
Daniel Clark SAUNDERS, A.M., educated in the University of Cambridge, New
England, came among them and continued several months. In the fall of 1793
he again received an invitation to settle in the gospel ministry, with
which he at length complied." |
A regular church was organized September 17, 1793, by Rev. Cotton
Mather SMITH, of Sharon, Conn., who had been sent as a missionary to the
infant settlements of Vermont.
The learned doctor's idea of rapid settlement would hardly satisfy
a modern man in the present age, and possibly the doctor's successors might
not like the way preaching was paid for in his day, if we may judge from
the following vote passed in town meeting March 28, 1792:
"Voted to raise the sum of thirty pounds on the list of the year 1792,
one-fifth part in cash, the remainder in cattle or grain at the market
price, to be expended in hiring preaching the ensuing Summer." |
In June of the same year Enoch WOODBRIDGE, Roswell HOPKINS, and
Samuel CHIPMAN, jr., were chosen a committee "to wait on the committee
appointed to come into Addison County to set a stake for county buildings,"
and voted, "that if established in Vergennes the buildings shall be erected
free from expense to the County."
But very few of the men who were active business men before the
election of city officers in July, 1794, have descendants or relatives
in Vergennes at present. They planned and toiled in clearing and improving
Vergennes and increasing her resources; but most of them have passed out
of the memory of all survivors, and tradition retains but faint images
of them. That they were bold and energetic men is certain; shrewd and sagacious
in business, free and generous in their hospitality, and of kindly sympathies;
plain and unpretentious men, but men of force. Those of the name of BRUSH,
who have been mentioned in this sketch, are strangers by hearsay even to
our oldest citizens. William was appointed by Governor and Council in 1785
to be assistant judge and elected by the people in 1786 to the same office,
which he resigned in 1787. Alexander, a colonel in the militia before coming
to Vergennes at an early day, was a respected citizen. He lived at one
time in a house which stood where the National Bank now is, and kept a
tavern. Elkanah BRUSH lived many years on the lot now owned by Mrs. PHAIR,
at the corner of Panton road and Main street; he married the widow of Luke
Strong about 1808, and afterward lived in the THOMPSON house.
Jacob KLUM conducted a tannery on the bank of the creek back of
Francis MCDONOUGH's house, and later on the west side, living in the shop
which Ahvia SCOVIL first occupied. Eli ROBURDS died in 1805, and was succeeded
on his farm by Durand ROBURDS, then major, who held many offices in Vergennes.
He afterwards sold his farm and moved to Ferrisburgh, to the house ever
since occupied by his children.
Richard BURLING after a few years is mentioned as a resident of
New York city. While here he was active in various kinds of business, principally
mills and iron works, and making potash, and the commerce growing out of
such business. The BURLING family at White Plains, twenty miles from New
York, were owners of large tracts of wild lands in Vermont, and probably
gave the name to Burlington.
Dr. Ebenezer MANN died at Vergennes February 12, 1796, in his sixty-second
year. Dr. Ebenezer HUNTINGTON was a practicing physician for Vergennes
and vicinity, and acquired great popularity. He was a genial man, a good
story teller, and enjoyed a joke. He lived on Comfort Hill, next south
of Thomas FISH's present residence. He was the father of Fordyce HUNTINGTON,
long a prominent citizen, and remembered by many.
Donald MCINTOSH, the Scotchman who came with Colonel REID in 1766,
went to Canada during the Revolutionary War, and returned at its close
to the place on Comfort HILL, where he lived for many years and on which
he was buried. He died July 14, 1803.
Nathaniel STEVENSON, also one of the earliest settlers, was engaged
in building mills and a forge on the west side of the creek, above the
bridge, but did not remain here many years.
Timothy ROGERS was a large landholder and interested in the city,
but did not long remain a resident here.
Thomas BYRD, an Englishman and a Quaker, was a character of note
here for many years; a man of sound judgment, of fine personal presence,
and of extensive reading. He was early elected mayor, and became the leading
trial justice for Vergennes and vicinity. Many a culprit received his sentence
from him--"ten stripes at the publick whipping post," then the common mode
of punishment. The post stood for many years near the present public watering
trough. Squire BYRD, as he was generally called, lived in a house where
O. C. DALRYMPLE's store now is. Although a good Quaker, he was not quite
a non-resistant. It is told of him that a citizen of Ferrisburgh, in an
altercation with some one in a store in Vergennes, told the man he lied,
and was immediately struck and felled to the floor. He went to Esquire
BYRD to enter complaint, and told his story. BYRD asked him, "Did you tell
the man he lied?" "Yes." "And he knocked you down?" "Yes." "Well, he served
you right. You may go; you can't get a writ here."
Justus BELLAMY, long a conspicuous citizen of Vergennes, lived at
the Sherman wharf. For many years he was the proprietor of Bellamy's distillery,
which stood near the brick store at the wharf. The late Elliott SHERRIL
married one of his beautiful daughters. Edmund SMITH married another. The
BELLAMY family at a later day moved to Canada.
Thomas ROBINSON, father of the late Rowland T. ROBINSON, who came
from Newport, R. I., lived in Vergennes several years, a part of the time
engaged in manufacturing, and at length bought a large tract of land, which
proved to be the best farm in Ferrisburgh and a monument to his skill and
judgment in the selection.
Jacob REDINGTON, soon after coming here, opened a tavern in a building
on the jail lot (C. B. KIDDER's store).
Josias SMITH, from Tinmouth, Vt., graduated from Dartmouth College
in 1789; came to Vergennes in the spring of 1791, and was a practicing
and successful lawyer in Vergennes to the time of his death in 1810. He
was first city clerk under the charter election and was mayor at the time
of his death.
Azariah PAINTER, who came here in 1789, was prominent in business
circles and well known as keeping tavern here for many years. He bought
of Jesse HOLLISTER, in 1800, what is now the Stevens House. He had two
sons, Lyman and Hiram. Two daughters of Hiram PAINTER are now living in
Vergennes, Mrs. KEELER and Mrs. SPRAGUE.
Azariah and Thomas TOUSEY were interested in mills and iron works.
Azariah started the stilling-mill and resigned it to Thomas; they came
from Newtown, Conn., but left no known descendants here.
Enoch WOODBRIDGE came from Manchester to Vergennes in the beginning
of 1791, bought and moved on a farm near where Ezra CHAMPION lives, and
in a few years moved to the grounds now occupied by Mrs. HAWLEY. He was
a highly educated man of talent, a graduate of Yale College; was in the
army through the Revolutionary War, a part of the time as commissary. After
the war he went to Bennington county, where he was register of probate
five years, judge of probate one year, State's attorney two years, which
office he resigned in the fall of 1790 to come to Vergennes, and was soon
elected judge of the Supreme Court, and for seven years was chief justice.
He was father of Enoch D. WOODBRIDGE; of Mrs. Villee LAWRENCE and several
other daughters. F. E. WOODBRIDGE and the late Mrs. PIERPOINT were his
grandchildren. He died April 21, 1805, in his fifty-fifth year.
Dr. John W. GREEN purchased in 1790, for £40, the lot and
buildings where F. E. WOODBRIDGE now resides.
Abram BALDWIN, David BOOTH, and Zalman BOOTH, all of Newtown, Conn.,
bought property in partnership, and did business on the west side of the
creek for several years.
Roger HIGBY (or HIGLEY) was a lumberman engaged in sending timber
to Quebec, but failed in business. He lived where the Farmers' National
Bank stands.
Samuel DAVIS, a blacksmith, raised a large family in Vergennes,
one of whom, the Hon. Bliss N. DAVIS, who was born here in 1801, stated
at the Vergennes Centennial that his "father made the axes that felled
the trees to make room for the houses in Vergennes."
Robert and John LEWIS built potash works a little above the mouth
of Potash Brook. A few years later they assigned a large amount of property
for the benefit of their creditors.
Samuel DAVIS lived in the house north of the Congregational Church,
and his shop was in what is now William E. GREEN's garden.
Thus we see that down to the time when the city government was formed
a very large proportion of the few people here were active, energetic,
and bold business men, actively engaged in converting timber and wood and
ores of the neighborhood into merchantable condition.
The city officers were elected in July, 1794, agreeable to the law
of incorporation. (The time of annual meeting was changed in 1800 to the
fourth Tuesday in March.) This first city meeting was held in a new school-house
standing near the present town house. Enoch WOODBRIDGE was elected mayor;
Josias SMITH, clerk; Roswell HOPKINS, Samuel STRONG, Phineas BROWN, and
Gideon SPENCER, aldermen; Azariah PAINTER, sheriff; Samuel CHIPMAN, Eli
ROBURDS, Elkanah BRUSH, Ebenezer HUNTINGTON, Oliver PIER, and Jacob REDINGTON,
common councilmen.
The records of the Court of Common Council show a respect for a
strict construction of the charter law, that has not always since been
apparent. When, a few months later, Samuel HITCHCOCK moved from Burlington
to Vergennes, and became associated with the picked men elected to fill
the city offices, Vergennes could boast of as large a number of strong-minded
and accomplished men as ever graced a country village. Samuel HITCHCOCK,
who had married a daughter of Ethan ALLEN, and was himself the peer of
any lawyer in his day, lived for several years in a house standing on the
ground now occupied by the Catholic Church.
In 1794, a minister was settled, and licenses were granted for six
taverns. In 1795 a jail was provided.
Daniel HARMON became a citizen of Vergennes and lived where the
National Bank is, and probably had a store in the lower corner of the same
lot, apparently the best location in the city for a store. In 1796 Harmon
conveyed a lot 22 by 40 feet, to Josiah and William FITCH, "traders in
company." This was what was lately known as Pat FOSTER's store.
THE
FIRST NEWSPAPER
In this year correspondence was held with Anthony HASWELL, of Bennington,
with a view to his establishing a printing press and publishing a weekly
paper in Vergennes; and a committee was appointed to agree with some person
to establish the printing business in this city, and give them the use
of a public lot. Thompson's History of Vermont says that the Vergennes
Gazette was founded at Vergennes by Samuel CHIPMAN, August, 1798. A copy
of this paper is shown by Mr. JOHNSON (No. 74.), dated February 5, 1800
"Printed for Samuel CHIPMAN, jr., by FESSENDEN at Printing Office adjoining
Court House." The Vergennes charter and by-laws were printed at Vergennes
in 1801 by CHIPMAN & FESSENDEN.
PUBLIC
BUILDINGS
In April, 1797, a stock company was formed to build a court-house,
with 124 shares at $25 a share, the city to give the use of a public lot
on which to erect it, and to take as many shares as could be paid for with
the avails of another public lot to be leased for the purpose. The preamble
to the subscription reads:
"From the central situation of this city it is contemplated that the time
is not far distant when the Legislature of Vermont will be convened in
said city, if suitable accommodations can be had. Among the many considerations
which demand the attention of the citizens to prepare for such an event,
that of erecting a convenient house in which they may assemble for the
transaction of public business is of primary importance. An undertaking
of such expense is of too great magnitude to be effected by the ordinary
mode of taxation in our infant State. Other measures, therefore, must be
adopted." |
TOUSEY, BALDWIN & Co. subscribe for 10 shares; Gideon SPENCER,
for 8 shares; Zalman BOOTH, for 7 shares; Robert HOPKINS, for 6 shares;
Jabez G. FITCH, for 6 shares; DIBBLE & SHERRILL, 6 shares; Samuel HITCHCOCK,
for 6 shares; Samuel STRONG, for 6 shares; Daniel HARMON, for 4 shares;
Jesse HOLLISTER, for 3 shares; twelve others, 2 each, 24; twenty others,
1 each, 20 shares, leaving for the city 18.
The building was completed in time for the meeting of the Legislature
October 11, 1798, and stood on the highest land in the city a little farther
back from the street than the present town house. It was a building nearly
square, with large windows; was two stories high and well arranged for
the purpose for which it was built. The second story was used for a Masonic
hall until anti-Masonry became dominant in the State, when it was converted
into a school-room. To the lasting disgrace of the city the building was
taken down in 1838.
At the time of the meeting of the Legislature Isaac TICHENOR had
just been re-elected governor; Paul BRIGHAM, lieutenant governor; Roswell
HOPKINS, then mayor of Vergennes, was secretary of State; Daniel FARRAND,
of Newbury, was speaker of the House; Daniel C. SAUNDERS, who had been
recently dismissed as minister in Vergennes and was then living in Burlington,
preached the election sermon, in accordance with a custom that prevailed
in Vermont until 1835. Vergennes was represented by Amos MARSH, who was
the next year and several successive years elected speaker. John STRONG,
of Addison, was one of the twelve councilors. The session continued twenty-nine
days.
Party spirit ran high in Vermont at that time, and for the first
time in her history the important civil officers to be elected by the Legislature
were chosen from the dominant party exclusively, amid great excitement.
The chief justice of the Supreme Court, Israel SMITH, a man in high repute
for his learning and virtue, was refused an election on party grounds merely,
which roused a violent and bitter feeling, and gave rise to the epithet
current for a long time, "The Vergennes slaughter-house."
A delegation of Indian chiefs from Canada came to Vergennes during
the session to ask of the State compensation for their lands, as they claimed,
from Ticonderoga to Canada line. Their claim was considered, but not granted.
The Legislature, however, paid their expenses while here, and gave them
a hundred dollars in token of friendship.
Mathew LYON, the very able and prominent Irish politician of Fair
Haven, who came to this country a poor boy at thirteen years of age, and
was bound out in Connecticut to pay the cost of his passage, had been arrested
for a trial under the alien and sedition law, and by the United States
Circuit Court, sitting at Rutland, in October, 1798, was sentenced to four
months' imprisonment and to pay a fine of one thousand dollars, with costs.
He had been elected to Congress in 1796, and at the next election in September,
1798, there was no choice; but in December following LYON was elected while
he was in jail. At the conclusion of his trial in October he expected to
be confined in Rutland jail; but the United States marshal was a bitter
political opponent of LYON's, and it is said lived in Vergennes. He took
LYON to Vergennes jail, where he treated him with great rigor. LYON's friends
from Fair Haven sent him a stove for use in the jail. LYON's term of imprisonment
expired February 9, 1799, and it was expected that he would be re-arrested;
but having been elected to Congress he, as soon as the door was opened,
proclaimed himself on his way to Congress, and thus made it unlawful to
arrest him. There was, however, intense excitement throughout the district
as the time of his liberation approached. He was a man to have warm and
devoted friends and bitter enemies, and the natural instincts of Vermonters
for free speech and a free press had been outraged, and they seemed anxious
to enter their protest against political persecution. The following contribution
to the Rutland Herald is reprinted in Governor and Council, Vol. IV, and
may be interesting to the people of Vergennes: "At the time of his [LYON's]
imprisonment in Vergennes under the odious sedition law, passed by Congress
during the Federal administration of John ADAMS, when he had stayed out
in prison the term of his commitment of four months, and nothing remained
but the payment of his thousand dollars' fine to entitle him to his liberty,
it was found that the marshal of the State, whose sympathies and preferences
were strongly with the Federal party and against Lyon, would stickle about
receiving for the fine any other than money that was of legal tender, and
in that case it might be difficult to procure the specie. Most of the gold
then in circulation was of foreign coin which passed at an uncertain value
according to its weight, which often varied by different weighers, and
was therefore not a legal tender. It was known that Mr. LYON while in prison
had issued frequent publications, therein freely discussing and sometimes
censuring the measures of the Federal administration, and that if any pretext
could be made for continuing his imprisonment and thereby prevent his taking
his seat in Congress, to which he had been re-elected while in prison,
the marshal would not hesitate to resort to it. It was further ascertained
that if the fine was paid, the marshal intended to re-arrest him for his
subsequent publications. Therefore, to secure his liberty so that he could
take his seat in Congress, which had already convened, Mr. Apollos AUSTIN,
a resident citizen of Orwell, and a man of wealth, at his own expense and
trouble procured the thousand dollars in silver dollars, and on the day
that Mr. LYON's confinement expired, Mr. AUSTIN with the entire body of
Republicans in Orwell, nearly every man went to Vergennes, where a like
spirit brought together some thousands of the Republicans from other parts
of the district and State, in order, probably, to overcome the authorities
from re-arresting. Mr. AUSTIN, however, was not permitted to pay the money
he had brought. All claimed the privilege of bearing a part, and one dollar
each was the maximum they would allow any one individual to pay. One gentleman
from North Carolina, a staunch Republican, was so zealously anxious for
the release of Mr. Lyon from prison, that he might take his seat in Congress,
at that time nearly equally divided by the two great political parties,
came all the way on horseback from North Carolina with the thousand dollars
in gold to pay the fine, supposing that as Vermont was then new and was
comparatively poor, the resources of the people were not sufficiently ample
to meet the exigency. Having paid the fine the friends of Mr. LYON immediately
took him into a sleigh, followed and preceded by a concourse of teams loaded
with the political friends of Lyon, which reached from Vergennes as they
traversed Otter Creek upon the ice, nearly to Middlebury, from which place
a large number continued to bear him company to the State line at Hampton,
N. Y., where they took leave of him and wished him God speed on to Congress."
It is singular that such an enthusiastic and excited gathering of
people from all parts, with teams enough to fill every vacant cleared space
in Vergennes (for there were no public conveyances as exist to-day), could
have taken place and no one in Vergennes to preserve a record of the proceedings,
or even to hand down to the next generation the tradition of the great
excitement. The writer well remembers the stories of his grandparents,
then neighbors of LYON, the excited crowd which attended LYON's passage
through Fair Haven, with music and banners and the wildest enthusiasm;
but the leading men of Vergennes were of the Federal party, and had no
sympathy for their political opponents. The words of censure of the government
for which Lyon was imprisoned seem mild in comparison with the political
abuse of the present age.
However much the citizens of Vergennes may have been interested
in public affairs, they were not indifferent to business matters, which
seem at that time to have been in a prosperous condition. In August, 1798,
SPENCER leases to Azariah TOUSEY a site for a slitting-mill and the privilege
of erecting a dam at the foot of the falls, from the hole in the rocks
on the island (now visible) to the west shore.
In January, 1799, Josiah and William FITCH sold their store (on
the bank lot) TO CURTIS & SAWYER for $800. SAWYER married a daughter
of Roswell HOPKINS and continued in trade here for several years. Argalus
HARMON bought the lease of the public lot in front of the green.
Among recent settlers of that time appear the names of Amos MARSH,
who lived on the Franklin house lot; Luke STRONG, another lawyer, who built
the Thompson house and died there in 1807, aged thirty-nine years; Luther
E. HALL, who first lived where KIDDER's store is and then in a house now
occupied by F. C. STRONG (he lived to a good old age in Vergennes); Belden
SEYMOUR, from Connecticut, whose trade was that of a hatter (accumulated
property, and he and his sons were long identified with the business of
Vergennes); Henry CRONK, long sheriff and constable, and tavern-keeper
(married a sister of Roswell HOPKINS; at length removed to a farm in West
Ferrisburgh); Wm. BURRITT (for many years an active and prosperous business
man in Vergennes); Bissell CASE, a tavern-keeper; Asa and Abraham DIBBLE,
the latter assistant judge of County Court.
The grand list of 1798 shows seventy-eight names. Fifty-four houses
are entered in the list at from one dollar to eighteen dollars: average,
five dollars forty cents; two hundred and forty acres improved land. The
total list was $6,709.25, but property, except houses, was entered at about
five times the amount of our one percent. General STRONG enters fifty acres
improved land; Donald MCINTOSH fifty acres; Roswell HOPKINS forty acres,
leaving only l00 acres for all the others.
From 1791 for about ten years the Newtown Company, as it was called,
was active in manufacturing, in buying and selling real estate, and in
loaning money. The company consisted of Abram BALDWIN, several of the name
of TOUSEY, and several of the name of BOOTH. BALDWIN and the TOUSEYs did
not long remain here; they were probably rich, but they were not popular.
Dr. David FITCH was a popular physician; he was born in 1795, was
a deacon in the Congregational Church, but his history is not well known.
Belden SEYMOUR, from Newtown, Conn., came here about 1796 and established
the business of making hats; not exactly the style used to-day, but satisfactory
to the wearers. He first bought a lot with a store on it in the block between
Elbow and Green streets, and eventually owned a large part of the square.
Belden SEYMOUR was successful in business, and at length retired with a
competence to his farm on Comfort Hill, where he died in 1841. His wife,
who was Abigail BEERS, lived one hundred years wanting a few weeks. She
was sister of Mrs. GREEN, the mother of William E. GREEN.
For many years after the city organization, taxation was light;
in one year the expense for the care of the city poor amounted to $15.
The bridge was the great burden, but with the help from the adjoining towns
and the aid of the lottery authorized by the Legislature they managed to
keep up a bridge. In 1800 they bargained with General STRONG to put four
trestles under the bridge, put in one new string piece and 800 feet of
plank for $13; and in 1805 he offered to build a new bridge for $500.
Many roads in Vergennes and vicinity had been opened, but frequent
changes in their location are recorded.
In 1795 the new school-house mentioned stood near where the town
hall is; a few years later it was moved on to the present school-house
grounds on South street and used until the large one, now Mrs. Julia ADAMS's
residence, was built.
STRONG & CHIPMAN built a grist-mill on the island, which they
afterward sold to Ephraim HUBBELL, and HUBBELL to Francis BRADBURY, February,
1810. The largest island was then much larger than it now is. One survey
says it extended up stream six rods above the bridge. It was bordered by
trees and wild grape vines, and some one had a garden on it. A gentleman
now living told the writer that the first grave he remembers was on that
island: a stranger was buried there. In low water there was a dry passage
from one island to the other, until channels were blasted out to secure
water for the mills. The trees were cut and portions of the large island
were dug away for the same purpose. Owing to this cause a mill on the island
for dressing cloth was undermined and fell into the stream.
Within the next few years the names of many new residents appear,
increasing the population to 516 in 1800, and to 835 in 1810. About 1797
John H. SHERRILL, grandfather of William A. SHERRILL and Mrs. William E.
GREEN, brought his young wife on horseback with Elliott SHERRILL, then
an infant in her arms, and came into Vergennes on a dark, rainy evening.
In Swift's history it is said that he had a store in Middlebury in 1798.
He lived here in 1800. He first lived where the Baptist Church stands,
but soon moved to the house on the west side, belonging to Dr. INGHAM's
estate, and about 1830 he built the brick front where he lived until his
death. He was an honored and respected citizen. Another citizen of this
date was Abraham DIBBLE, who was assistant judge of Addison County Court
in 1801-04.
Benajah WEBSTER, a native of New Hampshire, who had learned the
gunsmith's trade in New York city, came to Vergennes about 1806, and began
and continued for many years the business of blacksmithing. He first lived
in the house vacated by Samuel DAVIS next north of the Congregational Church,
but afterwards built the brick house now the property of William E. GREEN,
and converted his old house into a shop. The bricks for his house were
made at the yard of Dr. GRISWOLD, on the farm now occupied by Carleton
Bristol. Mr. BEERS, the father of Ransom BEERS, was at first associated
with Webster. Mr. WEBSTER had a large family of children; in later years
he moved on to the farm in Ferrisburgh now owned by his grandson, William
W. BARD. Warren WEBSTER, a son of Benajah, followed the trade of blacksmith
in Vergennes a while and moved West. One daughter, Delia WEBSTER, achieved
distinction and was known throughout the United States for her successful
efforts as an abolitionist and her consequent imprisonment in Kentucky,
and a trial which aroused the sympathy of every abolitionist in the land.
The HARMON family was prominent in Vergennes during the first quarter
of the present century. Daniel HARMON came from Bennington county about
1795. Calvin and Argalus came two or three years later. They were known
principally as merchants and distillers. They traded in the stone store
now standing on Main street north of East street.
Edward SUTTON came to Vergennes about 1803, and until his death
in 1827 was a successful merchant, leaving a large estate for those days.
He lived in the house previously owned by Amos MARSH, and his store has
since been remodeled to form the dwelling house of J. B. HUSTED. At the
time of his death he was in partnership with Edward J. SUTTON, who died
the same year, and the business was closed, and the store building was
rented and used as a store for several years by many different parties
-- William F. PARKER, BIXBY & BLACKMAN, Cyrus SMITH, and others. The
estate of Mr. SUTTON was divided in 1828 between his two daughters, Caroline
and Jane SUTTON. The death of Jane SUTTON, in 1832, from cholera, followed
next day by the death of Edmund PARKER, caused an intense excitement in
Vergennes.
Edward A. KENDALL, in “Travels through the Northern Part of the
United States in 1807 and 1808,” says: "Still lower on the Otter Creek,
and only five miles short of its entrance into the lake, is a cataract
which ranks among the most beautiful in New England. On its banks are seated
the town and village of Vergennes, a name intended to honor M. De Vergennes,
sometime minister of the court of France. Sloops ascend from the lake to
the foot of the cataract; and, from this and other circumstances, Vergennes
is well seated for iron works; bog ore abounds in all the adjacent country,
and stone ore is brought from Crown Point, on the opposite side of the
lake. A furnace, and other extensive works, in addition to those which
have been long established, are at this time erecting. There are bridges
across the Otter Creek, both at Middlebury and Vergennes; and each of these
villages exhibits a busy and thriving appearance.
"Roads both from New York and Boston meet in
Vergennes, whence there is a road due north to Burlington, distant twenty-two
miles, a commercial village and port of entry on the lake, and by which
there is a constant communication, either by land or water, with Montreal,
in Lower Canada."
In 1809 an important lawsuit was decided in regard to the falls.
Silas WRIGHT, of Weybridge, sued STRONG & SPENCER, of Vergennes, for
damages, claiming that the building of a dam at Vergennes, and the changes
made at the falls, caused such a rise of water that the lands on the creek
and on Lemon Fair, were overflowed, to the great injury of the owners;
but after a long trial, with many witnesses, the jury brought in a verdict
for the defendants.
The query that has always been most pressing for an answer in regard
to Vergennes --Why does not Vergennes grow faster in numbers, wealth, and
business? -- was just as unanswerable in 1800 to 1805 as it ever has been.
It was admitted everywhere that her situation was in the midst of a fertile
and productive country; that her water power was unrivaled; that the whole
body of water in Otter Creek, with a fall of thirty-seven feet, was available
for any purpose for which water power could be used; that the locations
for mills were peculiarly free from danger by reason of freshets; that
her means of communication by water with the northern markets were all
that could be desired; that her people were intelligent, numbering among
them some of the brightest minds in the State; and yet her population was
constantly changing; men did not come to stay; the returns from capital
invested in her business, except in rare instances, were not satisfactory.
But in the fall of 1807 and the year following it was thought that this
question would not be asked again; that a bright future awaited the little
city. A strong company of wealthy gentlemen of Boston proposed to embark
in the iron business in Vergennes on a large scale. Captain Francis BRADBURY
came on here and in October, 1807, secured a perpetual lease of water power,
and about seven acres of land on the west side of the creek, from Gideon
and Stephen SPENCER, for the consideration of $3,000 and an annual rent
of $300, and very soon assigned three-fourths of it to Stephen HIGGINSON,
William PARSONS, James PERKINS, and Benjamin WELLS, all of Boston. There
was at that time on the ground leased a forge and slitting-mill, a shop
for making nails, and near by a "steel-factory." On the east side was a
small forge; on the island a gristmill, and also one on the west side,
and a number of saw-mills. In January, 1808, this company advertised that
they would purchase charcoal in large quantities, and built large coal
barns for storing it; at one time they had fifteen such barns. SPENCER's
gristmill stood in the little hollow eight or ten rods below the bridge.
A low shed for the use of his customers extended toward the present dry
houses, and at the end of that a large gate, closing the road to the wharf.
A flume ran from the present dam by the side of the rocks in the bank on
a level to carry water for the machinery below. The large yellow house
(so called) was soon built, and in 1809 Thomas H. PERKINS leased, on a
perpetual lease for $5,000 and an annual rent of $500, the remainder of
the falls and mills and the land to Panton road on the south and city line
on the west, with some reservations of small lots previously leased. The
small leases were bought in by the company and their business enlarged.
Their forge had nine fires; they bought the Monkton ore bed and large tracts
of wood land, started a small forge on Little Otter Creek, near the covered
bridge on the road to Monkton; numbers of mule teams which they introduced
for hauling ore and coal were quite a novelty. Colonel WELLS, an accomplished
gentleman of Boston, was for many years the managing agent. It is said
that 177 tons of cannon shot were cast at their works for the use of MACDONOUGH's
fleet at the battle of Plattsburgh, and it is also said that the iron business
was closed soon after the war and that the company met the fate that many
other iron-makers have had to meet -- heavy losses; and the old question
returned unanswered, the population of Vergennes being no greater in 1820
than in 1810. Their grist-mill and saw-mill were continued for many years.
In 1825 they advertised for custom at their mill, and also that
they desired to sell various tracts of land in the vicinity. In 1815 Philip
C. TUCKER came on from Boston as a clerk or book-keeper for the company,
and remained till 1830, the acting agent in closing up their business.
He was fifteen years old when he came to Vergennes, and during his clerkship
studied law, and opened an office in 1824, and continued a successful lawyer
until his death in 1861.
Previous to the operations of the Monkton Iron Company, as they
were called, the burning of wood into charcoal in pits in the fields had
been practiced to some extent, but was largely increased when this company
began to purchase. Immense quantities were made on the lands of the SPENCER
family in Panton and Addison, who owned what are now the farms of N. RICHARDS,
H. HAWLEY, E. HOLLAND, J. CARTER, Thomas NOOMAN, and other tracts. When
Ira WARD was a young lad his father was engaged in the business for Spencer,
his family finding a temporary home in a house where E. HOLLAND lives.
Ira, just old enough to drive the cows home from the woods (when he could
find them), in passing along the road south of the house discovered a bear
advancing toward him. After gazing at him a few moments the animal turned
and left. Deer and game of all kinds were abundant in all this region even
at that time.
The necessity for workmen in the mills, asheries, and on the rafts,
and in chopping wood for coal, and the money so freely paid out by the
Monkton Iron Company, had brought to Vergennes quite a number of Canadians
with their families, a portion of whom occupied a cluster of houses on
what is now the Shade Roller Co.'s yards, and was then called "French Village."
A still larger number lived on East street. Among them were some quaint
and original characters, ever ready to give expression in broken English
to their wit and drollery, or to relate the adventures of their lives in
Canada, some of them in lumber camps and some of them in the Northwest
or Hudson's Bay Company as voyagers or carriers.
Previous to the War of 1812 Vergennes had become a central point
for pleasure parties from the surrounding towns, and Painter's Tavern,
where the Stevens HOUSE is now, was a resort for such parties and balls.
There were many young ladies in Vergennes, at that date and a little later,
whose fame for beauty, wit, and intelligence has come down to succeeding
generations, and some of the men whom the living now remember as quiet
and sedate citizens were then considered as agreeable and accomplished
society men, much inclined to gayety. As tending to show a slight difference
in the now and then, the following incident is given, as related to the
writer a few years ago by an aged lady who lived in Vergennes and was a
young lady in society from 1805 to '10. She said she well remembered going
to a ball where the daughters of the richest man in Vergennes were able
to enjoy the luxury and the very great distinction of appearing in calico
dresses, while their associates were obliged to wear the homespun and home-woven
linsey-woolsey dresses that all had been accustomed to wear before they
were startled by the introduction of such an extravagance as calico dresses.
She could not conceal the fact of her then admiration and longing for a
dress in elegance equal to the calico dresses of her rich friends.
In the summer of 1813 Lieutenant Thomas MACDONOUGH, then thirty
years of age, who had already made it manifest that he possessed the courage
and promptness and the cool and calm judgment necessary for the position,
was given the command of the very small naval force on Lake Champlain,
and December 19 took his vessels into Otter Creek for winter quarters at
"the button-woods," three-fourths of a mile above Dead Creek. Commodore
MACDONOUGH, as he was then called, made Vergennes his headquarters, and
during the winter was engaged in building several galleys or gunboats,
to carry two guns each. Before these were completed, on the 5th of April,
1814, General WILKINSON, then commanding the United States troops at Champlain,
N. Y., informed Commodore MACDONOUGH that the vessels of the enemy on Lake
Champlain would soon be ready to sail, and probably would attempt to land
a force for the purpose of destroying MACDONOUGH's vessels. On application
Governor CHITTENDEN ordered out the militia in Franklin, Chittenden, and
Addison counties, 500 men to be stationed at Burlington and 1,000 at Vergennes,
and on the 11th Wilkinson advised MACDONOUGH to erect a strong battery
at the mouth of Otter Creek. From the 16th to the 20th, General WILKINSON
and Governor CHITTENDEN were both at Vergennes, and the site of the proposed
battery was agreed upon. About the 12th of April a large body of militia
arrived at Vergennes and was quartered in different places--some in barns,
some in the school-house, some in the vacant house formerly occupied by
President Saunders. As the result of the consultation at Vergennes the
militia were all discharged except the company of Captain William C. MUNSON,
of Panton, on condition that they should rally on the firing of alarm signals,
and General Macomb was ordered to send 500 United States troops to Vergennes.
Ira WARD, now living, with a number of other members of Captain MUNSON's
company, was sent to HAWLEY's farm on the lake shore (Olmsted KEELER's)
to watch the lake and give notice of the approach of the enemy. The anticipated
attack of the British did not occur until the 14th of May, when one sloop
and eighteen galleys commenced an attack on the battery at the mouth of
the creek, commanded by Lieutenant CASSIN. The point has since been called
Fort Cassin. MACDONOUGH, with what vessels he had afloat, soon appeared
and put the enemy to flight, taking from them two fine rowboats. About
the last of May, MACDONOUGH's vessels were completed and sailed down the
creek. It has always been asserted in Vergennes that his flagship, the
Saratoga, was launched the fortieth day from the time the first tree used
in its construction was cut in the woods. He spent the summer on the lake,
and the result at Plattsburgh on September 11 is too well known to need
repetition.
MACDONOUGH was a tall, spare man, extremely popular with all his
acquaintances in his vicinity. His office was in the second story of a
wooden building that stood where N. J. MCCUEN is now in business, the lower
room being used for a guard-house. One of the militiamen in the guard-house
accidentally discharged his musket, the ball passing through the floor
and near MACDONOUGH. In one of the consultations as to dismissing the militia,
MACDONOUGH said, "If you will take your militia home I will take care of
the fleet. I am in more danger from your men than from the enemy."
A number of ship carpenters came with the commodore to assist in
the building of his vessels. Captain BROWN was superintendent. Edward ROBERTS
went to the battle with him, and afterward remained in Vergennes.
There was great fear and anxiety among the citizens of Vergennes
at the time of the attack at Fort Cassin. Some of the families packed their
valuables to have them in readiness for removal, and some more excitable
ones did remove temporarily, but the scare was of short duration.
The law of the State then required that each town should deposit
with the town treasurer powder and lead for use in an emergency, and on
the 13th of May the town officers of Ferrisburgh met at Theophilus MIDDLEBROOK's
(then town treasurer) to "run" bullets and prepare cartridges, and continued
at the work through the night. On hearing the cannon about daylight their
anxiety was so great that they insisted on having news, and David, then
twelve year old and anxious to go, was dispatched on horseback to learn
the news. He could not be prevailed on to stop until he got to the point,
about the time the firing ceased, and he then returned with the good news.
The fears of the people were quieted for the time being, but a feverish
state of excitement prevailed throughout this region until after the battle
of Plattsburgh, which was one reason why the people rallied so quickly
when called upon to repel the invasion.
On the 4th of September, 1814, General MACOMB, then in command of
3,400 United States troops at Plattsburgh, of which number 1,400 were invalids,
appealed to Governor Chittenden for aid, as his small force was so manifestly
inadequate to resist the large force advancing to assault him. Governor
CHITTENDEN, believing himself unauthorized to order the Vermont militia
out of the State under such circumstances, called for volunteers. Hon.
E. P. WALTON says in “Governor and Council”: "This call was at once responded
to, not only in the western counties nearest the scene of battle, whose
men arrived in time to take part, but also in Central and Eastern Vermont.
Irrespective of party opinions or age, the people turned out en masse,
fathers and sons, veterans of the Revolution, and lads too young for military
service--all pressed on toward the lake." Many went from Vergennes and
vicinity; prominent among these was Samuel Strong, who had been major-general
of the Third Division of Vermont militia from 1804 to '10, when he resigned;
and Major Jesse LYMAN, who had been an officer in the Revolutionary army.
Judge SWIFT says in his “History of Middlebury”: "When a sufficient number
of volunteers had met together, they organized as they could, in a summary
and unceremonious way, by putting forward such prominent men as were willing
to be officers. And when new recruits came on they took their places as
they could in the ranks. To General Samuel STRONG, of Vergennes, was assigned
the position of commander-in-chief of the Vermont volunteers; Major LYMAN,
of Vergennes, was his right-hand man, and was appointed colonel."
Judge SWIFT, then secretary to the Governor and Council, and Amos
W. BARNUM, of Vergennes, who was the governor's military aid, crossed the
lake from Burlington to Plattsburgh in company with General STRONG and
others, on Thursday morning, September 9, and met General MACOMB at the
fort. On Sunday, the 11th at seven P. M., General STRONG writes to Governor
CHITTENDEN:
"We are now encamped with 2,500 Vermont volunteers on the south side of
the Saranac opposite the enemy's right wing, which is commanded by General
BRISBANE. We have had the satisfaction to see the British fleet strike
to our brave commodore, MACDONOUGH. The fort was attacked at the same time,
the enemy attempting to cross the river at every place fordable for four
miles up the river, but they were foiled at every attempt except at Pike's
encampment, where we now are. The New York militia were posted at the place
under Generals MOORE and WRIGHT. They were forced to give back a few miles
until they were re-enforced by their artillery. The general informed me
of his situation, and wished for our assistance, which was readily afforded.
We met the enemy and drove him across the river under cover of his artillery.
Our loss is trifling. We took twenty or thirty prisoners. Their number
of killed is not known . . . . What shall be our fate to-morrow I know
not." |
Before this letter was written, however, Lieutenant-General Sir
George PROVOST, "governor and chief of his majesty's North American Provinces,
and commander of the forces," as he styled himself, had hastily left for
Montreal, and what were left of his 14,000 troops, veteran soldiers of
Wellington's army, at ten o'clock that night began to follow his example.
It is not strange that so signal a victory filled the whole country with
astonishment and delight; but it is strange that men of Vermont had the
courage and resolution to volunteer to form a part of a force so small
and seemingly so inadequate to meet so large and well-appointed an army
of trained veterans. Towns, cities, State Legislatures, and Congress united
in their tributes of thanks and honors to the victors. The Legislature
of Vermont passed very flattering resolutions of thanks to General Strong
and the volunteers, and to Commodore MACDONOUGH, to whom they also granted
a tract of land. The Legislature of New York voted a sword to General STRONG,
and as a picture of a gala day in Vergennes in 1817, the following is copied
from the Northern Sentinel of July 18, 1817:
"Honor by
New York to Major-General Strong.---
" Vergennes,
June 26, 1817.
"Yesterday the sword voted by the Legislature of the State of New York
to be presented to General Samuel STRONG in consideration of services rendered
by him at Plattsburgh in 1814, was delivered to him by the Hon. Ralph HASCALL,
Colonel Melancthon SMITH, Major Reuben SANFORD, and Major David B. MCNEIL,
appointed by the lieutenant-governor of that State, acting as governor,
to perform that service. The day was fine, and the several exercises were
conducted in a manner peculiarly gratifying, under the direction of David
EDMUNDS, Amos W. BARNUM, Enoch D. WOODBRIDGE, Luther E. HALL, and Francis
BRADBURY, esq., the committee of arrangements on the occasion, and Major
LAWRENCE and Captain HUNTINGTON, marshals of the day. In the morning the
delegation from the State of New York were met at Mr. JOHNSON's inn in
Ferrisburgh by Messrs. WOODBRIDGE and BRADBURY, and Captain GEER's troop
of cavalry, and escorted to this place. It is but justice to remark here
that the conduct of the troops on this occasion, and through the exercises
of the day, was such as to do honor to themselves and their commander.
At one o'clock General STRONG was escorted from his house to Mr. PAINTER's
inn, where, after a short interview with the gentlemen from the State of
New York, he proceeded through a numerous procession of the volunteers,
who accompanied him to Plattsburgh, and other respectable citizens, to
the platform in front of the court-house. The delegation from New York
were then escorted by Captain GEER's troop, dismounted, to the top of the
platform, where the following address was delivered to General STRONG by
Colonel Melancthon SMITH in behalf of himself and his associates:
"Sir, The Legislature of the State of New York have directed the governor
to cause to be presented to you a sword as a testimony of the high sense
they entertain of your valor and public spirit and for the services rendered
by you during the invasion of Plattsburgh by the British troops in September,
1814. The lieutenant-governor, acting as governor, has honored us with
this commission. In adverting to the events of that period when a numerous,
disciplined and well appointed army, under officers of experience and well
versed in the art of war, flushed with recent and astonishing victories,
conquerors of the conqueror of Europe, boastful of their prowess, and confident
of success -- when such a force retires before our newly-raised, undisciplined
troops, not one-fourth their number, we have cause of gratitude to the
God of Armies, who so manifested his strength in our weakness. We are not
unmindful that, uninfluenced by local considerations, with no motive but
the love of country, no prospect of fame except at the sacrifice of your
life, no interest but a sense of duty, and notwithstanding every discouragement,
you, Sir, volunteered in defense of a sister State. The act will be remembered
by the people with gratitude. Accept, Sir, this sword. It is the gift of
a free people to a free man. It bears on its hilt the device of a Herculean
Mountaineer crushing in his arms the British lion; it will be a memento
for your sons to imitate your example, and incite them to deeds of glory.
It is given, not as a reward but a pledge, which the State of New York
will redeem when occasion shall present itself. We are directed to communicate
to you the consideration of his excellency the lieutenant-governor and
of the representatives of the people. We offer you our personal regard
and respect."
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To which General STRONG made the following reply:
"To be honored, gentlemen, for any services I may have rendered, with the
approbation of a State acknowledged to be the first in wealth, in commerce
and population, and in no respect inferior to any State in the Union, affords
a satisfaction I cannot undertake to express. It is well known that the
precipitate retreat of the British troops from Plattsburgh to their own
territory prevented the citizens and militia of the States of New York
and Vermont from coming to a close and severe conflict with the enemy.
Had it been otherwise I am persuaded that the volunteers from Vermont,
who knew no discouragement in flying to the relief of your State, when
suddenly invaded, would have faithfully performed the duty which one member
of the Union always owes to another. I accept the sword, gentlemen, and
request you to communicate to the lieutenant governor and Legislature of
the State of New York the high sense I entertain of the honor they have
conferred. And you will permit me to say that the manner in which you,
gentlemen, have executed your commission has added much to my gratification.
You will please accept the assurance of my respect and esteem." |
The sword presented was of exquisite workmanship, its hilt and scabbard
of gold. On the scabbard was the following inscription: "Presented by his
excellency, Daniel D. TOMPKINS, Governor of the State of New York, pursuant
to a resolution of the Senate and Assembly of the said State, to Major-General
Samuel STRONG of the Vermont Volunteers as a memorial of the sense entertained
by the State of his services and those of his brave mountaineers at the
Battle of Plattsburgh."
After the presentation of the sword the general and the delegation
from New York, with the citizens, proceeded to Painter's Inn, where they
partook of a dinner provided for the occasion.
Vergennes people felt a special interest in the battle of Plattsburgh,
from their exposed situation and liability to an attack from the British
fleet; and the fact of the building of the vessels of our fleet here the
previous spring had also increased their interest in the result; and they
were, moreover, acquainted with the prominent actors. Few battles have
been more important in their results than this, which had great influence
in securing the treaty of peace which soon followed, and was celebrated,
when received here, with illuminations and great rejoicing. The volunteers
were not all fortunate enough to return uninjured. Thomas STEVENS, Wm.
MCKENZIE, and others in this vicinity received wounds. Major LYMAN contracted
fever from which he died soon after. General STRONG took a severe cold
which resulted in what was then called consumption, which made him an invalid
the rest of his life.
Business in Vergennes seems to have languished after the war; the
Monkton Iron Company did not long continue the manufacture of iron. In
Thompson's Gazetteer of Vermont it is said they suspended in June,
1816, and also that the machinery in operation on the falls during the
war consisted of one blast furnace, one air furnace, eight forges, one
rolling mill, one wire factory, besides grist, saw and fulling-mills, etc.
From 1816 to '23 were dark days for Vergennes, it not showing any
increase in business, wealth or numbers. The cold summer of 1816 was unfavorable
to all engaged in farming and had a tendency to lead men into other occupations.
The saw-mills, however, were at work to good advantage. Captain Jahaziel
SHERMAN and those associated with him were building steamboats in Vergennes,
which gave employment to a good number of men, but had no influence in
bringing men of capital and enterprise into Vergennes. General Samuel STRONG,
John H. SHERILL, Captain SHERMAN, Belden SEYMOUR, and a few others were
occupied in producing from the soil or by manufacture some addition to
the real visible wealth of the community; but a large number of the citizens
seem to have thought they could get rich by trading commodities or lands
with each other. Some lumber and potash were sent to Canada and considerable
wheat was carried to Troy. Until the Champlain Canal was opened in 1823,
wheat and other products were transported by teams to Troy, and goods for
the merchants brought back. Most of the teaming was done in the winter,
while the sleighing was good, by farmers residing in the vicinity. The
favorite route from here was through Bridport, Orwell, West Haven, etc.,
and taverns were found once in six miles, and frequently nearer, and were
well patronized, although many of the travelers carried food from their
homes. All the merchandise that came to Vergennes (except for a few articles
from Canada) was brought by teams. The merchants went to market twice a
year and purchased goods enough to last them six months. To order by sample
or give orders to travelling salesmen was a thing unheard of. To get to
Boston and back required about six days' riding in stages.
The trade of Vergennes has always been large in proportion to her
population. To be a successful merchant in that day required planning,
prudence, discrimination, and a wise foresight. Customers expected to find
in every store dry goods, crockery, hardware, drugs , and medicines, and
all kinds of groceries; especially all kinds of liquors, which were sold
as freely and in almost as large quantities as kerosene is sold today.
The merchant then must take grain and nearly all kinds of produce for his
goods, and find a market for the barter taken as best he could. He must
give long credits and have the happy faculty of making collections without
offending his customers. It was a good training school for the development
of the faculties, and many were made strong and fitted for public duties
by this training. The census of Vergennes for 1820 shows the number of
inhabitants to be less than in 1810 -- 835 in 1810, and 817 in 1820 --
and until 1823 there was no perceptible increase , and no nice buildings
were erected. There were about thirty two story houses, but most of the
others were low and of little value.
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