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The Testimony of John Williams
from The Williams History
JOHN, SON OF ROBERT WILLIAMS, ADDS HIS MOTHER'S NAME
"Being subject to diverse inconveniences for want of distinction, I add to my name Shoebridge,
in the 22nd of the 2nd month, 1820.
John S. Williams."
This is a record from the Bible of John Shoebridge Williams, showing that at the age of 30 he required
a distinguishing name and
therefore took the middle name, Shoebridge.
[rest is by John S. Williams in "American Pioneer," 1843]
ROBERT WILLIAMS OF RUTHIN, WALES
"My father's name was Robert. He was born in the town of Ruthin, in Denbighshire just 120 years
ago. A love of novelty soon led him
to England, and thence to America. He opened two mercantile establishments in Newbern and Beaufort,
N.C. In 1767 he married
Elizabeth Dearman, an English lady, and by way of a honeymoon excursion, brought his wife to America,
with the prospect of a
speedy return for settlement. She invited Anne Shoebridge, of Essex, or London, my mother, then a young
lady of 19, to visit
America, as her companion. The invitation was accepted. When we consider that to cross the Atlantic
it then required to be tumbled
and tossed on the waves from eight to twelve weeks at a time, it will be seen that that visit heads
most of the honeymoon trips
now in fashion.
Twice they were ready to return, once packed up, but a wise Providence ordered that the children of
these women should be born
Americans.
By his first wife, Elizabeth, he had but one child, Richard, now living in Massillon, or near Massillon,
in the sate of Ohio. She, Robert
Williams' first wife, died in 1773, and he, Robert Williams, married my mother October 1st, 1774, by
whom he had eight children, three
only of whom lived to be known by name: Elizabeth Garretson, Samuel Williams, and myself, J.S.Williams.
I mention the time of my
mother's marriage with some degree of pride. It took place very near, if not the very day that Logan
made his celebrated speech,
and not far from the time the Bostonians made their great dish of cold water tea.
ROBERT WILLIAMS' BUSINESS REVERSES
"My father is said to have been wealthy, but several causes contributed to lessen his fortune,
until at the time of his death, in 1790,
a few weeks after my birth, his estate was considerably embarrassed. A great storm at sea seemed, as
I have heard, to put the first
check to his success. Then the failure of an extensive house in London, then the Revolutionary war,
and the reception of continental
money. This he kept, in dependence on the Government, until it was nearly worthless. The breaking out
of the Revolution (1771),
which was concluded in 1775, added to other considerations, determined him to retire from mercantile
pursuits, which he did, to a
fine estate in Carteret County, N.C., chosen with reference to its value for timber and water power.
ROBERT WILLIAMS' MILL DAM
"He built a fine milling establishment, both flouring and sawing, breasting against a dam, which
held an inexhaustible supply of water
in a pond of from six to ten miles in circuit. Scarcely was this done till the whole dam and all went
down stream into tide water,
which flowed up the mill-tail. The vast quantity of water which rushed through the breach in the alluvians
of Carolina left a hole of
90 feet in depth from the top of the dam. This it was necessary to repair before water could again be
accumulated.
"He, my father, was not to be outdone in that way, but mills were built separate at each end of
the dam, which are standing yet for
all I know. His benevolence, a characteristic of his nation, grew upon him with age: and 'tis said he
carried this very far. He also at
one time set his whole plantation of slaves free, probably in or about 1780, when the Society of Friends
(of which he was a member)
manumitted theirs. Several of these stayed about us until we left Carolina, and two, an ancient man
named Quam, lived in our house
until his death in 1794: and a female named Jenney followed us to Ohio in 1802, and died in our house
in 1804. From what was
known of these native Africans, it was believed they were nearly, if not quite, 100 years of age at
their deaths. If there is a Heaven
for the good, which I doubt not, these two must be in it.
"My father's estate, being somewhat embarrassed, and, as is understood, mismanaged by his executors,
left my mother little except
our homestead of 1100 acres of fine land and part of the personal property. She was still in comfortable,
but not by any means in
affluent circumstances. It may now be seen that we were neither born with a silver spoon in our mouths
nor a very good prospect of
having one placed there to remain, and until we shall be satisfied that such things are of real advantage
to youth we shall not suffer
regrets to arise on account of the darkening of our youthful sky.
EARLY LIFE OF JOHN SHOEBRIDGE WILLIAMS
"In one thing we count ourselves most fortunate. As is customary in the South, aged blacks take
care of the children. Old Quam was
appointed my guardian, and a more faithful one never protected a ward. There is something surprising
about blacks, as well as
Indians, that attach them to children, and children to them, more firmly than can, under similar circumstances
bind whites. It is an
undeniable fact that blacks are more faithful nurses than whites, or at least children seem to think
so. I thought nobody equal to old
Quam: he thought there never was such a fine, black-haired, curly headed, blue-eyed boy before born,
as I was, although I kept him
running after me in daytime, like a hen after one chicken. I had a deal of Welsh blood about me, and
would go when I pleased, and
Quam would not cross me, not he; and thus he was perpetually in a stew to keep me out of every danger,
both real and imaginary.
He loved my mother as if she were his own, and he knew besides the loss I would be to him; my death
would almost kill her, as I was
by more than ten her youngest living child. Old Quam escaped from a deal of anxious concern at his death.
"My being so much the youngest, and living in a slave country, which makes white children scarce,
my only companion during my
first four years was old Quam. He was eminently pious and pre-eminently innocent. He was just such a
nurse as was calculated to
have a good effect upon me. I remember him well and very vividly the time of his death, by which, at
four years, I lost my friend.
Previously he had taught me many of the essentials of religion. He had most firmly impressed on my mind
that there was a Great
Good Man who made everything. That he lived away up in the sky. That he could see all we did. That when
we did good he loved
and smiled at us, but when we hurt anything or did anybody harm he was sorry, and would frown at us
and would not like us. That it
was very wrong to displease him. Although Quam knew not a letter, he could repeat whole verses of Scripture,
and, as I have heard,
some chapters. He use to tell me of wicked people, how they oppressed and destroyed one another, and
how the Great Good Man
was so angry at some wicked people that he made their country so dark that they could feel the darkness,
like grains of corn.
"In this way he would so impress me as to make me cry, till the family would be drawn to know what
was the matter. My good
mother was eminently pious, too, and always took much pains to impress my mind with love and fear for
the Supreme Being, but I
could not understand her as I could Quam's simple illustrations.
"I was very much indulged, and had it not been for Quam's pious influence, a boy of my wayward
propensities could scarcely have
been kept within tolerable bounds. There is no wonder I was indulged when we consider my situation as
last in the family and first in
the heart of my widowed mother, who, however, never let her feelings overcome her prudence, but kept
me within reasonable
bounds after Quam's death. While Quam lived, he was not satisfied to be parted from me the whole of
any night. He would get up
every night in sweet-potato time, and have some roasted by three or four o'clock, and then I was just
as regular to wake and my
sister must carry me out to Quam in the kitchen. There I would eat potatoes and ask him questions, and
we would chat over all our
concerns till near daylight, when I would tumble down on his bunk and finish the night in sleeping and
he in watching. These things
seem to me almost as if they happened last year. Old Quam's great indulgence in satisfying all my inquiries
to the best of his ability,
and never checking me in asking and inquiring, I have no doubt, the same was of essential service to
me. I have not a particle of
doubt that it gave me an early memory. I can well remember when two and a half years old, being held
one night in a door by my
sister to see the sawmill burn, which was say forty rods from the house. I remember the fire that flew
towards our house, and their
anxiety and precaution in extinguishing sparks on the roof on which was old Quam, and how my teeth chattered
with fear and cold. I
believe, too, that not only this early and definite memory was the result of his indulging all my inquiries,
but that it gave me great
facilities in attending to studies and in acquiring knowledge in after life.
"It is miserable treatment to rebuke a child who, from the affection of knowing, will ask a thousand
questions. Sometimes
burdensome, to be sure, but when we consider that upon that affection of knowing is built all the child's
advancement in knowledge
afterwards, how cruel it is to rebuke the inquiries of the infant. Many a parent has ruined his child
by this kind of discouragement,
and afterwards chastised him for not loving and attending to studies and for making slow progress therein,
when his own thoughtless
course had produced that apathy and inability. All innocent inquiries by infants and children at all
proper times should be indulged
and encouraged, how pestersome soever they may seem.
EARLY SCHOOLING OF ELIZABETH AND SAMUEL
"Being born among a dense slave population, and twelve miles from the nearest settlement of friends,
white children were very thinly
scattered, so that country schools could not be maintained. White children were sent from home for schooling.
I never knew a
school in that country except one quarter (which would be three months) kept by one Thomas Eceles, when
I was four and a half
years old. My sister and brother attended. I, however, under the tuition of my mother, learned so as
to read with ease at the age of
seven. Being divested of all playmates in childhood, induced a singular turn of mind, which may be seen
to this day, and which I shall
never be bereft of, were it desirable. I learned rapidly, never wore out or abused a book in my life.
I kept my first primer, toy books,
spelling books, slate, arithmetic, and without a leaf amiss, until I had a nephew old enough to use
them. I have sometimes regretted
giving them to him, as I was grieved to see they were soon gone when placed in other hands.
"Owing to the waywardness of my disposition, and evil propensities of my nature, I do think that
had it not been for the early
influences of old Quam and my mother, that I could not have been a man that society would have tolerated.
They took singular
pains to impress my mind with a horror of inflicting pain on even the meanest insect. When a child I
would cry to see one wounded. I
could not bear to witness the writhings of a conch, boiling to death in its own shell. That seemed to
be the only manner of killing
them. I could not bear to see fish struggling on the shore for breath, nor clams roasting for dinner.
To my early tuition may be
attributed the fact that, although in boyhood and youthfulness I was an inhabitant of the woods, in
the midst of and often annoyed
by wild animals, and I had a gun at command, I never shot at but four living creatures, all of which
escaped; and when I considered
that some of them might be seriously wounded and suffering in pain, and writhing in death, all thoughts
of shooting at animals were
abandoned. I always considered it fortunate that my early infancy, in which is laid the foundation of
the future man, fell into such
hands as old Quam and my mother; but, unfortunately, that while I have lost much of the good infantile
education, I have retained
much, if not most of that which was erroneous, and added of my own what is wrong. My early seclusion
from children induced a
singular turn of mind and propensity to be alone. This will show itself frequently in the eyes of others
to great disadvantage. Perhaps
my voluntary relinquishment of my right among the Friends at the age of 37 may in part be traced to
this source.
A BOND HELD BY A TORY
"The most severe stroke that I remember to have fallen on my mother was in 1799. She received information
that the heirs of one
Sam Connell were coming on us for debt, contracted before the Revolution. At a certain time, as I have
heard, my father expected
three vessels from England, that he had engaged to reload with naval stores. He had the loading on the
wharf, in Newbern, when a
long and tempestuous storm set into the mouth of the Neus River until it was so swollen as to float
off his loading. Much of it was
lost, and before he could collect enough more the vessels came, and of Sam Connell he purchased to the
value of seventy pounds,
for which he gave his bond. The Revolution commenced soon after. Connell was a Tory and ran off to England
with the bond. This
prevented its settlement. After Jay's treaty the heirs came upon us, not only for principal and interest
but compound interest.
Twenty-five or thirty years had swollen it to a considerable sum. However questionable the compulsion
of a widow, who had not
anything like her third at the final settlement of the estate, might be, mother was never the woman
to think that any circumstances
could justify debts being left unpaid while anything was remaining. I am proud to say that she never
got into the late fashion of
believing that the widow of a landholder or speculator ought to be wealthy, whether her husband was
ever really worth a cent or
not. The executors agreed to take the homestead and let her have all the remaining personal property.
She agreed to the proposal,
and in order to enable her to remove to the Northwest Territory she sold what the family could spare.
Her personal property sold
very low, as it was a time of general emigration.
FROM BEAUFORT TO ALEXANDRIA BY SAILING VESSEL
"In April, 1800, we sailed from Beaufort for Alexandria, in company with seventy other emigrants,
large and small, say twelve families.
We had one storm and were once becalmed in Core Sound, and had to wait about two weeks at Curritue Inlet
(now filled up) for a
wind to take us to sea. From thence to Alexandria we had a fine run, especially up the Potomac Bay.
While cooped up in the vessel
a circumstance happened to me that I shall never forget, and was always of use to me. One of the first
nights of the voyage I lost
my trousers, so that when it was time to dress in the morning my indispensables were non est inventis.
There were many of both
sexes present, for the schooner had very little loading but emigrants. The mortification felt for half
an hour at the accident was
never erased from my memory, and from that time to this, I never undress without knowing precisely where
my clothing is left.
During the storm we were in, the majority on board were seasick, and we had rather a disagreeable time
among, say forty or fifty
vomiting individuals. Neither that nor the rolling of the vessel affected me, as it happened. This is
mentioned as one of the
disagreeabilities of emigration that makes settling in the woods feel more comfortable by contrast.
At Alexandria we remained several
days before we got wagons to bring us out. Here everything was weighed. My weight was just 75 pounds.
THROUGH THE VIRGINIA MOUNTAINS
"We stopped here two weeks, on what I think was called Goose Creek in Virginia, before we could
be supplied with a wagon to cross
the mountains, in place of the one we occupied which belonged there. We stayed one night at Dinah Besor's
Tavern, at the foot of
the Blue Ridge Mountains. It was called Dinah Besor's house, because the gray mare was there the better
horse. Some of the boys
mounted a fine cherry tree, for which the old man gave them a scolding, lest they might break the limb.
I noticed the immense
number of whippoorwills that were here, and the difference in their note from what I was used to. Here
their cry resembled their
name, but in Carolina it resembled the words 'whip the widow whitcoak.' The mountain roads (if roads
they could be called, for pack
horses were still on them), were of the most dangerous and difficult. I have heard an old mountain tavernkeeper
say that although
the taverns were less than two miles apart, in years after we came, he has known many immigrant families
that stopped a night at
every tavern on the mountain. I recollect but few of our night stands distinctly, say Dinah Besor's,
Goose Creek, old Creeks, near the
South Branch, Thomlinson's, Besontown, and Simpkins, and Merritstown. Our company consisted of Joseph
Due, Levina Hall, and
Jonas Small, with their families.
SOJOURN AT FREDERICKTOWN, PA.
After a tedious journey, we all arrived safe at Fredericktown, Washington county, Pa., where we stopped
to await the opening of
the land office at Steubenville, Ohio. Here we found Horton Howard and family, who had come on the season
previous. Here also the
children had the whooping cough. Those whom we left at Alexandria came to Redstone old fort, ten miles
below Fredericktown,
where they sojourned for the same purpose; and although as we thought unfortunately detained, they were
first at their resting
place. We regretted much to leave them, but considered ourselves fortunate in being the first to start;
but, like many circumstances
in life, where appearances are not realities, they were fortunate in being left for a better and more
speedy conveyance.
"Jonas Small, Francis Mace, and several other families from Red Stone, returned to Carolina, dissatisfied
with the hills, vales and mud
of the Northwest, little dreaming of the level and open prairies of this valley. Horton Howard and family
started first from
Fredericktown.
THROUGH PENNSYLVANIA MOUNTAINS INTO OHIO
"Joseph Due, Livina Hall and ourselves made another start in September or early in October. We
started in the afternoon, and lay at
Benjamine Townsend's, on Fish Pot Run. We lay also at the Blueball, near Washington; at Rice's on the
Buffalo; and at Warren on the
Ohio. These are all the night stands I now recollect, in 55 miles. We arrived safe at John Leaf's, in
what is now called Concord
Settlement. From Warren, Joseph Due and Mrs. Hall proceeded up little Short Creek and stopped near where
Mount Pleasant now is,
in what is now called Concord Settlement. Four or five years previously five or six persons had squatted
and made small
improvements. The Friends, chiefly from Carolina, had taken the land at a clear sweep. Mr. Leaf lived
on a tract bought by Horton
Howard, since owned by Samuel Potts, and subsequently by William Millhouse. Horton Howard had turned
in on Mr. Leaf, and we
turned in on both.
"If anyone had an idea of the appearance of the remnants of a town that has been nearly destroyed
by fire, and the houseless
inhabitants turned in upon those who were left, they can form some idea of the squatters' cabins that
fall. It was a real harvest for
them, however, for they received the rhino for the privileges granted and work done, as well as in aid
of the immigrants in getting
cabins up, as for their improvements. This settlement is in Belmont County, on Glen's Run, about six
miles northwest of Wheeling, and
as much northeast of St. Clairsville. Immigrants poured in from different parts, cabins were put up
in every different direction,
women, children, and goods tumbled into them. The tide of immigration flowed like water through a breach
in a milldam. Everything
was bustle and confusion, and all at work that could work. In the midst of all this, the mumps, and
perhaps one or two other
diseases prevailed, and gave us a seasoning. Our cabin had been raised, covered, part of the cracks
chinked and part of the floor
laid when we moved in on Christmas day. There had not been a stick cut except in building the cabin.
OUR CABIN IN THE WOODS
"We had intended an inside chimney, for we thought the chimney ought to be in the house. We had
a log put across the whole width
of the cabin for a mantel, but when the floor was in we found it so low as not to answer, and removed
it. Here was a great change
for my mother and sister, as well as the rest, but particularly my mother. She was raised in the most
delicate manner in and near
London, and lived most of her time in affluence, and always comfortable. She was now in the wilderness,
surrounded by wild animals;
in a cabin with about half a floor, no door, no ceiling overhead, not even a tolerable sign for a fireplace,
the light of day and the
chilling winds of night passing between every two logs in the building, the cabin so high from the ground
that a bear, wolf, panther,
or any other animal less in size than a cow, could enter without even a squeeze. Such was our situation
on Thursday and Thursday
night, December 25, 1800, and which was bettered but by very slow degrees. We got the rest of the floor
laid in a few days, the
chinking of the cracks went on slowly, but the daubing could not proceed till weather more suitable,
which happened in a few days;
door-ways were sawed out and steps made of the logs, and the back of the chimney was raised up to the
mantel, but the funnel of
sticks and clay was delayed until spring.
"My mother had been weakly on our journey, and at Fredericktown was more seriously ill than I ever
knew her before or since. She
still lives, a monument of the Lord's mercy, and a bright illustration of the discipline of which the
human mind is susceptible. She has
been blind about eight years, and to my recollection she never complained of anything, but trusted all
to Divine Providence. She
now, at the age of ninety-five, waits her change with patience, is little or no trouble to anyone; enjoys
good health, a serene and
sound mind, and the age of dotage seems never to have overtaken her; never gives unnecessary pain or
trouble to anyone, and is
pleased when by repeating verses she learned when a girl, she can add to the happiness of the social
circle. She has been a woman
of strict economy and great industry, but never milked a cow, and perhaps never spun a thread in her
life, and scarcely ever
cooked, but was a great sewer and knitter. This she does now with great facility, saying that if she
could not knit she would be very
unhappy. She is very little of her time without her knitting, except on First Days, as she calls the
Sabbath. She was always a
member of the Society of Friends. She is much delighted with hearing the Word or any religious books
read.
OUR PIONEER FAMILY
Our family consisted of my mother, a sister of twenty-two, my brother past twenty-one and very weakly,
and myself, in my eleventh
year. Two years afterwards, Black Jenny followed us in company with my half-brother, Richard, and his
family. She lived two years
with us in Ohio, and died in the winter of 1803-4.
"In building our cabin it was set to front the north and south, my brother using my father's pocket
compass on the occasion. We had
no idea of living in a house that did not stand square with the earth itself. This argued our ignorance
of the comforts and
conveniences of a pioneer life. The position of the house, end to the hill, necessarily elevated the
lower end, and the determination
of having both a north and south door added much to the airiness of the domicile, particularly after
the green ash puncheons had
shrunk so as to have cracks in the floor and doors from one to two inches wide. At both the doors we
had high, unsteady, and
sometimes icy steps, made by piling up the logs cut out of the wall. We had, as the reader will see,
a window, if it could be called a
window, when, perhaps, it was the largest spot in the top, bottom, or sides of the cabin at which the
wind could not enter. It was
made by sawing out a log, placing sticks across, and then, by pasting an old newspaper over the hole,
and applying some hog's lard,
we had a kind of glazing which shed a most beautiful and mellow light across the cabin when the sun
shone on it. All other light
entered at the doors, cracks and chimney. Our cabin was twenty-four by eighteen. The west end was occupied
by two beds, the
center of each side by a door, and here our symmetry had to stop, for on the opposite side of the window,
made of clapboards,
supported on pins driven into the logs, were our shelves. Upon these shelves my sister displayed, in
ample order, a host of pewter
plates, basins, and dishes, and spoons, scoured and bright.
PIONEER UTENSILS AND FURNITURE
"It was none of your new-fangled pewter made of lead, but the best London pewter, which our father
himself bought of Townsend,
the manufacturer. These were the plates upon which you could hold your meat so as to cut it without
slipping and without dulling
your knife. But alas, the days of pewter plates and sharp dinner knives have passed away never to return.
To return to our internal
arrangements: A ladder of five rounds occupied the corner near the window. By this, when we got a floor
above, we could ascend.
Our chimney occupied most of the east end; pots and kettles opposite the window under the shelves, a
gun on hooks over the north
door. Four split-bottom chairs, three three-legged stools, and a small eight by ten looking-glass sloped
from the wall over a large
towel-and-comb case. These, with a clumsy shovel and a pair of tongs, made in Frederick, with one shank
straight, as the best
manufacture of pinches and blood-blisters, completed our furniture, except a spinning wheel and such
things as were necessary to
work with. It was absolutely necessary to have three-legged stools, as four legs of anything could not
all touch the floor at the
same time on account of the unevenness of a puncheon floor.
"The completion of our cabin went on slowly. The season was inclement, we were weak-handed and
weak-pocketed; in fact,
laborers were not to be had. We got our chimney up breast-high as soon as we could, and got our cabin
daubed as high as the
joists outside. It never was daubed on the inside, for my sister, who was very nice, could not consent
to 'live right next to the mud.'
My impression now is that the window was not constructed until spring, for until the sticks and clay
were put in the chimney we
could possibly have no need of a window; for the flood of light which always poured into the cabin from
the fireplace would have
extinguished our paper window, in the place of glass, and rendered it as useless as the moon at noonday.
We got a floor laid
overhead as soon as possible, perhaps in a month; but when it was laid, the reader will readily conceive
of its imperviousness to
wind or weather, when we mention that it was laid of loose clapboards split from a red oak, the stump
of which may be seen beyond
the cabin. That tree grew in the night, and so twisted that each board laid on two diagonally opposite
corners, and a cat might have
shaken every board on our ceiling. It may be well to inform the unlearned reader that clapboards are
such lumber as pioneers split
with a frow, and resemble barrel staves before they are shaved, but are split longer, wider and thinner;
of such our roof and ceiling
were composed.
PIONEER LUMBER
"Puncheons were planks made by splitting logs to about two and a half or three inches in thickness,
and hewing them on one or both
sides with a broad-axe. Of course our floor, doors, tables and stools were manufactured. The eavebearers
are those end logs which
project over to receive the butting poles, against which the lower tier of clapboards rest in forming
the roof. The trapping is the roof
timbers, composing the gable end; and the ribs, the ends of which appear in the drawing, being those
logs upon which the
clapboards lay. The trap logs are those of unequal length, above the eavebearers, which form the gable
ends, and upon which the
ribs rest. The weight poles are those small logs layed on the roof, which weigh down the course of clapboards
on which they lay and
against which the next course above is placed. The knees are pieces of heart timber placed above the
butting poles successively to
prevent the weight poles from rolling off. To many of our learned readers these explanations will appear
superfluous, but the Pioneer
may be read by persons much less enlightened on these subjects, and to such these explanations may be
of real service.
"It was evidently a mistake to put our chimney at the lower end of the house, for as soon as we
put the funnel on in the spring we
found that the back of our breastwork settled and was likely to topple our chimney down. This we might
have remedied by a kind of
framework had we thought of it and had tools to make it with. So scarce were our tools that our first
pair of bar posts were
morticed by pecking them on each side with a common axe and then, blowing coals in the holes, we burned
them through so as to
admit of the bars. But I do no think the framework to support the chimney was thought of. To prop it
with a pole first suggested
itself, at the foot of which was a large stake. These remained an incumbrance in the yard for years.
"There never was any unmixed good or unmixed evil that fell to the lot of men in the probationary
state. So our fireplace, being at
the East end, was much more like our parlor fireplace in Carolina: and besides this, while the chimney
was only breast high, we
should have been bacon before Candlemas had the chimney been in any other position; but situated as
it was, and the prevailing
winds that blew inside of the house, as well as outside, being from west to east, most of the smoke
was driven off except
occasionally an eddy which would bring smoke and flame full in our faces. One change of wind for a few
days made our cabin almost
uninhabitable. Here is presented an advantage of an open house. Let the wind be which way it would,
the smoke and ashes could
get out without opening doors and windows, and all that sort of trouble known at the present day whenever
a chimney seems to
draw best at the wrong end; besides this, a little breeze would not, as now, give us colds.
"We have heard that the position in sleeping makes a material difference in the soundness of it;
but which (to lay with the head
north or south) produces the sounder sleep we have forgotten. At any rate, my brother and I slept in
the southwest corner with our
heads to the south, and I remember well that from the time I lay down until I had to get up and go to
work only seemed about a
half-minute if so long. My mother and sister occupied the northwest corner, but as to the soundness
of their sleep I knew little,
there being no complaints. My brother and I took it in the healthy open air, while my mother and sister
still had a partiality for old
fashions and hung some kind of curtains on sticks suspended by strings over the joists. The curtains
were very likely partly, if not
wholly, of good old furniture check, which, with many other relics of times gone by, were treasured
by the family.
PIONEER BED CLOTHES
"There are two modes of keeping warm. One is to clothe thin, lie on straw or leaves, and let the
heart and lungs be active to keep
up the heat. The other, and at present the most fashionable one, is to clothe very warm, lie on feather
beds and let the heart and
lungs become lazy and of little account. The former was our plan, especially that of myself and brother,
perhaps not so much from
the choice of sound philosophy as from other circumstances. We soon found, however, that to make rag
carpeting, such as
sometimes covers kitchen floors now, and to sew two breadths of proper length together, was a good substitute
for blankets,
especially if there could be here and there a rag of red flannel, even if the rest were tow linen rags.
These cadders (for so we called
them) were of great help in bed, not so much from any warming qualities they possessed in themselves
as from their great ability to
press a sheet or blanket close, if we had any under them; and also by their gravitating propensities
they very materially aided the
imagination in coming to the conclusion that we were well covered. We would look upon our new cadder,
when we were so fortunate
as to get one, and especially if there were red stripes in it, with the same feeling of delight as a
modern belle does upon her new
Brussels carpet and piano.
"I had another source of comfort in cold weather, which I trust I never shall forget. My good old
mother (God bless her) never went
to bed in winter without seeing that the cadder was tucked close to the back and feet of her John; nor
would she suffer him to go
out in cold weather without his jacket. This, I sometimes thought, was rather officious interference
on her part, but like other giddy
children, I did not know, or rather I did not care, properly to appreciate her kindness. If I had taken
a cold or had been exposed
unusually she would see that my feet were soaked in warm water and that I had a hearty drink of warm
pennyroyal tea before going
to bed. The simple remedies of some of the pioneer women may be pitted against the shops of the druggists
for simple and effective
cures, and if their prescriptions were not as fashionable and costly as medicinal ones now, they sometimes
did much less harm.
A PIONEER LIBRARY
"The evenings of the first winter did not pass off as pleasantly as evenings afterward. We had
raised no tobacco to stem and twist,
no corn to shell, no turnips to scrape; we had no tow to spin into rope-yarn, nor straw to plait for
hats, and we had come so late
we could get but few walnuts to crack. We had, however, the Bible, George Fox's Journal, Barkley's Apology,
and a number of books,
all better than much of the fashionable reading of the present day, from which, after reading, the reader
finds he has gained
nothing, while his understanding has been made the dupe of the writer's fancy, that while reading he
had given himself up to be led
in mazes of fictitious imagination and lost his taste for solid reading, as frothy luxuries destroy
the appetite for wholesome food. To
our stock of books were soon after added a borrowed copy of the Pilgrim's Progress, which we read twice
through without stopping.
The first winter our living was truly scanty and hard; but even this winter had its felicities. We had
part of a barrel of flour which we
had brought from Fredericktown. Besides this, we had part of a jar of hog's lard brought from old Carolina;
not the tasteless stuff
which now goes by that name, but pure leaf lard, taken from hogs raised on pine roots and fattened on
sweet potatoes, and into
which, while rendering, were immersed the boughs of the fragrant bay tree that imparted to the lard
a rich flavor. Of that flour,
shortened with this lard, my sister every Sunday morning, and at no other time, made short biscuit for
breakfast--not these greasy
gum-elastic biscuit we mostly meet with now, rolled out with a pin or cut out with a cutter; or those
that are, perhaps, speckled by
or puffed up with refined lye called salaeratus, but made out, one by one, in her fair hands, placed
in neat juxtaposition in a skillet or
spider, pricked with a fork to prevent blistering, and baked before an open fire, not half-baked and
half-stewed in a cooking stove. If
all the pleasures and happiness imparted to the inhabitants of Cincinnati for one week, by all the ice
creams and other nicknames,
could be accumulated in the mind of one individual, I conceive it would hardly equal what I felt between
the time the process of
making them began in the house and the process of digesting them ended in my stomach.
MY SISTER ELIZABETH'S BISCUITS
"I do not believe that bankers, brokers, and misers could, from the sight of gold, experience such
feelings of delight as I felt at the
sight of the first skillet full, piled on a plate by the fire awaiting the cooking of the second. To
attempt to describe the felicity of
eating these breakfasts is useless, when I cannot convey even a tolerable idea of the happiness of anticipation.
Those breakfasts
made the Sabbath doubly dear and kept us in good humor all the week, thinking of the past, and anticipating
the future. If there is
any way to enjoy that day that exceeds all others, of a temporal nature, it is to reserve all the good
things to be enjoyed in it, and
in idea to be associated with it, and for which we thank the Giver of all good things. The relish of
these biscuits was that of real
temperance in the use of food.
AMIDST THE FOREST PRIMEVAL
"The reader is not to suppose from anything we say that a log cabin life in the woods produces
unalloyed happiness. This is not to
be found in a palace in a crowded city, log cabin, nor yet in a Fourier association. Every advantage
seems to bring with it a
disadvantage, to give it a relish by contrast. In the ordering of a good Providence, the winter was
open but windy. While the wind
was of great use in driving the smoke and ashes out of our cabin, it shook terribly the timber standing
almost over us. We were
sometimes much and needlessly alarmed. We had never seen a dangerous looking tree near a dwelling, but
here we were surrounded
by tall giants of the forest, waving their boughs and uniting their brows over us, as if in defiance
of our disturbing their repose and
usurping their long and uncontested pre-emption rights. The beech on the left often shook his bushy
head over us as if in absolute
disapprobation of our settling there, threatening to crush us if we did not pack up and start. The walnut
over the spring branch
stood high and straight; no one could tell which way it inclined, but all concluded that if it had a
preference it was in favor of
quartering on our cabin. We got assistance to cut it down. The axeman doubted his ability to control
its direction, by reason that he
must necessarily cut it almost off before it would fall. He thought by felling the tree in the direction
of the reader [a picture
accompanied the article], along near the chimney, and thus favor the little lean it seemed to have,
would be the means of saving
the cabin. He was successful. Part of the stump still stands. These, and all other dangerous trees,
were got down without other
damage than many frights and frequent desertions of the premises by the family, while the trees were
being cut. The ash beyond
the house crossed the scarf and fell on the cabin but without damage.
FORTY-TWO YEARS LATER
"We visited the premises in August, 1842, to take a sketch and found it, as well as the country
around, amazingly altered. In place
of the towering beech on the left stands a fine brick house, owned and occupied by Joseph Parker. Instead
of a view confined to a
few rods by a dense forest the tops of ridges and knobs may now be seen for miles, resembling a slanting
view across a nest of
eggs. Not one of the trees in the drawing now remain. Well do I remember the rude figure of a man which
I cut on the beech to the
left of, and in the distance beyond the walnut, as well as the stormy night and the tremendous clap
of thunder that shivered the
ash, seen a little more to the left. The black locust, also, that is seen beyond the cabin leaning to
the left is remembered. It was
considered to be a valuable tree and was allowed to stand after other trees were cut. Oft have I looked
at its slim body and
proportionably towering height. At length fire got around it, and as is the case with every hypocrite
under persecution, being rotten-hearted, it burned down. I measured its length; it was just ninety feet,
and to this day in estimating heights, I refer to the
appearance of that locust and a stump of eighty feet which was also measured.
"The little hickory between the house and spring was a mere hoop pole and we saved it. It grew
very thriftily, and the last time I
saw it the finest shelibarks graced its top; but like many other things, it had but a short life after
a promising youthfulness. It, too,
is gone as well as the white walnut which stood over the spring, and the sprout on which the spring
gourd was wont to hang. But
the fine, the clear, the gushing fountain of cold limestone water is still there in the same shallow
depression, and there its health
giving stream will remain and run long after Miller and his theory of the end of time happening this
year will both be consigned to
oblivion.
VOICES IN THE NIGHT
"The monotony of the time for several of the first years was broken and enlivened by the howl of
wild beasts. The wolves howling
around us seemed to moan their inability to drive us from their long and undisputed domain. The bears,
panthers and deer seemingly
got miffed at our approach or the partiality of the hunters, and but seldom troubled us. We did not
hunt for them. The wildcat,
raccoon, possum, hornet, yellow-jacket, rattlesnake, copperhead, nettle, and a host of small things
which seemed in part to balance
the amount of pioneer happiness, held on to their rights until driven out gradually by the united efforts
of the pioneers, who, like a
band of brothers, mutually aided each other in the great work. These things, as well as getting their
bread, kept them too busy for
lawsuits, crimes and speculations and made them happy.
OUR DAILY BREAD
"One bag of meal would make a whole family rejoicingly happy and thankful then, when a loaded East
Indiaman will fail to do it now,
and is passed off as a common business transaction without ever once thinking of the Giver, so independent
have we become in the
short space of forty years. Having got out of the wilderness in less time than the children of Israel,
we seem to be even more
forgetful and unthankful than they.
"When spring was fully come, and our little patch of corn (three acres) put in among the beech
roots, which at every step
contended with the shovel and plough for the right of soil, and held it, too, we enlarged our stock
of conveniences. As soon as bark
would run (peel off) we could make ropes and bark boxes. These we stood in great need of, as such things
as bureaus, stands,
wardrobes, or even barrels, were not to be had. The manner of making ropes of linnbark was to cut the
bark in strips of convenient
length, and water-rot it in the same manner as rotting flax hemp.
PIONEER ROPE AND ORNAMENTS
When this was done the inside bark would peel off and split up so fine as to make a pretty considerably
rough and good-for-but-little
kind of a rope. Of this, however, we were very glad, and let no ship-owner with his grass ropes laugh
at us. We made two kinds of
boxes for furniture; one kind was of hickory bark with the outside shaved off. This we would take off
all around the tree, the size of
which would determine the caliber of our box. In the one end we would place a flat piece of bark or
puncheon, cut round to fit in the
bark, which stood on end, the same as when on the tree. There was little need of hooping, as the strength
of the bark would keep
that all right enough. Its shrinkage would make the top unsightly in a parlor nowadays, but then they
were considered quite an
addition to the furniture. A much finer article was made of slippery elm bark, shaved smooth and with
the inside out, bent round and
sewed together where the ends of the hoop or main bark lapped over. The length of the bark was around
the box and inside out. A
bottom was made of a piece of the same bark dried flat, and a lid like that of a common band box, made
in the same way. This was
the finest furniture in a lady's dressing room; and then, as now with the finest furniture, the lapped
or sewed side was turned to the
wall and the prettiest part to the spectator. They were usually made oval, and while the bark was green
it was easily ornamented
with drawings of birds, trees, etc., agreeably to the taste and skill of the fair manufacturer. As we
belonged to the Society of
Friends, it may be fairly presumed that our band-boxes were not thus ornamented. Many a shy glance would
be cast at the new
band boxes, and it is hoped that no modern belle will laugh, because a pioneer Miss might be proud of
her new band box. 'For it is
just as easy to be proud of such things, and as much sin, too, as to be proud of a new dressing table,
glass, etc.
"On the other hand, it is quite as easy to be happy, and easier to be properly thankful, for the
small favors in the woods than it is
now for a pampered Miss to be happy with, or thankful for, all the finery of her toilet. The amount
of happiness received or
acknowledgement to the Giver is by no means regulated by the appearance or cost of the article.
"To the above store of bark ropes and bark boxes must be added a few gums before the farmer considered
himself comfortably fixed.
It may be well to inform the unlearned reader that gums are hollow trees cut off, with puncheons pinned
on or fitted in one end, to
answer in the place of barrels.
CHARACTER DEVELOPED BY HARDSHIP
"The privations of a Pioneer life contract the wants of man almost to total extinction and allow
him means of charity and
benevolence. Sufferings ennoble his feelings, and the frequent necessity for united effort at house
raisings, log rollings, corn
huskings, etc., produced in him habitual charity, almost unknown in these days of luxury, among the
many tyrannical wants of
artificial tastes and vitiated appetites. We have now but little time left to think of good, and still
less to appreciate it. Our system of
action now seems to be a general scramble for the spoil. From the reverend divine who looks upon the
fatness of his salary as being
the good of his profession, down through all the grades of speculators, swindlers and jockeys, whose
maxim is 'their eyes is their
market,' the leading principles are near akin, if not the very same. Most. If not all, of these, if
it were not for public opinion, would
cheat their dim-sighted mothers out of their good spectacles by giving them empty frames in trading
and then brag of their skill in
cheating. There are many honorable exceptions to the too prevalent system of grabbing.
"That system reminds us of the scramble which went on for years among the squirrels, raccoons and
groundhogs for our corn crops,
and frequently they left us little except the husks, and our path around the field made in our own defense.
GETTING OUT OF THE WOODS
"We settled on beech land, which took much effort to clear. We could do no better than clear out
the smaller stuff and burn the
brush, etc., around the beeches which, in spite of the girdling and burning we could do to them, would
leaf out the first year, and
often a little the second. The land, however, was very rich, and would bring better corn than might
be expected. We had to tend it
principally with the hoe, that is, to chop down the nettles, the water-weed and the touch-me-not grass;
earless lamb's quarters and
Spanish needles were reserved to pester the better prepared farmer. We cleared a small turnip patch,
which we got in about the
10th of August. We sowed in timothy seed, which took well the next year. We had a little hay; besides,
the tops and blades of the
corn were also carefully saved for our horses, cows, and the two sheep. The turnips were sweet and good,
and in the fall we took
care to gather walnuts and hickory nuts which were very abundant. These, with the turnips which we scraped,
supplied the place of
fruit. I have always been partial to scraped turnips, and could now beat any three dandies at scraping
them. Johnny-cake, also,
when we had meal to make it of, helped to make up our evening's repast. The Sunday morning biscuit had
all evaporated, but the
loss was partially supplied by the nuts and turnips. Our regular supper was mush and milk, and by the
time we had shelled our corn,
stemmed tobacco, and plaited straw to make hats, etc., the mush and milk had seemingly decamped from
the neighborhood of our
ribs.
THE PIONEER'S STAND-BY
"To relieve this difficulty my brother and I would bake a thin Johnny-cake, part of which we would
eat, and leave the rest till the
morning. At daylight we would eat the balance as we walked from the house to work. The methods of eating
mush and milk were
various. Some would sit around the pot, and everyone take therefrom himself. Some would set a table
and each have his tincup of
milk, and with a pewter spoon take just as much mush from the dish or the pot as if it was on the table,
as he thought would fill his
mouth or throat; then lowering it into the milk would take some to wash it down. This method kept the
milk cool, and by frequent
repetitions the pioneers would contract a faculty of correctly estimating the proper amount of each.
Others would mix mush and milk
together. Many an urchin who was wont to hit his little brother or sister with a spoon in quarrel around
the mush pot on the floor, in
after life learned to quarrel on the floor of Congress, or to exchange shots on what is sometimes called
'the field of honor.' So quick,
if not magical, has been the transition of this country. To get grinding done was often a great difficulty
by reason of the scarcity of
mills, the freezes in winter and droughts in summer. We had often to manufacture meal (when we had corn)
in any way we could get
the corn to pieces. We soaked and pounded it, we shaved it, we planed it, and, at the proper season
grated it.
"When one of our neighbors got a hand mill it was thought quite an acquisition to the neighborhood;
no need then of steam doctors.
We could take hand mill sweats of our own when we pleased, nor of homeopaths, for our stomachs needed
larger doses; nor of the
professional physicians, for white walnut bark boiled and the decoction stewed down was the fashionable
medicine used by those
unfashionable ones who chanced to have a qualm. As for dyspepsia and the like, saw mills might as well
be suspected of having it. In
after years, when in time of freezing or drought, we could get grinding by waiting for our turn no more
than one day and a night at a
horse-mill we thought ourselves happy.
"To save meal we often made pumpkin bread. When meal was scarce, the pumpkin would so predominate
as to render it next to
impossible to tell our bread from that article either by taste, looks, or the amount of nutriment it
contained. To rise from the table
with a good appetite is said to be healthy, and with some is said to be fashionable. What then does
it signify to be hungry for a
month at a time when it is not only health y but fashionable? Beside all this, the sight of a bag of
meal when it was scarce made the
family feel more glad and thankful to Heaven than a whole boatload would at the present time.
"Salt was $5.00 per bushel, and we used none in our corn bread, which we soon liked as well without
it. Often has sweat ran into my
mouth, which tasted as fresh and flat as distilled water. What meat we had at first was fresh, and but
little of that; for had we been
hunters we had no time to practice it.
LIGHT FOR WINTER EVENINGS
We had no candles, and cared but little about them except for summer use. In Carolina we had the real
fat light wood, not merely
pine knots, but the fat straight pine. This, from the brilliancy of our parlor on winter evenings, might
be supposed to put, not only
candles, lamps, camphine, Greenough's chemical oil, but even gas itself to blush. In the west we had
not this, but my business was
to ramble the woods every evening for season sticks, or the bark of the shelly hickory for light.
"'Tis true that our light was not even as good as candles, but we got along without fretting, for
we depended more upon the
goodness of our eyes than we did upon the brilliancy of the light. At that day none but the aged wore
glasses. My mother said she
injured her eyes by the early use of them. Such a thing as a young dandy of either sex peering through
gold frame concaves till their
eyes push out like the lumps on calves' heads before the horns appear was not known. The more concaves
are indulged in the more
the eyes will push out, for the shape of the eye will accommodate itself to the lens. The use of glasses
either concave or convex
nine times in ten injure both eyes and the sight, and is a species of intemperance. If you physic for
every complaint you will soon
lose your health. If you never exercise your muscles to fatigue they will soon become weak; so with
the eye. Be afraid of fatiguing
it, aid it with glasses so as never to put its power to test, and it will soon be useless without them.
I am now in my 54th year and
have never used a glass and never shall unless accident or disease should set upon my eyes. I write
and read no little. My wife had
so indulged her eyes by the use of glasses as five years ago to require those of 16-inch focus. My remonstrance
became strong and
she consented to follow my directions. The consequence is that she has not used a glass for four years,
although she sews, reads,
threads her needle and often by candle light. Who would not prefer to be a Pioneer and enjoy all his
sources of happiness than to be
a slave of fashion or indolence and suffer heat, cold, and disease to serve it?
WORK FOR WINTER EVENINGS
"One of my employments in winter evenings, after we raised flax, was the spinning of rope yarn
from the coarsest swingling tow to
make bed cords for sale. Swingling tow is a corruption of singling tow, as swingle tree is of single
tree. The manner of spinning rope
yarn was by means of a drum, which turned on a horizontal shaft, driven into a hole in one of the cabin
logs near the fire. The yarn
was hitched to a nail on one side of the circumference next to me. By taking an oblique direction and
keeping up a regular jerking or
pulling of the threads the drum was kept in constant motion, and thus the twisting and pulling out went
on regularly and
simultaneously until the length of the walk was taken up. Then by winding the yarn first on my forearm
and from that on the drum I
was ready to spin another thread. A late improvement of this kind of Pioneer spinning is called political
wire working, and had I kept
pace with the improvements of the age I might at present have been a most expert political demagogue
of wealth and influence.
"The unlearned reader might inquire what we did with the finer kinds of tow. It is well enough
to apprize him that next to rope yarn in
fineness was filling for trousers and aprons; next finer, warp for the same and filling for shirts and
frocks; next finer, of tow thread,
warp for shirts and frocks, unless some of the higher grades of society would use flax thread. Linen
shirts, especially seven hundred,
was counted the very top of the pot, and the one who wore an eight hundred linen shirt was counted a
dandy. He was not called a
dandy, for the word was unknown, as well as the refined which bears that name. Pioneers found it to
their advantage to wear tow
linen and eat skim milk and sell their flax, linen and butter.
PIONEER CLOTHING
"Frocks were a short kind of shirt worn over the trousers. We saved our shirts by pulling them
off in warm weather and wearing
nothing in the daytime but our hats made of straw, our frocks and our trousers. It will be thus perceived
that these things took
place before the days of suspenders, when every one's trousers lacked about two inches of reaching up
to where the waistcoat
reached down. It was counted no extraordinary sight, and no matter of merriment, to see the shirt work
out over all the waistband
two or three inches and hang in a graceful festoon around the waist. Suspenders soon became a part of
the clothing, and were a
real improvement in dress. Not so with the underfoot strap of the dandy, the upward strain of which,
together with the ascentional
power of vanity in the walking balloon, seems nearly to lift him from the ground.
"The girls had forms without bustles, and rosy cheeks without paint. Those who are thin, lean,
and colorless from being slaves to
idleness or fashion are, to some extent, excusable for endeavoring to be artificially what the pioneer
girls were naturally; who, had
they needed lacing, might have used tow strings, and, if bran were used for bustles, might have curtailed
their suppers. Those
circumstances which frequently occasioned the bran to be eaten after the flour was gone laced tight
enough without silk cord or
bone-sets, and prevented that state of things which sometimes makes it necessary to eat both flour and
bran together as medicine.
And requires bran or straw outside to make the shape respectable.
SAVING SHOE LEATHER
"Not only about the farm, but also to meeting, the younger part of families, and even men, went
barefoot in summer. The young
women carried their shoes and stockings, if they had them, in their hands until they got in sight of
the meeting house, where, sitting
on a log, they shod themselves for meeting; and at the same place, after meeting, they unshod themselves
for a walk home,
perhaps one or two miles. Whether shoes, stockings or even bonnets were to be had or not, meeting must
be attended. Let those
who cannot attend church without a new bonnet, who cannot go two or three square, because it is so cold,
or so rainy, or so
sunny, not laugh at the zeal of those pioneers for religion. Religion barefoot is as acceptable as religion
shod, and as easily come at,
too. If those barefoot girls could not knit as fine lace they could knit better stockings. If they could
not cut as fine figures in dance,
they could make healthier mothers and housewives; and if they could not make as fine music, they could
sing lullaby to much better
effect. It is to be noted that among the pioneer, all was neither goodness or happiness. It was as easy
to go to church for fashion's
sake, or to see and be seen, then as now; in fact, the ways of Heaven are equal, but man very unequally
acts the part on earth.
EDIBLES FOR WINTER EVENINGS
"Turnips, walnuts and hickory nuts supplied the place of fruit till peaches were raised. In five
or six years we sometimes went to
Martin's Ferry on the Ohio to pick peaches for the owner, who had them distilled. We got a bushel of
apples for each day's work in
picking peaches. These were kept for particular eating, as if they had contained seeds of gold. Their
extreme scarcity made them
seem valuable and stand next to the short biscuit that were so valued in times gone by. Paw-paws were
eaten in their season.
When we got an abundance of apples they seemed to lose their flavor and relish. It is the same with
everything but heaven and
virtue, which never fail, but greatly increase in relish with their abundance and stand in direct contact
with all sublunary good.
DOMESTIC ANIMALS
"Mrs. Leaf gave me a beautiful white, black and yellow kitten, which made the best squirrel catcher
in the country. Mice and rats
there were none. She was worth money and lived fifteen years. We bought a heifer in the same Fall of
1800, which made us a fine
cow; she lived about as long as the cat. Pasturage was abundant in summer, being composed mostly of
nettles, waist high, which
made us fine greens, and thus served for both the cow and her owner, and yet, like everything else on
earth, seemed to balance the
account by stinging us at every turn. Even the good pasturage of this new country, considered as a pasture,
had its balancing
properties, for the same rich soil from which sprang nettles and pasture in such abundance brought forth
also the ramps of wild
garlic, which springing first were devoured by the cows. Cows could not be contained for want of fences,
nor dared we neglect
milking lest they might go dry; and for two or three weeks cows were milked in pails and the milk thrown
out and given to the hogs.
We never milked on the ground, as it seemed a pity and some said it was bad luck. We never heard of
milk sickness or we might
have been less disposed to fret at the ramps, and might have been thankful for being blessed with a
disadvantage less frightful. Our
axe handles were straight and egg-shaped. Whether the oval form and the quick bulbous ends of the present
day is an improvement
or not is immaterial here to inquire, but had we used the present form then I should at times have been
fixed to the axe. The hand
that holds this pen had, before it felt the cold of twelve winters, been so benumbed by chopping in
the cold as to have the fingers
set to the handle, making it necessary to slip them off at the end, which could not have been done were
they of the present shape.
After the fingers were off a little rubbing and stretching from the other hand would restore them, but
would not dry up the blood nor
heal the chaps with which they were covered. These and kindred things are well calculated to make one,
by contrast, appreciate
the blessings of leisure and ease until they become too common, when we lose our relish of them, and
the gratitude we ought to feel
for time even to think.
RICHARD WILLIAMS' SCHOOL
"On Saturday, July 31st, 1802, my brother Richard arrived at our cabin. He had been a sea captain
for many years, and at the age of
32 abandoned his seafaring life. I was exactly 12 years old to an hour when he arrived. He had left
his family at or near Wheeling. His
arrival was greeted as a great acquisition to the settlement, as he had a good education. He was born
under auspicious
circumstances. The neighbors soon had him a cabin up near the meeting house and a school opened. I had
never been sent to
school. He put me in three syllables in Dilworth's spelling book. I think the first lesson commenced
with the word 'abandon,' and I
abandoned that lesson, and that book, for I swallowed the whole of it very soon. I never did continue
my studies to a single lesson
at school, but must know all the book contained. The teachers could keep me back in recitation, but
not in knowing. I soon found
that the head of the class was my place by pre-emption.
"After the quarter was out, sugar making, land clearing, corn planting, etc., put an end to my
regular schooling, but not to my
progress. Within the hour allowed for rest at noon I used to run a mile over the deepest and steepest
kind of a hollow to spell at
school. Having missed the evening spellings, I always began foot, but that did not annoy me, nor prevent
me from ending head,
when the mile must again be run over dinner and I to my work. One spring, while I was hewing the side
of a stump to set a flax
brake, I was fortunate enough to split the middle toe of my right foot. Although a stiff joint, a large,
crooked toe and a bad nail was
the consequence, I always counted myself fortunate under the accident, for it gave me a chance of going
to school a quarter. It
was sore two months and a half, most of which time I never touched the forepart of my foot to the ground
but walked to the
school, when the bare mention that my foot would be no worse hurt to stay at home would insult me. It
was not altogether, and
perhaps not half, the love of study that made me love school. There was in my composition a good portion
of the love of play and
frolic. Subsequently a strained wrist and strained ankle, as well as a disease of one of my heels, which
gave me great pain for four
months, baffled the skill of Doctor Hamilton of Mount Pleasant, were all, with other wounds and bruises,
counted as blessings
because they gave me better opportunities for studies.
JOHN MEETS A GAY DECEIVER
"Going home from school one evening, I took a different route. Upon the hillside above me I saw
a most beautiful white and black
lively animal with a fine bush. I thought surely no one had ever before seen so fine a frisk. Agreeably
to a prevailing trait in my
youthful character, which determined me never to leave any mystery in a book or on land without knowing
something more about it,
I took two clubs in my hand and went to reconnoiter his whereabouts. On approaching I perceived by the
smell that I heard of the
animal before, but as I never backed out because difficulties were presented, the approach was continued
unperceived until within a
few paces of him. He then discovered me and ran very impertinently towards me and looking me fully in
the face, seemed to ask
what I wanted. Keeping my ground, he made for a retreat, when the temptation to throw became too strong.
The last I saw of him
was just as the club was about to hit him, when he, by a way peculiarly his own, administered a perfume
to my body not so
agreeable as Bergamot, but certainly preferable to the breath of a confirmed sop in the use of tobacco
or alcoholic spirits. He also at
one and the same operation administered eye water to both eyes. It was for a few minutes powerful in
effect, if not lasting in
efficacy. In this respect, however, it was not behind most of the nostrums sold by less skillful quacks,
and in one respect at least
very much like many of them, I pocketed the joke and went home laughing about it. It was a lesson. Had
I made the best use of it
and taken warning from it never again to be so much deceived by appearances, it might have saved me
some trouble; but I thought
more of Blair's maxim that it was better to be imposed upon than to foster a suspicious disposition,
and have let others impose upon
me by serious appearances very frequently since. I was not in quite as good a humor about it as might
be supposed from the face I
put on, for I silently vowed vengeance on the next of the race I met with. The vow was faithfully redeemed
about five years
afterwards without my being the least incommoded. By this time I was 19, and knew much better how to
conduct an affair on the
field of honor.
"My faithful and industrious sister did much for us as she did afterwards for her own family by
weaving. In the Spring of 1804 she and
also my brother got married, the one to Sarah Arnold, and the other to Joseph Garretson, whose autograph
our readers have seen.
The circumstances of our family very much changed by these movements. The infants, instead of webs and
nursing, exchanged for
weaving. Change and contrast are both necessary to happiness, and novelty has most frequently a charm
independent of things
changed.
THE FOLLY OF YOUTH
"On October 24th, 1804, my brother and I went out to the Friends settlement to a corn husking.
As was common, the heap was
divided. We were chosen on different sides. They had peach brandy, and handed it around freely. I thought
that to be a man I must
drink when men drank, and I got most comfortably drunk. The last of the husking I remembered was throwing
corn in the husk. Total
abstinence from all remembrance overtook me until they let me fall in carrying me to the house. Again
I relapsed into total
forgetfulness until three o'clock, when I awoke with the chimney at the wrong end of the house, my brain
turned topsy turvy, and
my feelings otherwise much worse than when I took the quack medicine above described. My brother had
gone home. I followed him
at daylight and joined him at work. I expected surely that friends would disown me and was afraid to
go to meeting or see an
overseer for months. I marked the day in the almanac and determined never to be so beastly again, which
resolution has not yet
been broken.
"About the same time, like other boys of that age, I wanted to be a man or as near like one as
possible, so I tried to chew tobacco.
This made me most uncommonly sick. When I got over that spree I determined to be a man without it or
not at all. To use neither
spirits or tobacco is sometimes very uncomfortable, for a person cannot always keep clear of the breath
and stench of those who
are continued in the use of one or both. In such situation I have been nauseously sick and ready to
say:
Oh wad some power the giftie gie us
To smell ourselves as others smell us;
It wad from sie habits frae us
And make us men.
SCHOOLING OBTAINED UNDER DIFFICULTIES
"I went to several teachers, the last of which was the present venerable citizen of Dayton, Aquillia
M. Bolton. After going to school
in all thirteen months and eighteen days - three months of which time was to him - I graduated, not
by receiving parchment in form,
but by again taking upon me my usual occupation of farming. While I was going to his school I walked
near two miles, morning and
evening, and chopped wood and fed cattle for my boarding. I often thought that if I only had the opportunities
of some boys, how
happy I would be. I would then check such a rising complaint by thinking that had I their chances ten
to one I would be just as idle
as they.
"Previous to this last quarter I signified to a teacher a wish to learn surveying. He loaned me
the books and I gathered some of
father's small instruments. We had a large crop in, but I knew I could find time. Surveying was all
wrought out that summer and, in
the old fashion, written down. In my book I made this memorandum: 'I have in the last three days calculated,
plotted and written
down 14 pages of Gibson's Surveying, besides plowing 10 acres of corn.' I counted that good work. When
I entered Bolton's school I
was either well versed in surveying and its kindred mathematics, or else he said what he did not think,
or thought what he did not
know.
"In my 22nd year I took up school near Barnesville, where the bright blue eyes of one of my pupils,
Sarah Patterson by name (the
same eyes which don't wear glasses now), together with her rosy cheeks, seemed to monopolize in themselves
all that was good,
bright or pretty in Euclid, Ferguson, Newton, Bacon, Martin, and a host of other authors that were dear
to me. The purpose of my
life seemed to be changed. Here let me drop a caution to the fair lasses, not to let their eyes shine
too sparkingly around, for they
know not what harm they might do. How many good scholars in prospect they might spoil, and how much
the course of life might be
changed by them?
"In removing to Fredericktown before I was 10, somewhere near Merritstown, Fayette County, I saw
a most beautiful valley of
meadow. This impression made me determine in after life to live in Pennsylvania, and was the moving
cause of my living in that state
twelve years.
EXPERIENCE AS A SURVEYOR
"In 1824 I entered Shriver's Brigade as engineer under the general government in the examinations
of the Chesapeake and Ohio
Canal. J. Knight and I were the first two who commenced that work, and here it might be said I was again
in the woods and again a
pioneer. Two campaigns were spent in those examinations, until the country from the very head of the
Youhagany to Pittsburg,
became familiar. Those examinations convinced me that a canal from Cumberland to the Youghagany never
could be constructed,
but a railroad throughout the middle section to supply its place could - an opinion I have yet seen
no cause to change. At that time
it was unpopular to mention railroads in any degree of connections with canals. General Simon Bernard
was chief engineer of our
department, a man truly distinguished for his industry, as he was for excellent qualities.
"In 1826 I became the assistant of C. W. Wever, Esq., in the construction of the National road
in Ohio, east of Zanesville. Here it
was my fortune again to be a pioneer, for there were then no McAdamized roads in the West, and none
in the United States except
twelve miles of about half an experiment in Maryland. It was my business to superintend the gradation
and McAdamizing for the
United States until 1829, when I commenced the Maysville turnpike, which I superintended the whole six
years of its construction.
That road, together with the engineering of divers roads in Kentucky and several diverging from this
city, Cincinnati, and some other
roads in this state, will long remain as marks of 17 years' labor, and will be looked upon as starting
points from which it may be seen
whether the science of road making has advanced or retrograded.
A QUIVER FULL
"Ten fine children in times past sat around my table. Other kinds of wealth I never was an adept
at either collecting or keeping
together. The lack of such a trait of character I shall not regret until it is seen that money bestows
merit, or that the value of the
man is in direct proportion to the weight of his purse. Having seen some men do more good with one dollar
than others with their
thousands, the conclusion has been forced upon me that riches are more frequently detriments than blessings.
This is, however, not
the fault of the property, but of those who possess it.
"Thus, kind reader, you will see that we have in this article endeavored to connect the past with
the present, not only by the direct
line of survey, but by frequent offsets from the main line as we proceeded. All we have said was thought
either to belong to the
history of the country, past or present, or to bear materially upon it until the time we again assumed
the task of pioneer in
publication by starting the first purely historical periodical that was ever attempted.
JOHN SHOEBRIDGE WILLIAMS,
Of Cincinnati, Ohio, 1843."
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