Greetings:
I am your recently-appointed (in March) Town of Marshall
Historian, to succeed Dorothy McConnell, who has retired. Believe me, she's a
hard act to follow; however, I am doing my best to get acquainted with the
history of the Town of Marshall (did you know the Town is named in honor of Chief
Justice John Marshall, who served from 1801-1835? I didn't until I started
doing some serious reading). Therefore, operating on the assumption local
history may be a closed book to some, I am starting with the basics: the
founding the Town of Marshall. If there are corrections to be made, please
email me, Janet Dangler, at townofmarshallblooger@gmail.
This blog is also intended to keep residents up-to-date on what is going on around the town: new buildings, events which are scheduled. For that I need your help - please let me know your news and it will appear on this blog. You can email or call me at 841-4707 and I'll be glad to answer questions!
First of all, the sympathy of the community is extended to the family of Lois Goodson Cole, who passed away Friday, September 11, 2015 at the Presbyterian Home. Her funeral was Tuesday, September 15, at Owens-Pavlot Funeral Home. Lois leaves a son Charles and a daughter Cindy Gall of Deansboro; her grandchildren; her sister Mary Lloyd and brother Harry Goodson, and lots of nephews and nieces.
The Apple Fest sponsored by the Women's Fellowship of the Congregational United Church of Christ will be September 27. Along with apple pies from the church's kitchen will be home baked goods with an apple theme, as well as apples and cider for sale. The day starts at 10:00.
Mark your calendars for three events coming up. October 3 is the date of the United Methodist Church turkey supper, with all the fixings topped off with apple or pumpkin pie. On the 22nd will be the Senior's Night Out, sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Committee, with chicken on biscuits followed by Bingo. The 24th will be the Congregational UCC Church's annual turkey supper.
Many have noticed the new sign gracing the front of the Congregational church. It was donated by Chuck Morris in loving memory of his parents, John and Mary Alice Morris. The Morris family lived on Shanley Road.
The new pole barn by Buell's Fuel will be used for storage. The building went up so quickly: one day it was grass; then wooden poles; then metal cladding; and finally the trusses.
And now on to the history of the Town of Marshall:
Today, it is generally agreed that Deansboro in 2015 is the
hub - the seat, as it were - of the Town of Marshall. It wasn't always that
way, though. The first settlers in the Town of Marshall - known as the Town of
Paris at first (the Town of Kirkland was part of the Town of Paris, and then
the Town of Marshall was incorporated from the Town of Kirkland in 1829) - were
the Brothertown Indians, made up of different tribes (the Narragansetts, the
Pequots, Mohegans, Montauks, Natnicks and Shinicooks) from Connecticut and
Rhode Island. They settled in the land the Oneida Indians gave them. This was a
"considerable tract of land," about 24,000 acres. It stretched
approximately from Madison Lake to College Hill in Clinton.
One of the first of the Indian
settlements was around 1774, known as Dicksville, named after Asa Dick, a
Narragansett. Dicksville boasted two
sawmills, a shoe shop, a school, a grist mill on the bank of Willona Creek (Big
Creek, or the east branch of Oriskany Creek), a blacksmith shop, a tavern and a
carpentry shop. By the early 1900s, although some buildings remain (Amy Marris
lives in the former Indian church, later their school house; and Ed Gallagher
lives in the house that Asa Dick built, formerly Wratten's), Dicksville pretty
much was a memory. However, there is a historical marker near a lilac tree on
what was Asa Dick's property and used to be a pasture connected with the Milton
Wratten farm (now behind a newer ranch house on property owned by Ed
Gallagher). Under the lilac are several gravestones, the largest and most
interesting of which is the one inscribed "In memory of Asa Dick." There is also another cemetery on the
Brothertown Road, and some descendents of the Brothertowns have come from the
mid-west, where they were relocated, from time to time to visit it. It's
unclear where exactly Dicksville was located, but I believe it was
roughly from around the home owned by Bob and Maureen Gray (formerly Clifford
Small) on the left side of Route 315; and Eric Gallagher's (formerly Clarence
Lloyd) on the right going toward Waterville; by Ed Gallagher's farm on the corner of Rt. 315
and Burnham Road; to the Forge Hollow line. Possibly Dicksville went down what is now Route 315 as far as California Road. The curve on Route 315 from Dicksville into Forge Hollow is known as
Daniels' Nose, as the area was once owned by people named Daniels.
Another little-known and mostly forgotten hamlet which was
settled around 1775 is Brotherton (Brothertown), or the Indian name
Eeyamquittoowayconnuck, at the top of Bogusville Hill Road at McMillan corners.
Bogusville - so named because of the
counterfeit coins manufactured and distributed there - is about a mile from
Clinton going toward Deansboro, and the road where the hamlet was is called
Bogusville Hill Road. Every community back then had a grist mill and Brotherton
was no exception; also there was a cheese factory. 1775 turned out to be a bad
year in which to settle, however, because when the Revolutionary War began in
earnest, they moved out temporarily due to conflicted allegiances. Once peace
was declared, they moved back, led by David Fowler, and were pleased to find
that the potatoes they had planted years before had grown from year to year and
were still thriving, making them a sustaining crop. Anyone who has ever
cultivated potatoes can easily understand this!
Forge Hollow was another once-thriving community in the Town
of Marshall. It was settled in the late 1700s and
was notable for its forge - it used ore from Clinton and later scrap iron to
turn into farm tools - hence the name Forge Hollow. The proprietors were Daniel
Hatchett and Captain Nathan Daniel. Forge Hollow was also known for its grist
mill and saw mills. It was also celebrated for the cave-pocked limestone cliffs
over which a spring bubbles to a pool below. It used to provide water for
nearby grist mills and sawmills; now, one can see bicyclists stopping by for a
cool drink, or people filling water jugs with the spring water from the
"hollow." Forge Hollow ended just about a mile from Waterville on Rt.
315.
Most white settlers first settled in the areas in higher
elevations around what is presently Deansboro, because they felt it was
healthier; the valley was termed a swamp hole. Joseph Eastman, the first white
settler, came in 1784. David Barton,
ancestor of the present Bartons in Waterville and whose name was given to the
Barton Hose Company in Deansboro arrived next in 1794. David Barton first settled in the west hills,
on the farm now owned by the Bishopp family; but, because he inadvertently
landed in Brothertown land, he was obliged to move, and he did. The most
important early "white" settlement in the Town of Marshall was
Hanover in the east hills. It's still there, but only a shadow of its former
self. In 1795, the first settlers in Hanover, Isaac Miller and his wife Irene
and their children, chose the hillside, fearing malaria in the lower valley,
possibly due to the close proximity of the Oriskany Creek. In Hanover was a tavern;
a cobbler, who went from house to house to make shoes for the family; a general
store; a post office (the mail was brought to Hanover Green by a post rider); a
school house; mills and houses; and a church - called the Hanover Religious
Society, which was organized in 1797. The first main highway ran from
Waterville to Whitesboro through Hanover.
These were all important and bustling communities until
about the mid-1800, when the Chenango
Canal was opened in 1837, followed by the railroad along the canal route in
1867. Homesteaders realized that the
supposed "fever valley" boasted fertile land (witness the crops of
the Brothertowns!), not to mention plenty of water, and they started settling
in the lower regions. The mills and the stores of Forge Hollow, Dicksville,
Hanover and Brotherton were abandoned, and those regions became neighborhoods
of homes, such they are today.