Yolo County CA Archives History - Books .....Preface & Chapter I. 1904 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ca/cafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Peggy Perazzo pbperazzo@comcast.net January 4, 2006, 1:07 pm Book Title: Recollections Of A Busy Life Surnames in this section of the book: RUGGLES, SEARS, WALLACE, KINKLE, DRAKE, JACKSON, WHITFORD, OLDS, HAMMOND, OLNEY, CONKLING Dedicated to My Faithful Wife, Viola who has been my companion and helpmeet through storm and sunshine; loving and kind, she has been a most faithful and devoted mother to our children who love, and adore her. Eli Fayette Ruggles (1833 - 1904) On the 19th day of August 1904, after a brief illness of ten days, Father Ruggles was laid to rest in the beautiful Forest Home Cemetery, at Oak Park, Illinois. It is a beautiful spot - an eminently fitting place for one of the noblest characters the world has ever known. Father Ruggles was a good, upright, honest Christian man, one of God’s own sons, and to know him, was to love him for his sterling qualities. Always ready with a kind word and a helping hand for those in distress, and ever charitable to the hungry wayfarer that knocked at his door. He uncomplainingly and willingly sacrificed his own prospects and aims, so that his children might secure that education and those advantages which would so well fit them for the battle of life. The inheritance that he leaves is the riches - the knowledge of his pure character, the remembrance of his unfailing devotion, and his lasting love. Chapter 1. The journey of life has been likened by some one to a man beginning to climb at the base of a double ladder and at the top, forty-five years later, is in his best manhood - then begins the descent, and when at its base is an old man, and the grave receives him. This view of life may do for an old bach. or maid, but does not meet my case - for on this journey I have taken a companion to share my joys and sorrows, and I call her my wife - Viola - and at the time of reaching the top of the ladder we are surrounded with five children, and have buried one on the way. And now you, my children, want to know of my life from earliest recollection to this time. My beginning in life was just the same as yours, so far as life is concerned. Somebody found us a little bundle of humanity nestling close to a fond mother, and she turns a light covering back and somebody looks and looks again at that infant face and tries to reason about that baby. What does the little thing know? - nothing. Where did he come from? - and you can’t answer your own question. Neither can the wisest man that ever lived. Your only source of information is what is revealed in the Bible, and even that is but faintly told - for that is of God’s secrets. There is nothing in God’s creation that so fully reveals the wisdom of God as a baby. When I was 21 years of age my mother gave me for a birthday present a little lace nightcap that she said I wore when a baby. That is my mother’s evidence that I was once a baby. That baby, as he grew in stature and strength to hear it, received the name of Eli Fayette Ruggles. How the name of Fayette was chosen I can only surmise. LaFayette was not of this country, but came to it in her hour of greatest need, and found in many a hard battle till its life and existence was safe, and then returned to his native land. So as he was but a part of us I received but part of his name. I had a chance of seeing other mothers as they came to visit and take tea, and the earliest reasoning I had was that of all the mothers I had seen mine was the quickest. How quick, she would whirl the table into the middle of the floor and make the dishes rattle in their places! You see, I had an interest in that. Then, as I grew to be quite a boy, I noticed the cat and dog were lying with their hind feet close together, and, a string being handy and a little fun wanted, I tied their hind feet together and soon the dog concluded to be off - and such a yelling of dog and cat and rattling of chairs as they tumbled pell-mell - and mother was on hand quick, I assure you. She grabbed me up and put some good, solid spanks on me as quick as I had ever known her to do anything in the way of business. One day father said to mother: “I guess I shall have to get some glasses, for that cataract is affecting my sight so I see but dimly,” and mother looked in his eye and said, “Surely it is growing, and I fear it will spoil that eye.” Father was both carpenter and farmer. Father had been hewing timber in the woods to build a barn, and it was on a side hill. One very frosty and slippery morning he was driving the cows over this spot to prevent their going to the prairie and picked up a chip and threw it at the cattle; his feet slipped from under him and he fell face down, striking the affected eye directly on a dry stub or stick that was standing directly upwards, penetrating the eye - forced the eyeball out on his cheek and broke off, leaving a piece some eight inches long outside the face, beside what was in the head. A doctor was called, and can you imagine what must have been the agony when that stick was pulled from his head? Then the torn flesh was stitched up after the eyeball was replaced, but father always carried the scars. But another baby boy has come to our home, and he is named Joseph Westley. This home and of what I write is in the country, not far from Milan and Norwalk, Ohio. To speak to you about a railroad, you think of long trains of cars being whirled over a nice smooth track at the rate of forty or sixty miles per hour, and the passengers in perfect ease and comfort. About the days of old of which I write the first railroad was then building through our vicinity. Straps of iron nailed on long timbers and car or large box with four wheels under it - three quarters of the car for freight, and drawn by a span of horses - that was our railroad. Later steam began to be the power, but uncontrollable. No person dare ride on or with it save the experimenter, and it took years to perfect it and control it safely. Living not far from our house was father’s father and mother. I was full of boy antics when I could see grandpa and grandma come to our house. Grandma was blind, but she always brought something good to us children, and grandpa was always so good-natured that I came to love them both. Grandma would knit and mother spin. But grandpa got too old to do his work, and it was arranged that one of his sons should have his property and care for them as long as they lived. But they lived longer than this son thought they would, and the son and his wife (they laid it mostly to the wife) figured it out that they had kept them as long as they ought to have lived, and they could not afford, and more than that, they would not keep them longer. They were adding farm after farm to their home farm, and were becoming idolaters to wealth. It is said that they would skim milk the third time and then give it to their hired men to drink. Uncle Eli, living in Milan seeing that his father and mother were so unwelcome by his brother, told him to bring their parents to his house and he would care for them, which was done, and there they remained content and welcome till they died, at a ripe age of near 90 years. All honor to Uncle Eli, after whom I was named! In this vicinity lived most of father’s brothers and sisters, and here I give their names: Sara. Married Josiah Drake. One son lives yet in Norwalk and has a livery stable. Daniel. Became a rich farmer, and his children still live near Milan. Polly. Married Benjamin Jackson. Moved to California about 1858. Joel, their son, went with Fernando and Lyman, 1849. Peter. Moved to St. Joe, Mich., about the time we came to Michigan. Later he built a saw and grist mill ten miles south of St. Jo. Sally and Emma were his daughters. Martin was a ship carpenter. Worked in Milan and Sandusky. Salmon. Ship carpenter. William. Carpenter. Moved to Chicago. Burned out by the great fire of 1871. Later moved to and died in California. Eli. Carpenter and wheelwright at Milan. A disease called bloody murrain has been very fatal with horses and cattle in all this portion of country for a long time, and father has lost some of his, and he has a pair of beautiful black horses with a star in each forehead, and he has been giving preventives - but those fine blacks have to go just as others have gone, and father is very much discouraged. Fernando has been in Michigan the past year and writes a glowing letter of the blessings of good health, rich soil, etc. Father decides to move to Michigan, and arranges accordingly. Gets canvas and bends long strips of wood over two wagons, puts on the canvas, sells off furniture and makes ready. But here comes a wagonload of folks and stops in front of our house, and here is grandpa and grandma and Uncle Eli and Auntie and many others of the relatives. Well, Joseph, I hear that you are going to the far west. Well, I can’t blame you much, but we are awfully sorry to have you and your nice family of boys leave us. See how many have you now - Fernando, Freman, Martin, Lyman, Lewis, Eli and Westley - seven all told. Well, they are a nice lot of healthy fellows, too. But how about mother? You ask where did she come from. Mother’s people lived just across the state line, in Pennsylvania. Father, when a young man, was teaching school and also singing school in that vicinity, and became acquainted with and later married Sylvia Brown, that since became our mother. Now, let us have some singing - and grandpa and the older boys take the bass and Grandma takes soprano and father the tenor, and they sing, “The morning sun shines from the east and spreads his glories to the west.” Then Sherborn was called for, and again they sing, “While Shepherds watch their flocks by night.” Oh, it would have done you good to hear that soprano and tenor. Grandma sat with head thrown a little back and her sightless eyeballs raised as if seeing the unseen - hands clasped together and her thumbs playing round and round each other. Oh, it was grand singing. Then grandpa and all the rest knelt before God while he implored the Good Shepherd to be with his son Joseph and his family as he journeyed to the far west. And here I wish to say that I sadly regret that I did not long years ago write down what I have heard father tell when on the old farm in Michigan about his people from his earliest recollection to the time of which I now write when he was to leave Ohio. My father was of the fourth generation of Ruggles’. Joseph Ruggles the first was from Scotland, and the name was transmitted from father to son. My father being the fourth, I will here give part of a clipping from a Chicago paper of the past year. “Havana, Ill., Feb. 9 “General J. M. Ruggles, an old settler and veteran of the Civil War, died here this morning at the Hopping Sanitarium. General Ruggles was born March 7, 1818, in Richland County, Ohio, and was of noted ancestry, his great-uncle being Brigadier Timothy Ruggles, who was president of the first congress which ever met in America in New York in 1755.” Another great-uncle, John Ruggles, was three times elected United States Senator from Maine, and another uncle, Benjamin, was first United States Senator from Ohio, serving eighteen years, from 1818. His father, Judge Spooner Ruggles, was State Senator in Illinois from Ogle and Winnebago counties in 1842. General Ruggles came to Illinois in 1833 with his parents. From 1852 to 1856 in the State Senate. He drafted the first platform on which the Republican party of Illinois was organized. At the outbreak of the Civil War he was appointed lieutenant of the First Illinois Calvary by Governor Yates. When mustered out, in 1864, he was lieutenant-colonel of the Third Illinois Cavalry. He was Master in Chancery for Mason County for several years after the war. This record tells us that we have relatives in Illinois, if we wish to hunt them up. The two wagons have had their white canvas tops for a few days and some neighbors have called to say good-bye, and Aunt Aurelia, father’s oldest sister, that married Mr. Whitford, and Aunt Sarah, that married Mr. Drake, and Aunt Polly, that married Benjamin Jackson, Uncle Martin and Salmon and Orrin and William and Uncle Eli all live in this vicinity, and called to see the family off to Michigan. One wagon takes the family, the other the household goods, such as bedding, etc. To the outside of one wagon box is attached a chicken coop. Good-bye to associations of many years to father and mother, good-bye to Milan and Norwalk, and away we start for the then far west. It was slow traveling with muddy roads and oxen. We sleep in the wagon, and that is all right, but I wish they had left those chickens at the old home, for every morning long before day that rooster is calling - time-to-get-up-up. I wish he would shut his yaup. But the older members of the wagonhold said it is all just right, and they feed the cattle and build a fire out of sticks and brush, and mother gets us a good breakfast for good appetites. When near Kalamazoo, Mich., Lyman says to father, what prevents our locating here? See this small prairie of about 300 acres surrounded with timber. Take 160 acres about half prairie, then all we need to do is to get a home started and then hitch to a plow and your land is already cleared, and fine land it is, too. I knew by the looks of the road. But Fernando had been writing home about the fine streams of water and springs boiling up clear as crystal, and such beautiful black walnut and white wood, and sugar maple trees, where you can make your own sugar and cattle can live all winter on browsing the brush, while you clear the land. So on we go, and in a two week’s journey arrive at a farm three miles southwest of our destination. But that three miles is through an unbroken forest. It will take too long to cut a road through for the wagons, so a tree is selected that has a forked shaped crotch, and this is, when made, about eight feet long, with stakes at the three corners - the front rounded up from the bottom so as to run over any small logs and dodge around trees anywhere, and on this is piled part of the goods, with mother and Baby Westley on top. We came to Mill Creek, and here we had a hard time to cross. But it is finally accomplished, although there is more water on board than is for comfort. But mother is crying, and I don’t recollect to have ever seen her cry before. What is the matter, mother, that makes you cry? To think of going away into this forest to begin life over again? ‘Tis a hard prospect, that is a fact. But we finally arrive at a log house, and are made very welcome by the good people, who say we can spread our beds on the floor and make ourselves as much at home as possible. After we had been refreshed with a good supper and the fire played antics around the logs, sending up ten thousand sparks to cheer us, we quite forgot the hardships of the day. During the evening stories were told of this new country - some laughable, some fearful. Next day was spent in selecting the eight acres selected by Fernando. Then a place was chosen near a boiling spring, pure and cold, and near by was running a small creek. Here they cut away the brush first, then the trees, till enough was cleared on which to build. Then a road was made, and the wagons brought in. There was a road through the woods to the east and north, but none to the southwest till these wagons came in. One yoke of oxen and wagon was sold as payment on the land. The land is on record as the E. ˝ of the S.E. Ľ of Sec. 31, Township No. 3 South, Range No. 16 West. The township was then without a name, but later was called Hartford, in Van Buren County, Michigan. The oxen just sold were named Dime and Jerry; the oxen we kept were Maje and Brady. Maje was a docile fellow that would let anything be done with him that the occasion required. When the farm was partly cleared father made a yankee harness for Maje and used him as a horse to plow corn. First Settlers of Hartford There was at this time but four settlers in the township, namely: Ferdino Olds, Henry Hammond, B. A. Olney and Thomas Conkling. My older brothers have been traveling through these woods some - have been to these neighbors’ houses, and each evening as the log house is being built they tell of what discoveries they have made during the day. These hard-beaten, winding paths all through the forest are made by the deer. Nearly every day some of the family have seen the white flags of the deer as they bound away, and are soon out of sight. Last night Fernando brought home a fine buck, and we younger chaps had to wonder at and admire his beauty. One large tree was noticed, being but a shell of a tree, and the bark all scratched and torn, that proved to be where bears lived. The howl of the wolf was often heard. Then a path was commented on that was a little wider than the deer path, but not trod so deep and hard. That proved to be an Indian trail leading from one settlement to another. Additional Comments: "Recollections of A Busy Life," By Eli Fayette Ruggles, H. L. Ruggles & Co., Publishers, (published circa 1904) Transcribed by Peggy Barriskill Perazzo, December 2005 Transcription submitted to California Archives by Kellie Crnkovich with approval from Peggy Perazzo on 12/27/2005 File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ca/yolo/history/1904/recollec/prefacec261ms.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/cafiles/ File size: 17.9 Kb