LORAIN COUNTY OHIO - History of Lorain County, Columbia Township (Part 1) *************************************************************************** OHGENWEB NOTICE: All distribution rights to this electronic data are reserved by the submitter. Reproduction or re-presentation of copyrighted material will require the permission of the copyright owner. *************************************************************************** File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Peter & Ruth Weitzel Guins pguins@voyager.net January 25, 1999 *************************************************************************** The following is the Columbia Township portion of the Williams Brothers _History of Lorain County, Ohio, with Illustrations & Biographical Sketches of Some of It's Prominent Men and Pioneers_ Published in 1879 in Philadelphia. I have attempted to copy it as written, complete with the capitalizations and punctuation of the authors. The only intentional change is that surnames are written in all caps. COLUMBIA Physical Features In the western part of the township the surface is level. In the central and eastern portions it is undulating, but nowhere rough and broken. The soil is generally a clay loam, varied in some places by gravel. It is one of the best watered townships in the county. Rocky river flows northward through the township, gathering up in its course many tributaries. Plum creek flows in a nearly parallel direction through the western part of the town. The timber native to its soil was beech, maple, hickory, black and white oak, black and white ash, basswood, elm, sycamore, buckeye, walnut and butternut. Purchase Prior to the apportionment by draft of that part of the Reserve lying west of the Cuyahoga river, Levi BRONSON, Azor BRONSON, Harmon BRONSON, Calvin HOADLEY, Jared PRITCHARD, and some fifteen others, formed an association called the "Waterbury Land Company". This company, together with William LAW, Benjamin DOOLITTLE, Jr., and Samuel DOOLITTLE, drew at the fourth draft, April 4, 1807, this township as number five, range fifteen, with two thousand six hundred and fifty acres in the townships of Boston and Richfield, in Summit county, annexed to equalize it. The draft was in the following proportions: to the Waterbury Land Company, twenty one thousand six hundred dollars; William LAW, two thousand eight hundred and ninety-two dollars; Samuel DOOLITTLE, eighty dollars. The deed was executed on the 28th day of May, 1807, by John CALDWELL, John MORGAN, and Jonathan BRACE, for the Connecticut Land Company, to Levi BRONSON, Calvin HOADLEY, Jared PRITCHARD, Azor BRONSON and Harmon BRONSON, in trust for the Waterbury Land Company. Pending the negotiation for the extinguishment of the Indian claim to the lands west of the Cuyahoga, the Company bought of William EDWARDS a thousand acres of land in tract two, town eight, range eleven, Euclid, (now East Cleveland), and a number settled there the summer previous to the draft. Survey In the summer of 1807 the township was surveyed. A surveyor by the name of LACEY was first employed, but his chain was found to be of an incorrect length and he was discharged. In August of the same year Robert WORDEN, a surveyor from Columbiana county, was engaged, who, with Levi BRONSON, Daniel BRONSON, Benoni ADAMS, and Elias FROST of Euclid, as ax and chain men, set out from Cleveland taking a southwest course until the northeast corner of the town was reached. From this point they proceeded west two and a half miles, thence south a like distance to the center of the township. The party made their encampment here, on the west bank of the Rocky river. A daughter of Levi BRONSON, Mrs. Oliver TERRELL, accompanied the party to do their cooking, to whom must be accorded the honor of being the first white woman that ever set foot on the soil of Columbia. Settlement In September, 1807, a company numbering thirty-three persons, left Waterbury, Connecticut, for this township. They were, Bela BRONSON, his wife and one child; Calvin HOADLEY, wife and five children; John WILLIAMS, wife and five children; Lemuel HOADLEY, wife and three children, his father and his wife's mother; Lathrop SEYMOUR and wife; Mrs. PARKER, and four children; Silas HOADLEY and Chauncey WARNER. Two months afterwards the company reached Buffalo, west of which place there was then no road, and they were compelled to chose between the dangers, at that time of year, of lake navigation and those attending a journey along the beach. The company divided, four families embarking on the lake, while the remainder preferred the land route. The little party set sail under a bright sky and with a favoring breeze, but not long afterward encountered one of those sudden gales common at that time of year, which carried them back a distance of several miles, where the vessel went ashore. A week was spent before another start could be made. Arriving in sight of Presque Isle the vessel was again struck by a contrary wind and driven back to a point on the Canada shore under which the voyagers took shelter. They remained here two weeks for a favorable wind, when the journey was resumed. They proceeded without further reverses until within sight of Cleveland, then a pretentious place of three log cabins, when a violent wind struck their craft, and they were forced to retreat until near the site of the present city of Erie, where they went ashore. They were now thoroughly discouraged with their experience by the lake. The season was growing late, and whether to make another attempt by water or undertake the long journey on foot was not a pleasant alternative. Calvin HOADLEY determined to make another trial, and, with his family, arrived at Cleveland after encountering many experiences similar to those we have mentioned. The most of them, however, determined upon the land route. Bela BRONSON, wife and child, were of this party; Mrs. BRONSON carrying the child in her arms for a distance of fifty miles west of Erie, where they were met by teams with which friends had gone back from Cleveland in search of them. Arriving at Cleveland, the company made a location there, with the exception of Bela BRONSON and family, who, with ox-team and sled, pushed on toward Columbia. They were accompanied by Levi BRONSON, Jared PRITCHARD, John WILLIAMS, Silas HOADLEY, Calvin HOADLEY, and five or six others who went ahead and cut a road for them. The family brought along in the sled cooking utensils - with which Mrs. BRONSON prepared the food for the company- and camp equipage. Their progress was, of course, slow, eight days being consumed in reaching Columbia. Two days subsequently - on the 7th day of December, 1807 - they arrived on lot twenty-seven, where Bronson and family made a location. The company divided into three sections, commencing simultaneously the erection of three cabins, one for Bela BRONSON, on lot twenty-seven; one for John WILLIAMS, on sub-lot three; and one for Calvin HOADLEY, on lot thirty-four. During the erection of BRONSON's house, the box of the sled was turned up against a tree, and under this the family took shelter until their cabin was built. The house was ready for occupancy by Christmas. In 1810, Mr. BRONSON changed his location to the Center, where the cellar of the house in which he resided can yet be seen. He died here in October, 1811. He was one of the ten sons of Seba BRONSON. His wife's maiden name was Sally TWITCHELL. Mrs. BRONSON subsequently married Benoni ADAMS. Two children of this pioneer family are now living - Rev. Sherlock A. BRONSON, D.D, who was eight months old at the time of the settlement of the family in Columbia, now an Episcopal clergyman of ability and usefulness, resident of Mansfield, O., and a daughter, Sally, living in Ottawa county. In an address delivered to this township July 4, 1859, Rev. Dr. BRONSON gives the following interesting picture of their situation in the winter of 1807: "Our post office was at Painesville, fifty miles distant; the nearest mill was at Newburgh, twenty-eight miles away; and but little provision could be had at Painesville. That winter my father wrote back to his friends that he was the richest man in town. He might have written himself down the greatest nabob of all of Ohio that lay west of Cleveland and north of Wooster, and there would have been none to dispute his claim. For a time, that winter, ours was the only residence in Western Ohio. Gloomy, desolate and lonely as those times were, my mother kept up good cheer, and said she always hoped for better times. Taking into account the time of arrival, late in December, no house ready for occupancy, that in the company was a woman with an infant only eight months old, and the nearest dwelling twenty miles distant, you have before you a rare picture of pioneer life." The second family that settled in town was that of John WILLIAMS, who moved in from Cleveland after spending the holidays with his friends there, arriving January 3, 1808. They took up their abode in the cabin already partially prepared for them on sub-lot three. In 1810 he removed to a farm a mile south of the Center on lot forty-eight. Mr. WILLIAMS died in the spring of 1813, and his remains lie in an unmarked grave in the Center burying ground. The only surviving member of the family is Mrs. Weaver HARRINGTON, now residing in Eaton county, Mich. Calvin HOADLEY followed closely after WILLIAMS, arriving in the first part of March of the same year, and commenced life in the Columbia woods in the house previously built on lot thirty-four. In the summer of 1809, he built a grist mill on the Rocky river, south of the Center, the first mill in the county. He afterward built a grist mill and also a saw mill, on the same river, on lot twenty-one. Captain HOADLEY was a man of great energy of character, and became one of the most prominent men of the town. He was a son of Lemuel HOADLEY, Sr., who raised a family of eight children. Calvin was the second child and oldest son. He was a carpenter by trade. His wife's maiden name was TERRELL. They raised a family of five children. A daughter, the only living representative of the family, resides in Berea, O. Early in the spring of 1808, the following additions were made to the settlement: Lemuel HOADLEY, Sr., and Lemuel HOADLEY, Jr.,on lot forty-seven; James GEER, on lot thirty-five, south part; Lathrop SEYMOUR, on lot eleven; Jared PRITCHARD, on lot thirty-one; Silas HOADLEY, on lot twenty-nine; Isaac FROST and his two sons, Elias and Lyman, on lot twenty-eight; Nathaniel DOAN, on the north part of lot thirty-five; and Benoni ADAMS, on lot fifty. The HOADLEYs were originally from either Salem or Plymouth, Conn. Lemuel HOADLEY, Sr. was the father of eight children. Mary, the eldest, became the wife of Sahel OSBORN. Of Calvin we have already given a brief history. The next was Lemuel; he was a colonel in the war of 1812. Sally married Zephaniah POTTER. Lemuel was a mechanic, and much of his life was engages in the erection of mills; he built most of the grist mills in this region of the country. He removed to Brecksville in 1812, and built the first mill in that town; and two years subsequently he went to Bath and erected mills there. In 1819, he settled in Olmsted, Cuyahoga county, and erected for himself the pioneer mill in that township, and also built the first frame house there. In 1824, he exchanged his farm and a mill in Olmsted for a farm in Ridgeville, west of the center of the town, and took up his abode there. In 1832, he sold out and moved back to Olmsted, and with his son-in-law, John BARNUM, built a saw-mill at the mouth of Plum Creek, and laid out a village there. In 1838, he removed to Chillicothe. He married Chloe TYLER. He was known everywhere as Major HOADLEY, a title which he acquired, it is said, on the journey from Connecticut. The company would sometimes be obliged to construct a bridge across a swollen stream, and Mr. HOADLEY was so perfectly at home at such work that his companions gave him the honorary title of "major", which he ever afterwards bore. Luther was also a colonel in the war of 1812, and died in the service. David, a carpenter by trade, died in Connecticut. Urania married Riley WHITING, an extensive clock-maker of Winsted, Conn. In 1810, James GEER, changed his location to the north part of the township, exchanging his original purchase with Calvin HOADLEY, for land on lot twenty-one. Here he established a rude tannery, using sap troughs for vats, and an axe to pulverize the bark. He also followed shoemaking, having learned the trade of his wife, formerly Mrs. Mary PARKER, whose first husband was a shoemaker. Of some of the other settlers mentioned, no knowledge can now be obtained of their later history. Nathaniel DOAN was a man of more than average ability, and was a leading man in the settlement. He was the first justice of the peace of the township. He subsequently moved to Cleveland. Benoni ADAMS was at that time a single man, but in 1810 he married Mrs. Sally BRONSON, widow of Bela BRONSON, and settled at the Center. In 1808, Mr. ADAMS carried the mail on foot from Cleveland to Maumee. The only habitations of white men on his route were those of Nathan PERRY, at the mouth of Black River, and a Frenchman at Milan. Two weeks were usually consumed in making the trip. He lost his way on one occasion, and failed of reaching the end of his journey within the required time, and his pay was withheld for that trip. Sometimes the streams were swollen to such a degree that he was compelled either to travel a long distance to find a place through which he could wade, or to construct a raft with which to cross. His route lay through Black Swamp, the passage of which, from its extent, could not be made in a single day, and he was obliged to spend the night in the woods, usually making his bed on the trunk of a fallen tree. Says Dr. BRONSON, whose mother subsequently became the wife of Mr. ADAMS: "I have heard him say he has traveled the swamp when the water was half-way to the knee, and he was obliged to break the ice the whole forty miles." During the same year, Seba BRONSON,Sr., and his two sons, Seba and Daniel, moved in from Ashtabula county. The elder BRONSON settled on sub-lot four, Seba, Jr. living with him. Daniel located on the north part of lot thirty-six. In 1812, Seba BRONSON, Jr. removed to Liverpool, Medina county, remained a year, and then returned to Columbia. In the spring of that year, it is said, he dug out a canoe, and journeyed down the river to the lake, thence to the mouth of the Sandusky river, thence up that river, to Lower Sandusky (now Fremont). There, in an opening in the forest, he planted a piece of ground to corn, under the protection of Fort Stephenson. After harvesting his crop, he returned to Columbia, residing there until his death, in 1851, aged seventy-five. In 1809, Roswell SCOVIL, Horace GUNN, Timothy DOAN, Daniel BUNNELL, Zephaniah POTTER, Wm. HOADLEY, Noah WARNER, Marcus TERRILL, and Joseph BURKE joined the settlement. SCOVIL settled on lot thirty; GUNN on lot__. The latter carried the first mail west of Cleveland, in 1808. In June, 1809, he married Ann PRITCHARD, daughter of Joel PRITCHARD, which was the second marriage in Columbia. Timothy DOAN located on lot twenty-nine, buying out Silas HOADLEY, who returned to Connecticut. BUNNELL drew, by draft, lot one, which he exchanged with Samuel PARDEE for land in Olmsted. Potter settled on lot __. He was a doctor - the first in the township. HOADLEY settled on lot thirty-five, south part, but returned to Connecticut in 1811. Marcus TERRILL settled on the north-west corner of lot thirty-nine. WARNER, in 1811, removed to Liverpool. ==== OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List ====