NEWSPAPERS: Aunt Betsy Townsend. 1908. Fayette Co., PA. Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm Contributed by Marilyn Tolentino. Transcribed by Carole Clarke Originally submitted by Delores Mollohan-Hartman (rhart61650@aol.com) on February 16, 2001 on the Fayette County List. ___________________________________________________________________ In the Daily News Standard, Uniontown, Fayette County, Pennsylvania Newspaper, July 1, 1908 Her husband went with Dr. Braddee Aunt Betsy Townsend of Masontown Tells how Things were Many Years Ago. Nearing the Century Mark. Pioneer Resident of Klondike was a wanderer in the days of the famous mail robber - Worked for 25 cents per day. Masontown, July 1 - One of the oldest residents of the Masontown neighborhood is "Aunt Betsy" Townsend, who is nearing the century mark. She has lived in this section all her life and is well-known by everybody. She now lives alone in a little log cabin on the farm of George W. N. Boice which place has been her residence for the last 21 years. It is not certain just how old Mrs. Townsend is but she knows that May 11 is her birthday is it is thought she was 91 years old this year, although she says she feels a hundred years old. "Aunt Betsy" did not have any schooling in her early days and cannot read nor write and has not kept very closely in touch with modern progress, but in her original, primitive way she can tell many incidents of interest in regard to the early day of this region. "There were only two or three houses and no store in Masontown when I was young, says Mrs. Townsend. I used to hoe corn for 25 cents a day and get a bushel of corn for my day's work." She had to work when a child and had no chance to go to school - she often washed clothes all day for 25 cents. She was very strong and could easily carry a bushel of coal on her back. For five years of her life "Aunt Betsy" was a wanderer. At an early age she married Sam Townsend, a man much older than she and for five years they traveled about the county. Townsend going with Dr. Braddee, the quack doctor, who was sent to prison in 1839 for robbing the United States mails. "Aunt Betsy" remembers Braddee and his wife and Pennell and tells many incidents about them. She says she often wondered what Dr. Braddee and her husband were doing when they traveled over the country, but that they did not tell her. During her travels with Townsend "Aunt Betsy" walked at one time from the Masontown region to Wooster, O., and traveled to many places in Ohio and went on the boat to Wheeling and Marietta. However, these jaunts were the extent of her travels. Finally Townsend went away and she never heard any more about him and she settled down in her native neighborhood and has lived here ever since. Only Once on a Train. Only once was "Aunt Betsy" ever on a train and that was when she made a trip to Smithfield a few years ago. She had also been once on a street car at Uniontown and went out to the old park and the car stopped and "Aunt Betsy" wondered how they would ever get back to town as there was no place for the car to turn and great to her surprise when the motorman went to the other end of the car and the seats were turned and the car was ready to go back. Newspaper smeared and can't read about two whole paragraphs) "Aunt Betsy" was in Uniontown frequently in her early days and when a girl she worked at the old White Swan Tavern as a kitchen girl. She had red hair when an girl and many people remembered her by this. Many times she walked to Uniontown and (sentence smeared, can't read) town to Waynesburg about 20 miles.