Jefferson County PA Archives Biographies.....KNAPP, Moses 1778 - 1847 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Nancy Lorz honeypete@certainty.net April 27, 2005, 9:04 pm Author: Ernest O. Knapp Relative Gives Account of Life of Moses Knapp The relative has furnished us with a short biographical account of the life of Moses Knapp, one of the four original settlers of what is now Brookville. The account follows: The Jefferson county atlas includes a biography of Moses Knapp, among the prominent citizens of the county. The first paragraph reads as follows: "In the spring of 1796 Andrew and Joseph Barnett, Samuel Scott and Moses Knapp left the mouth of Pine Creek on the West Branch of the Sesquehanna, (sic) in Lycoming county, and wended [their] waywith their effects, to the confluence of Mill Creek with the Sandy Lick, now Port Barnett for the purpose of establishing a settlement. Three days after their arrival, Andrew Barnett was taken sick with cholera morbus and died. He was buried on the bank of the Red Bank, a few rods below the mouth of Mill Creek, and this was the first white man that died in the place. His grave is yet pointed out to the curious, as the first white man's grave" According to the account the "death of Andrew Barnett cast a gloom over those who had come with him." They were discouraged and considered returning to the Sesquehanna but finally remain. Samuel Scott was a millwright by trade and was assisted in his work by Moses Knapp, who was then about nineteen years of age. They first built a mill on Mill Creek. The mill was owned by Scott. Moses Knapp exhibited considerable mechanical ingenuity in his work, and soon built a mill for himself on North Fork Creek. He left his mill stand idle during a winter (likely 1800-1801) while he went to Indiana, Pa., to attend a term of school. While there he became acquainted with Miss Susan Matson, a daughter of Uriah Matson. The acquaintance soon ripened into an engagement, and Moses Knapp and Susan Matson were married. She returned with him to Port Barnett. He build a cabin near his mill and there the young couple commenced housekeeping. Knapp continued to be active in the lumber business and ran the first raft of sawed lumber out of Red Bank Creek. The planks were used to sheet one of the first dams on the Monongahela River. Knapp would frequently take a canoe along with him to Pittsburgh. There he would load his canoe with supplies purchased for his home, and would then paddle the canoe up the Allegheny iver and Red Bank Creek. Moses Knapp sold his original mill and "betterments" and moved to a new location at the mouth of North Fork Creek. A clipping in the possession of the writer (date and origin unknown) reads, "the first white person to settle in what is now Brookville was Moses Knapp, who build a log house about 1801 at the mouth of North Fork creek. In this log cabin was born the first white child in what is now Brookville, Pa." Ten children were born in the vicinity of Brookville and the eleventh child, Eliza Ann, was born at Dowlingville, now Baxter, in 1823. In the spring of 1821 Moses Knapp moved to Dowlingville, which was located along Red Bank Creek about five miles from Brookville. Here he continued his lumber business but misfortune soon came in the way of a serious accident. While cutting timber he got a foot and leg crushed so badly that an amputation became necessary. A Doctor Stewart from Indiana, and a Dictor (sic) Ranki of Licking (now Clarion, Pa.) performed the operation in the summer of 1821. This was, in all probability the first surgical operation performed in Jefferson county. When the doctors decided to amputate they were without a saw. One of the boys was sent to borrow one and returned with a small miter saw. At that early date anesthesia had not come into use so the doctors gave their patient a liberal amount of whiskey. The sons then held their father while the limb was amputated. The saw used in the operation bore the trade-mark "Made by H. Hull, Sheffield, England." The late Dr. A. J. Simpson, of Summerville, Pa., owned the saw for many years. He had it reconditioned and exhibited it to the Jefferson County Medical Society. At the present time the saw is owned by James Simpson, Summerville, Pa. Moses Knapp recovered from the operation and whittled for himself a "peg leg" with which he got along quite well. He was very active for one so handicapped, and carried on his work for many more years. He died in 1847 and was buried in what is now known as the old Jefferson cemetery, and which is located near Baxter, Pa. >From the Jeffersonian Democrat, Brookville, PA., Saturday, June 25, 1955 This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/pafiles/ File size: 5.0 Kb