Compiled by John H. Wheeler Published in 1903 by B. F. Bowen CHAPTER 12 Pages 71 - 75 |
OLD PIONEERS WHO HAVE REMOVED FROM OUR MIDST
Thomas J. Thorpe came to Wexford county in the fall of 1871, and took up a homestead in the township of Selma. It was then necessary to come by way of Traverse City, and it took two full days to go from that place to Mr. Thorpe's homestead. Mr. Thorpe was born in Allegany county, New York, in 1837. From a sketch of Mr. Thorpe's early life we quote the following: "At the breaking out of the Rebellion he enlisted in the Eighty-fifth New York Regiment; served with distinction during the Peninsular campaign; was wounded twice during the seven-days fight when General McClellan changed his base of operations from the Pamunky to the James river, once at Fair Oaks and again at Malvern Hill; in 1862 he was made lieutenant colonel of the One Hundred and Thirtieth New York Infantry. After the battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, his regiment was mounted and afterwards known as the famous First New York Dragoons, and took an active part in all the great cavalry battles until the close of the war. In June, 1864, he was wounded and taken prisoner at Travillion, Virginia. On the Fourth of July of that year, while a prisoner in the stockade at Macon, Georgia, Colonel Thorpe made a Fourth of July speech, which was interpreted as incendiary, and for which he was taken out of the stockade to be hung, but the Confederate authorities became convinced from the demonstration made by the two thousand prisoners in the stockade that the safety of the city of Macon, as well as the lives of their guard, could be better conserved by returning him to the stockade, which was done at the close of that day. In December, 1864, he was made a full colonel of his regiment for meritorious conduct on the field. July 17th of the same year he was honorably discharged from the service of the United States, after a service of four years and seventeen days, during which time he participated in forty-six engagements." After a stay of over a year in the county, Colonel Thorpe went back east, and for five years he had charge of a large public school in the city of Buffalo, New York. He then went into the school book business for the A. S. Barnes Publishing Company, of New York, covering several middle and western states, and making two trips to the Pacific coast. He returned to his Wexford county farm in 1879, and in 1880 was elected clerk and register on the Republican county ticket. He was re-elected in 1882, and was re-nominated in 1884, but defeated by George A. Cummer. He took an active part in the struggle which resulted in the removal of the county seat from Sherman to Cadillac via Manton. He was a talented speaker and could hold an audience, no matter what the subject under discussion might be. In political campaigns his services were in great demand, both in his home county and in surrounding counties. After his defeat for a third term as clerk and register he removed to Chicago, where he remained several years and at last went into the educational work, which was his delight. Silas S. Falloss was the first attorney to settle in the village of Clam Lake, arriving in the summer of 1872. He was elected prosecuting attorney the same fall. He served one term as circuit judge and was a member of the board of supervisors for several years. In 1884 he removed to Chicago and resumed the practice of law in that city, making that his home until the present time. John Mansfield was born in Connecticut in 1842. At the breaking out of the Civil war he enlisted in the First New York Cavalry and served to the end of the war. He came to Wexford county in 1872 and took up a homestead on section 12, in what is now Boon township, at the same time purchasing another quarter section adjoining the homestead later buying another eighty-acre piece, making four hundred acres in all. Being a practical farmer and a hard worker, he soon had sufficient land cleared to begin to realize a profit from the crops he raised. Being of Irish descent, he had great faith in potatoes, and devoted a large part of his land to the cultivation of that crop. raising from five hundred to four thousand bushels a year. Another crop he found very profitable was hay. Being in close proximity to the lumber camps in the vicinity of Cadillac on the east and the Manistee river on the west, he could start out on a winter's morning with a load of hay or potatoes, dispose of it at camp and reach home by nightfall. He served his township several years as supervisor, and in 1880 was, elected county treasurer, serving two terms. In 1894 he was elected judge of probate, filling the office for eight years. At the expiration of this service he sold his farm and removed to Newaygo county, where he still resides. Capt. C. K. Russell came to Cadillac in 1879, purchasing the American House, which he managed for over fifteen years. He was a native of New York, where he was born in 1826. He started out to be a sailor and so well did he apply himself to the work that he became master of a vessel at the age of twenty-one, after which he was always familiarly known as "Captain Russell." He enlarged and improved the hotel property, making it one of the best public houses in the city, or, in fact, north of Grand Rapids. Becoming at length somewhat tired of the hotel business, and having saved a nice sum of money in the meantime, he removed to Grand Rapids in 1891, where he still resides. He makes occasional visits to Cadillac, having still some landed interests in this city to look after. Daniel
McCoy, formerly a Wexford County lumberman,
and now state treasurer of Michigan, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in
1845 and lived in that city until 1867, when he came to Michigan, locating in Macomb
county, where he lived until 1872, when he went into the lumbering business on the
Manistee river. In 1873 he transferred the scene of his operations to the village
of Clam Lake, purchasing quite an extensive tract of pine land and erecting a large
saw-mill about one mile north of the village. He remained a resident of Clam Lake,
now Cadillac, until 1883, when he removed to Grand Rapids, Michigan. He filled the
offices of president of the village and mayor of the city. He was chairman of the
Wexford county Republican committee for several years, and only once was he known
to waver in his, support of that party. That was when Hon. Jay A. Hubbell, of Houghton,
was in the field for the office of United States senator from Michigan. Mr. McCoy
was an ardent Hubbell man and tried hard to secure the nomination of a candidate
for representative in the legislature who would support Mr. Hubbell for senator.
In the strife which occurred in the representative convention, which lasted two
days and in which nearly two hundred ballots were taken, the counties of Kalkaska,
Lake and Missaukee, which with Wexford county constituted the representative district,
pooled their issues and drew, lots as to which of the three candidates from those
counties should receive the nomination. The lot fell to A. A. Abbott of Kalkaska,
and he was accordingly nominated. Mr. Abbott was an anti-Hubbell man, and Mr. McCoy
undertook the task of bringing about his defeat. He prevailed upon a friend by the
name of Bonnell, of Missaukee county, with Democratic leanings, to announce himself
an independent candidate for representative. H. C. McFarlan was one of the successful merchants in Manton, locating in that village in 1874. He carried a full line of general merchandise and did a very lucrative business. He was born in Wayne county, Michigan, in 1848, and in 1862, at the age of fourteen years, he enlisted in the Twenty-seventh Michigan Infantry, but was soon afterward discharged. He then went into the Sixth Michigan Infantry, and served until the end of the war. After his army service he led the life of a sailor for six years on the lakes. An estrangement between him and his wife led to a final separation some time in the early nineties, and he sold out his business at Manton and for a year or two his Wexford county friends lost sight of him. He finally went into business again in Williamsburg, Grand Traverse county, where he still resides. H. F. Campbell
was born in Quincy, Michigan, in 1852, his parents removing to Grand Ledge, Eaton
county, Michigan, in 1861, where he lived until he came to Wexford county in 1876.
He had worked on the Grand Ledge Independent at the printer's trade, having acquired
a good degree of proficiency in that line before coming to Wexford county. His first
work in the county was on the Cadillac News. After a short time in Cadillac he went
to Sherman and worked in the Pioneer office for some time, finally purchasing a
half interest in that paper, with J. H. Wheeler as the other half owner, the company
being known as Campbell & Wheeler. Mr. Campbell lost his first wife by death some
time before coming to this county, and in 1880 he married Miss Lizzie Cummings,
of Conneaut, Ohio. Soon after this second marriage he sold out his interest in the
Pioneer and removed to Manton. He held the Sherman postoffice for two years, resigning
his position upon his change of residence. In 1883 he received the appointment of
postmaster at Manton, which office he held for four years. B. Woods
was born in Albany, New York, in 1847, his father moving to Lockport, New York,
in 1850, where they lived until 1865. Mr. Woods then left home and went to Oil City,
Pennsylvania, which was then the center of the oil operations of that state, and,
in fact, of the whole world. Here he worked about six months and then went to Grand
Rapids, Michigan, where he entered the employ of Cook & Skinner, stage coach proprietors.
William Derr was born in Salem, Columbiana county, Ohio, in 1846. He came to Grand Traverse region in 1866, stopping first in Grand Traverse county, where he worked several years in the lumber camps in the winter and on farms in the summer. He came to Sherman, Wexford county, in 1872, and took up the occupation of stage driver, the mail route then being from Clam Lake to Traverse City via Sherman. He was engaged in this work for six years, a part of the time as proprietor of the line and part of the time as driver only. In 1878 he went into I. H. Maqueston's grist-mill as assistant, under Mr. Bennett. After a couple of years service he became so proficient that he was given full charge of the mill, which he managed to the entire satisfaction of his employer and the public at large. After some seven or eight years work in the mill he bought a farm in Wexford township and turned his attention again to farming. Owing to the protracted illness of his wife he decided to move west, thinking the change might improve her health. He chose what was then the territory of Washington as his future home. The change did not bring the benefit hoped for to his wife, who died a few months after reaching their new home. Mr. Derr will long be remembered by the residents of the county in those days, both for his sturdy and genial characteristics and his Jehu-like driving on the mail routes. He still lives in Washington. Moses Cole was one of the early pioneers in Wexford county, settling on a homestead in what is now Wexford township in 1867. He was born in Niagara county, New York, in 1836, and came to Michigan in 1857, living for several years near Detroit, and for three years having charge of a toll-gate on the Detroit and Erie plank road at Conner's Creek. He traded his homestead for village property in Sherman, and purchased a half interest in the saw-mill which was situated one and a fourth miles east of Sherman village on a stream known as Cole's creek. He replaced the muley saw with a circular, and at one time had a shingle mill in connection with the saw-mill. He sold out his interest in the mill in the early nineties and removed to Grayling, Michigan, where he still lives. Frank D. Hopkins,
a former merchant at Sherman, was born in Livingston county, Michigan, in 1856.
L. A. Avery came to Grand Traverse county in 1863 from Steuben county, New York, where he was born in 1835. He first settled near Monroe Center on a homestead claim, clearing a farm and working at his trade, that of a blacksmith, until 1874, when he moved to Sherman, Wexford county, built a blacksmith shop, and for nearly twenty years carried on this business, to which he added the wagon repairing business. He moved to southern Michigan some nine or ten years ago, and now lives a few miles north of Petoskey on the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad, where he still works at his trade. D. V. Emmons was born in Oakland county, Michigan, in 1841. He enlisted in the Third Michigan Infantry in June, 1861, serving three years in the Army of the Potomac. He was in the first real battle of the Civil war at Bull Run, and in many of the battles fought by the eastern army. He came to Wexford county in 1878, and engaged in the drug business in Sherman. He continued in this occupation until 1886, when he bought an eighty-acre farm on section 5 in Antioch and engaged in the occupation of farming. After three or four years at this business he moved to Allegan county, Michigan, and later went to Galesburg, Michigan,, and purchased a flouring mill. He was still operating this mill at last tidings from him. H. H. Skinner, the first sheriff of Wexford county, took up a homestead on section 4 in Wexford township in 1865. He had served several years in the army prior to locating in Wexford county, and in consequence of the infirmities brought on by army exposure his health became so poor that he had to abandon his farm, and finally, some eight years ago, he was obliged to accept the state's offer of aid to the ex-soldiers and entered the Soldiers' Home at Grand Rapids, Michigan. E. D. Abbott, formerly sheriff of Wexford county, was born in Sodus, Wayne county, New York, in 1841. On the 26th of February, 1864, he enlisted in Company E, First New York Dragoons, afterwards known as Company C, Nineteenth New York Cavalry. He served until June 27, 1865, when he received an honorable discharge. Not content to settle down to the old life in the east, he determined to take Horace Greeley's advice to "Go west, young man, go west," and in November, 1867, he reached Wexford county, taking up a homestead five miles west of the village of Manton, although it was five years before that village was thought of. Upon the resignation of Joseph Sturr, who was elected sheriff of Wexford county in 1870 and moved to southern Michigan soon after entering upon the duties of the office, Mr. Abbott was appointed to fill out the balance of the term. At the following election in 1872 Mr. Abbott was elected to the office he had acceptably filled, and held the office during the years 1873 and 1874. He then went into the drug store of M. S. Emmons at Sherman, and has made that business his principal occupation since. He now owns a drug store at Alba, Michigan, having resided at that place for the past eight or ten years. Henry Clark came to Wexford county in 1868, his occupation at that time being land looker and timber estimator, and he came in the interest of those who were desirous of getting the choicest selections of pine lands, of which there were many thousands of acres in the county at that time. It was largely through his efforts, together with those of his uncle, Sylvester Clark, that the county seat was located where the village of Sherman now stands, instead of a mile farther north at the Manistee river. It was also largely through his influence that the Maqueston Brothers, Isaac H. and E. G., who were the first merchants to locate in the county, were induced to come into what was then an almost unbroken wilderness. After a few years residence, during which he married Alice Fox, he went with his bride to live in Big Rapids, and after a short stay there they removed to Grand Rapids. About the year 1880 he moved to Duluth, where he lived until the death of his wife, which occurred in 1885. After this sad event he left Duluth and resumed his old occupation of timber estimator, finally taking up a homestead near Two Harbors, Minnesota, where he has since resided. He has never remarried, his son Neil being his only companion in their little cabin on the homestead until a year ago, when the latter married Dora, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. Gasser, of Sherman, Wexford county, and took her to the backwoods home in Minnesota. Alonzo Chubb was born in Monroe county, New York, in 1823. His people moved to Michigan soon after the state was admitted to the Union. Mr. Chubb enlisted soon after the beginning of the war of the Rebellion in the One Hundred and Fifth Ohio Volunteers, serving two years, at the end of which time he was mustered out on account of wounds and sickness, having attained the rank of lieutenant. In 1867, he came to northern Michigan, settling in what is now the township of Cleon, Manistee county. He often tells of how he wintered some pigs he brought with him when he moved into the wools. The snow got so deep that it was impossible to get to Traverse City, the only place where feed could be procured, and as a last resort he drove them to the woods with the rest of his stock to see if they would "browse." To his utter surprise they took right hold of the tender maple twigs and lived on a "browse" diet the balance of the winter. Mr. Chubb also says that there are not many people who can truthfully boast of holding office in two counties, living in two representative and two senatorial districts, and yet never changing his residence from the town he first settled in. Of course this state of affairs came about by reason of the township of Cleon having been attached to this county for a number of years, during which time Mr. Chubb served a term of four years as judge of probate of Wexford county. He is still hale and hearty at the age of eighty and has a real estate office in the village of Copemish, in Manistee county. |