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1880 Township of Deerfield Part C. Pages 430-437
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| 430.
order to assist one another homeward. The result
proved the truth of another adage, "When the blind lead the blind," etc.; for
"both" fell "into the ditch," and in falling they became separated.
Each struggled to his feet, but with their faces turned in opposite directions. Each
insisted that his way was right, and as neither could convince the other of the
"error of his way," finally trudged away in opposite directions. Through the
intervention of friends both finally reached home safe and sound. Warned by such
occurrences as this, the voters determined to pursue a different policy, and in 1843, and
for several years thereafter, annually voted that no liquor should be furnished at
elections. But this action does not fairly represent the position of the town on the liquor question, for it has generally been a liquor-trafficking and liquor-drinking community, at least to a more marked degree than most of its sister towns. The only records bearing upon the matter are those of votes taken at four different times. The first, in 1845, was 17 voted for license, and 15 against it. The second was taken in 1846, and resulted for license, 25, against license, 48. The third was the vote of 1850, when 66 votes were cast for license, and only 14 against it. The last was that taken in 1868 as to changes in the constitution of the State, when the vote for the prohibitory clause was 23, and the vote against it was 185. In the matter of building a town-house, the first public action was taken at the town-meeting in 1863, when $300 was voted for the purpose of building a town-house, and a committee of five, consisting of Ira Lamb, James Pratt, James Cameron, John Sellers, and William Payne, was appointed to select and procure a site as near the centre of the town as possible. The committee purchased a site of Bela Fenner. At the town-meeting of 1864, $300 was voted to apply on the job, and the committee were instructed to build a new house, to cost not more than $800. The committee sold back to Mr. Fenner the lot purchased of him, and bought of Mr. Leonard one-half acre of ground a little west of the northeast corner of section 21, for the sum of $20. The contract was let to the lowest bidder, Jethro Shout, for $790, April 28th, and on October 15th, the job being completed, the house was accepted, and was occupied for the election. The total cost of the building and lot, including furnishing, amounted to about $920. A special meeting was held Feb. 22, 1868, to consider the question of issuing town-bonds to the amount of $15,000, in aid of the "Chicago and Michigan Grand Trunk Railway The project met with a chilling reception, being negatived by a vote of 126 to 46. At the annual town-meeting of the same year, the proposed changes of the constitution were voted upon with the following result: in favor of the new constitution, 35; against it, 185. For annual sessions of the Legislature, 0; for biennial sessions, 191. For prohibition, 23; against it, 185. Another vote on constitutional amendments was taken Nov. 5, 1872, and the following votes were cast: for the payment of railroad bonds, 13; against it, 198. For the re-division of the judicial districts of the State, 12; against it, 200. For the proposed change in the salaries of State officers, 14; against it, 197. During the war for the suppression of the Rebellion this town did its best to fill its quota under the several calls for troops, and to accomplish this result held several special township-meetings. The first of these meetings was held in response to a petition signed by prominent citizens. It was held at the house of Calvin W. Leonard, Feb. 20, 1864, and a resolution was passed to raise $100 bounty for every man enlisted and credited to the town till its quota was filled, by a vote of 111 to 19. March 21, 1864, another petition, bearing the names of 29 citizens, was presented, praying for action at the town-meeting to extend this provision to others. At the town-meeting held April 4, 1864, it was accordingly voted to raise by loan a sufficient sum to pay each volunteer who had enlisted or should enlist in the United States service and be credited to the town, on any quota, under calls of the President made since Jan. 7, 1864, the sum of $100, the bonds to bear 7 per cent. interest, and to be payable in one, two, and three years. Another special meeting, held at Mr. Leonard's, Aug. 6, 1864, extended the same provisions to drafted men, or those who furnished substitutes, subsequent to Feb. 4, 1864. Previous to June 10, 1865, the sum of $5425 had been contributed to clear the town of its liability under the call for 500,000 men, and a meeting was held on that day to take some action regarding the refunding of such contributions by raising a sufficient sum by tax, and also to pay drafted men in 1863, '64, and '65, who served or furnished substitutes, the sum of $100 each. A motion to raise the tax, and also one to pay the bounty, was negatived by a vote of 91 to 44. The population of Deerfield in 1850 was 822. In 1860 it had increased to 1015. In 1870 it was 1128, of whom 988 were natives, and 140 were of foreign birth. In 1874, for some unexplained reason, the population showed a falling 431. off, as it was then reported at 1043. This number was divided as follows: Males, under five years, 78; from five to ten years, 60; from ten to twenty-one years, 153; from twenty-one to forty-five years, 177; from forty-five to seventy-five years, 96; from seventy-five to ninety years, 9; total, 573. Females under five years, 64; from five to ten years, 63 from ten to eighteen years, 96; from. eighteen to forty years, 145; from forty to seventy-five years, 98; over seventy-five years, 4; total, 470. Their condition in life was reported as follows: Males, from ten to twenty-one, all single, 153; over twenty-one, single, 67; married, 199; widowers and divorced, 16. Females, from ten to eighteen years, single, 95; married, 1; over eighteen, single, 38; married, 184; widows and divorced, 25. Total, married, 384; single, 618; widowed and divorced, 41. From the census of 1874 we also glean some interesting statistics regarding the town, its resources, and productions, which are given in as concise a form as possible. Deerfield then possessed an area of taxable lands of 21,659* acres, of which 12,078 acres were improved and 49 acres were exempt. Three acres were devoted to places of burial for the dead, and 2½ acres to church and parsonage-sites. There were then in the town 184 farms, averaging an area of 117.71 acres each, the average being a little higher than is that of most towns. In 1873, 3021 acres of wheat were harvested, yielding an average of 14.47 bushels to the acre, giving the town fourth rank in the county; and 1022 acres of corn produced an average of 27.55 bushels per acre, giving the town the twelfth for corn. In the quantity produced it holds rank among the towns of the county as follows: it is third for wheat and all other grains, except corn, and for pork, fourth for cheese, fifth for potatoes, ninth for wool,. eleventh for corn, thirteenth for butter, and fifteenth for hay. In a general average it stands as the seventh town of Livingston County. The following table shows the quantity of its products for 1873:
There was then 424 acres of orcharding, and the yield of apples for that and the previous year was reported at 14,394 bushels in 1872, and 9634 bushels in 1873. The amount of stock kept was
for that year: horses, 517; mules, 5; working oxen, 52; milch cows, 417; other neat
cattle, 677; swine, 731; sheep, 5498.
POST-OFFICES
The first post-office in Deerfield was established in 1837-38. It was intended to call the office by the name of the town, but the department having already established an office in Lenawee County under that name, issued a commission to Alfred Holmes as postmaster of "Deer Creek" post-office. It was then kept in his blacksmith-shop, a little south of the west quarter-post of section 17. In 1843 the office was transferred to John How, and moved to his house on section 6, where it remained for about seventeen years. In 1848, Mr. How died, and was succeeded by his son William, who retained it till his death, in 1864. His widow kept it a few months, and then it was transferred to Darius Lewis,who, for private reasons, kept it 432. for a while on his front stoop. His successor was Alexander Bain, who kept it at his ashery, and was succeeded by the present postmaster, William W. Henderson, in 1870 since which time it has been kept in the store.
Daniel Boutell first carried the mail over this route, which led
from Howell to Shiawassee, embracing the offices of Deer Creek and Byron. Oak Grove,
Cohoctah (at first called Tuscola), Argentine, and Madison were added when they were
established, and the northern terminus of the route transferred to Linden, so that the
present route embraces five offices, and is more than thirty miles long. The round trip is
made from Linden to Howell and return on Thursday and Friday of each week.
INDUSTRIES
The first mechanical industry in the town was the
manufacture of lumber, and was inaugurated by John How, who rigged and operated a
"pit-saw" for that purpose in 1834. This primitive style of sawing did not long
remain in vogue, for in the winter of 1835-36 he commenced work on a saw-mill. The first
step was the building of a dam across the Shiawassee River, and the spot fixed upon was
that where the stream crossed the south line of section 6. The line of the dam lay
diagonally across the section line, and it was about 100 feet long. It was built of logs
held in place by small trees, whose butts rested upon the logs of the dam, and whose
untrimmed tops extended upstream, and were anchored by dirt and stone dumped upon them. It was necessary at
times to do this work of filling in by cutting holes through the ice that formed and
dumping the ballast through them. In the spring, when the sun began to warm up the earth
and streams, the water began to work through the half-frozen, lumpy mass, and soon
undermined the dam, which, as the freshet increased in volume, was nearly all swept away.
It was rebuilt as soon as the high water subsided, and in the following summer the mill
was built and commenced operations. This mill was about 20 by 42 feet in size, furnished
with an old-fashioned "flutter-wheel" and a "sash" saw, and was run
simply for custom sawing, though Mr. How afterwards bought some land on section 18, on
which was some fine timber, and did a little lumbering. But even this lumber was used for
building purposes by the settlers of this and adjoining towns. After Mr. How's death the
mill property passed through several ownerships, and finally came into the possession of
Isaac L. & D. N. Roberts, who, about 1852-53, built the first grist-mill in the town.
Since that time the property has had several owners, and has been divided. The grist-mill
has been owned by Philander Sackner, David B. Bradley, Isaac L. Roberts, William Sturgis,
Isaac L. Roberts, Darius Lewis, George Green, and is now owned by Holcomb & Green. It
is a building 36 by 44 feet in size, two stories high, with a basement, and fitted up with
two run of stones and the usual accompanying machinery. It has three iron turbine
water-wheels, furnishing an aggregate of about 40 horse-power It has a capacity for
grinding 150 bushels of wheat and 300 bushels of feed per day, and is doing a good custom
business. The saw-mill has been owned, since the property was divided, by Philander
Sackner, Joseph Rider, George G. Gibson, and Simeon Kittle, who is the present proprietor.
Before the division it was rebuilt as it now stands. Its annual product was put down in
1874 at 100,000 feet. It now does but a limited custom business in times of high water.
An ashery was operated at Deer Creek several years ago by
Alexander Bain, and was subsequently moved to his 433.
land on section 17, where it was run for a while and
then abandoned.
VILLAGES
In an agricultural community villages are usually of slow growth, and rarely attain to any considerable size, unless, by means of manufactories and railroads, a foundation is laid, and an impetus given to the trades and branches of business that build up a place. And yet, to the citizens of the vicinity, the growth of these little hamlets possess a degree of interest that renders a history of then, however brief, desirable.
DEER CREEK
which received its name from the post-office, lies in
the northwest, part of the town, mostly on the southeast quarter of section 6, but
extending a little on to the northeast quarter of section 7. It is very pleasantly located
on high, lightly-rolling ground, on the east bank of the south branch of the Shiawassee
River, and contains a population of about 75 souls. The name most commonly applied to it
by people of the vicinity is "Howburg," derived from the name of John How, the
original owner of the land on which it is built.
DEERFIELD CENTRE
as its name implies, is located at the centre of the town, and is but a little huddle of dwellings, with a store and blacksmith-shop. It commenced in 1842, when Calvin W. Leonard made the first purchase of land on the school section, and built the first house in the village. It was located on the site of Mr. Leonard's present handsome residence. At that time the nearest houses were Bela Fenner's, a half-mile south, and Elhanan F. Cooley's and Elias B. Holcomb's, about the same distance east. A couple of years later Mr. Fenner sold two small lots on the north line of section 22 to Addison Sutherland and Mishal Hull. Each of them built a house on his lot, and Sutherland, who was a blacksmith, also put up a small shop on his lot, and went to work at his trade, Hull working in, the shop with him. The next building erected was the stone building on the southwest corner of section 15, which was intended for a school-house, but not used as such,¶ the district voting to not accept the building, and subsequently purchased another site of Mr. Leonard, and on that erected their present frame school-house, one of the best in the town, at a cost of about $800. Next, the town-house was built in the summer of 1864, and soon after John R. Bunting, a returned soldier, who had lost one foot in the service of his country, erected the present store building, and opened a grocery. He soon after sold to Mishal Hull. Since then it has passed through several hands, and is now owned by a Mr. Giddings, of Gaines, Genesee Co., Mich. In 1874 the Methodist church was built. The present statistics of the village show that it contains one church, one school-house, one town-house, one store and postoffice, one blacksmith-shop, about a dozen dwellings, and a population of about 50.
HIGHWAYS
The first road in the town was the one opened by the How family, leading north from their settlement to the Shiawassee road, or trail as it then was. Of course this was not surveyed, but was cleared of rubbish and marked by "blazed trees" as a private undertaking. The first recorded surveys of roads 434. were made by A. Adams, between the 15th and 20th days of May, 1837, and were opened in the following order: first, a road in continuation of the one running east from Oak Grove, which crossed sections 31 and 32 in a southeast direction, and passed into Oceola; second a road running on section line from the northeast corner of section 31 to the west line of Tyrone; third, one across the town a mile north of the second road; fourth, one connecting these two, running from the northeast corner of section 32 to the northeast corner of section 29; fifth, one running west, three-quarters of a mile from the east quarter-post of section 18; sixth, one running from the northeast corner of section 31 to the southeast corner of section 6. These roads were, of course, supplemented by others as fast as the needs of the pioneers made them necessary. In 1847 the non-resident highway tax was appropriated "to build a bridge across Ore Creek at Bennett's dam," which is now one of the most important bridges in the town, it being on the direct road to Linden and Fenton. The present fine bridge at that point was erected in the centennial year. The How bridge across the Shiawassee was built in 1851.
SCHOOLS
The division of the town into school districts was a
work which extended through a considerable length of time, and since their first formation
many changes in their boundary lines and numbers have been made from time to time, so that
it would be a laborious task, as it would be a practically useless one, to try to trace
them all from their organization to the present. We will therefore give but a brief resume
of the most salient points in the history of each. 435.
District No. 7, now obsolete, was organized March 2,
1839, from sections 20, 21, 28, and 29.
RELIGIOUS HISTORY
In the late fall of 1836, the first religious meeting
in the town of Deerfield was held, at the house of Reuben Pease, on section 14, in the
Topping neighborhood. Rev. Washington Jackson, the pioneer Methodist preacher of this
vicinity, had given out the appointment, in connection with several others in this region, some
time before. It was a Sunday appointment, and a severe wintry storm which set in and
continued through the preceding night, and was unabated on Sabbath morning, promised to
prevent the meeting. But the people were hardy pioneers, used to and fearless of storms,
and load after load of people came from different directions through the snow-drifts, the
ox-teams and drivers hoary with snow and frost. In spite of the inclement weather a large
congregation got together; the meeting was one of unusual interest, and long held a place
in the remembrance of those who attended it.
FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF DEERFIELD
was organized at the Centre. It had but a few members,
among them being Mrs. John Anderson, John D. Converse and wife, Reuben Young and wife, and
William A. and Elizabeth Hull. Mr. Hull was the first class-leader. What its first circuit
relation was is not known. Upon the organization of the Oak Grove circuit, in 1855, it was
connected with that circuit, and so remained until 1874, when it was transferred to the
new Parshallville circuit. It has had quite a varied experience, meeting with, perhaps,
more than the usual amount of alternating periods of prosperity and adversity, but still
maintains its position upon the battlements and floats the pure white banner of the
Saviour to guide repentant sinners to the pathway leading to life eternal. Its present
membership is about 25. No class-leader has been appointed since the position was vacated
some time ago, and the preacher in charge of the circuit consequently acts in that
capacity. The pastors of the church since 1855 have been as follows: 1855, William
Birdsall; 1856, Lyman H. Dean; 1857, L. P. Murch; 1858-59, James H. Caster; 1860, F.
Brittan; 1861-62, Samuel P. Lee; 1863-64, James R. Cordon and J. G. Horton, two months;
1865-66, D. P. Balls; 1866-68, Joseph W. Holt and J. G. Horton in the latter year;
1869-70, Alexander Gee; 1871-74, James Balls; 1875, Orlando Sanborn; 1876, William
Birdsall; 1877-78, Edwin Daw; 1879, Orlando Sanborn. Under the preaching of Rev. E. E.
Caster, O. H. P. Green, and Edwin Daw there were revivals, that under Caster being the
most notable and extensive.
BAPTIST
A Baptist society was formed some time between 1845 and 1850, at the school-house in District No. 1, it being a branch of the church at Parshallville. Its membership was small, and contained, among others, Horace H. Nottingham and wife, Mrs. Samuel Leonard, Mrs. Perry, Mrs. Jemima Downer, Abiram Blackburn, wife, and mother, and Jethro Shout and wife. Preaching was kept up once a month, at the school-house, for a few years, and then the society was broken up, its individual members transferring their membership to other churches of the connection. At the present time, Baptist services are held every two weeks at the church in Deerfield Centre, by Rev. I. W. Lamb, pastor of the Parshallville Church.
ROMAN CATHOLIC
There were a number of Irish emigrants among the early
settlers of Deerfield, all of whom were communicants of the Church of Rome, and as soon as
they could see their way clear to do so, they set at work to erect a church. Preparatory
to this undertaking a church was organized in June, 1846, by Rev. Patrick Kelly, a
missionary sent out to organize churches among the Catholics of this State, which then
numbered 13 families, most of them being young married people. James McKeone was the
leader of the enterprise, and among the others who assisted in the work were
Dennis and Timothy McCarthy, Bryan Corr, John McKeone, Edward Sweeney, Michael Bennett,
Patrick and James Conklin, James Scullin, James Murphy, James McGuire, and John Ryan.
CEMETERIES
There are but three burying-grounds in Deerfield, and two of these have been regularly incorporated. The first is called
THE DEERFIELD CENTRE BURIAL-GROUND
As has been mentioned, the first death
in town, so far as known, was, that of Mrs. Achsah (Wood) Bennett, the second wife of
Benjamin Bennett, who died in, June, 1837. The second is believed to have been that of
Mrs. Nancy Faussett, widow of James Faussett, and mother of Thomas and George Faussett;
she was the first person buried in this ground. Her death occurred March 6, 1838. Other
early deaths were those of Mr. Joseph Wise's father, date unknown; Lydia E. Luce (daughter
of Freeborn and Eunice Luce), an infant, Aug. 2, 1838; and Mrs. Sarah Boutell, second wife
of Lorenzo Boutell, Oct. 9, 1840.
DEER CREEK BURYING-GROUND
This is located on the northeast quarter of section 7. It contains about 1.1 acres. The ground was first opened in 1846, by John How, as a family and neighborhood burial-place, and was finally incorporated at a meeting held in the Deer Creek school-house, Oct. 30, 1875. After adopting a name, officers were chosen as follows: President, John How; Vice-President, William W. Henderson; Secretary, Frederick Bredow; Treasurer, David B. Bradley; Sexton, John G. Gibson. These officers hold their position at the pleasure of the association until removed for cause. No change has yet been made in the official board.
CATHOLIC CEMETERY
Around the Catholic church, on section
25, is located the third burying-ground in Deerfield. It contains nearly two acres, and
has numerous graves, over many of which have been erected beautiful and costly monuments.
It looks somewhat neglected. With a little effort and watchful care, it could very easily
be made the prettiest cemetery in the town. |
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* By the United States survey the area of the town is reported at 23,871.25 acres, the sections on the north overrunning, and those on the west falling short of the true area of a section. Neither the lakes nor the streams were "meandered," which accounts for the apparent discrepancy.
¶ Some time about 1869 the stone building and one acre of ground was purchased by Mr. Leonard, who finished it off for a blacksmith-shop and sold it to George Knickerbocker, who worked in it for some time. After several changes of owners it was finally bought by Misfial Hull and fitted up for a store-room in connection with the store,--a use to which it has ever since been devoted.
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