(ilass Book COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT 3 6 DOWN THE HISTORIC SUSQUEHANNA A SUMMER'S JAUNT Otsego to the Chesapeake BY Charles Weathers Bump BALTIMORE: Press of The Sun Printing Office 1899. TWO COPIES RECElVBDi Library of CotlgPttflt Office of the lj r .,5_1Roq Register of Copyrights 48534 Copyrighted, 1899. All Rights Reserved. For the author's circulation, reprinted in revised and enlarged form, through the courtesy of the proprietors of The Baltimore Sun, to whom this acknowledg- ment of their generosity is due. TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE. I. A Trip of Much Promise, ... 1 Cooperstown, N. Y., August 15. II. In the Pages of History, ... 8 Cooperstown, N. Y., August 16. III. Not Unsung by Pouts, 15 Cooperstown, N. Y., August 17. IV. Cooper's "Glimmerglass" ... 25 Cooperstown, N, Y., August 18. V. Two Modern Explorers, . . . 32 Richfield Springs, N. Y., Aug. 19. VI. Thro' the Hop Country, ... 40 Afton, N. Y., August 20. VII. Where Mormonism Began, ... 48 Binghamton, N. Y., August 22. VIII. Along the Southern Tier, ... 57 Owego, N. Y., August 23. IX. Legends of Two Hills, .... 66 Pittstou, Pa., August 24. X. The Vale of Wyoming, .... 80 Wilkesbarre, Pa , August 25. XL Beneath a Big City, 90 Wilkesbarre, Pa., August 26. XII. The Home of Priestley, .... 97 Northumberland, Pa., August 28. PAGE- XIII. Down the West Branch, .... 107 Suubury, Pa., September 2. XIV. The Passing of the Boats, . . .120 Sunbury, Pa., September 8. XV. A Noble Water Gap, 126 Harrisburg, Pa., September 4. XVI. In Busy Harrisburg, 134 Harrisburg, Pa., September 5. XVII. Some Model Farms, 142 Columbia, Pa., September 6. XVIII. The Story op Columbia, .... 149 Columbia, Pa., September 7. XIX. The Land op Big Barns, .... 157 Columbia, Pa., September 9. XX. Amid Charming Highlands, . .164 Port Deposit, Md., September 12. XXI. At the River's Mouth, .... 172 Havre-de-Grace, Md., Sept. 14. XXII. George Talbot's Caye, . . . .ISO Watson's Island, Md.,Sept. 15. I. A TRIP OF MUCH PROMISE. Cooi'EitsTowN, Otsego County, N. Y., Aug. 15.— The other day when I told a friend I proposed to spend a summer vaca- tion in a trip making the entire length of the Susquehanna river from Lake Otsego to the Chesapeake, he said to me, sort of apologetically: "I have always considered the Susque- hanna such a useless river. It seems so big and lumbering, and it has not the charm of the Hudson for scenery or historic in- terest." Before we parted, an hour later, I had so oppositely convinced my friend that I am sure he is now envying me the trip. As for myself I redoubled my enthusiasm over the summer scheme. So here I am at the head of the big river, looking forward with eagerness to a jaunt of many miles down stream and forearmed, as it would seem, from "reading up" on what I am to see in the way of fine scenery, of sites in- vested with historic interest, and moun- tains and vales replete with romantic legends and Indian tales. A great many other persons are unde- niably in the same boat with my friend. Perhaps I myself might have been as igno- rant had I not had a grandfather who was familiar with every mile of the Susque- hanna and who repeated many of its most interesting incidents as we traveled to- gether along portions of its banks. Casting about for a reason, it seems to me that the fame of the Susquehanna has two distinct setbacks which have led to its comparative neglect by travelers in search of the picturesque or fond of tracing the footsteps of American history. One of these setbacks arose from the cir- cumstance that the river was peopled by three different Commonwealths— Maryland, Pennsylvania and New York. The New Yorkers look eastward to New York city and Albany. Similarly the Pennsylvanians mostly find a commingling of interest with Philadelphia. And out of all this grows much ignorance on the part of one section in the doings of another. In Maryland, for instance, little is known of the prosperity and attractiveness of the river valley with- in the limits of New York. While contrari- wise I have at times found much apathy in Central New York about the history and development of the river in Maryland and Lower Pennsylvania. Perhaps much of this isolation might have been overcome had the Susquehanna been regularly navigable by steamboats or had the railroads formed a single line from Cooperstown to Havre de Grace. Then a steady down-to-Maryland business would have ensued in big proportions and the charm of travel up and down the river would have been strong. , But the steam- boats could not come and the railroads mainly turned eastward and westward in their building, and so the Susquehanna has been passed by travelers. The importance of this consideration is seen by comparing the Susquehanna with the Hudson, beyond doubt the most ad- mired of American rivers. Railroads on both banks and steamboats day and night carry tourists from New York to Albany through the entire region of beauty, legend and history. It is again made obvious by recalling the Potomac, the scenic portion of which is traversed by every passenger to or from the West over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The Susquehanna river has not one, but half a dozen rail- roads. They follow every mile of its banks from Otsego to the Chesapeake, yet no less than eight changes of cars are required for a through journey. And yet, in spite of such drawbacks, there is much of genuine interest to be found in a journey all the way along the Susquehanna. In its long and winding course from limpid Lake Otsego, its scenery is certainly as varied as that of any river. Sometimes through fertile val- leys teeming with busy farmers; then again in narrow, rocky gorges, with moun- tains close by framing in views that are hard to excel, and contributing rushing cascades to swell the big stream; again past cities alive with industries and im- portant as railroad centres. In all its windings it never has the fault of being monotonous, and often justly earns the application of those much-abused adjec- tives, "romantic," "noble" or "grand." No more pleasing lake scenery can be found than on and around Otsego; no more beau- tiful vale entered than that of Wyoming; no bolder views laid bare than above Har- risburg, where the river forces its way with abruptness through a gap in the Kic- tatinny Mountains; no finer rocky gorges than from Columbia to Port Deposit. The painters have not neglected the Sus- quehanna, especially the men who led American art in the generation just pass- ing away. Those who are familiar with the public and private galleries of our lead- ing American cities can easily recall can- vasses reproducing charming bits of river and mountain scenery from along the Sus- quehanna and the Juniata and other tribu- taries. In many instances these paintings are doubly valuable because they picture landscapes that have been greatly altered. Statistics are dull sometimes, but then again they give much in short compass. It interests us to be told, for example, that in the country drained by the Sus- quehanna there are two millions and a quarter of inhabitants. When we ask what is included in this drainage area we are told by Government investigators that the Susquehanna drains 26,000 square miles, of which 6,000 are in New York, nearly 20,000 in Pennsylvania and a small fraction in Maryland. In other words, it comprises about one-seventh of New York State, in the southern and central portions, and slightly less than one-half of Pennsylvania, sweeping from beyond Scranton on the northeast almost to Johnstown on the southwest, and from beyond Lancaster on the southeast to the oil region of the northwest. Of course, the Susquehanna does not do this un- aided. It has many, many active branches. the chief among which are the Chenango and the Chemung, in New York State, and the Juniata and the West Branch, in Pennsylvania. Incidentally let me remind you of one other fact concerning the Susquehanna which is of importance. It is, without ex- ception, the longest river on the Atlantic seaboard, and is overtopped in size only by a few of the great broad Western rivers. Its length is counted as 420 miles. That of the West Branch is more than 200 miles. The hundreds of towns found every few miles along the main river and its tribu- taries show how the two millions and a quarter of inhabitants are made up. It is true that there are no cities of the largest size, but there are many of the next size, the most conspicuous being Binghamtou, N. Y., at the junction of the Chenango river, which has 50,000; Elmira, on the Chemung, 33.000; Scranton, Pa., on the Lackawanna, 75,000; Wilkesbarre, on the main stream, 45,000; Williamsport, on the West Branch, 35,000; Harrisburg, on the main stream, 60,000; York, on Codorus creek, 30,000; Lancaster, on Conestoga creek. 40,000, and Altoona, 30,000. We are told also by the Government ex- perts already quoted that there is a goodly amount of water power in the rapids and descents of the Susquehanna and its many feeders. For instance. Lake Otsego is 1,193 feet above tidewater, so that the river has to descend that considerable amount in getting to Havre de Grace. Much of this power is utilized, but much of it is not, and we are assured that there are valuable opportunities to get power for manufactures along a portion of the West Branch not yet developed by railroads. That one gap on the West Branch is the only part of the entire river which has not a railroad on the one bank or the other, sometimes on both. Close students of American development long ago ob- served how the rivers helped make the rail- roads great by yielding their banks to furnish available routes. This is especially noticeable in the case of the Susquehanna. Four of the great through lines to the West make use of portions of the river valley. They are the Pennsylvania, the Lehigh Valley, the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western and the Erie. The Pennsylvania comes in from Phila- delphia some miles below Harrisburg and leaves the Susquehanna at the mouth of the Juniata. The Lehigh Valley from New York enters the valley near Wilkes- barre and goes up stream to the mouth of the Chemung at Athens. The Erie approaches the river east of the town of Susquehanna and goes west with it to near Athens. Similarly the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western comes in at Great Bend and parallels the Erie to near Athens and beyond on the Chemung. Indeed, if the Baltimore and Ohio may be considered as entering the valley when it crosses its mouth at Havre de Grace, it can, with propriety, be asserted that only one of the big routes from New York does not use the Susquehanna Val- ley. That one is the New York Central. The first 16 miles of the river course be- low Lake Otsego is followed by the Coop- erstown and Charlotte Valley Railroad; then for 80 miles to Susquehanna, the Delaware and Hudson Railroad is there; then come the Erie and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western on both banks to Waverly and the Lehigh Valley from Waverly to AVilkesbarre; then from Wilkesbarre to Northumberland and Sun- bury both banks are again occupied, the right by a division of the Delaware, Lacka- wanna and Western and the left by a di- vision of the Pennsylvania Railroad; from Sunbury to York Haven, through Harris- burg is the Northern Central Railroad, part of the Pennsylvania system, and from Harrisburg to the mouth of the river at Perryville the east bank contains the Columbia and Port Deposit divisions of the Pennsylvania. At Perryville the Phila- delphia, Wilmington and Baltimore is tapped. From which statements it is evident that the river is followed by railroads for each of its 420 miles, and that for nearly half of that distance there are tracks on both sides. Many other railroads come into the valley for a few miles here and there. notably in the great anthracite coal belt around Wilkesbarre and to the east of the river below Sunbury. That coal belt is in a great measure responsible for the develop- ment of the Susquehanna Valley in popu- lation and wealth. Mines honeycomb it. railroads cut into it everywhere and an- nually there is dug out of it and trans- ported to domestic and foreign markets the enormous amount of 50,000,000 tons of hard coal. As hard coal has put railroads along one branch of the Susquehanna so has soft coal intersected the headwaters of the West Branch with other railroads. The West Branch rises in Cambria county, Pennsyl- vania, not far north of Cresson. The re- markable thing about this source is that it is on the west slope of the Alleghany mountains and that in order to get through to meet the North Branch at Northumber- land it has to work its way through the mountains. After it leaves Cambria county the West Branch enters the Clearfield coal region and running hither and thither in this re- gion are half a dozen different railroad sys- tems, including several divisions and branches of the Pennsylvania; the Penn- sylvania and Northwestern; the Pittsburg and Eastern; the Buffalo.. Rochester and Pittsburg, and the Beech Creek Railroad, which after leaving the river at Clearfield again swings alongside of it at Lock Haven and goes with it to Williamsport, where the Beech Creek road ends and where it has an important traffic exchange with the Philadelphia and Reading. All these rail- roads are comparatively recent, because mining in the Clearfield coal region has only become important within the last dec- ade. From Clearfield to Karthaus is the one bit of the Susquehanna not yet taken up by railroads, but at Karthaus we again meet a ramification of the Pennsylvania system, the Philadelphia and Erie Road. On this line we may travel for more than a hundred miles down the river, through Williamsport and other flourishing towns and to the meeting place of the two big Susquehanna branches at Northumberland. / From Willianisport to Northumberland the Pennsylvania is on one bank, while an im- portant division of the Philadelphia and Reading is on the other. I nearly forgot to speak of the intimate relation of the Susquehanna to a greater city than any within its watershed. I mean Baltimore. When rafts and boats with flour and farm products began to go down stream in profusion, Maryland's metropolis was the natural market, though some of the traffic was diverted overland to Philadelphia. Then the latter city's merchants began to reach out, and the Baltimoreans, to keep the lead, first built a series of steamboats, which proved to be failures, then a canal and finally a railroad —the Northern Central. The canal is dead now, but the railroad still carries a goodly trade from the Susquehanna to Baltimore, though, of course, the manifold industries of the river towns are too great to be con- tent with a single market. Thoughtful men in Baltimore see the day when that city will have to draw on the Susquehanna for a water supply. In- deed, the cost and the advantages were fully weighed when the present supply was enlarged 20 years ago, though the Gunpowder river was then found sufficient. Today Baltimore has more than half a mil- lion inhabitants; the limit of the Gunpow- der's capacity is foreshadowed and the Susquehanna will come next. Its water will have to be conveyed nearly 40 miles. Already the river is used in this way by cities further upstream, but none of them approach the magnitude of the Baltimore idea. Were I interested in geology or in duck- hunting and river fishing, there would be other avenues to open up delights on the Susquehanna for me. For the geologist there is a wonderful opportunity in a trip such as we promise. I am not a hunter of duck nor a student of rocks, and so I look for the interesting side of my jaunt to the natural beauty of the river valley, to the incidents of its past and the industries and achievements of the present. In them is the hope of this pil- grimage. II. IN THE PAGES OF HISTORY. Cooperstown, Otsego County, N. Y., Aug. 16.— So many pretty notions get frac- tured nowadays by heartless seekers for facts that it was really no surprise for me to learn yesterday that all our old ideas concerning the meaning of the name Sus- quehanna will have to be revised. It has been dinned into my ears from childhood — and I guess the same in your case, dear reader— that Susquehanna meant "long, crooked river," or else "broad, shal- low river," or else "wide, muddy river," or "the river of rapids." All seemed ap- propriate to the big stream, and so you and I accepted the one or the other as be- ing the true Indian name. Now we are told that all were guesses, made by men with only a half knowledge of native tongues. In their place we are asked to believe that the Susquehanna is "the river of the people with booty taken in war." And in the light of this assertion the following facts are recalled: Capt. John Smith, engaged in exploring the Chesapeake bay above Virginia in 1608, entered the mouth of the Susquehanna and there encountered a different set of In- dians from those he had previously known. They were brave, noble-looking fellows of giant stature — decked out in war paint and evidently fresh from a fight, as they had much spoil in their canoes. The doughty Virginian was unable to talk with them directly, but he used as interpreter an In- dian whose tongue he knew. When he asked the name of his new acquaintances, the interpreter — unable, possibly, to get or to understand the real tribal designation — replied that they were the Susquehan- noeks. "the people of booty taken in war." This, at least, is the theory of a recent scholar, who says that "sasquesa" meant "war booty," and "anough" meant "men." The older writers had maintained that "hanna" was "river," and that the first part meant either "crooked," "muddy," "shallow" or "rapids." i'ou can take your choice among these theories and guesses. If you like the ones which are descriptive of the river, believe in them. Yet, if the latest be true, it is rather curious, is it not, that the acci- dental error of a not over-intelligent in- terpreter should have given such a pretty name to a big Indian tribe and, after them, to this great, majestic river? I never reflect upon the name of the river without recalling how the truest of poets, Coleridge and Shelley, were both attracted by its sound and its suggestion of romance, and it was with positive pleasure that I read today what Robert Louis Stevenson said of the river when he crossed it in some of his travels through this country: "When I heard that the stream over which we passed was called the Susquehanna," wrote the English au- thor, "the beauty of the name seemed part and parcel of the land. As when Adam, with divine fitness, named the creatures, so this word Susquehanna was at once accepted by the fancy. That was the name, as no other could be, for that shining river and desirable valley." There were other Indian names than the one now borne. The Onondagas, of the Six Nations, called the river Ga-wa-no-wa-na- neh, or "the great island river." Among the Indians of the West Branch that por- tion of the Susquehanna was known as Otzinachson, or the "river of demons," be- cause of some tribal superstition that seems to have been widespread. "Quen-ish-ach- gek-ki," the stream of long reaches, was another name for the West Branch. It is often said that Capt. John Smith was the first white man to view the Sus- quehanna, but it is necessary to go earlier than that. There is even a belief that the famous Feruando de Soto penetrated to this river, but aside from such a tradition it is true that the first white men here were Spaniards, and that they long ante- dated John Smith. At an early day Spaniards were in the Chesapeake, and named it St. Mary's. From the bay they carried off a native to Mexico, where he was educated and bap- tized. This Indian returned to the Chesa- peake with several Spanish priests, and some distance up "a large river flowing into the bay" they founded a missionary station, which they called Axacan. This river was most probably the Susquehanna, and these priests the first white men to visit it. Their fate was a sad one. Their Indian protege turned on them and as- sisted in killing them. It is odd that while Smith, the English- man, and these Spanish priests were the pioneers of the lower Susquehanna, it should be reserved for a Frenchman and three Dutchmen to be the first whites to see the upper portion. The Frenchman was Etienne Brule, a lieutenant of Sam- uel Champlain, the Governor of Canada, and a noted discoverer. Champlain, with the Huron Indians as allies, in 1615 planned an attack on the Iroquois in Central New York. With 12 Hurons Brule was sent to secure the aid of the Andastes or Caron- tonans, whose chief village seems to have been somewhere on the Susquehanna— possibly near Athens, possibly much farther down. After many hardships and several bloody fights Brule reached the Carontonan town and they started to join Champlain, but found he had returned to Canada. This caused Brule to return with the Carontonans and spend the winter in explorations. Among other things he descended the river to "its junction with the sea." a journey which was made, so he reported, "through a series of populous tribes at war with one another." Three years elapsed before this hardy explorer got back to Champlain. The narrative of his adventures has a strange fascination for us who live in the days of comfortable railroad travel through peaceful, populous towns. About the same time three adventurous Dutchmen came into this wilderness from Albany, boated down the Susquehanna as 10 far as the neighborhood of Wilkesbarre, crossed overland to the Delaware and thence on to New York. Quite a different trip from a similar canoe outing often taken now! Nearly a century after the explorers came the traders, mostly established on that portion of the river now in Pennsyl- vania. Stories of them are fully retailed in the histories of that State. Many of them were French-Canadians. Some were noted characters, such as Conrad Weiser, who constantly served as the envoy of the Penns to the Indians. In my last letter I mentioned that civ- ilization moved up the Susquehanna in- stead of down. This is plainly shown by the dates of land purchases from the In- dians. Maryland secured her portion in the seventeenth century. William Penn prompt- ly saw the moral value of making pur- chases from the Indians, and in 1683, the year after Pennsylvania was settled, he enlisted the aid of Thomas Dongan, Gov- ernor of New York, who secured from the Indians a deed to "all that tract of land lying upon both sides the river commonly called or known by the name of the Sus- quehanna." Dongan, in 1696, transferred the title to Penn for the consideration of £100. What a miserable sum this now seems for a region where at least a million persons dwell. It was, of course, limited by the grants of royal charters, but, as I read it, it included the entire Susquehanna Valley within what is now Pennsylvania. Penn seems not to have been satisfied with this title, for in 1700 he had it rati- fied by the Susquehannocks, and in 1701 by other Indian tribes. Later his sons began to make fresh purchases. They bought everything south of Harrisburg in 1736; up to the neighborhood of Sunbury in 1749 and 1758, and to Towanda in 1768. The last purchase by Pennsylvania was in 1784, when the area north of Towanda and west • of the Susquehanna was ob- tained. New York's purchases of the Sus- quehanna Valley occured in the same dec- ade. Settlements in every case followed closely behind colonial purchases. 11 The Indian history of the Susquehanna is remarkable. It was dominated by the Iroquois, or Six Nations, who from their stronghold in Central New York, by using the Susquehanna mainly, but also the Mo- hawk, Hudson and Allegheny rivers, had built up an empire big in extent and pow- erful in kind. Many times a year tne Iruquois in their war canoes went down the Susquehanna to the Chesapeake and compelled the submis- sion of tribes as far as the Carolinas. The Journey was apparently no more to them than it is now to a traveler by train. They bested the Susquehannocks so often that they finally were able to force the rem- nant to abandon their Maryland and Penn- sylvania haunts and take up an humble po- sition under the conquerors' wing in New York. They did the same to the Lenni Le- napes on the Delaware, to the Nanticokes on the Eastern Shore and to the Shawnees higher up the Susquehanna. They kept the white man from fully settling the up- per Susquehanna Valley for nearly a cen- tury after the lower part was peopled by whites. There is no telling to what period their remarkable confederacy might have ex- teuded had they not adopted the British cause against the colonists. Then the Iroquois power was broken as quickly as it had been formed. The terrible Wyom- ing massacre in Susquehanna Valley and the massacre in Cherry Valley, on a tribu- tary of the Susquehanna, caused the ex- pedition of Gen. John Sullivan in 1779. He went up the river with a strong military force and was reinforced at the mouth of the Chemung by Gen. James Clinton, who had brought New York militia overland to Lake Otsego and then down the Susquehanna on rafts. General Sullivan burned Indian villages by the wholesale and gave the Iroquois a thrash- ing such as they had never had. After that they were willing enough to sell the fairest part of Central New York to the whites. The Wyoming and Cherry Valley mas- sacres are not the only dark stains of the sort in the Susquehanna Valley. After 12 Braddock's crushing defeat in 1755 the In- dians, backed by French officers and sol- diers, descended the river and spread ter- ror in many promising Pennsylvania set- tlements. There were massacres at a num- ber of points near Northumberland and in Cumberland Valley, and many more women and children were carried into captivity in Canada. The remembrance of the fiendish cruel- ties practised by the Indians led to the most horrible crime of all, the murder in 1763 of the remnant of Susquehannock In- dians, who had long made their homes near where the Conestoga creek empties into the Susquehanna in Lancaster county. A group of frontiersmen, known as ''the Pax- ton boys," in a wanton attack on the set- tlement and in a later fiendish charge upon a public building, to which the survivors of the first affair had been removed, made away with 20 Indians, many of them wom- en and girls and none able-bodied war- riors. It was a crime which cannot be justified. As an echo of Indian occupation, stone weapons, utensils and implements are fre- quently found at every point of the river valley, many of them made from rocks which can only be traced hundreds of miles away. The skeletons of red men are also sometimes unearthed, some of them of giant type. In addition to the Wyoming and Cherry Valley massacres, the Susquehanna figures in the Revolutionary War in other ways. Its lower fords and ferries were constantly crossed by armies and leaders going from North to South and South to North. And when the Continental Congress was driven out of Philadelphia by British occupation it removed first to York, then to Lancas- ter, both of them on tributaries of the river and not far from the latter. In the contest of 1812 the mouth of the river again had a share of war. After terrorizing other towns at the head of Chesapeake bay the British fleet cap- tured and burned Havre de Grace and the village of Lapidum, a few miles tip the river. 13 Again in the Civil War the Susquehanna was the "high-water mark of the Con- federacy," Wrightsville being the nearest point to Philadelphia reached by any part of General Lee's army during the invasion of Pennsylvania in 1863. Nor should it be forgotten that this same section played a prominent part in co- lonial times in the border wars of Lord Baltimore and the Penns, both struggling to spread their boundaries. This con- test, frequently accompanied by blood- shed, developed a remarkable character in Col. Thomas Cresap, who upheld the Mary- land claims in York and Lancaster coun- ties with such courage as to make him one of the most interesting figures in American colonial life. The varying origin of the families who peopled the different parts of the Susque- hanna Valley is in itself a study. Quite naturally we at once think of the Palati- nate Germans or Pennsylvania Dutch, who have for two centuries left the impress of their thrift upon the rich farming lands of lower Pennsylvania. Next below them, on lands more rugged and rocky, were thou- sands of Scotch-Irish families; and farther, in Maryland, families of English and Irish stock. In Central Pennsylvania the river banks were cleared by persons mostly of English origin, while from Wilkesbarre north there was a decided preponderance of New England immigrants, indirectly English. To these the last half century has added the Welsh slate-miners in the Peach Bottom region; the Italian, Hun- garian, Russian, Polish and other Slavonic types in the coal mines, and the people of still other nationalities in the growing cities. Besides the actual history of the Susque- hanna, there is a wealth of interesting legend and folklore. I wish I had time to repeat it all. 14 III. NOT UNSUNG BY POETS. Cooperstown, Otsego County, N. Y., Aug. 17.— Yesterday I went into a book- store to get a recent novel. The man be- hind the counter was one of those whom a book-lover delights to meet, one who knew and prized the books he sold. It was easy to get into a chat with him about the litera- ture of the Susquehanna and the result will, I am sure, surprise you. Cooper's name, of course, was first on our lips when we started to recall the poetry and novels in which the Susque- hanna is well remembered. Then I spoke of Nathaniel P. Willis, most graceful of American authors, whose happy years of life beside this river at Owego found full expression in his varied writings. My friend, the bookseller, soon reminded me of Thomas Campbell and his epic, "Gertrude of Wyoming," while I, in turn, thought of other Englishmen, and suggested Cole- ridge and Southey, who, with the enthusi- asm of youth, dreamed of placing their ideal colony of Pantisocracy upon the banks of the Susquehanna, which, like Campbell, neither of them had ever seen nor ever saw. Wyoming's name brought to mind "The Death of the Fratricide," in which John Greenleaf Whittier has told in ballad form the fate of a hapless being who killed his own brother in the terrible Revolutionary tragedy. An echo of another massacre is found in "Jennie Marsh, of Cherry Valley," by George P. Morris, the editorial associate and friend of Willis. Thus we discoursed for fully an hour, adding to our catalogue a goodly array of notable poets and romancers. It was a casual review, of course, and doubtless many were omitted whom you may now re- call. But I cannot refrain from repeating 15 lor you some of the things which then came in mind or which we found by turn- ing to his well-stocked shelves. The thread which binds Southey and Coleridge to the Susquehanna is a slender one, but it must be acknowledged that there is something deeply interesting in their dream of starting upon the Susque- hana a brotherly community where pri- vate property was to be abolished, where two hours a day were to be spent in pro- viding food and the rest of the time "in rational society and intellectual employ- ment." Biographers of both poets tell how the scheme was talked of in 1794, when Coleridge was 22 and Southey two years younger, and how it was never real- ized because no funds were forthcoming and because the two wedded sisters and had to be practical enough to earn a liveli- hood. The reason why the Susquehanna was selected is in doubt. The fact that Dr. Joseph Priestley, founder of modern chem- istry and an eminent philosopher, had re- moved from England to Northumberland in the same year may have had something to do with it. But a letter from Coleridge to Southey, written at the time, adds an- other reason. The former, it appears, had met in London a suave American land agent, who recommended the Susquehanna "from its excessive beauty and its security from hostile Indians." The ease of farm- ing, the opportunity for literary men, the cheapness of land and of living and the credit obtainable were all duly impressed upon Coleridge, who, in his last sentence, says: "The mosquitoes are not so bad as our gnats; and after you have been there a little while, they don't trouble you much." Truly a most excellent land agent! Joseph Cottle, the British bookseller, whose after reminiscences add so much to the knowledge of his friends Coleridge and Southey, gives still more light. He says Coleridge would talk for hours at a time of the Susquehanna as "the only refuge for permanent repose." Then Cottle adds: It will excite marvelous surprise in the reader to understand that Mr. Coleridge's friends could not as- certain that he had received any specific informa- tion concerning this notable river. "It was a 16 I grand river," but there are many other noble and grand rivers in America (the Land of Rivers!), and the preference given to the Susquehanna seemed almost to arise solely from its imposing name, which, if not classical, was at least poetical, and it probably by mere accident became the centre of all his pleasurable associations. Had this same river been called the Miramichi or the Irrawaddy it would have been despoiled of half its charms and have sunk down into a vulgar stream, the at- mosphere of which might have suited well enough Russian boors, but which would have been pestifer- ous to men of letters. Cottle also quotes Coleridge's poem, "A Monody to Chatterton," written when Pantisoeraey was on tap. In it, after speaking of his vain aspirations for abso- lute liberty, he says: Yet will I love to follow the sweet dream Where Susquehanna pours his untamed stream; And on some hill, whose forest-growing side Waves o'er the murmurs of his calmer tide. It is so usual here in Cooperstown to hear of "The Deerslayer" as associated with Otsego Lake that it is rarely remem- bered that other novels by Cooper depict later phases of life on the lake and river. Deerslayer is such an ideal of chivalresque manhood and the descriptions of the re- gion, then In the primeval wilderness, are so fine, that the first of the Leatherstock- !ng Tales overtops the novelist's other In- dian stories. But in "The. Pioneers, or the Sources of the Susquehanna," Cooper drew upon the early recollections of his life and has described with minuteness affairs in- cident to the settlement of the region by his father, who figures in the novel as Judge Temple. It is an animated presen- tation of the vigorous and picturesque country life of its time and place and is equally successful in its delineations of natural scenery. Then in "Home as Found" we are introduced to the descendants of the characters of '"The Pioneers" and to Cooperstown about 1835. In its day it was most unpopular for its criticisms of Amer- ican faults as seen by one who had dwelt abroad for some years, and it is unfortu- nate also in being made the vehicle for an account of a squabble between Cooper and his townspeople. In "Wyandotte, or 17 the Hutted Knoll," Cooper again returns to the Otsego. It narrates the settlement of an English family in the vicinity of the lake about the commencement of the Revolution, and abounds in quiet scenes of sylvan beauty and incidents of a calmer character than are usual in Cooper's fic- tions. The associations of Cooper with this pretty lake are well expressed in verse in a short anonymous poem which Henry W. Longfellow thought worthy of a page in his anthology, "Poems of Places." Some of its stanzas are as follows: O haunted lake, from out whose silver fountains The mighty Susquehanna takes its rise; O haunted lake, among the pineclad mountains, Forever smiling upward to the skies. A master's hand hath painted all thy beauties; A master's hand hath peopled all thy shore With wraiths of mighty hunters and fair maidens, A master's heart hath gilded all thy valley With golden splendor from a loving breast, And in thy little churchyard, 'neath the pine trees, A master's body sleeps in quiet rest. Cooper's daughter, Susan Fenimore, who died here but a few years ago, inherited her father's love for Otsego and the Sus- quehanna, and in "Rural Homes," which was published in the year before her father died, she charmingly and without extrava- gances described the scenery around her home in Cooperstown. She is the author of other works showing her appreciation of country life. In Cooperstown she is esteemed for her charities. The happy touch of Willis rechristened and made famous so many spots in the Highlands of the Hudson that "Idlewild" is more known as his home than "Glen- mary," near the Susquehanna. Yet some of the happiest years of his life were spent on the little place near Owego, which he poetically named for his wife. "Al Abri, or Letters From Under a Bridge," gives us an intimate sympathy with him at "Glen- inary," and contains descriptions of that portion of the Susquehanna which are writ- ten in his most graceful vein. He finds ma- terial where others would see nothing, and 18 so we get wonderfully interested in the little brook and the venerable toad and a dozen places and creatures that to others would seem commonplace. Similar delicate fancies characterize his petition "To the Unknown Purchaser and Next Occupant of Glenmary," written when financial troubles compelled him to return to New York and buckle down to steady labor. On the other hand, his "Revery at Glenmary" is the most sincerely devout of all his religious poems, while others of this kind, "A Thought Over a Cradle," "A Mother f o Her Child," "Thoughts While Making the Grave of a Newborn Child," let us see the sacreduess of his domestic life at Owego. The neighborhood of Owego is also re- flected in various short poems by William Henry Cuyler Hosiner, who is, perhaps, better known as the poet of the Genesee than of the Susquehanna. "A Voice From Glenmary" is a tribute to the memory of the first Mrs. Willis. Other poems by him which I noticed were: "Fir-Croft," "The Deserted Hall," "Lament for Sa-sa-na," "A Hunting Song," "A Cascade Near Wyoming" and "Lake Wyalusing." The satirical genius of James K. Paul- ding links him to the Susquehanna in a peculiar way. In 1813. when Admiral Cockburn and his British fleet burned and sacked the Maryland village of Havre de Grace, at the mouth of the Susquehanna. Paulding published "The Lay of the Scot- tish Fiddle," supposed to be written by Walter Scott. It is a free parody of the "Lay of the Last Minstrel," and is both a satire of the Scottish poem and of the British warfare on the Chesapeake. Some of its descriptive bits show a close famili- arity with the mouth of the Susquehanna. It is clever as a parody, and had the dis- tinction of provoking a fierce review from the London Quarterly. The vale of Wyoming is peculiarly rich in its associations with literature. This is partly due to its tragic story, partly to its natural beauty. Many of the later poets have been attracted to it by the "Ger- trude" of Thomas Campbell, which, in these days of Anglo-American ententes, may be recalled as being a pioneer in caus- 19 ing international good feeling. These are his familiar opening lines: On Susquehanna's side, fair Wyoming! Although the wild flower on thy ruined wall And roofless homes a sad remembrance bring Of what thy gentle people did befall, Yet thou wert once the loveliest land of all That see the Atlantic wave their morn restore. Sweet land! May I thy lost delights recall, And paint thy Gertrude in her bowers of yore, " Whose beauty was the love of Pennsylvania's shore. Delightful Wyoming! beneath thy skies The happy shepherd swains had naught to do But feed their flocks on green declivities, Or skim, perchance, the lake with light canoe. From morn till evening's sweeter pastime grew, With timbrel, when beneath the forests brown, The lovely maidens would the dance renew; And aye those sunny mountains half-way down Would echo flageolet from some romantic town. Unfortunately Campbell never saw the valley of Wyoming and his descriptions do not fit it. This is noticeable in the lines just quoted, but more so in the next stanza, where he says you "may see the flamingo disporting" in the Susquehanna. The American poet, Fitz-Greene Halleck, pointed out this defect in a poem which he wrote when he first saw Wyoming. Halleck says: When thou com'st, in beauty, on my gaze, at last, "On Susquehanna's side, fair Wyoming!" Image of many a dream in hours long past, When life was in its bud and blossoming, And waters, gushing from the fountain spring Of pure enthusiast thought, dimmed my young eyes As by the poet home, on unseen wing, I breathed, in fancy, 'neath thy cloudless skies. The summer's air, and heard her echoed harmonies. Nature hath made thee lovelier than the power Even of Campbell's pen hath pictured: he Had woven, had he gazed one sunny hour Upon thy smiling vale, its scenery With more of truth, and made each rock and tree Known like old friends and greeted from afar, And there are tales of sad reality T n the dark legends of the border war, With woes of deeper tint than his own Gertrude's are. Two women writers who are warm in their poetic praises of Wyoming and the Susquehanna are Mrs. Lydia Huntley Sigourney and Mrs. Elizabeth Fries Ellet. 20 Mrs. Sigourney wrote several poems about Wyoming. "Zinzendorff," one of her long- est, tells the story of that noble Moravian's visit to the Indians there. "The Lily" is the story of Frances Slocum, who was car- ried off by Indians in the Revolution and found half a century later as the head of an Indian family. In "The Meeting of the Susquehanna and Lackawanna" Mrs. Sigourney says: Rush on, glad stream, in thy power and pride, To claim the hand of thy promised bride ; She doth haste from the realm of the darkened mine To mingle her murmured vows with thine; Ye have met— ye have met, and the shores prolong The liquid notes of your nuptial song. On, on, through the vale where the brave ones sleep. Where the waving foliage is rich and deep, I have stood on the mountain and roamed through the glen To the beautiful homes of the Western men; Yet naught in that realm of enchantment could see So fair as the vale of Wyoming to me. Mrs. Ellet, who is best known as the author of a "History of Women of the American Revolution," wrote these beauti- ful descriptive lines: Softly the blended light of evening rests Upon thee, lovely stream ! Thy gentle tide, Picturing the gorgeous beauty of the sky, Onward, unbroken by the ruffling wind, Majestically flows. Oh! by thy. side, Far from the tumults and the throng of men, And the vain cares that vex poor human life, "fwere happiness to dwell, alone with thee, And the wide, solemn grandeur of the scene. From thy green shores, the mountains that inclose In their vast sweep the beauties of the plain, Slowly receding, toward the skies ascend, Enrobed with clustering woods, o'er which the smile Of Autumn in his loveliness hath passed, Touching the foliage with his brilliant hues, And flinging o'er the lowliest leaf and shrub His golden livery. On the distant heights Soft clouds, earth-based, repose, and stretch afar Their burnished summits in the clear, blue Heaven, Flooded with splendor, that the dazzled eye Turns drooping from the sight. Nature is here Like a throned sovereign, and thy voice doth tell, In music never silent, of her power. Nor are thy tones unanswered, where she builds Such monuments of regal sway. 21 Alexander Wilson, the first American ornithologist, gained much information about birds during a walking trip from Philadelphia to Niagara in October, 1804. This journey he described in a lengthy poem, "The Foresters," which is com- mended for the ardent love of nature there- in revealed. He pasesd up the Susque- hanna from Wilkesbarre to Athens, and narrates many incidents along the way. It has been less than a century since then, but the valley has wonderfully changed since he described it, as these lines of his will show: And now Wyomi opened on our view, And, far beyond, the Alleghany blue, Immensely stretched; upon the plain below The painted roofs with gaudy colors glow, And Susquehanna's glittering stream is seen Winding in stately pomp through valle5 T s green. Hail, charming river! pure, transparent flood! Unstained by noxious swamps or choking mud; Thundering through broken rocks in whirling foam, Or pleased o'er beds of glittering sand to roam; Green be thy banks, sweet forest-wandering stream; Still may thy waves with finny treasures teem; The silvery shad and salmon crowd thy shores, Thy tall woods echoing to the sounding oars. On thy swollen bosom floating piles appear, Filled with the harvest of our rich frontier; Thy pine-browned cliffs, thy deep romantic vales, Where wolves now wander and the panther wails; Where at long intervals the hut forlorn Peeps from the verdure of embowering corn; In future times (nor distant far the day) Shall glow from crowded towns and villas gay; Unnumbered keels thy deepened course divide, And airy arches pompously bestride ; The domes of Science and Religion rise, And millions swarm where now a forest lies. A fine tribute to the Susquehanna is con- tained in Thomas Buchanan Head's "New Pastoral," which is a series of poetic sketches of the emigration of a family from middle Pennsylvania to Illinois. In it are these lines: I have seen In lands less free, less fair, but far more known, The streams which flow through history, and wash The legendary shores— and cleave in twain Old capitals and towns, dividing oft Great empires and estates of petty kings And princes, whose domains full many a field, Rustling with maize along our native West, 22 Outmeasme and might put to shame! and yet Nor Rhine, like Bacchus crowned and reeling through Hi* hills— nor Danube, marred with tyranny, His dull waves moaning on Hungarian shores— Nor rapid Po, his opaque waters pouring Athwart the fairest, fruitfulest, and worst Enslaved of European lands— nor Seine, Winding uncertain through inconstant France- Are half so fair as thy broad stream, whose breast Is gemmed with many isles, and whose proud name Shall yet become among the names of rivers A synonym of beauty— Susquehanna ! In his "Wagoner of the Alleghanies" Read also speaks in similar strain of Where queenly Susquehanna smiles Proud in the grace of her thousand isles. Praise of the Susquehanna not unlike Mr. Read's is to be found in many sonnets of Mr. Lloyd Mifflin, whose home is at Co- lumbia, Pa., and who has recently attract- ed much attention. In "My Native Stream" he says: To Vallambrosian valleys let them go, To steep Sorrento, or where ilex trees Oast their gray shadows o'er Sicilian seas; Dream at La Conca d'Oro, catch the glow Of sunset on the Ischian hills, and know The blue Ionian inlets, where the breeze, Leaving some snow-white temple's Phidian frieze, Wafts their light shallop languorously slow. Let me be here, far off from Zante's shore. Where Susquehanna spreads her liquid miles, To watch the circles from the dripping oar; To see her halcyon dip, her eagle soar; To drift at evening round her Indian isles, Or dream at noon beneath the sycamore. And in "The Susquehanna From the Cliff," written from Chiquesaluuga Rock, near his home, Mr. Mifflin says: Upon Salunga's laureled brow at rest With evening and with thee, as in a dream, Life flows unrippled even as thy stream. Below the islands jewel all thy breast. The dying glories of the crimson west Ave mirrored on thy surface till they seem Another sunset, and we fondly deem The splendors endless, e'en as those possessed In youth, which sink, alas! to duller hue As years around us darken and but few Faint stars appear, as now appear in thee. How softly round thy clustered rocks of blue Thou murmurest onward ! Oh ! may we pursue Our way as calmly to the eternal sea. 23 Mr Mifflin's home town, Columbia, was the scene of some incidents in the excft aom of Anglesey, whose story was firs* introduced into fiction by Smoflett in* "Peregrine Pickle.- and has sincTbeen re peated in "Florence Macarthy," in Scott s Guy Mannering," and more particularly m Charles Reade's well-known novel ^ "The Wandering Heir." ' xae The boys of this generation who have a fondness for tales of adventures have had the lr mterest awakened in the Susquehan na and particularly the Wyoming district by the fiction of Edward S. Ellis a Trei ' on schoolmaster, who has written harf a hundred stories of Indian times. One se call e d y th^2w° mP ^ iSin f three flumes, fs called the 'Wyoming Series," and in an- nesfserTe 1 " X* ** " Ri ™ ^ ™ld*r- setting Same region furni shes a Had we gone further, this letter might be a day's job for you. Of local historians the Susquehanna has had a hundred £££ ir^liTi W ri° m are ^oxning's S- Col wm. A V Ch fP m an, Charles Miner, Col. William L. Stone, George Peck Sten ben Jenkins, Hendrick B. Wright! StewS Pierce and others-Dr. William H Bgll 3 Harnsburg, and J. N. Meginness, of Wil hamsport, whose "Otzinachson" is a store- house of West Branch Indian lore. Many ballad writers and local versifiers might be added, and in the domain of fiction could be dug up many titles of historical or TonTat ^V? bUt ^^ *»S or none at all. So, too, one could include the whole literature of that noble Indian U gan beginning with his speech as reported unon t°hT S / effer > S ° n - His °*rthplac P e was his M Hv , SuSQUehanna,s banks and there ms eail.v years were spent. But in what I have quoted I am sure there is enough to convince you that poets love the sSfquS hanna and that this great river has not gone unsung. oc 24 IV. COOPER'S "GLIMMERGLASS." Coopebstown, Otsego County, N. Y., Aug. 18.— If you dislike the novels of J. Feniinore. Cooper you may find it a sorry job to come here, for his genius made Cooperstown classic and Cooperstown is grateful. We have not many of these shrines of lit- erary men in America and for that reason Cooperstown is rather unique. But the European traveler can surmise just what will be found here if he recalls his visits to the homes of Scott, of Burns, of Shakes- peare, of a score of other famous members of the authors' guild. When we came by train we were driven down Leatherstocking street to the Feni- rnore House. The conversation of the others at our first meal dwelt upon the beauties of Otsego Lake as written up by Cooper. Upon the front porch we noticed many delving into the pages of some one or other of his novels, possibly reading them over to refreshen themselves upon the spot, but maybe secretly getting ac- quainted for the first time in order to join in the prevailing topic of conversa- tion. Leaving the hotel for a stroll east on Main street, we observed the bookstores displaying Cooper literature and appropri- ate photographs, while the next-door mer- chant was trying to attract our attention to his souvenir china and his Cooper spoons. Presently we crossed Pioneer street and a block farther turned through handsome marble gates into a pretty park whose centre is occupied by an exquisite statue of Cooper's noblest Indian mounted upon an immense bowlder of syenite. Upon this 25 spot, we were told, was Cooper's handsome home, Otsego Hall, which was burned soon after his death in 1851. Passing out of the little park by its up- per gate, a few steps farther eastward brought us to the yard of Christ Church, where the distinguished novelist lies buried. I cannot exactly describe it, but some- how or other it reminded me of the yard of the famous edifice at Stratford, within whose walls Shakespeare rests. The Strat- ford church is a finer building, but this American one has its own merit and for picturesque surroundings is fully equal to the other. It stands near the green banks of the Susquehanna, as the Stratford church does near the banks of the Avon— but the banks of the Susquehanna are higher and bolder and more embowered, and it is placed in a landscape of greater variety than that of the Avon. The grounds about the church are shaded with noble and venerable pines, elms and ma- ples, and beneath them have been laid, side by side, five generations of the Cooper family. The novelist sleeps beside his wife under a flat marble slab turned dark with- in the half century. A few feet away lies his father, William Cooper— the founder of Cooperstown— aft- erward judge of the county of Otsego and its first representative in Congress. The father was a New Jersey man who, having acquired a large tract in the valley of the Susquehanna and around the lower shores of the lake, came here in 1786 to reside and to improve his land. It was then a wilderness, still echoing the red man's tread and dwelt in by but few white men. An occasional trapper or colonial soldier had strayed this way. Then in 1779 Gen. James Clinton brought his army here to go down the Susquehanna to join General Sullivan. And in 1783 Washington made a special trip here from the Mohawk Valley to study the possibilities of the Susque- hanna for inland navigation. The place which Judge Cooper founded early became the centre of a circle of cul- tivated and refined men and women, such as is rarely found in a village of its size. It has retained that tone through the cen- 26 tury and has added to it greatly in recent years by becoming an attractive summer resting place for city dwellers of wealth and culture. Many such have their homes here in these months and many others yearly rent cottages in order to find sweet retreat in a village beautiful for situation, healthy because high, pretty in its out- ward evidences, possessing historic inter- est, yet not ultra-fashionable nor "'loud" and stylish. Next to Cooper's, the name most often heard here is that of Clark, or Clarke. The upper eastern end of Otsego's shores has been for a century a part of the big estate of a family of the latter mode of spelling, while the millions made by a resi- dent who spelt his name without the "e" have been generously used to promote the welfare and attractiveness of Cooperstown in many ways. The pretty park on the site of Cooper's home and its beautiful cen- tre statue are both a memorial to Cooper from Mrs. Alfred Corning Clark, whose handsome home is near by and who has also erected a series of fine gray stone buildings in front of the park. The most striking of these has been donated as a village li- brary, another as a home and gymnasium for the Y. M. C. A., while the third con- tains the offices of the Clark estate. The father of Mrs. Clark's dead husband was Edward Clark, who made his fortune by a sewing machine invention. A minute's walk from Christ Church yard and we were beside the Susquehanna. Though only a few hundred feet from its beginning the bends and overhanging trees jealously hid the lake from us. As we stopped a short while admiring the placid beauty of the little stream that is destined to large things ere it loses its identity, I could not help recalling what Willis wrote after he had stood there in the same admiring frame of mind. "The Susquehanna breaks out of the lake just at Cooper's door," he said, "and it is a magnificent river as his is a magnificent mind. As a twin-fountain head of intellect that honors the country and waters that fertilize it, it is a spot that has a good right to be famous." 27 Presently we were upon the shores of the lake. We have been in Cooperstown for several days now and have taken every opportunity to see Cooper's "Glimmer- glass" from its many vantage points, but, though it has been intensified, I do not think I shall ever quite forget the beauty of the lake as I first saw it. It is a body of deep, clear blue water, about nine miles long and from three-quarters of a mile to two miles wide, extending from north to south and lying between rather abrupt and densely wooded low mountains on the east and gently sloping beautiful and gracefully rounded hills on the west. The almost unbroken forest of the eastern side offers combinations of color rarely equaled for beauty and variety and wonderfully heightened on this first view by the gold and red of the sinking sun. The west side's easier slopes were covered with a variety of farm crops, richly cultivated fields, meadows and pastures, among which are quiet farmhouses and more costly summer homes, forming in all a scene of great pas- toral beauty. The north end of the lake bends to the west, and it was not possible to see the head, but in its stead we had a beautiful view of the bold wooded mountain which from its outline is often called "the Sleep- ing Lion," but whose true name is Mount Wellington, after a certain "Iron Duke." Nearer at hand, on the east side, is a peculiar structure rising out of the water, apparently a stone lighthouse built regard- less of expense. This is "Kingfisher Tower," designed like a mediaeval castle and erected to a height of 60 feet. Its main windows are brilliant with stained glass, its roof glistens with red earthen tiles and on its land side is a drawbridge and portcullis. This odd "view-structure" was put up in 1876 by the late Edward Clark. A cleared spot on the mountain side above Kingfisher Tower was the farm of Fenimore Cooper, "The Chalet," where he daily rode or walked to seek relaxation from mental labors by directing its tillage. Nearer to Cooperstown on the same side is Lakewood Cemetery, in which there is a 28 monument to Cooper, a slender marble shaft surmounted by a statuette of "Leatherstocking," in which the old "scout," clad in a hunting shirt, with deer- skin cap and leggins, leans on his long rifle and looks wistfully across the Otsego over the hills toward the West. His dog, "Hec- tor," is at his feet, looking up into the old hunter's face. The monument has va- rious emblems illustrative of Cooper's In- dian and sea novels. You will recall Cooper's loving description of the lake in the first chapter of "The Deer- slayer." It is often quoted in full by later writers who describe their visits here. It was, in Deerslayer's day, "a broad sheet of water, so placid and limpid that it re- sembled a bed of the pure mountain at- mosphere compressed into a setting of bills and woods." Its most striking pecu- liarities "were its solemn solitude and sweet repose." "On all sides, wherever the eye turned, nothing met it but the mirror-like surface of the lake, the placid view of heaven, and the dense setting of woods. So rich and fleecy were the out- lines of the forest that scarce an opening cotild be seen, the whole visible earth, from the rounded mountain top to the water's edge, presenting one unvaried line of unbroken verdure." It is easy for me now to comprehend the delight of Deerslayer when he first viewed this "glorious picture of affluent forest grandeur relieved by the beautiful variety afforded by the presence of so broad an ex- panse of water." And we feel satisfied, too, at the appropriateness of the name "Glimmerglass" when we gaze upon "the surface as smooth as glass and as limpid as pure air, throwing back the mountains, clothed in dark pines, along the whole of its eastern boundary, the points thrusting forward their trees even to nearly hori- zontal lines, while the bays are glittering through an occasional arch beneath, left by a vault fretted with branches and leaves." Not only do we admire the lake when its surface is so mirror-like that it reflects the pines "as if it would throw back the hills that hang over it." For with the rip- 29 pies come new beauties, new brilliancies of coloring, wonderful tints, a sheen not single, but made of many pure colors. For quiet beauty, for picturesqueness of form and outline, for charming atmos pheric effects, this highland lake is often truly compared to the famous lakes of Eu- rope. It can lay no claim to grandeur, as the novelist's daughter.. Miss Susan Feni- more Cooper, has written, "yet there is harmony in the different parts of the pic- ture, which gives it much merit and which must always excite a lively feeling of pleasure. The hills are a charming setting for the lake at their feet, neither so lofty as to belittle the sheet of water, nor so low as to be tame and commonplace; there is abundance of wood on their swelling ridges to give the charm of forest scenery, enough of tillage to add the varied in- terest of cultivation; the lake with its clear, placid waters lies gracefully beneath the mountains, flowing here into a quiet little bay, there skirting a wooded point, filling its ample basin, without encroaching on its banks by a rood of marsh or bog." Around the whole the pen of Cooper has thrown a halo of romance of such power and such exactitude in description that when you begin by picking out the sites of the different incidents of "The Deer- slayer," you end by forgetting that the characters never lived and invest the spots with a real historic interest. Every little point has been portrayed with a wealth of detail that makes the story as real as the place itself. The brain of the novelist was most cunning with the spots he had loved and cherished from boyhood. As we rode up the lake on one of its lit- tle steamers, with Mount Vision on our right, Hannah's Hill opposite, Mount Wel- lington ahead and round Council Rock be- hind at the Susquehanna's start, we seemed to see Natty Bumppo's skiff glid- ing along with caution for fear of hostile redskins: to hear Hurry Harry's voice; to catch a glimpse of brilliant, handsome, willful Judith, her gentler sister Hetty, and the wise, brave, true-minded Deer- slayer. Incident after incident of Cooper's novels came to mind and we looked with 30 eagerness for Leatherstocking's cave, on Mount Vision, where Chingachgook died; for Rat Cove, for Point Judith, for Leath- erstoeking Falls, for Wild Rose Point, where many exciting incidents were lo- cated; for Gravelly Point, where Deer- slayer killed his first Indian; for the canyon on Five-Mile Point, where he hid \mder a fallen tree from 40 Indians; for Hutter's Point, where he first viewed the "Gliin- merglass," and finally for the shoal spot supposed to be the site of the sunken is- land where Hutter and his daughters had dwelt in Muskrat Castle. Thus to the pleasure of a ride upon a beautiful lake was added the charm of tracing the scenes of a great work of fic- tion. The boat passed by various costly country homes and stopped at many little landings in front of cottages peopled with outing parties. This part of the trip formed still another kind of diversion. Years ago Cooper predicted that Otsego would become a favorite summer resort. It seems to have come true. Chance gave us the opportunity of seeing Otsego in another way \ipon the same day. In the morning our boat ride was taken, in the afternoon we drove around the lake— a rare pleasure. A constant succession of lovely vistas was encountered — but the finest part of the drive was in the long stretch of winding road beneath overarch- ing trees, which afforded a delightful sense of seclusion. It was the capstone of our edifice of charming memories of the "Glimmerglass." T shall ever love Cooper the more for having introduced this lake to fame, and to me. 31 V. TWO MODERN EXPLORERS. Richfield Springs, Otsego County, N. Y., Aug. 19.— Yesterday, when we were sit- ting on the porch of the Fenimore House, at Cooperstown, I said to my wife: "How wouid you like to be an explorer?" "I am willing," was her reply; "but is there anything left for us to discover?" "Come with me tomorrow," I remarked mysteriously. That is how we happen to be here at Richfield Springs today. I can already hear you remarking that Richfield is not an unknown land, and that thousands and thousands have been here before me. That attitude is because I have not explained myself. Maybe when I get through you will be willing to rank me with Stanley and Peary and a few other men of equal renown. Maybe not. That is for you to decide. You see, it all came about in this way: The geographers and the cyclopsedists in- variably tell you that the Susquehanna has its source in Otsego lake. I wasn't satisfied with that. "Why not get farther back?" said I to myself. Not that I wished to rob Cooper's beautiful lake of any of its glory. I admire it too greatly. But I was coached in school by a professor who was a great stickler for all the facts, and ;is my purpose is to tell everything about the Susquehanna, I determined to go on a hunt for the Susquehanna's farthest head- waters. The other day, when we drove all the way around Otsego, we crossed several brooks that evidently emptied into the lake. "Possibly their source may be what I aim to find," said I to myself. So, when we returned to Cooperstown, I hunted up a detailed map of this region, and from 32 that map I made various deductions, which finally led up to our getting to Richfield to- day. "Queer way to be an explorer!" I can hear you exclaim. "To have a map! The idea!" Well, wait a bit before you again east suspicions on my claim. I found that three brooks of some length, but of small size, come into the upper end of Otsego lake. One is three miles long, another six, the third eight. I had about determined upon one of these streams, when the lake which lies here below Rich- field Springs caught my eye. It is just as truly one of the sources of the Susque- hanna as is its larger, more beautiful and more romantic rival back over the hills yonder to the east. Its outlet, Oak creek, meets the waters from Otsego Lake four miles below Cooperstown. It is not much of a meeting, because the Susquehanna is small and Oak creek smaller still. Oak Creek is nearly if not quite fourteen miles long from Richfield's lake. The lat- ter, formerly known as Schuyler's lake from an early settler, but now repossessing its Indian name of Canadarago — is four miles long. Into its upper end, after flow- ing through the village of Richfield Springs, comes a stream whose length is eight miles, called Ocquionis by the In- dians and Fish creek by the whites. If you will add up my figures, reader, and compare them, you will see that the source of Fish creek is the farthest headwater oi the Susquehanna. And you will begin to understand why two modern explorers drove today from Cooperstown to Rich- field and beyond. And why I feel a bit tickled at the idea of having added more than twenty miles to the generally ac- cepted length of the Susquehanna. Of course, carping critics would raise a "hue and cry," but what care I, serene in my own conceit. We found the springs which give rise to Fish creek in a high, hilly country north of Richfield toward the beautiful Mo- hawk Valley. In fact, a mile or two beyond there was a fine outlook. There was the dividing ridge. The rainwater which 33 falls at one place passes into the Mohawk and so into the Hudson. The rain not far away reaches the Chesapeake by way of the Susquehanna. Those old maxims about "small beginnings" came into our minds as we realized just where we were. From there the mouth of the Susquehanna was nearly 450 miles away. By that route it was nearly 700 miles to the ocean. By the Mohawk 200 miles would bring the chance raindrop to the great sea. It is fan- ciful, I know, but I almost endowed the drops with feeling and felt pity for them that half should be borne by Nature's chance so far from their brothers. A more odd evidence of this "parting of the waters" is found in Summit lake, which is four miles north of Otsego lake. In ordinary times it's outlet is one of the brooks which I have mentioned as flow- ing into Otsego. But in high water another outlet carries half of it north into the Mohawk. The drive along Fish creek is one of the many popular ones in the neighborhood of Richfield. The stream runs between good hills, and is very generally bordered by steep banks. Two fine estates are reached by this drive— "Cullen wood," the home of Col. William Cullen Crain, and the Cruger Mansion, a fine antique stone structure overlooking the Mohawk Valley, and origi- nally the manor house of an estate of 26,- 000 acres. Jordanville is the name of a little hamlet near the spot where Fish creek begins. This, by the way, is in an- other shire than Otsego, for Warren town- ship, in which Fish creek rises, is in Her- kimer county. It is a rather curious fact that, before the days of dams and other artificial obstruc- tions in the Susquehanna, shad in the spring actually reached Fish creek from the Chesapeake and were caught in abun- dance in these waters. In fact, lamenta- tions over the loss of the shad are common among the old inhabitants of the entire Upper Susquehanna. The country about Richfield Springs is certainly a diversified one, with many hills of varied heights and quite a series of little lakes and blue ponds. We had a splendid 34 opportunity to grasp this fact this morn- ing, for, on our drive from Cooperstown, we climbed Mount Otsego and there had a beautiful panoramic view. Once this high summit was called Rum Hill, but that phase of culture and progress which gets in its work on ugly and queer names was successful here. The summit is 2,800 feet above sea level and 1,600 feet above the level of Otsego lake. It is easily the highest point in this region, and for that reason the observatory which lifts its head above the trees on the mountain crest has the advantage of being able to command an extensive view in every direction. I honestly deem it one of the finest out'ook points I have ever visited, though it has its limitations, as we discovered when we tried to rind Cooperstown, which we had left six miles behind, or Richfield Springs, which lay the same distance northwest. Both were hidden behind the ridges of jealous hills. This was the more notice- able because almost the whole length of Otsego lake reflected blue far beneath us. Northward the Adirondacks were clearly seen. To the northeast the Green Moun- tains of Vermont were dimmer. So, too, were the hills of Western Massachusetts. To the southeast the Catskills were plain. A ridge of the Alleghanies limned the hori- zon on the south, while on the west and northwest it was bounded by the hills of Chenango, Madison and Oneida counties. The two great mountain ranges of this State and that of another State were thus revealed, 60 to 80 miles away. The highest peaks of the Adirondacks were easily picked out. We were much amused by the grandilo- quence of a man whom I may with pro- priety call the "view-expounder." We reached the top some minutes before him and thus had an opportunity to drink in the wonderful panorama before he broke in upon us. His first statement was that "the view from Mount Otsego comprehended 9 States and 40 counties." Then, with a general sweep of his hand, he indicated "the whole course of the Hudson, from the Adirondacks to New York city." Then he pointed out the "Alleghanies down inPenn- 35 sylvania," and presently, taking up a poor field glass, he picked out some forest fires in the Adirondacks. It was kind of him to thus retail an item which had been in yes- terday's papers, but unfortunately for his veracity these fires were upon the north side of the Adirondacks, fully 200 miles away. Every minute I expected him to point out Canada, or Boston, or the monument at Washington. But he refrained. Richfield, of course, is famous for its sul- phur springs, which are considered the strongest in this country. I echoed the idea when we entered the front room of the elaborate series of bathhouses. In a foun- tain in the centre the waters are made to bubble and sparkle until they really look tempting, but the odor of the place prompt- ly reminded me of a story of a countryman who was passing here when this spriug was being uncovered and enlarged, 80 years ago. Smallpox was prevalent in the neighbor- hood, and when the farmer got a good whiff of the bad-egg odor, he whipped up his horse and with a groan exclaimed: "Oh, God; I've ketched it!" Sitting in the trim little park in front of the bathing establishment and opposite the leading hotel, the Earlington, I could not avoid contrasting the past and present of Richfield. The springs were noted for their healing qualities among the Mohawk In- dians, but it was not until 1820 that a young physician thought of booming the place as an invalid resort. Boarders came at $1.25 a week, and were then merely "outlanders" in a rich cheese-making coun- try. Today living costs 20 times the sum named, and Richfield is famous and fash- ionable, its popularity largely due to the favor of that section of the "smart set" which prefers an inland watering place more select thau Saratoga. Its chief ave- nue is lined with hotels. There are in and near the town the summer homes of many wealthy folk. Golf links have made de- mands upon near-by fields. East Indian gymkhana races and a horse show hold forth at the fair grounds. Wheelmen and wheel women spin around Lake Canadar- 36 ago. Tallyhos and stylish traps dispute the roads with them and with those in the saddle. An orchestra plays many num- bers daily at the Earlington, and in other ways it is evident that wealth and ele- gance dominate, at least in the summer. Yet with all this, the farmer has not been elbowed out. His hay wagon or his carryall jogs in review past the Earliug- ton's porch parties side by side with the fine coach or drag, while his hopfields and his cornfields are set over against the mil- lionaire's lawn or handsome home. In- deed, you are hardly out of sight of the hotels before you are in a land of farm- workers. I might enjoy life here at Richfield were I a cottager, but I am not so sure about an extended stay at the hotels. The waters are so widely praised as of value in cases of rheumatism, gout, neuralgia and dis- eases of the blood and liver that many evi- dent sufferers are here. Even though they may be of one's own set and warm friends, their presence, it seems to me, cannot help but act as a damper upon the gen- eral gayety. The bathing establishment affords an in- teresting study of the approved methods of treating these health seekers. There are pulverization, inhalation, douche, vapor and massage rooms, Turkish and Russian baths, sun baths, electric baths and a large swimming pool of sulphur water. So that, if you choose, you can get saturated with sulphur externally and internally be- fore you leave. If you have a woman friend whom you have reason to believe employs artificial aids in her toilet, advise her to stay away from Richfield. Sulphur, you know, oxi- dizes metallic cosmetics and the appear- ance of the cheeks under such circum- stances is scarcely beautiful. Similar tricks are played with one's jewelry. The estate of the late Cyrus H. McCor- mick, of Chicago, who made millions by inventing agricultural implements, is on the eastern slope of Sunset Hill, north of the town. Richard Croker has a stock farm near here, on which his family have been dwelling this summer while the Tammany 37 leader has been abroad or busy in fixing up political slates. Lake Canadarago is a favorite place for drives, canoe and steamboat trips and fish and game suppers. It is a pretty sheet, though not to be compared with Otsego. In the centre is a wooded island. A legend saith that a corresponding island once stood a short distance away, but that the wrath of the Almighty suddenly sank it be- cause a Mohawk healing prophet who dwelt on it became so puffed with pride as to proclaim himself the "twin brother of the Great Spirit." I have spoken of the drives to Cullen- wood, to Lake Canadarago and to Mount Otsego, but have said not a word of one of the most noted— that to the east past two pretty little "Twin Lakes," through the village of Springfield, at the head of Otsego Lake, over into the historic Cherry Valley and on beyond for seven miles to Sharon Springs. The road followed is the old State turnpike to Albany from the western counties. To Cherry Valley is 15 miles. Prom Cooperstown to Cherry Val- ley is about the same distance. Sharon is a watering place whose glory as a summer resort has given way to popu- larity as a sanitarium. It has sulphur springs like those of Richfield, and also chalybeate and magnesia springs. It has all the water-cure treatments in vogue at Richfield and, in addition, one may take mud baths, pine needle baths and the Fa- ther Kneipp cure. These people the hotels with invalids. Formerly Sharon was a fa- vorite place for wealthy German and He- brew citizens and was known as "the Baden-Baden of America." Half way between Sharon and Cherry Valley the road passes around the north or outer side of Prospect Mountain, and we got grand valley views. The Mohawk Val- ley lay spread out 1,700 feet beneath us for an east and west distance of fully 80 miles, shut in on the north by the Adiron- dacks. It was a panorama different from that of Mount Otsego, yet equally fine. I never think of Cherry Valley without recalling the delicate compliment of Willis when he said it was "La Vallee Cherie." It 38 is, indeed, a pretty and romantically sit- uated valley, famed for the terrible mas- sacre on November 11, 1778, when Joseph Bryant and his Indians with fire and the tomahawk spread ruin and desolation through the infant settlement, killing in all 48 persons, many of them women and children. In the village cemetery the bones of the slain were later collected and there a small monument has been erected to their memory. In the centre of the vil- lage is another monument, put up to recall those of Cherry Valley who died, in the Civil War. Cherry Valley was the first settlement in this whole region. It was started in 1740 by John Lindesay. a Scotch gentle- man of some fortune. In the first half of this century it was noted in New York State as the residence of a coterie of fa- mous lawyers and politicians. Prof. Sam- uel F. B. Morse worked out much about his telegraph here. The late Douglas Camp- bell the historian, was born here. Rev. Solomon Spalding, reputed author of the "Book of Mormon," and Rev. Ehphalet Nott, the distinguished president of Union College, were among the early principals of Cherry Valley Academy. Two miles north of the village is Te-ka- ha-ra-nea falls, where a small brook falls 160 feet Cherry Valley White Sulphur Springs are not far away. Cherry Valley creek, after a southwest course of 16 miles, contributes its mite to the Susque- hanna. ! . Our little excursions in this region are ended now. Tomorrow morning we return to Cooperstown to start down the Susque- hanna. VI. THRO' THE HOP COUNTRY. Afton, Chenango County, N. Y., Aug. 20. — Before our departure from Coopers- town today a last visit was paid to the be- ginning of the Susquehanna, where the wa- ters of Lake Otsego glide into the narrow channel which by and by expands to be- come a mighty river. So pretty was the spot that we were loath to leave it, though imagining well how much awaited us in the next 400 miles. Standing long on the bridge which is thrown across the stream a couple, of hundred feet from the lake, we gazed down upon as pretty a brook vista as can be seen anywhere. Leafy trees and bushes over- hung the water in profusion, and some grew quite in midstream, with their roots clinging to mossy rocks. The water was so calm and clear as to reveal, with the aid of a friendly sun, the charms of the river bottom, and the stream seemed to us to have a mood akin to ours, unwilling to leave the "Glimmerglass" for an onward hurry to the Chesapeake. The whole scene was one of sylvan quiet, especially appre- ciated by most visitors because only a minute's walk from the noise of Coopers- town's main street. The river has the same placid beauty here at Afton, 54 miles below Coopers- town. We saw it grow as we traveled with it, saw it gradually spread from a width of 40 feet to- one of 300 feet. Yet, though it has frequently been stirred up by dams and millraces, and has received the waters of various turbulent and noisy brooks, it still seems content to be serene on a summer day and passes quietly beneath the white suspension bridge which is but a short walk from the centre of this pretty village. Prom 40 the bridge the banks present the same pic- ture of overhanging trees as at Coopers- town, though the wider river substitutes a lake background for the brook vista up above. The river valley from Cooperstown has the same characteristics as the stream it- self. Hemmed in by high uplands on each side, it offered us a series of peaceful, pleasing scenes. The high, bounding hills leave an intervale of a mile to a mile and a half. The hillsides have been largely al- lowed to remain wooded, but often tracts have been "cleared" for crops or cattle, and we saw many cows browsing in the midst of tree stumps far above the river. The rich lands on the levels adjoining the river banks showed fine crops, and the general well-being of the farmers was evidenced by their neat homes and filled barns. The whole region is noted for its dairying and stock raising rather than for its farm products. A succession of just such pretty villages as Afton broke in upon the farm scenery and made interesting stopping points for our train. Streets with arching trees gave glimpses of well-ordered lawns and pretty homes. Some of the latter showed us where modern ideas had brought in the Queen Anne type of dwelling, but mostly they were of the two-storied, comfortable- looking type general in Central New York, usually painted white, with green blinds. These villages occurred with regularity every three or four miles— Milford, Port- landville, Colliersville, Oneonta, Otego, Wells Bridge, Unadilla, Sidney, Bain- bridge and Afton. They all have flour- mills, sawmills and small factories and are all typical villages save Oneonta and Sid- ney. These two have been pushed ahead by railroad industry, the former decidedly more than the latter. Two railroads link these various Susque- hanna villages and towns, and have con- tributed largely to their growth in the last 30 years. From Cooperstown to Colliers- ville, 16 miles, we were carried by the Cooperstown and Charlotte Valley Rail- road, a small road whose building was due to the former progressive spirit of Coop- 41 erstown citizens. Then we met the Al- bany and Susquehanna division of the Del- aware and Hudson Railroad, which strikes the Susquehanna at Colliersville, where the river bends to the southwest, and runs with the river to Nineveh, below Afton, where it aims across to Binghamton. It is part of a short through route from Bos- ton to the West, and has frequent "flyers" and fast trains. Its course is mainly on the west bank of the river. The trip from Cooperstown as far as Oneonta was emphatically a journey through the hop country. This is the hop- picking season and the groups at work amid myriads of tall poles added zest to our sightseeing. Sometimes hundreds of acres were given up to the picturesque hop vines, while every farm owner along the river had at least an acre or two. The hopflelds were very inviting. During the summer the green and leafy vines had crept up the myriads of poles and across interlacing strings until the rows before being picked seemed like a vast festoon, an idyllic contribution to some great har- vest festival. They were so charming jis to make me appreciate the spirit of the writer who said there is "flippancy in the name and nature of the vine, as gay and debonair to the end it tosses its light sprays." All of which is quite foreign to the thought of another, a temperance mor- alist, who turned his head away when trav- ersing these fields and tried to avoid the "sleepy aroma of the sun-steeped hops," because it made him "ashamed" that such pretty vines should be intended for "the base uses of the makers of beer." Five counties here in Central New York produce one-half of the 50,000,000 pounds of hop used in this country or exported abroad. Cooperstown and Oneonta are the chief trade centres for that part of the region around and below Lake Otsego. The time for picking is when the tiny cones i