■-^P/ *^ ^-^ 'WW.' / --^ --^P '■ ^^ -^^ 'WW J ■a? %*> o > ^^:o \/ »^^fe\ '^^-^^'' ;:a^.^K^. %/ '*^K': ^ ^o C ^ h^-^^i^ 0^ ... , >> ■v' = « o ' o ^^ ^i^*^ .v^i*5C'- -x^ A ;lit to see him following the plow, on the farm now owned by Mrs. A B. Cox, while his little class trudged along by his side, scanning their Virgil and Homer. The learning acquired under such circumstances would not be likely to be easily forgotten, It is told that when Mr. Dunloj) left Ireland he was engaged to a charming young lady, conditionally on his returning to claim her as his wife within seven years. When the seven years were nearly ex- pired he made the long journey, from Cherry Valley to Ireland, to bring her to his frontier home. His fiancee had, however, given up all hope of ev^er heor- ing from him again, and was to be married, on the day following his arrival, to another suitor. She. however, welcomed her old love with open arms, married him, and with him sought a new home in the western wilds. It is a pretty romance, and few will wish to be so uncharitable as to doubt its truth. There were seven families in the original London- derry party, comprising about thirty persons in all. including children. The names of the heads of five of these families. — David Ramsey, Willian Gault. James Campbell. Patrick Davidson and William Dickson, — have come down to us. After the name of its founder the place had been originally called Lindesay's Bush; a name doubtless too homely to suit the somewhat refined ideas of the Rev. Mr. Dunlo^j. for, in the year following his ar- rival, it was, at his suggestion, re-christened "Cherry HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. T) Valley."' The new name beinu,- derived from the fact that wild cherries were abundant in the valley. Little has passed down, either by manuscript or tradition, of the doings of the infant settlement dur- ing the ten years following the arrival of the Lon- donderry party. Mr. Lindesay. tired of the rough life and the severity of the winters, disposed of his farm, in 1744. to a Mr. John Wells; a man of rare attainments and integrity, and possessed of a natui'- al judicial mind. He was for many years judge and jury in all disputations that arose from time to time in the neighborhood, and after its formation was one of the Judges of Tryon County. A Saw Mill and Grist Mill were early erected, and the cleared spaces around the cabins grew in size, but the number of the settlers remained practically the same: the occasional incomers about balancing the losses l)y deaths and removals. The reputation of the Eev. Mr. Dunlop's primitive but thorough .school had. however, extended and a number of the leading settlers along the Mohawk were accustomed to send their sons to him for instruction. They lived with him and formed a little boarding school. In the early fifties the little settlement received an im^jetus from the arrival of new settlers and from that time up to the beginning of the Revolution its growth, if slow, was steady and constant. Thus the records show that the eight families, who comijosed the population of the place in 1752, had increased to forty in I7t)5 and at the opening of the Revolution H HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. to over sixty. During this time a Blacksmith Shop had been opened, a little store, or trading place- started, and a second Saw Mill erected. There were the usual Indian scares and at one timea x^reconcert- ed attack of the Indians was only prevented by the nnusiial vigilance of the inhabitants. The Indians were always a source of dread and fear and the hus- bandman invariably took his rifle with him when going to his work. During the last French war the danger of attacks from the Indian allies of the Fren'^h became so great that fortifications were erected and a company of Ranger.-J. under the command of the celebrated Capt. McKean, were stationed here. Despite the many scares the place was fortunate in escaping all Indian attacks. Occasionally, however, an unfortunate settler, living on the outskirts of the little settle- ment, was found dead in the woods, or beside his plow, having been ruthlessly murdered by some rov- ing band of Indians ; doubtless from a distance, as the neighboring Indians were on friendly terms with the settlers. During the several Freiu^h and Indian wars the t^xposed condition of the settlement and the paucity of men capable of bearing arms, prevented Cherry Valley from being largely represented in the conflicts that took place, but we read in the old family man- uscripts of volunteers from here being present in several battles and it is known that at least three from Cherry Valley were with Johnson on his Lake George expedition. HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. 7 The additions to the original settlers came mainly from the New England colonies, and, after the last French war, a number of French Canadians also took up their residence here. The former were mainly Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, who naturally passed by the Dutch settlements along the Mohawk and 'Scho- harie Valleys to seek a section whose people held views more similar to their own. and where they could worship in a church of their own denomination. As a consequence the little Log Church on the hill soon became too small for its steadily growing con- gregation, and in 1755 a frame church was erected on the spot where the village Cemetery is now.- Around the church, as was then the custom, their lictie burying ground was laid out. the last resting place of the many generations that have lived and died in the years that have intervened. Soon after the close of the last French war. ad- ditions to the settlement became more frequent but the growth of the place was somewhat neutralized by the branching out and forming of new settle- ments by its inhabitants. Thus we find Middlefield. Otego, Laurens. Unadilla and Harpersville settled by emigrants from Cherry Valley; all small but flourish- ing settlements at the outbreak of the Revolution. HISTORY or CIIElfKY VALLEY. CHAPTER II. THE EARLY DAYS OF THE REVOLITIOX. The Scotch-Irish, who composed the greater por- tion of the popiihition of Cherry Vallf^y. had natural- ly little love for the Enuflish. and the French Cana- dians, who formed a smaller part, had even less, so that it was Uut natural that the inhabitants of this place should be among the first to protest against the attempt of the Royalists, under the leadership of the powerful Johnson family, to commit Tryon county to the English cause. This influence effected to some degree the not less patriotic but more phleg- matic Dutch of the Mohawk Valley, but it had little effect on the independent natures of the residents of the Cherry Valley hills, where the very air seemed to breathe of freedom. The Church at Cherry Valley was early in 1775 the place appointed for one of the first meetings to protest against this action on the part of the Tories, and the fact that it could accommodate but a small fraction of those who flocked hither from all parts of the country, shows how great and deep was the inter- est thus early taken in the cause of freedom. HISTORY OF CHLRRY VALLEY. 9 The foremost part that Cherry Valley took in the deliberations of Tryon County, and the influence of some of its representatives, is shown by the fact that John Moore, a resident of the place, was the delegate from Tryon County to the first Provincial Congress, -of which body he was one of the Chaplains, — and a member of the State Committee of Safety. Sam- uel Clyde, of Cherry Valley, was the first Chairman of the Tryon County Committee of Safety. At the General Organization of the Tryon County Militia, on August 26th, 1775, among the Officers appointed from Cherry Valley were : Robert Wells, First-Major ; Samuel Clyde, Adjutant and Captain, and James Cannon, John Campbell, jr., and Robert Campbell, Lieutenants. C)n Sept. 19th, Samuel Campbell was appointed Lieut. -Colonel of the Min- ute Men. It is worthy of mention, as showing the scarcity of money in those early days, that the County Committee, at the time Mr. Moore was elect- ed a delegate to the Provincial Congress, passed a ]-esoiution that the pay of the member of that body, from Tryon County, should be "Eight Shillings in New York currency and no more." That, though Tryon County was divided nearly (equally for a time between tories and patriots, the settlement of Cherry Valley was nearly unanimous in its patriotism is clearly shown by the fact that thirty-three of its inhabitants, out of a total popula- tion of only three hundred, responded to the call to arms in 1776. Probably no section of the country, 10 HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. outside of New England, sent so large a proportion of its inhabitants to join the patriot armies. The fact is even more remakable when we consider thai this settlement was the most exposed of any in the country, not only because of its nearness to the Tory settlement to the North, but also from its dan- ger from Indian attacks on the west. During the early days of the revolution there was little danger from either of these sources. The flight of the Johnsons and Butlers, to Canada, prevented open hostilities on the part of the tories, and the Indians had been so long on friendly terms with the settlers of the region around Cherry Valley, that, although they had signed an alliance with the British, they hesitated to engage in hostilities against them. The battle of Oriskany, on the 6th. of August. 1777, changed the friendly feeling, or at most quies- cent hostility, of the redman into deadly hatred.- Thenceforth they sought only to be revenged on the settlers of Tryon county, for the death of their brethren, who had fallen in that fierce conflict. Es- pecially were they embittered against Cherry Valley, as the home of Col. Samuel Campbell and Major Samuel Clyde, who had not only been officers high in command in that battle, but had also been es- pecially conspicuous for their bravery and deeds of valor. Up to this time no fortifications had been erected in Cherry Vallev since the distruction of the old HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. H stockade of the French and Indian wars, but the certainty that Brant, the Indian Chieftain, would sooner or later incite his warriors to take vengeance on the settlement, led the inhabitants, in the late summer of the same year, (1777), to prepare a place of refuge in case of attack. They accordingly se- lected the house of Col. Samuel Campbell, on ac- count of its size and elevated position, and threw up an embankment of earth and logs, enclosing the house and barns. Hither during the summer and fall of 1777, the inhabitants of the surrounding country gathered for safety, a sort of military discipline being maintained; no one being allowed to pass outside of the fortifica- tions without a permit. This course was made necessary by the fact that even in this stronghold of patriotism some converts to toryism were found; doubtless influenced by the British successes in the campaigns of '76 and '77. Human nature was the same in 1776 as now, and to some the desire to be on the winning side was greater than their love of country. It is stated in the "Annals of Tryon County" that (luring the early summer of 1778 a premeditated at- tack of the Indians under Brant was prevented by a boyish parade of the younger inhabitants, who were accustomed, in imitation of their elders, to parade in front of the fortifications with paper hats and wood- en guns. The Indians lying in concealment in the woods to the southeast, mistook them for real soldiers 12 HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. and, abandoning their intention of attacking the place, moved off toward the Mohawk; stopping for the night at a point nearly opposite the old Sulphur Spring. It was here that the gallant young Lieat. Matthew Wormuth met his tragic end. Lieut. Wormuth, who was the son of a wealthy resident of the Palatine district, had ridden up from the Mo- hawk to inform the residents of Cherry Valley that Col. Klock with a portion of his regiment would ar- rive the following day. Toward evening he started to return to his home, accompanied by Peter Sitz, a bearer of dispatches. The Indians hearing them approach, concealed themselves behind a large rock, and commanded them to halt. They, however, put spurs to their horses and endeavored to escape, but a volley from the guns of the Indians killed the horse of Sitz and wounded Lieut. Wormuth. who was at once tomahawked and scalj^ed — the '•Annals" says, by Brant himself, who had long been a per- sonal friend, but failed to recognize him in his un- iform and ever after lamented his sad mistake. — Sims, a later authority, denies that Brant was him- self the murderer. Sitz was captured but had the firesence of mind to destroy the despatches and sub- stitute false ones, which he also carried. The death of Lieut. Wormuth was no more tragic than that of many others but his youth, Une personal appearance and agreeable manners, attracted much attention and caused his fate to be remembered when that of others was forgotten in the excitement of those stir- ring times. HISTOEY OF CHERRY VALLEY. 1^) During the summer, stern necessity conipelling the settlers to cultivate their land, it \vas customary for the inhabitants to form themselves into little •companies and work touether: a iX)rtion standing guard while others lalKjred. In June of this year the neighboring hamlet of Springfield was burned by the Indians and a number of the inhabitants carried into captivity. The inhabitants of Cherry Valley had long be- .sought the Provincial (Tovernment for protection against Indian incursions and the matter being laid before Gen. Lafayette, an his visit to Johnstown, in the Spring of 1778. he ordered that a Fort be erected at Cherry Valley, and a garrison be sent for its pro- tection. The ^ort was accordingly built during the summer. It was situated in the Cemetery, near the C^hurch. and a stockade enclosed the two buildings, A regimt^nt under the command of Col. Ichabod Allen, was sent from Connecticut and took posses- sion of the Fort in the Fall. Unfortunately Col. Alden had no experience in Indian warfare and underestimated the courage and ferocity of the Indian. The mere presence of the troops he judged sufficient to intimidate the red men and refused to allow the settlers to move into the stockade, even after reports were brought to liim that the Indians, under their great Chief taiiL Josef)h Brant, were rendezvousing on the Susquehanna: where they had been joined by a body of Tories under Capt. Walter Butler, son of that C\)l. John Butler, who gained such an infamous notoriety from his participation in the Wvomi)it>- Massacre. 14 HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY, (CHAPTER III. OHERRY VALLEY AT THE TLME OF THE MASSACRE. At tho time of the Ma^saere the Fort and the vil- lage ot* (MieiTv Valley, it' it may be called a village, romprisiuii: as it did only half a dozen houses and a church. — was situated in nnd around the , present Cemetery at the lower end of the village and at the upper end of a valley, resembling a Roman Amphi- theater in shape; being. a])parently. about six miles in length by one mile in width, and surrounded on all sides by gracefully sloping, wooded hills. Asa strict matter of fact the valley continues to the South, until it join-^ the larger valley of the Susquehanna, but it turn-! sharply to the right where the Westford hills rise, a mile or two below the village of Rose- boom, and is so hidden from view by the hills that it appears to end with them. The hills to the North of the village (n^er-look the Mohawk Valley; the .•streams on that side seeking the Ocean by way of the Mohawk, while those on the South side mingle with the waters of the Susquehanna. Some older geographers have contended that the latter river has its source in the Cherry Valley hills instead of in Otsego Lake. HISTORY OF CHEEKY VALLEY. 15 Ou the hill at the upper eiul of the valley, in a direct line from Jie Ftjrt stood the log- house of <'ol. Samuel Campbell. «)ii the site of the residence now occupied as a summer home by his great-great- i4rand-children; a half mile to the east and on the .same level was the house and shop of James Moore, the blacksmith of the settlement, on the lands now owned by Elisha Flint, and North of him lived a Nelson family. About the same distance to the North of Col. Campbell's was the home of his father- in-law. Matthew Cannon, (disputed): while at an equal distance to the West, was the home of John Campbell, now tbe summer home of the writer. The present Ja(^kson Millson farn) was then occupied by a James Campbell. On the road to the West, leading to Springfield, lived the Kev. Samuel Dimlop at the foot of Living- ston's Glen, on the lands of Mrs A. B. Cox. There is a tradition that further up the Glen there was a sort of flax or carding mill, in which lived the family <»f the owner, whose name is not given. Following the Springfield road: the McClellans occupied the present Chauncey Steenburgh farm: James an[)()site the Fort, on the East side of the valley, lived the Thompsons, on the knoll near the Sulphur Spring-, further North. John Foster, on the farm now owned by E. L. Hinskley. Near the pres- ent Reservoir was the house and Saw Mill of Hugh iMitchell and. beyond, on the Marks farm, lived Patrick Davidson. Still further North, on the Dewitt C. (Campbell farm, was the house of a family named Co(^ns. John Mcxjre. tradition says, lived on the Elisha Moore farm a little over two miles East of the village, but it seems more probable that he should have erected his house on the hill to the West, over-looking the Mohawk Valley, now owned by Wm. H. Waldrcm. A further list miti:ht ]>e given but this is sufficient HISTORY OF CHLRRY VALLEY. 17 to show the limits of the Massacre. It will be seen that the limits of what was known as the Cherry Valley settlement were, on the West and South, almost identical with the boundaries of the present town of Cherry Valley in those directions. To the East and North the boundaries were not much different than at present, but the Indians either did not reach the more distant houses, or the owners had sufficient warning so that they escaped to the Mohawk settlements. At the time of the Massacre most of the male in- habitants of Cherry V^alley, over the age of sixteen, were serving in the Continental Army, at distant points. At first thought it seems strange that the men who had lived all their lives among the Indians, and knew all their wiles and strategems, and were thoroughly acquainted with their methods of war- fare, should have been sent to the main armies and men unacquainted with the ways of the Indian be .sent to protect a frontier settlement. It can only be explained on the theory that experience had shown that when men were left to protect their home settle- ments, their zeal for the cause of patriotism was likely to be lost sight of in their desire to look first after their own interests and the improvement of their farms and material prospects. In the case of Cherry Valley it was a sad mistake. Had such men as Capt. M'Kean, Col. Campbell and Col, Clyde been at home, it is safe to say, the Indians would not have found the settlement so unprepared, and 18 HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. that many of the lives lost in that horrible butchery would have been saved. Among the men who, by their ability, prominence, or zeal for the cause of patriotism, gave honor to Cherry Valley during the Revolutionary period, the first place must be given to the Rev. Samuel Dunlop. by reason of his age, great learning and the position he had so long occupied in the settlement. His great age prevented him from taking active part in the conflict but his advice was sought by all on matters jjertaining to the war, and the patriotism di-:- played by the inhabitants of this section was largely due to his influence. John Moore was the most prominent resident of the place during this period, though not distinguish- ed as a soldier, owing to his lameness. He was a delegate to the first, second, third, fourth and fifth Provincial Congresses; a member of the State Com- mittee of Safety, and several times a Member of Assembly. Capt. M'Kean, though not an educated man, was one of the leading men of the settlement by reason of his natural abilities and physical strength and endurance. In such times physique and agility were quite as important as mental training, and indeed were likely to give the j^ossessor greater prominence. M'Kean was accounted one of the most skillful Indian fighters in the country. He had command of a company of Rangers in the French war, and also during the Revolution. During the war he was HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. 19 raised to the rank of Major. He was killed in the battle of Durlock, near Sharon Springs, in the sum- mer of 1781. Samuel Clyde, who was raised to the rank of Col., early in 1778, was one of the most prominent men and active patriots of the settlement. It is claimed that, after the death of Gen. Herkimer, the Officers wished to elect him Brigadier General in the place of Herkimer, but that he declined, on the ground that his advancement over the heads of Officers of high?r rank, would cause jealousies which would be injurious to the American cause. The failure to ap- point a successor to Gen. Herkimer is said to have been due to this refusal on the part of Mr. Clyde, who was then a Major. Col Clyde was a member of the State Assembly in 1777-8, and Sheriff of Montgomery County in 1785-9. Col. Samuel Campbell was one of the leaders of the settlement in all matters — social, religious, political and military. - He was a member of the Tryon County Committee of Safety and a Col. of the Tryon County Minute Men. His grand-son, the late Judge W. W. Campbell, author of the "'Annals of Tryon County,'" states that as the highest Officer left in command, he led off the troops after the Battle of Oriskany. Col. Campbell was the intimate friend of Gov. Clinton, and numbered among his friends most of the public men of the North. As late as 1802 he was a member of Assembly from Tryon County. James and John Willson were among the leading 20 HISTORY OF CHERRY VALLEY. and most influential residents. The Rev. Mr Swin- nerton, ni his "Historical Sketch of the Presbyter- ian Church of Cherry Valley/" states that the former was, in 1739, High Sheriff of A bany County, which then included all this part of the country. He came here first in that year, as a surveyor, in company with Mr. Lindesay, and later on settled here. Ht- was Commissary for the regiment stationed in the Fort. The Wells were the social leaders of this part of the Country. John Wells, who died just previous to the Revolution, was a King's Magistrate and his son Robert Wells, was a Major in the Tryon County Militia. The entire Wells family were killed in the Massacre, excejjt a son who was in Schenectady at the time. The latter was afterwards the famous New York lawyer — John Wells. James Cannon, although a young man, was a very active patriot and afterwards became a man of con- siderable importance in Otsego County, holding- several County offices. Hugh Mitchell and Thomas Shankland, though men of inferior education and social position, were nevertheless, by reason of their activity and patriot- ism, men of some condsideration in the settlement. The former was; in 1775, a member of the Schenec- tady Committee of Safety. Thomas Spence. the Indian interpreter, was also for a time a resident of Cherry Valley. He rendered valuable services to the Americans during the Revolution. HISTORY OF CHERKY VALLEY. 21 There were a number ot others who. by reason of their activity in the cause of Liberty, are wortliy of mention, but the above list comprises those who might be termed the -leading men'" in the settle- ment. It is a remarkable list for a little frontier settlement of three hundred people. Not alone be- cause of the prominence of tliose mentioned, in the affairs of the western part of the Province, but also for the reason that so many of them were men of excellent social standing and superior education. — To the latter facts the former was doubtless due. — The Dutch of the Mohawk Valley though an excel- lent, sturtly and honest people, were not, as a rule, an educated class, and they readily yielded prece- dence to the brighter and more cultivated intellects of the Cherry Valley leaders, in their councils and deliberations, notwithstanding the fact that each dis- trict was. in military matters, very tenacious of its rights. It is interesting in this connection to note that many of the men who were the most prominent, during the RevolutiKV OF t'HEKUV VALLEY. of tlio sad niul awfnl horrors of tlu» ^lassacnv. Hearing" the liulian outerios the mothm* hurriinl her ohiUlreu up the hank, on the side of tlioGhMi. Toll- iuu' them to oonooal themsolvos in tho bushes autl eautitniiuii" tluMU uuiU>r uo eireuiustauees to answer any ealls. no master by whom uiven. she sought auotlier hiiliui:; phiee anil eventually reaelieil the Fort without her ehililreu. The followinLj niornini;' i\ sooutiiig party tried to tiuil the ehildreu. but no answer was returned to their ealls and shouts, and finally, diseouraiied, they sent a party after the mother. She had no better sueeess. In vain she ealled them again and aj^ain. There was uo response. Heart brokeu in the belief that tlu> Indians had captured them slu> was about \o return \o the Fort wlieu one of the soldiers diseovmiHl tlnMU hudilled together, iu fear and trembliug. in a dense thii-ket of brush, eold and liunnry. but unharmed. As nioruiug drew on. the prisoners were assembltnl together and eomnuMu*ed their weary march down the valley, in a pitiless November storm. They en- camped about two miles from the village and. after a sleepless night, upon the disnuil monung of the twelfth, again started on their doleful way. Mrs. Cannon, on account of her age and i>therwise en- feebled condition, not being able to keep up with the party, was killed anil left by the wayside. A sad day's march and another sorrowful night, and then came the joyful announcement that the women and children were to be sent back, with the exception of ^y, HISTOKV OK CHliKKV VAIJ.I.^. 2U I he families f tlu' war. Among the eaj^tives was the late Janu-s (.*ampJ)ell. then a Ixjy of five or six years, who died al)f)nl 1H70. The Fort was attacked upon the 11th. hut the as- sailants were repulsed. An attack was a^^ain made ;i- tinental tnjcjps under c;(jniinand of Col. JMiiies (xordon, accompanied by a regitnent of the Molniwk Militia under CJol. Kloc;k, arrived at the Fort, liaving l)een notified by some ot the fugitives of the attack