Thursday, December 27, 2012

A Golden Decade for Simeon Ide


 
 
 
 
As Simeon became older, his devotion to Evelelina never wavered.  Louis Flanders gives us several glimpses of Simeon's love for Angelina in his book. In 1827, Simeon and a friend were out at a political rally. He convinced the friend to spend the night at his house, because they had both been drinking and it wasn't a good idea for the friend to go all the way home. They made such a racket coming up the walkway and into the house that they woke Evelina up and she met them at the door. As he told his son-in-law (probably Louis Flanders' father) “you should have seen the look on her face”. That was it for Simeon and alcohol. The next day, he took all the liquor bottles out of the house, smashed them against the foundation of the barn, and never touched a drop of liquor again. He also didn't smoke or play cards until he was in his eighties.

Simeon joined the Episcopal church, although he makes it plain in his diaries that he had never been in love with “The Church of England”. My guess is that Evelina was Episcopalian and it was her wish to join the Episcopal church in Windsor. Why else would Simeon have joined a church he didnd't really like? Her brother Edward became the vicar of the Episcopal Church in Windsor, which seems to me to indicate a strong tie to the Episcopal church. On the other hand, there is no mention of Lemuel and Sarah having strong ties to any denomination.

Once he had decided to join the church, Simeon threw himself into church affairs with enthusiasm, becoming a vestryman and a delegate to the Diocesan conventions. Louis says, “There are some of us alive today who remember him in his eighty-eighth year, standing in his pew as erect as in his youth, his fine old head crowned with a shock of snow-white hair, earnestly responding to the psalms or joining in the hymns with a trembling voice.”

The 1820's were a golden decade for Simeon. His family and his business were growing by leaps and bounds. In 1820, when he moved his shop to the second floor of West's tavern, he had a Ramage two-pull wooden frame printing press. The sole main difference between a Ramage press and the original printing press invented by Gutenberg was that Ramage incorporated many metal parts into his press, thus making his press much more durable. The Ramage press was called a “two pull” because each copy required the printer to pull the lever down twice. Although presses made totally of iron did exist at that time, they were wicked heavy and hard to take apart, making the Ramage press more popular for the average printer.

 
 

In 1824, Simeon did have to break down and buy a Wells Iron printing press. This press was still operated by hand, but needed one pull instead of two. Peter Wells, of Philadelphia, had designed a printing press with a series of toggle levers rather than a main screw. The more powerful motion of the toggle switches tore apart wooden frames, so the whole machine had to be made of metal. Unfortunately for Wells, several other inventors from America and Europe had similar designs, and the controversy of who had the idea first has never been solved. The Wells press only dominated the industry for a few years. Simeon's Wells press may have been the first iron printing press used in Vermont

 

In 1828 Simeon bought a bed and platten power press which printed 12 sheets a minute. This press was invented by Haskell and Metcalf of Woodstock, Vermont. Bed and platen power presses used flat bed and flat impressions to print, and not rotary drums. This printer used water or horse power throughout the whole printing process, except to load unprinted sheets of paper in the front and take off the printed sheets at the back. Although this purchase put Simeon into a new era of technology, it also ended an era of prosperity and success, and ushered in an era of headache, heartache, and stress.
 
 

Monday, December 17, 2012

Windsor County Court, December 11


Jessica Quimby, DOB 5/27/86, pled not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight on October 28 in Windsor



Ashley Husband, DOB 9/28/90 was also charged with disorderly conduct/fight on October 28 in Windsor



Timothy Simonds, DOB 1/20/82, pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license on October 2 in Bridgewater.



Amanda Viger, DOB 3/24/84 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Windsor on October 26



Keith Descrochers, DOB 3/31/82, pled guilty to his first DUI charge, in Hartford on November 21



Jennifer Clough, DOB 10/19/89 pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/obstruct on November 5 in Sharon



Shane Harlow, DOB 4/11/65 pled not guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of a crash with property damage on October 6 in Hartford



Hunter Dwinell, DOB 2/19/92 pled not guilty to a charge of escaping from custody/furlough on December 4



James Filipowicz, DOB 6/20/90 pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Chester on November 1



Magen Hill, DOB 5/3/86 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Weathersfield on November 6



Benjamin Stearman, DOB 8/14/80 pled guilty to a charge of marijuana possession in Windsor on October 17



Joey Bergeron, DOB 2/26/81 pled not guilty to a charge of buying, receiving, selling, possessing or concealing stolen property in Reading on November 4



Alexander Gee, DOB 9/10/91, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight in Windsor on October 15



Ashley Blanchard, DOB 1/12/93, pled not guilty to 2 counts of sale of depressant/stimulant/or narcotic and two counts of sale of heroin in February. Blanchard was also charged with possession of drugs with intent to sell in Holyoke, Massachusetts. In Holyoke's Police Department blog, the Holyoke police chief said that Blanchard was the sixth person that month from Vermont who had been arrested for drug offenses and made a statement that from now on, any time the police department sees a car with Vermont license plates in Holyoke, they are going to assume the person is there to obtain drugs. The policy of the Holyoke police department is now to stop every car they see with Vermont license plates. I hope they don't include Vermonters going to the Holyoke Mall.


Luella Powell, DOB 2/27/81 pled not guilty to a charge of aiding in the commission of a felony in Chester on May 15




Simeon Goes to Washington


By the time Simeon had been married for five years, he had paid for his business and owned a house worth $2,000, built by his brother William. In one of his diaries, he observes that, “For nearly 30 years, my family consisted of between 10 and 15 people, including children. Simeon had ten children, and his wife's mother Charity Goddard lived with them, as well as his wife's four siblings, Edward, Nathan, Harriet and Charlotte Goddard. His children were Harriet, born in 1819; George, born in 1821; Mary, born in 1823; Lemuel, born in 1825; Sarah, born in 1827; Frances, born in 1828; Ellen, born in 1831; Agnes, born in 1833, Julia, born in 1835; and Charlotte, born in 1837. Sarah married A.B. Flanders, and it was her son and daughter who wrote “Simeon Ide, Yeoman, Freedman, and Pioneer Printer”.

In 1820, Simeon moved his print shop to the second floor of West's Tavern. West's Tavern was where Vermont's founders signed the Constitution of Vermont in 1777. In 1825, Simeon became a bookbinder and publisher as well as a printer, and moved to even bigger quarters. He had begun printing for both the Vermont government and the federal government. He began printing the laws of Vermont, and he got a printing contract for the U.S. Post Office.

Simeon went all the way to Washington, D.C. to apply in person for the Post Office contract.

His trip began when he left Windsor by stagecoach at 1:00 p.m, and arrived in Boston at 8:00 pm. The next day, he took a stagecoach to Providence, Rhode Island. On the afternoon of the third day, he took a steamboat to New York. He didn't like the steamboat ride, but he wasn't seasick. He didn't like the sound of the water in the bilge because he couldn't sleep. Late on the fourth day, he left New York for New Jersey, headed for Philadelphia. On this leg of the trip he alternated between riding watercraft and stagecoach. On the morning of the fifth day he left Philadelphia on a steamship bound for Baltimore. On this ship, he made friends with a Quaker gentleman.

This man was also headed for Washington, D.C. and he was on the same stagecoach train, a train of eight four-horse coaches. They weren't in the same coach, though. Simeon was in Coach Four and the other man was in Coach Two. When they got to Baltimore, Simeon switched with someone else so that he could ride in coach two with his new friend.

Soon they were on their way again. Simeon was irritated at the long breaks the drivers took. It seems that the drivers liked to stop for a while and  “take a drop to lay the dust”. After a fairly long interval of steady driving they had to stop because there had been a terrible accident. Coach Four had overturned and landed at the bottom of a ravine. Many people were hurt and several died. Apparently after the last stop, when they got going again, Coach Four had headed out ahead of Coach Three and the driver of Coach Three tried to pass Coach Four and ended up running Coach Four off the road. Simeon says that “Rum was the cause of the accident, or I should perhaps say, the recklessness of the drivers produced by the rum.”

Luckily, because he had switched coaches, Simeon arrived in Washington without mishap, and personally submitted his bid for the Post Office contract. When he was in Washington, a newspaper reporter someone from Windsor knew showed him around the town and he actually got to meet President John Quincy Adams. He had to repeat the whole process of his trip in reverse, to make it back to Windsor. A few weeks after he got back to Vermont, he was notified that he had won the bid. His expenses for the whole trip “footed up to about $70”.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Windsor County Court December 4


Kayla Cassady, DOB 4/22/94, pled not guilty to a charge of sexual assault on a victim less than 16 years of age, in Sharon, in November


Kerry St Lawrence, DOB 1/27/62 pled not guilty to a charge of heroin possession in Hartford on October 5

David Durphey, DOB 1/28/88 was charged with driving with a suspended license on October 8 in Springfield


Donald Larock, DOB 8/1/68, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault on October 20 in Stockbridge


Billy Joe Prive, DOB 3/20/78, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with his license suspended on October 17 in Cavendish

Claes Mattson, DOB 6/13/54, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with his license suspended on October 12 in Bridgewater.


Frederick Rogers, DOB 12/6/79, pled guilty to a charge of driving with his license suspended in Cavendish on Octber 4


Walter Wood, DOB 6/26/60, pled not guilty to a charge of taking a big game animal by illegal means in Royalton. Wood was allegedly caught using corn as bait during deer hunting on October 20.


Ericka Lindberg, DOB 9/6/63, pled guilty to a charge of simple assault on a law enforcement officer in Cavendish on September 29

Sonya Gordon, DOB 10/21/74, pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Chester on October 11.


Loren Washburn, DOB 2/7/82, pled guilty to a second charge of DUI in Bethel on November 13

Joshua Gonyo, DOB 9/17/87, pled not guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Hartford on October 9


Cynthia Parker, DOB 1 / 4/ 62, pled not guilty to a first charge of DUI in Woodstock on November 17

Jackie Shuttle, DOB 8/28/86, pled not guilty to a charge of petit larceny in Hartford on October 12. Shuttle allegedly stole a cell phone.


Van Mongeur, DOB 3/7/64, pled not guilty to charges of violating a relief/prevention of abuse order, unlawful tresspass, and interfering with access to emergency services on November 6. He was also charged with unlawful tresspass on November 3.

Simeon Finds True Love


By Spring of 1813, Simeon ran out of excuses to stay in Windsor, and he finally had to return to his father's farm. In April, he was helping his brother cut cordwood for the next winter. I can personally attest to the fact that if you're doing cordwood, it's a good time to get your sons home.

Simeon found himself at loose ends. He tried to continue with an apprenticeship, and signed on with Major William Faye of the Rutland Herald, but left there after a week. In May, Simeon got a letter from a friend who had found work in Brattleboro. The letter mentioned that there might be employment in Brattleboro, so Simeon “gathered his belongings in a silk handkerchief” and walked 60 miles to Brattleboro. He ended up being hired by William Fessenden for 80 cents a day, to print Webster's spelling book. Simeon said in his diary that he operated “8 two-pull hand presses; each requiring two able-bodied men to work it. (page 31 in Yeoman). Fessenden also ran a bookstore, and one of the perks of his job was that he could borrow any books he wanted from the bookstore.

While Simeon was in Brattleboro he got a letter from Major Faye offering him a better job. Apparently Major Fay didn't hold it against Simeon for leaving his apprenticeship so quickly, possibly because there wasn't enough work for Simeon there at the time. Fay had just begun publishing “Watt's Psalms and Hymns”.

Simeon stayed in Rutland for 13 months. While he was there, he joined a social club that called themselves “The Beauties”. Simeon remained friends with “The Beauties”, and exchanged letters with them for the rest of his life. “The Beauties” met at each others' houses regularly, for dinner, drink and conversation about books and other intellectual pursuits. They also attended parties together. Simeon associated with two “girls of wealth and position”, and it appears that either one of those girls would have been happy to have been courted by Simeon.

Simeon, however, had his eye on another girl, who was of neither wealth nor position, nor old enough to marry. Pamela Goddard was 16 years old when Simeon met her. Her father, a clockmaker and silversmith, was in poor health. Simeon fell in love with her, and vowed that if her father died, he would take care of Pamela, her four siblings and her mother, Charity.

In the meantime, however, things were not going well. The work dried up in Rutland, and Simeon went back to Windsor looking for work and couldn't find a job. 1815 was the first year in a three year economic depression. Also, 1816 was the year without a summer. A volcano eruption in Indonesia caused the disruption of weather patterns around the world. 1816 was called the year without the summer throughout the United States, and Vermonters called it “1800 and froze to death”.

During the summer of 1816, there was a frost every month. Craftsbury and Montpelier had a foot of snow in June. An article in Spooner's Vermont Journal, in Windsor, said, “It is extremely cold for this time of year. The late frosts have killed the corn. It is not probable that enough will get ripe for seed for next year. There is not sufficient hay to winter cattle upon and nothing with which to fatten them this fall.” (vermonthistory.org “The Year Without A Summer”) Simeon doesn't mention “the year without a summer” in his diary, but he does mention that hay cost $16 to $18 a ton. Vermont lost at least 10,000 people that year, when people gave up on Vermont and moved to places where it was easier to grow crops.

Finally Simeon had to go back to Lemuel's farm once again, except that this time, Lemuel's farm was in New Ipswich, New Hampshire. He decided that if he couldn't find a job as a printer he would start his own printing company, in an old blacksmith's shop on his father's farm. He went to Boston to buy some secondhand print. It was the first time he had ever been in a city that big, and he was sure he would be “tricked” by big city people looking to take advantage of a country traveler, but he conducted his business there without any trouble. Soon he was printing in his little blacksmith/printing shop New Testaments which he sold for 28 cents apiece. His 11 year old sister helped run the printing press and set the type. Through it all, he continued to court Pamela Goddard by writing letters.

Simeon broke even on the New Testaments, but he didn't make any money. Still, he had the type he had bought in Boston, and it was paid for. He decided to start a newspaper in either Keene, or Brattleboro, and finally decided that Brattleboro would be the better choice. Everyone advised him not to start a newspaper. For one thing, the economy wasn't good. For another thing, the positive outcome of the War of 1812 had been the death of the party, and at least one of Simeon's advisers told him that the lack of political rivalry in the “Era of Good Feelings” would cause a newspaper to be a “Miss Nancy affaire” meaning boring and lackluster. One person, however, did have some faith in Simeon, saying, “This young Ide may succeed, he's tough enough to live on a rock.”

Simeon might have been tough enough to live on a rock, but Simeon didn't want to bring Pamela, her mother and her sisters and brothers to live on a rock. He started his newspaper in Brattleboro and called it “The AmericanYeoman”. He rented some rooms in G.F. Atherton's store,near the Post Office on a corner of Main Street and set up his press. With his brother Truman as his apprentice, Simeon worked 16-18 hours a day. Before long he had 400 subscribers and was earning a living. When Jesse Cochran wanted to sell the “Vermont Republican” in Windsor, Simeon bought that paper, merged it with “The American Yeoman” and moved back to Windsor. It is impossible to trace the ownership of the “Vermont Republican” with absolute certainty before this, but I think it was founded by Oliver Farnsworth and Sylvester Churchill, who Simeon had originally been apprenticed to, then sold to Jesse Cochran, who sold it to Simeon. Simeon merged the paper with the American Yeoman and called it the Vermont Republican and Yeoman. He bought “Spooner's Journal”, merged that with the “Vermont Republican and Yeoman”, and called the new paper “The Vermont Republican and Journal”. I think.

In 1818 Simeon felt he was well enough established to marry Evelina Pamela Goddard on March 11, in Rutland, with a few family friends and a few members of his old club “The Beauties” as witnesses. Simeon wrote in his diary 55 years later that, “ No length of time will obliterate the gratitude I owe to my heavenly father for so ordering my goings in the days of my youthful wanderings, that I shunned the allurements of wealth and high position and remained steadfast to my first love.” (Here I think Simeon is referring to the two girls of wealth and position) “Next to this is my debt of gratitude to her sainted mother who gave me so pure, so loving, so dutiful and so confiding a helpmeet. I was not worthy of so bright a jewel.” He also says that for the next 30 years, his family consisted of between 10 and 15 people, including his wife, his 10 children, his mother's wife, Charity Goddard, who died in 1857, and his wife's siblings, Edward, Nathan, Harriet and Charlotte Goddard.


Thursday, November 29, 2012

Windsor County Court November 27


Timothy Fleming, DOB 4/28/58, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct-noise in Springfield on October 6

Stephanie Fowler, DOB 12/18/72 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with license suspended in Hartford on October 12

Jay Robertson, DOB 7/10/66 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with license suspended in Norwich on May 26

Kyle Bingham, DOB 1/8/91 pled not guilty to a charge of careless or negligent driving in Springfield on October 6

Devin Harrison, DOB 1/13/83 pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault on August 10 in Springfield

Craig Bailey, DOB 5/27/73 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with license suspended in Hartland on September 24.

Andrew Erskine, DOB 11/22/81 pled guilty to a charge of taking a deer out of season in Cavendish on October 24

Matthew Bing, DOB 5/24/84 pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Woodstock on November 10

Chester Farrington, DOB 12/3/93 was judged guilty of his first DUI in Bethel on November 10

Daniel Barmore, DOB 11/28/87 pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischief greater than $1000 in Hartford.

Brian Dow, DOB 12/21/88 pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischeif greater than $1000 in Hartford

Dow and Barmore are two prolific and talented  artists who were painting large murals on railroad cars in the White River Junction train yard. Although their art is amazing and creative, it costs the railroad $900 to repaint railroad cars. Many people might enjoy seeing Dow and Barmore's artwork, but some of it covered bar codes used to check railroad cars in and out, which are expensive to replace. The two were caught in an undercover operation.

John Barrows, DOB 6/17/56 pled not guilty to a charge of his second DUI in Woodstock on October 18.

Windsor County Court November 20


Bruce Gauthier DOB 1/27/66 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Springfield on September 27

Christopher Brown DOB 4/7/81 pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault and a charge of aggressive domestic assault in Rochester on November 4

Kevin McAteer, DOB 8/31/73 was charged with aggressive domestic assault in Springfield on September 1

Timothy Murphy DOB 9/28/70 pled guilty to his first DUI charge, in Windsor on November 4

Michelle Forcier, DOB 2/11/70 pled not guilty to a charge of medicaid fraud in White River Junction on or about November 18th. Forcier is accused of submitting false claims for payment in access of $1,300 to Medicaid, for services she allegedly did not provide.

Scott Hunter, DOB 8/31/63 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license.

Howard Young, DOB 2/15/46, pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license.

Juliann Dibernardo, DOB 11/1/68 was judged guilty of of operating with a suspended license in Hartland

Fred Walsh, DOB 12/12/68 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Windsor on October 18.

Michael Robinson, DOB 9/5/55 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Woodstock on October 13

Shelley Leonard, DOB 4/8/69, pled guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Springfield on October 9

Simeon and the War of 1812 Part 2


The United States declared war against England on June 1, 1812. That year, Simeon's continued employment at “The Washingtonian” continued to be a source of friction between him and his father. In another letter, Simeon begs his father to let him stay in Windsor a little longer. This time, he assures his father that he is just setting type for copies of the United States Constitution and Washington's Farewell Address.
 
 
 Besides, he was waiting for news from his old master, Lieutenant Churchill. Churchill was convinced that the American Campaigns against British Canada would be successful, and Canada would become part of the United States. In that event, Churchill planned to start an American printing company in Canada.

This was the common attitude all across the United States. This war would be a quick and easy invasion of Canada. The settlers of Canada would welcome the Americans with open arms, grateful for their liberation from that tyrant, Great Britain. Unfortunately, that was not what happened.

During the first year and a half, the commanders on the American side were a bunch of incompetent, cowardly alcoholics who could not command troops or run a war. Most of the military appointments were based on political connections and not on military experience, knowledge or ability. American troops repeatedly attempted Canadian invasions, once across the Detroit River, once from the Niagara Peninsula, and once with Montreal as the objective, and none of these campaigns was successful.

Incompetent commanders were not the only reason for lack of American victories in the War of 1812. President Madison's Republican administration didn't want to spend much money to pay for food, uniforms and weapons, so soldiers were ragged, starving, and poorly equipped. Disease ran rampant through American military camps. The commanders couldn't control the troops, and they raped, burned and plundered their way into Canadian villages, earning them the hatred of the Canadians rather than their gratitude. Throughout the country, the Republicans and Federalists were fighting in what became almost a Civil War. If America's leaders couldn't become united, certainly America's fighting men were not going to be able to maintain unity, either.

While they were fighting the Americans in North America, the British were also fighting the French, under Napoleon, in Europe. They didn't have the resources to fully commit to protecting Canada and going after the Americans. After Napoleon was defeated in 1814, the British could turn all their attention to the conflict in North America. They invaded the United States along the East Coast. In Baltimore, Maryland, the Americans managed to prevail (in the battle that inspired “The Star Spangled Banner”) but the British attacked Washington DC and burned many federal buildings.

After two years of war, the most either side could do was come to a stalemate. The British were sick of war. They had been fighting Napoleon and then the United States. The United States had run out of money. It was becoming harder and harder to recruit soldiers to fight in an unpopular war. The numbers of casualties on the battlefield weren't all that impressive, but American deaths from disease, caused in large part by starvation and cold weather, were staggering.

The Treaty of Ghent, signed in December of 1815, brought an end to the War of 1812. The war accomplished very little to decide the issues that started the war in the first place. The boundary between the United States and Canada stayed where it had been before the war. Impressment ended, not so much because of the war, but because Britain didn't need to impress sailors now that the war with France had ended. The War of 1812 did strengthen national feeling within the United States. We had now defeated Britain a second time, this time with a new government under a new Constitution. It wasn't really a defeat, but that was a fact that wasn't particularly broadcast in America. The successful end to the war was the end of the Federalist Party.

As I read about the War of 1812, I couldn't help thinking about what might have happened to Simeon if he had gone, as a gung-ho 17 year old, to fight on the Canadian border. Of all the people I have “met” in my research of Upper Valley history, Lemuel Ide is probably my least favorite. He comes across as being pretty self-righteous, when half the time he couldn't even support his own family. His stock rose, though, when I thought about his words to Simeon regarding his son going to war. “I will go first. Then, if necessary, you can go.” If Lemuel had let Simeon go, I might not have been writing about him now. It would have been pretty unlikely that Simeon would have been killed in the war, but far, far more likely that he would have died of a disease caused by near starvation and freezing to death. I just can't get that thought out of my mind, and the thought of the thousands, millions of teenagers who have died over the years because their parents didn't care enough, or weren't strict enough, to say the word “No”, and keep them out of harm's way.
 
Simeon's old master, Sylvester Churchill, stayed in the military for the rest of his life.  He attained the rank of Colonel and became the Inspector General of the Army, retiring due to ill health at the very beginning of the Civil War, in 1861, and died a year later at age 76.  Sylvester Churchill was distantly related to Winston Churchill and you can certainly see the family resemblance in this picture.
 
 

Monday, November 19, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!


Windsor County Court November 13


Brandon Dimick, DOB 6/22/92, was judged guilty for operating with a suspended license on September 28 in Hartford



Amanda Bernier, DOB 10/3/87, pled not guilty to a charge of aiding in the commission of a felony. She was allegedly driving the car while another female got out and robbed an elderly man. The two had asked the man for money earlier and he gave them some. They followed him to the North Springfield Dam where he liked to read and walk, and asked him for more money. He pulled out his wallet to give them more money, when the passenger in the car jumped out and allegedly grabbed his wallet.



Jacob Allison DOB 3/12/90 pled not guilty to a charge of selling depressant, stimulant or narcotic, and two charges of selling heroin in Chester, Vermont in March.



Hunter Knox, DOB 8/24/91, pled not guilty to his first DUI charge, in Weathersfield on October 25. The Ascutney police and the Vermont State police responded to a report of an accident. When they arrived at the scene they found a car flipped onto its roof. Knox was the driver. He allegedly admitted to having been drinking, took a field sobriety test and a breathalyzer test and was subsequently arrested for DUI.



Richard Hudson, DOB 2/8/64, was charged with unnecessary/unlawful restraint of a vulnerable adult in Ludlow from January 1 to June 15 of 2012. Hudson and his wife allegedly met some people with disabilities from other states on Facebook, and convinced them to come to Vermont to live with them. When they arrived in Vermont, the allegations are that Hudson and his wife kept them captive, abused them, wouldn't let them leave, and were taking money from them. The Hudsons are also accused of instructing their son to help keep their “boarders” from leaving. You can read more about the case and watch a video taken outside the courthouse here:

 

Zachary Avery, DOB 4/7/95, was charged with unlawful mischief of $250 or less in Hartford on August 25. Avery had allegedly smashed several windshields and home windows.


Republicans, Federalists, and The War of 1812


It seems that Simeon had no burning desire to return to his father's farm. After the dissolution of the Farnsworth-Churchill partnership, and the premature end of his apprenticeship, Simeon found another printing job in Windsor, with “The Washingtonian”, a Federalist paper. Simeon, like the rest of his family, is a Republican, and in a letter home, he assures his father that he will have nothing to do with printing the paper. He will just be the bookkeeper. This didn't appease his father at all. In a letter back to Simeon, Lemuel says, “I am sorry to learn that you are in that dirty business and place. The Mosiac rule, I fear, will not cleanse the man that touches that loathsome press, 'The Washingtonian' “.

This is a pretty strong statement. Lemuel was a rabid Republican in an era when political feelings were running very strong. He was a Republican member of the state legislature for one term, but when he ran a second time, he lost the election by one vote. Louis Flanders, who wrote Simeon's biography, says that Lemuel probably would have been reelected if his political views were a little more moderate.

Certainly the events leading up to the War of 1812 would have affected the life of a young man in Vermont, just beginning to make his way in the world, especially someone involved in the newspaper business. Newspapers were political vehicles. Unlike today, when newspapers are supposed to be unbiased, newspapers of the 1800's were openly committed to one political party or the other, or for one cause or another.

Before the war, the United States was divided between the Federalist Party and the Republican Party. John Adams was a Federalist, and his administration created a strong banking system that put the new government on a firm financial footing. However, the next presidential election went to a Republican, Thomas Jefferson, and the Federalists never regained power. The Republicans, then as today, believed that less government is better, and that an agrarian based society is preferable over an urban society. Lemuel's harsh statement against the Federalist newspaper Simeon worked for mirrored the extreme animosity between the two parties clashing strongly over the impending war.

The Federalists didn't want to go to war against England. They admired England's political system and thought that the American system should emulate it. Most of New England was Federalist. New England shipping interests would only be damaged by a war with England. The Republicans supported a war with England. They hated the elitism of the British governmental system. Some Republicans believed that the Federalists secretly wanted to reunify with Britain, although that is hard to believe. John Adams, the only Federalist President, would hardly have turned the country back over to Britain. Emotions ran especially strong in Vermont. Although Vermont voted Republican in the election of 1808, it was the only New England state to do so. There were plenty of people in Vermont who sided with the rest of New England, which caused plenty of political tension.

After the American Revolution, there was a lot of unfinished conflict between America and Britain. Britain didn't believe the United States could survive as a country. They thought that a governmental system based on equality and universal suffrage would descend into chaos and anarchy and it was only a matter of time before America would come knocking on Britain's door asking to be taken back into the folds of the British empire. Looking toward that eventuality, Britain began building a government in Canada that they thought would look appealing to an America seeking to reunite with the mother country.

The border between Canada and the United States was blurry for a number of reasons. After the Revolution, 38,000 American colonists who had remained loyal to Britain moved to Canada. Canada got another influx of Americans during the 1790's, when the British offered free land and a promise of low taxes to anyone who wanted to settle there. At the same time, Irish immigrants, subjects of the King of England, poured into the United States. These migratory movements caused some confusion over the question of who was loyal to which country.

Britain took advantage of this confusion on the high seas. In British law, if you were born a British subject, you stayed a British subject for your whole life. There was no naturalization process. They didn't recognize American citizenship for their former subjects. They didn't come into America and grab British-born subjects and drag them home, but they did that very thing on the ocean. Britain was involved in a war with France, and that war was being fought mostly at sea, by the French and British navies. In addition, Britain needed sailors to man the ships that traveled throughout her far-flung empire. A small country, Britain could ill afford to lose all this manpower to the United States. Like a parent retrieving runaway children, captains of British ships overpowered American merchant ships at sea and “impressed” any sailors they thought had been born in Britain. Of course, it was hard to tell whether a sailor was American or British born. Many sailors who were born in America ended up serving on British ships, as well as sailors who had been born in Britain but were American citizens. This confusion also led to accusations of takeover plots and conspiracies on both sides of the Canadian border. The Americans were convinced that the British government was planning a new invasion of the United States, from Canada, and the British government was convinced that the Americans were sending Republican agitators and newspapers to Canada to spread republican ideals and cause unrest amongst the settlers there. Some of these accusations were accurate. There were some unscrupulous people who sought to get rich by fomenting hate and mistrust between Canada and the United States.

Our own Ira Allen, brother of Ethan, was involved in negotiations with the French to join Vermont with the French in a takeover of Quebec. After the takeover, Ira planned to have Quebec and Vermont unite and form a new state called “United Columbia”. Ira was on a ship full of guns headed to North America, when British naval forces intercepted it and impounded the contents. Ransford Rogers, one of Ira's cronies, went to Montreal to organize a secret society created to take over the city on behalf of Vermonters. The “White Cap Society” had 61 members, bound by a blood oath. During club meetings, held at night, Rogers performed occult ceremonies while all attendees wore special white caps. These ceremonies were supposed to yield the secrets to finding various hidden treasures. The White Cap Society also supposedly organized a plot to plunder and burn Montreal with the help of 1,000 armed men from Vermont. Montreal authorities got wind of Rogers' activities and chased him back to Vermont, where he disappeared. Rogers been run out of New Jersey for running a similar scam there. There's even a book about him – intriguingly entitled “An Account of the Beginning, Transactions and Discovery of Ransford Rogers, Who Seduced Many By Pretended Hobgoblins and Apparitions and Thereby Extorted Money From Their Pockets”.

These various threats to the security of Canada made the British nervous. British officers began to build alignments with Indian tribes on the American border, offering food, firearms and ammunition in return for allegiance against the Americans. On November 6, 1811, William Henry Harrison led a force of Americans in an invasion of a Shawnee Indian village, Prophetstown, on Tippecanoe Creek in Indiana. At Prophetstown, two Shawnee leaders, supported by the British, had gathered a band of followers to resist American settlement of their land. Although Harrison and his men succeeded in driving the Shawnee out of Prophetstown, they suffered heavy casualties.

The triple threats of impressment, British-sponsored Indian attacks, and troubles over the Canadian border convinced Republicans that war should be declared. The Federalists reluctantly agreed, but the two parties couldn't come to a consensus on how the war should be fought. The Federalists thought the war should be fought on the sea, with a strong American Navy, especially since the whole thing began at sea. The Republicans thought that building a Navy would be too expensive, and they didn't like the idea of any standing military. Convinced that Americans would rise to the occasion voluntarily like they did during the Revolution, the Republicans wanted a land war. They supported an invasion of Canada. They had the majority in Congress, and they carried the day.


Monday, November 12, 2012

Windsor County Court November 6


Van Monguer, DOB 3/7/64, was charged with a violation of an abuse prevention order on November 6 in Rochester.

Donna Gibson, DOB 2/7/48, was charged with driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol in Springfield on October 20.

Kathie Lawrence, DOB 12/9/50 was charged with driving under the influence on October 9 in Woodstock.

Deborah Anne Porter, DOB 9/1/58, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault on September 16 in Springfield.

Warren Atkins DOB 8/20/67 pled not guilty to a charge of DUI in Taftsville on October 22.




Monday, November 5, 2012

Windsor County Court October 30th


Michael Bates, DOB 3/15/82 pled not guilty to two charges of the sale of a depressant, stimulant or narcotic on February 29 in Springfield



Nicholas Laplaca, DOB 2/24/90, pled not guilty to a charge of reckless endangerment in Sharon on September 16th.



Cameron Chung, DOB 2/16/89, pled not guilty to a charge of grand larceny of greater than $900, and operating a vehicle without owner's consent in Ludlow on August 3.



Don Fielder pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Bethel on October 20.



Zachary Allen, DOB 6/8/92 pled not guilty to charges of burglary, unlawful mischief, unlawful trespass, and buying, receiving, possessing or concealing stolen property. Allen allegedly used bolt cutters to break into storage units in Weathersfield on August 22.



Andrew Picknell, DOB 10/18/93, pled not guilty to a charge of buying, selling, possessing or concealing stolen property in Hartford on June 1.



Jarrad Smith, DOB 12/23/83, pled guilty to a charge of simple assault on September 15.



Richard Martin, DOB 5/23/57, pled not guilty to operating with license suspended in Cavendish on September 21.



Jenna Kendall, DOB 12/5/92, pled not guilty to operating with license suspended in Hartford on September 8.




Simeon Ide's Apprenticeship


In 1809, Simeon's childhood came to an end when, at age 15, he was apprenticed to a printer in Windsor. Oliver Farnsworth (Stephen Farnsworth's son) and Sylvester Churchill printed the “Vermont Republican” newspaper. Simeon was the first apprentice to work for the Republican. He was to serve as apprentice for six years, until his 21st birthday. It appears that his actual “master” in this arrangement was Sylvester Churchill, and not Oliver Farnsworth.

Simeon did the work of a combined servant and printing apprentice. The primary job of a beginning printer's apprentice was to deal with the ink balls. This was a dirty, nasty job. The ink balls were soft leather balls filled with horsehair and mounted on a stick. They were a little bigger than a large man's fist. The apprentice would dip the balls in ink and then run the balls over the set type before running pages through the printer. The balls wore out fast, so it was the apprentice's job to make a supply of them and keep them inked.
inking balls

In “The Franklinsonian”, Simeon tells us that he also brought in firewood, kept the fires going, carded wool and ran errands for the master's wife. He says that he did “this and that for her ladyship at any time of the day or evening.” You get the idea that his master's wife was not his favorite. He does say that the “marster” gave him time to work for other people to make some extra money. One thing he did for other printers was sew together almanacs. He used his extra money to buy books which he read in his free time, which was from 8:00 to 11:00 every night. That was as long as his candle lasted.

Simeon also mentions that during meals he ate, not with the family, but at the second table, and “thought it no indignity.” This makes me think that there were other people that worked for the Churchills, because you wouldn't have a separate table just for one person.

During Simeon's apprenticeship, tensions were renewed between the fledgling United States and superpower Britain. The War of 1812 was looming. Simeon was full of youthful enthusiasm about the war, fueled, no doubt, by his mother's fireside tales of the heroes of the Revolutionary War. Simeon was only 17 when he wrote a letter to the editor of the newspaper he worked for, encouraging his fellow Vermonters to join the war. “Soldiers of Vermont! Upon you devolves an important duty, the faithful discharge of which requires a thorough conviction of its utility and necessity. You are about to be called upon to leave your family, friends and relations, and encounter the hardships incident to a war-faring life. And for what? For the gratification of accumulating territorial possessions? No. But to retrieve the honor, independence and liberty which was purchased at the expense of the lives and fortunes of thousands who nobly broke the chains of bondage and gave us an inheritance to be transferred unimpaired to our latest posterity.”

Although Simeon's apprenticeship was supposed to last for six years, it only lasted for two. The war intervened. Churchill and Farnsworth dissolved their partnership and went their separate ways. Churchill joined the military, and Farnsworth left Vermont to go to Newport, Rhode Island, which was quite a step up! As part of his new military duties, Churchill was a recruiter and tried to recruit his young former apprentice. Of course, Simeon was all set to go, but he was underage and needed his father's permission to sign up. Lemuel didn't share his son's fervor for war. Lemuel responded to Simeon's letter asking for permission to enlist. “I will go first, then, if necessary, you can come after.”

I like this answer, and I bet many parents throughout the country were thinking the same thing. They remembered the Revolutionary War. In the end, all hands were needed and people rose to the occasion. However, they also remembered that war was no lark for 17 year olds. Lemuel is saying, “If it comes to that, I will go. If they really need you, you can come later. In the meantime – no way.”

Monday, October 29, 2012

A Kid in Vermont - 1800


Simeon Ide was a prominent printer in Windsor. He printed the “New England Farmer's Almanac” and also printed the newspaper “The Vermont Republican” from 1809 – 1818. There is plenty of information on Simeon Ide online. He wrote a book called “The Franklinsonian”, an autobiography. Simeon firmly believed that children were brought up better when he was a kid than his grandchildren were being brought up, and wrote the book to tell his grandkids what it was like when he was their age. He also kept a diary for his whole life. One of his descendants, Louis Flanders, used the diaries and book to write a biography called “Simeon Ide, Freeman, Yeoman and Pioneer Printer.”

Simeon's parents were Lemuel and Sarah Ide of Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. Simeon was their first child, born in 1794. When they were first married, they started life with a “modest patrimony”. Lemuel was a carpenter by trade. If he had stuck to carpentry, he would have been fine, but he lost all of his money investing in real estate.

Things weren't going too well for Lemuel in Massachusetts, so he moved to Vermont with his wife and two young sons. The family moved around Vermont quite a bit for several years. Lemuel started a small house in Clarendon, but moved to Reading before it was finished. As his family grew to include twin daughters, he had a harder time making ends meet than ever. He decided that maybe he could earn back his losses by becoming a sailor, so he left his family and went to sea.

While Lemuel was at sea, he left his family in the care of his brother-in-law, Zenas Stone. Simeon's mother earned money teaching school, sewing, and doing housework for neighbors, but she just couldn't earn enough money to support her children. When Simeon was 5, his uncle took him to live with his grandparents in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. This trip was a two day ride in an open lumber sleigh in the dead of winter. Ide says, in “The Franklinsonian”, “It was a tedious, cold ride, especially since his clothing wasn't very abundant.” You have to wonder how bad things were, that Uncle Zenas thought it was necessary to make that long, cold trip.

Simeon's grandparents thought the world of him. There were two cousins in Shrewsbury, but not old enough for Simeon to really play with, or to go to school with. He went to church with his grandparents, and went to school there for two months in the summer and two months in the winter. At seven years old, he drove the horse plow and drove his grandmother and great-grandmother in the family carriage to do their shopping in a nearby village of Worcester.

Lemuel returned from his stint at sea none the richer. In his book, Simeon says that his father “most likely decided to find his fortune was on dry land, where he had lost it.” Lemuel returned to carpentry, built up a business, and the family's fortunes improved. When Simeon was seven, his uncle returned to Shrewsbury and brought him home to Vermont.

The family settled down in Reading. Simeon adored his mother. He says, “She was one of the best of women. She was the mother of eight children. She labored early and late for their welfare. She had a winning way of enforcing her precepts and encouraging her children in the practice of industry and economy. She lived to the great age of ninety-one years.” He tells about her spinning flax and carding wool by the light of the fireplace, while telling the children stories about Washington, Lafayette and Franklin. When Simeon became a printer as an adult, he printed a memoir of a Revolutionary War Hero for free. I bet he was thinking of his mother's stories by the fire when he was a young boy.

When you read “The Franklinsonian”, you get the impression that Simeon didn't think as much of his father, which is understandable, in light of the fact that his father's inability to earn a living made it necessary for his son to leave his mother and siblings for two years. Flanders, in his book “Simeon Ide”, describes a passage in one of Simeon's diaries when Simeon does mention his father, when he describes how his father built a fire in the fireplace. “ He first cleared away a bushel or so of ashes, reserving in a two pail iron kettle the live embers, then he rolled in a “backlog” about three and a half feet long by two feet in diameter, then on top of it he placed a sub- backlog, same length and about half the size, then placed the large kitchen andirons in due order, and on them another log, called the “forestick”, about the same size as the sub. Thus the foundation of the Christmas fire was laid.” His father then used the embers, some small kindling and some split wood to build the Christmas fire.

If you can get past the moralizing, “The Young Franklinsonian” is a pretty interesting, readable account of life for a young boy in Vermont in the early 1800's.It is pretty rare that you find a firsthand account of a kid's life from that era.  It's obvious that Simeon is using this book as a way to let people know how much better he was raised, how hard he worked, and so on, but there is plenty of story there to enjoy. You can read the whole book online at



Windsor County Court October 23


Jesse Perley DOB 11/14/76 pled not guilty to one count of sexual assault of a child under the age of 13 in 2012 in Hartford



Moses Allen, DOB 9/10/79 Pled not guilty to a charge of sexual assault of a victim of less than 10 years old on May 1, 2011 in Springfield



Kevin Upham, DOB 3/20/84, pled not guilty to domestic assault in Bethel on September 11



Jacob Vanryswyk DOB 11/5/88, pled not guilty to his second DUI charge, in Woodstock on October 9



Ethan Gallo DOB 8/11/89, pled not guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight that allegedly occurred on August 24. Gallo was rear-ended in front of the Pizza Chef restaurant in Quechee. Gallo was exceptionally irate at being hit because he had his newborn baby in the car. The person who hit him backed up, and Gallo thought he was leaving the scene, so he jumps out of his car and pulls the other driver out of the car while it is still in gear. The other person's car continued to move, and the other driver ended up being run over by his own car.



Calvin Therrien, DOB 11/19/80 pled not guilty to a charge of Burglary that allegedly occurred at the United Church of Bethel on June 8.



Marisa Thomas, DOB 7/24/90 pled guilty to a charge of larceny of under $900 on April 4th in Windsor. She stole her grandmother's debit card.



Ashley Newland, DOB 3/26/85, pled not guilty to a charge of burglary in Bethel on June 8th. She was also involved in the burgary of the United Church.



Craig Batchelder, DOB 6/20/85, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault in Springfield on July 30.



Tyler Wheatley, DOB 4/7/92, pled not guilty to his first charge of DUI, in Bethel on October 5



Gary Rice, DOB 9/4/44 pled not guilty to a charge of violating a prevention of abuse order, in White River Junction on August 24.



Brandon Wood, DOB 6/18/95, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault, and operating a vehicle without owner consent, in Cavendish on September 6.



Jacqueline Martini, DOB 2/4/87 was charged with two incidents of selling depressants, stimulants or narcotics on June 19 in Windsor



Tracey Thurston DOB 3/6/70 pled not guilty to a charge of embezzlement in Hartford in December, 2011.



Kevin Schaner, DOB 2/22/59 pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault with fluids on an officer, firefighter, EMB or health care worker, and his first DUI in Hartford on September 19



David Young, DOB 10/25/93, pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischief in Windsor on September 9th

Thomas Segerson, DOB 5/18/62, pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Hartford on September 5.



Joshua Aiken, DOB 5/23/81, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/obstruct in Springfield on August 10.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

A Bestseller in the Upper Valley in the 19th century


When I googled the year of Oliver Farnsworth's death, 1785, and Upper Valley, I found a book called“Reading Becomes a Necessity of Life”, by William Gilmore. This book was all about the reading habits of the residents of the Upper Valley in the late 18th and early 19th century. The author makes it clear that he is not writing about intellectuals, who mostly read the work of European philosophers, scientists and religious thinkers. He was writing about the average person who lived in Upper Valley at the time.

In the early 19th century, almanacs, broadsides, pamphlets and newspapers were the most popular forms of printed media. The most popular of all of these was the almanac. Almanacs were printed on very cheap paper, and were meant to be kept for a year and then thrown away. Gilmore says that ¾ of all households in the Upper Valley probably had an almanac. They cost 6 cents in 1816. Farm families depended on the almanacs for advice on when to plant their crops. The almanacs showed when the phases of the moon would be, forecast the weather, showed what time sunrise and sunset would be. This was a huge help in keeping track of the time of day, since many families didn't own clocks.

The most popular almanac used in the Upper Valley was the New England Farmer's Diary and Almanac, by Truman Abell. (Dr) Truman Abell lived in Lempster, New Hampshire. He wrote the New England Farmer's Almanac for 39 years. His wife's name was Sarah. They had eleven children but only four lived to be adults : Sophia, Erasmus, who also became a doctor and moved to Minnesota, Mary Jane, and Truman, Jr,. Dr Abell's obituary in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal states that “Dr A was an eminent and industrious practitioner, and his industrious and well-spent life secured for him the respect of a large circle of friends. Besides fulfilling all the duties of an active country physician, he cultivated the highest departments of science, especially astronomy.”Dr Abell died at age 74. He must have been rich, being a popular doctor and the author of a popular almanac for 39 years.

The Almanac was first printed in Weathersfield in 1815 by printers Eddy and Patrick. The 1816, 1817, and 1818 editions were printed by Jesse Cochran. For the next sixteen years, it was printed by Simeon Ide of Windsor. There was no New England Farmers' Almanac for 1836. In 1837, 1838, and its last year of 1839, it was printed by N.C. Goddard.

Simeon Ide was a prominent printer in Windsor. He printed the “Vermont Republican”, a newspaper centered in Windsor, from 1809 to 1818. His brother was the president of the short-lived Republic of California, and Simeon wrote, printed and published a biography about him. He also printed “The Recollections of an Old Soldier”, the memoir of David Perry. Perry was a hero of the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War who lived in the Upper Valley. He printed Perry's story without pay, because of his respect for war heroes.

October, 1816



This is how you read this page of the almanac. Today is October 21. The far left column is for the day of the month. The next column is the day of the week. October 21 is the second day of the week, so it is Monday. The next column tells us that the sun rose at 6:42 and the next column tells us the sun set at 5:18. The next column says that there were 11 hours and 38 minutes of daylight. This is a mistake. On October 13th, it says that there was an even 11 hours of daylight. On October 14th, it says that daylight lasted 10 hours and 58 minutes. On the 17th, it goes back to 11 hours and 48 minutes. It is a mistake that is repeated for the rest of that column. On the next page, which I will probably print next month, it says that November 1 had 10 hours and 6 minutes of daylight. The last two columns relate to the sun's position in the sky.

Northern Boundary of Mascoma's (Mascommah's) Deeds

This past weekend, the Old Redneck and I went back on the Connecticut River to find the southern boundary of the deed to Southern Vermont and New Hampshire.  We still didn't find it because we got rained out two days in a row.  We did talk to a man in Brattleboro who runs a canoe shop who said that if there was a ledge of white rocks along the Connecticut River in 1735, it was blasted away by the railroad.  I didn't even think of that, but I know the railroad did a lot of blasting when they were laying the rail beds - just ask Phineas Gage.  (But that's another story - we'll get there eventually).
     We put the canoe in the water at the Westminster canoe launch.  I believe that Dunshee Island, just a little bit downriver from the Westminster canoe launch, is the northern boundary mentioned in the deed.  The deed says, " bounded north at the mouth of a brook on the west side of said river emptying itself into said river between two and three miles above the great meadow aforesaid, against the second island in said river north of said great meadow ."  We know the Great Meadow was in what is now Putney.  This island is huge and probably permanent.  At the very middle of the island there is a brook on the west side of the island emptying right into the side of the island. You can see all this on a map of the Connecticut River, with all the canoe and boat landings, and the islands, at
http://www.crjc.org/boating/boating12.htm.

From the vantage point of the river, the island and the brook coming into the river look like this.






This is the island as you are heading toward it.



This is the very tip of the island as we were right up close to it.  It was hard to get a picture from the canoe,  I was afraid I would tip it over!


This is a picture of the brook coming into the side of the island, from the west, or Vermont, side.






Mascoma's (Mascommah's) Land Deeds

Mascommah signed three deeds.  There are copies of these deeds in the Hampden County Courthouse in Springfield, Massachusetts.  The originals are in a hermetically sealed vault somewhere, in Boston, I think.  I went down to Springfield to get copies of the deeds.  I was worried about driving and parking in the city but it was really easy.  The courhouse was huge and intimidating.  The old deeds were in the basement.  When I got down there, a really nice man named Tony helped me find what I was looking for.  Lo and behold, there was Mascommah's name and mark right in front of me.  So here are the deeds.









This is my favorite one because you can see Mascommah's name and mark really clearly, four names down from the top.  This is the deed to the Deerfield River parcel of land,




 The above deed is the deed to the land in Sunderland, Massachusetts and points west.  There are some who believe that this piece of property extended west as far as Newfane, Vermont.  Again, Mascommah's mark is the fourth down.


The above deed is my least favorite because you can hardly see Mascoma's name and I don't believe there really is a mark.  Unfortunately, it is the deed that we spent so much time on the river looking for the boundaries of.  It is the southern Vermont and New Hampshire deed and the one that most applies to the Upper Valley.  I guess it figures. Mascommah's name is the seventh down from the top.

After spending most of the summer finding the Indian Mascommah, I guess I have to leave him now and go on to other topics.  If I could go back in time and meet him, I would tell him that there is a river, a lake, a school, and a bank named after him.  I would tell him that the English people, who became Americans, really messed up the Connecticut River that he traveled on and loved, but then they got their act together, and now it is beautiful and clean.  Maybe in the spring, I will go to Schagticoke New York and do some research there and find out more about the village he lived in when he came down the river and signed those deeds.  And if we ever get nice weather, the Old Redneck and I will try to find the southern boundary of that deed one more time.  Rest in Peace, Mascommah.

Mascoma (Mascommah) Part 2

I hope everyone is enjoying the beautiful, beautiful weather!  The weekend starts tomorrow and we couldn't wish for a better weather forecast for the next three days.  There's a "The Conniption Fits" is going to play.  A lot of people should be there.  "The Conniption Fits" are organizing the whole thing on Facebook.   I think tickets are going to cost $25.00.

To pick up where I left off a week ago on Mascommah
I think it's interesting that women signed the main deeds. Then seventeen males signed a separate document attesting to the fact that these women were the true and rightful owners of this land. This seems to indicate that land ownership descended from the woman. This is confusing in that I have always thought that Native Americans didn't understand the concept of land ownership. However, these deeds clearly stated that they are wives of male members of the tribe, and the land descended to them from their mothers. The only thing I can think of to explain this is that these deeds were signed in 1735. By this time, the Indians would have learned about land ownership, and maybe would have adopted the concept from the English. Interestingly enough, though, important male owners had to sign a document verifying that the women had the right to sell this land. I also wondered if the men didn't want to go on record as having given up their tribal land, so they made one of the more important women sign the actual deed giving up the land. This is all speculation, I absolutely admit.

How important was Mascommah? He signed three deeds. Many of the Indian signers only signed one or two deeds. There were several Indians who signed up to nine. If you want to make inferences on importance based on how many deeds he signed, Mascommah was probably moderately important, but was not a main chief by any means.

Who were Mascoma's contemporaries? Who were the English men who signed those deeds? Taking each deed individually, we will start with the first deed, a deed for land on the Deerfield River, somewhere around Ashfield and Colrain, Massachusetts. The English men who signed this deed were Ebenezer Hinsdell, Elijah Williams, Joseph Wells and John Hastings. Joseph Kellogg, Esquire was the interpreter for the Indians. This deed was signed on August 6, 1735, and it appears that it was signed in Northampton, Massachusetts.

Ebenezer Hinsdell was the founder of Hinsdale, New Hampshire. In colonial times, spelling was not an important consideration and you would find people's names spelled all different ways. This was doubly true of Indian names, which were hard to pronounce and spell, but the Hinsdell/Hinsdale spelling just goes to show that it happened with English names too. Hinsdale was ordained as a minister, and planned to become a missionary to the Indians of the Connecticut River Valley. Instead, he became the chaplain at Fort Dummer, a Fort on the Connecticut River right near where Brattleboro is. He ended up being in charge of trade with the Indians, as well as converting them to Christianity. He must not have been a very good preacher, because the “Annals of Brattleboro tell us “the Indians engaged at first but before long went back to their old ways.”

Although the Indians from Western Massachusetts had relocated to Schaghticoke, they often traveled back to their homeland to trade. In 1734, Hinsell presided over a treaty with the Schaghticoke

Indians, receiving and welcoming three Indians as “commissioners” One of them was described as a lieutenant named “Massamah” - which could have easily been Mascommah. This was a time of peace, with the Schaghticokes entering trade agreements and signing treaties, but twelve years later, they would be back to “wage bitter war on the invaders of their ancestral lands.”(Colin Calloway The Western Abenakis of Vermont 1994) Ebenezer Hinsdale was born in 1702 and died in 1763.

Elijah Williams was a storekeeper in Deerfield, Massachusetts, and a member of the local militia. In 1756, he was the commander of the Crown Point Expedition. This was an offensive against a French held position on Lake Champlain during the French and Indian War. Elijah was born in Deerfield in 1712 and died there in 1771.

Joseph Kellogg was born in Hadley in 1691. When he was 12, he was captured by Indians during the Deerfield Massacre. For the next ten years, he switched back and forth between the Indians and the French, becoming proficient in English, French, and several Indian languages. He travelled with the Indians and the French on trade expeditions. He went all the way to the mouth of the Ohio River. In fact, he was probably the first English person to get that far. Finally, in 1715 his brother went to Canada and dragged him home, promising him that he would have plenty of opportunities back in New England. Upon arrival home, he was made “Interpreter to the Indians and Sargeant of the Guard” at Northfield. Kellogg married, and stayed at Northfield for most of the rest of his life, although he was constantly called to serve as interpreter at Fort Dummer and Fort Number 4. He was Justice of the Peace in Northfield. He died on an ill fated mission to Oswego, New York, in 1756. ( Bedini, Silvio, “Joseph Kellogg of Deerfield “ The American Surveyor, Spring 2004 http://www.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor-CompassAndChain-March-April2004.pdf)

I think Mascommah could have been friends with Joseph Kellogg but I do not think he was friends with Ebenezer Hinsdell.

John Hastings was a doctor who was born in Hadley, Massachusetts in 1689. He served at Fort Dummer and later at Fort Number 4, near present day Charlestown, New Hampshire.

I couldn't find anything out about Joseph Wells.

The second deed concerned land on the Connecticut River near Northfield, Massachusetts. Williams, Hinsdell, and Hastings all signed this deed, too, and again, Joseph Kellogg was the interpreter. In addition, Thomas West was a signer of this deed, instead of Joseph Wells. I couldn't find any information on him.

The third deed concerned land near Sunderland, Massachusetts. This deed was signed by just two English men, Joseph Kellogg and William Brattle. We already know about Joseph Kellogg and William Brattle was the founder of Brattleboro, Vermont.

Enjoying the Summer and Still Searching for Mascoma (Mascommah)

It's been hot, It's been hot but beautiful this week.  The crackerjack thunderstorms on Tuesday night served to clear the air and today was just gorgeous.  It seemed like it thundered all night.  We lost power early on and I was afraid we wouldn't get up on time but we did.  There were news posts on Facebook that said that our area wouldn't get power until Thursday morning, but thanks to all the hard working tree and power companies, we got home Wednesday afternoon to the power back on and the promise of a hot shower. 
     I was planning on wrapping up the Mascommah articles this week but I ran into a few snags.  I really don't want to post the whole land deed here, but the part of the deed that describes the boundaries of the land fascinate me.  The deed describes the land by stating,
"to the north of Fort Dummer bounded as follows – viz – south of the mouth of a brook emptying itself into the Connecticut River on the East side of said river about three quarters of a mile below the Great Meadow so called near against which near the west side of said river is a large ledge of rocks called the white rocks extending up said river and bounded north at the mouth of a brook on the west side of said river emptying itself into said river between two and three miles above the great meadow aforesaid, against the second island in said river north of said great meadow extending east twenty miles from said river and west also twenty miles, into the wilderness." The easiest way to read the whole deed is to google "Mascommah" and click on "Indian Deeds of Hampden County by Harry Andrew Wright.  The deed that I am quoting is the deed entitled "Southern Vermont and New Hampshire".
     After studying the deed for days, and following the Connecticut River from Brattleboro to Bellows Falls on Google Earth, and studying a map of the Connecticut River, my husband, The Old Redneck, and I decided that we would take a canoe from Walpole, New Hampshire to Brattleboro, and look for these sites.  Now, the Old Redneck is pretty much game for anything, but he is getting sick of hearing about Mascommah.  But he was pretty much into the idea of looking for these boundaries.  Except that.....on the appointed day, when we got to the put in site at Walpole, and we unloaded the canoe and were going to go to Brattleboro to drop the truck off and return to Walpole in the car, he said, "Weeeeelllllll, the truck has a tire that is worn all the way down to the threads and I'm not sure it will make it to Brattleboro. Why don't we just paddle down river, see if we can find the island boundary, then paddle back and go to Brattleboro after we replace the tire?"
        "So we're going to paddle back against the current?"
        "Sure, it won't be that hard."
         So we set out down the river in the canoe to look for the second island, the one with the brook on the west side emptying itself against the river.  And we're positive we found it, and took pictures.  The ride down the river was amazing.  It really does seem like you are on a highway, not unlike Rte 91 in that the sides are the same on both sides.  The river is surrounded by a thick, unbroken green underbrush and tall trees.  We were on the river alone that day and it was easy to imagine how it was in Mascommah's day.  It's completely understandable why they would use the places the brooks come in as markers for boundaries, because these are clear breaks in the wall of green coming up from the river, much like our highway exits.  I bet the Indians used these brook inlets as exits, too,  It makes perfect sense.  Mascommah and the other Schaghticoke Indians travelled up and down the Connecticut River to trade with the English at Fort Dummer, and they knew these brook outlets as well as we know the exits on the interstates. 
     Although we didn't get all the way down the river, we were excited to find the island and the brook inlet from the deed, and we had a great time.  At one point my husband was explaining how to steer the canoe  "feathering" with the paddle.  He said, "You know how I know that?"
       "How?"
        "Mascommah showed me how to do that.  In a vision."
        Another time, he reached into the cooler and pulled out a Michelob Ultra (due to carb issues) and said, "Cheers, Chief Mascommah.  Here's to firewater.
        "Hey, no way.  Mascommah was alcohol free."
        " Ah, maybe he partook of the hemp."
        "Are you kidding me?  No way.  He was substance free."
        Truly, I guess we'll never know.  That's the great thing about history.  He can imagine a partying Mascommah and I can imagine a virtuous fearless leader.
     Since then, I have done some more research and we now know that the "Great Meadow" refers to what is now Putney, so the south boundary must be south of Putney.  Next weekend, we are going to take another canoe trip putting in at Putney and getting out in Hinsdale to see if we can find the other boundary. In the meantime, we have to replace that one dead tire on the truck.