CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY FROM Cornell University Library F 589R5 M29 History of the city of Ripon and of its olin 3 1924 028 871 874 The original of tliis bool< is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028871874 CLA/^X^ HISTORY CITYOFRIPON, AKD OF ITS POUNDER, ID.A.VID F. 1^.A-I=ES WITH HIS OPLNION OF }/Lqi{ ki|d >Ikr|r]et^ of tl\e f)^y. MILWAUKEE: CRAMER, AUCENS & CRAMER, PUBLISHERS AND PRINTBRS, 1873. TO MT FRIENDS IN RIPON, THIS BOOK IS MOST EESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR. PREFACE. In writing this history of myself and of the towns I hare aided in building, I have frequently been asked to write it out and get it into book form, so if there is anything in my long life and experience worth keeping on the shelves of the book-case or taking down and reading, here it is ; and you who have had my acquaintance will see that the book is the Old Captain right over. I have not attempted to show the scholar or the statesman, but simply to give a true history of myself, and times as I have seen them, for I have learned that they who attempt to pass themselves off for something they are not, are discov- ered at once by the discriminating public. I once heard the celebrated clergyman, Orvil Dewey, preach, in the city of New York, a sermon from the text "Truth,'' and he showed most clearly that in all our acts of life we must be truthful or the world would see that we had not the truth in our souls; even the mere child will detect the putting on of airs. So here it is as thoughts have come to me and I have penned them, and you, critics, take it and deal gently with the old man, for such now they call me, if I do feel young. I have written this without gloves, for I meant it should come bare- handed if the hand may appear. OONTEIS'TS. CHAPTEE I.— My Own History, .... 9 CHAPTER n.— The West, . . .29 CHAPTER in.— Steamboating, . . 43 CHAPTER IV.— Founding of Ripon, . . 66 CHAPTER v.— Ceresco, . . 83 CHAPTER VI.— First Eplscopal Chdkoh— Farming, 96 CHAPTER Vm.— Mt SpEiscH at the Pioneer Festival, 132 CHAPTER IX.— Death of My Wife, ... 160 CHAPTER X. — Traveling for the Merchant's Associ- tion, . . . . 177 WiNNECONNE, . 204 CHAPTER XI.— My Opinion of Myself, 215 CHAPTER Xn.— Freemasonry, . 230 CHAPTER Xin.— Advice to Young Men, . . 233 CHAPTER VIV.— Conclusion, . . . .239 Ripon College, . . . 243 Dedication, .... 277 ILLXTSTRATIOI^S. Fecntispikce — Capt. David P. Mapes. Woods Hotel, • 225 RrpoN College, ...... 243 HISTORY CITY OF RIPON. . CHAPTER I. MY OWN inSTOEY. It is difficult for a man to speak long of him. self without vanity or incurring the charge of egotism. It might be thought an instance of van- ity that I at all pretend to write my life ; but this narrative shall contain nothing set down in malice and not a word but facts as they have occurred through the life and times of the three-quarters of a century that I have lived. I was born on the 10th of January, 1798, on the banks of the Hudsop, in the little town of Coxsackie, State of New York. My father and mother were of English oiigin, and had moved from Long Island, ^ew York, and settled at that 10 HISTORY OF THE place some time before the date of my birth. My father at this time built a hotel, known as the Elm Tree House, directly under the wide-spreading branches of one of the most noble elms that grew in that region, and in the top, amongst its branches, he built a summer-house. It became a place of great resort, and those buildings are amongst my earliest recollections. He had also a sloop to run from that place to New York city, for in those days a steamboat had never made its appearance on those beautiful waters. My father's family consisted of four children — two sons and two daughters — with my brother the eldest and myself the youngest. My brother was a mute with all his faculties bright but that of hearing, and this made him the more endeared to the family; of him I shall make frequent nien- tion through this narrative. This mute brother used to go with his father to the city, and when he returned to his home he had much to tell the Coxsackie boys of what he saw in the city of New York. He saw the city boys go in bathing, saw them plunge into the river and svmn out, and as he had not yet learned to swim, he did not know but that he could swim as well as he could walk, but when he attempted to CITT OF KIPON. 11 show the CoxsacMe boys how it was done in New York, he would have been drowned had he not been rescued. By constant practice he soon learned to swim and became an expert, as he did in all boyish sports. He was a pet and favorite with the boys of the place. My mother died when I was about six years old, and my father^ — as most fathers do — gave to his children that much abused being, a step, mother; but I, having been left without an own mother, have to say, in justice to two step- mothers, that they were kind to me and appeared to love me as a child, but I could not compare them with my own mother, for it is little we recollect before »ix years of age. I remember going to the funeral of my mother, and tliat is the most I recollect about her. My sisters had many complaints to make against the step- mothers, for they (the step-mothers) had daugh- ters of their own that did not so well agree. The -treatment which I received from my step-mothers T always ascribed to my own facility of making them love me, and here again is egotism. My father was unfortunate in his business as merchant, hotel keeper and sloop owner. The long sickness of my consumptive mother had 12 HISTOKT OF THE exhausted his means, so he went into the woods west of Coxsackie the then great distance of seven miles and bought mills and commenced the lum- bering business. This brings me up to twelve years of age. I had to take charge of teams and draw the lumber to the Hudson River and sell it,; in the winter I attended school, and finally gradu- ated in the log school-house, the teacher of which boarded around and had to take most of his pay in the ashes burned in the school-house. The teacher was a great man in his way. He was not great in mathematics ; he used to say, "Get a boy as far as the Rule of Three and he was fit for any business," but he did not believe in vulgar frac. tions and did not want to bother the boys' heads with them. It was hinted that the Rule of Three was as far as he could go, so the rest of my early education was picked up from guide-boards and sign-posts. The family battled on with the world until the war of 1812, when I was a lad of fourteen years but was small for my age. I wanted to get into the army, but was too young. I was enthusiastic in our cause and country, but my father was in in politics a Federalist, and I, a Democrat, could not see how he could be opposed to the war as it CITY OS- EIPON. 13 was our war against the British. I glorifsd in the success of our troops, and read of all the battles, but my father kept on saying it was an unneces- sary war. From experience I have learned that a war party is the popular party. Young man, never oppose a war. If your country engages in one you have only to help fight it out. Be it ever so unjust, the party in power has so many positions to confer that they will win. The proof of this you have at this date. The Democratic party that was charged with opposition to the war of the rebellion was unsucfcessful in its elec" tions, and notwithstanding the aid of some of the best men from the Republican party, called Lib- erals, it was a failure. So the war party is the party. About the year 1816, my father sold out his lumbering establishment and took his two sons — that is, myself and mute brother, called HaiTy — and started, in a covered wagon^ to emigrate to the West. The West, at that time, was the west- ern part of New York and Ohio. The point which he had fixed upon in his mind was out to the lakes, that was meant to be the paradise of the immigrant, but we brought up between Cayuga and Seneca Lakes, and a lovely place it was. My 14 HISTOET OF THE father purchased a new farm and set us at work clearing it, while he went back to bring the step- mother and other effects. We boarded with a good Christian woman, whose husband was a boat- man down the lakes and the Mohawk River. My father was a good praying man, and he and our landlady would have their prayers every alternate night. My father was what was called gifted in prayer, but I think our landlady was a little ahead of him. When my father was gone after his wife the landlady dispensed with praying, as my brother was deaf and could not hear them, and she must have thought that I was quite good enough without her prayers. In due time my father returned to the house which we had prepared, and we all worked with a will to make a home for the family. My sisters had married and w ere away. But for all of bur labor we got nothing but a wasted strength, for the title to the farm we had bought and almost paid for was not good, and we lost all. My father was discouraged, and resolved to gather the fragments and return to the land of his boyhood on Long Island. While working to clear the farm and make a home, I had overworked myself, and had to leave farming and go to a select school, where I learned to go beyond the Rule of CITY OF EIPON. 15 Three wMcli my first teacher thought was as far as a boy need" go in mathematics. I had arrived at the age to see the need of more schooling, and applied myself industriously to my studies, pro. gressing so well that I took a school to teach, and in this I found I was beaten. Reader, did you ever keep school ? If you have, you know some- thing of its difficulties. To be cooped up with a house full of little stupid urchins, and working away g,t them, and seeing the slow progress if any you make with them, is discouraging, and it dis- couraged me. So I told the trustees, when my term was half out, that if they would let me ofE I would call it square, and they did. I had boarded around and made the acquaintance of my patrons of the district, and it has left many pleasant recol lections outside of the school-house. My father and family had gone back to Long Island and left me to rough it with the world alone, but he proposed to me to go and study for a physician with a cousin I had in Jefferson County, New York, but I did not think well of that at first, for I thought I was better adapted to the commercial world than to the world of physic. Having had an ofier to go into a small grocery business with a young man, whose sister 16 HTSTORY 01' THE he thought would do to keep house for us, I made up my mind to take that course; whether the sis- ter had anything to do with my choice of calling, those who are acquainted with human nature may judge. I entered the business with the determina- tion to become a merchant, but with all my labor and application to business I found that the young man was not a fit partner for me, for I had been taught to abhor gambling, and he would get his crony in a back room and play at games for half or more of the night, thinking that the company of his sister wguld compensate me for his absence from business, but it did not. I began to waver in my choice, and leaned toward physic. I pro- posed to the young man to let met withdraw, but he said that his sister would not consent to have me depart just then, so I resolved to leave, consent or no consent, and one moonlight night, having taken an account of stock and ascertained that I could take a portion of what would be my share, while my partner was engaged in his game of cards and the loved sister was asleep in her couch, I took the only boat on that side of Cayuga Lake — and that belonged to the firm — and pulled out into the calm lake, notwithstanding it was midwinter. The lake at this point was about CITY OF RIPON. 17 three mDes wide, and is seldom frozen over. I had left everything behind but a very small amount of money and some clothes packed in a little valise. Early in the morning I landed on the east side of the lake among strangers and set the boat adrift, hoping that it might return and do some one good ; at least I had no further use for it. When daylight came I could look back across that beau- tiful lake, but felt no regret. I had no debts against me, but I did not know but that the housekeeper was somewhat anxious that I should return as a partner for her brother oi- herself, but I had never made any promise in that direction, and here let me say that 1 have never, in my long life, made a promise to the other sex that I have not most religiously kept, and let me say to you, young man, never make a promise unless you mean to keep it to the word. When I got upon the main road leading from Ithica to Auburn, I looked back over the straight road for miles and saw a sleigh approaching ; waiting for it to come up, as I was very tired, I found that it was going directly on my route to Jefferson County, New York, and my prospects began to brighten. In passing from Auburn to where now stands the city of Syracuse, there was only a lone public house, 3 18 HISTORY OF THE which I found many years after standing on the north side of the canal, which was not built at that time" 1817. I have since seen a beautiful city where the old hotel stood fifty-six yeai's ago. From thence I went to the city of Adams, where I found my cousins, the Drs. Ely^ and with them I made arrangements to enter upon the study of physic. I loaned my cash capital, which amounted to twenty dollars, with the stipulation that it should be repaid to me on call if I should get sick of the profession, which I did in about three months, but when I called for my capital it was a hard matter to raise the am(