I >."-^^'\.,<^ .V^^ ^y ^ .,% <*. /^Tl^i K~v^ o » o " -^ -'5^. » » *v> O^ ■' . « s . c ° r^^^ ^ <> ?'■ -^ .f '>^1^.^" ^^^ ,^' O «- ff , ^ .f" '~>'^^^^> '^, <■ ^r■ .x\' i .<^ ^^ -f- ,0 ^^-^^ ■9- "oho' ^ 4 o ^, •^o ■($> .^' 0^ ^ .;;w^, ^_ ,-^• -J.* '^^0^ 4 o ^- '>' 4* *.* '* V' '-M/j^^:- „<(P "^ %' 0^ -•' -.^ -■ ^V ,v:^>>- " ^^'. • -^ ^ •-^' ••/^ <^^ . . '?'. k\ v\^-^. 0" "' V' '"> /X\ i^'iff.- /: . . ,-' ^ O^ .0^ . c^'^^ J '■- Vv^ .^^ ^^.. * '-' ■ % 4 o -2- ■, r .^^M*^ .0 ^ ./% '" ^ ^'^y^T^" -i- V V 4 o % ^v v;. .^K/^ iM^* V^ ''^ 3 l-Uc n MINIATURE OP DANSVILLE VILLAGE: HUMBLY INSCRIBED TO THE FIRST SETTLERS, AND THEIR IMMEDIATE DESCENDANTS. BY J. \V. CliARK. DANSVILLE, N. Y. PUBLISHED BY JOEL W. CLARK. 1844. ■/Xf t%^-~.r- Is INTRODUCTION. When we look attentively at almost any portion of the surface of the Earth, we discover evidences that consider- able changes have taken place since its original formation. Unimpeachable testimony argues the mind back to that dis- tant Past, when the fountains of the great Deep were broken up, and the windows of Heaven were opened. At almost every step, we discover Phenomina which the Deluge alone can explain. Were it appropriate, it might be interesting to the philo- 8ophi« mind, to notice some of the time-enduring marks and Monuments which the retiring waters must have produced and left behind them, as memorials of their mighty agency. An agency by which the solid crust of the Earth was dis- solved, and a rocky nakedness effected on the tops and sides of ten thousand mountains, and unnumbered Pyramids reared up on the plains below. It is more than four thousand years ago since the Bow of covenant promise was first painted on the Cloud which over- shadowed the patriarch Noah on the summit of Ararat, demonstrating the change which had taken place in the con- •hution of the atmosphere, rendering it much more dense, ogad consequently much less pure and elastic. Our Marsh- al, Fens and stagnant waters which minister so materially to disease and mortality are evidently the Dregs of the Flood whose drainings could not become entire. These truths trgue a sickly atmosphere and bespeak an early grave. The site of this village and its immediate vicinity seema to have been a natural Basin which must have retained the water a considerable lime: the mounds and hills of sand which are so peculiar to our southern border must have been thrown up by the undefined whirl and commotion of these waters, as they retired in sublime and awful majesty. How long a period transpired before the first Indian Ar- row glanced along these streams — before the first Toma- Jkawk gleamed upon these mountains none can tell. How long a period transpired after the Red Man first desecrated the soil of these premises with animal blood before prepara- ti'ons were made for agricultural pursuits is equally difficult of solution. These centuries have bequeathed us no records, but have rolled silently away. Individual places like individual persons have claims up- on historians ; among these, some are more distinguished and require a broader page. The advantages and facilities of this place when estimated by calculating, business minds must be looked upon as a kind of public property, altho' but few may perceive the fact. This consideration has urged these imperfect sketches which may be censured for their defects, or feebleness, but the author consoles himself with the belief that no one will pretend that the picture is overwrought with thelabor of the brush. It is an extraordinary individual whose face pre- Mnts more than one prominent feature. In meeting with cne of this class, we meet many plain unmeaniog faces. Artists complain of the abscence of prominence in the ori- ginals which they are trying to copy. They feel most sen- sibly the want of some strong point, or lineament by which to identify the picture : something that will relieve from that smoothe monotony and vacancy which can never fix the eye. But when a plurality of highly marked features occupy the same face and hold it out to view, these being sketched, a less skilful hand may fill up the remainder. If the public mind shall find it difficult to discover the original of these sketches, it will not be, that our village pos- sesses no strong points, but on account of the feebleness of the artist who may not have been able to reach those very strong points and lineaments which stand out to behold- ers so prominently. There are many things which embar- rass a writer who attempts the history of any particular place. He must depend upon such dates and facts as the few remaining first settlers give him, and on such incidents as they relate. Under such circumstances an honest inten- tion to exhibit things as they were must be the amount of his responsibility. The humble drudge is exposed to censure without the hope of praise — to be disgraced by miscarriage, or punished for neglect, where success would have been without applause and diligence without reward. The una* voidable course to which a writer is sometimes constrained by cireumstances over which he has no control, exposed to accusations of a most unenviable character, and may award him a partiality for some certain class. But as the author has no high claims, upon the public, and expects little, or no reward for his humble services, he only hopes that sober minded men will do justice to his intentions. If these feeble efforts shall add any thing to this City in miniature; if they awaken any enterprise, or invite one Cap- italist, the author will not have toiled and endured in vain. ERRATA. Pago 10, for light, read tight. " 17, •• Bishop of Pay, read, Bishop of Pay. " 19, •• cerrian, read, certain. " •• " all do, •• all we do. •• 22, " drown, " drawn. " 30, •' this all, " all this. «• 30, «• contracted, read contrasted. " 31, " highest, " high. •' 32, " northeast, " northwest. " 83, " disposed, ♦• dispised. •• 38, •• Lockage, •' Leakage. «' •• " Leakage, " Lockage, « " " Lockage, " Leakage. *' 39, " boards and shingles, read boards and letntling. «JLTAMflSC .ol> 3// ii=^ '»■ .-'> n^: • ii"-.'/ ■;'' MINIATURE CF DAHSVILLE VILLASI When a neighborhood has advanced from a wilder- ness state to that of comfortable improvement, the contrast must be very impressive to such as remain of the first settlers. The hardships and incidents attend- ing these settlers must be very interesting to their immediate descendants. But as the incidents which are common to one family of first settlers are common to most of them, a very few need be mentioned. A studious enumeration of these casualties is as tiresome to sensible readers, as tautology is disgusting. There could have been, but little difference in the time that several families came into this place. There were some individuals, probably, within the town soon- er than the first settlement was made in this immedi- ate neighborhood, but as this part of the Canaseraga Valley is to be the subject of these pages, we com- mence with Messrs. Hammond and McCoy, who seem to have cut the first bushes and felled the first trees. It is not on account of any preference that one of these families is first introduced upon this page. Am- ariah Hammond and James McCurdy, Esqrs., who now reside in this village, on the same premises where they first settled, came here in 1795. Mr. Hammond 8 relates that during his first visit to this place, he slept two nights under a pine tree on premises which he af- terwards purchased. 1 put a bell on my horse, said he, that he might not stray beyond hearing, but it was unnecessary, as the horse came as often as every hour to where he lay and disturbed his sleep; the horse seemed sensible of his lonely situation, and fearful in view of it. Our inform- ant says when the Sun rose over the hill, especially the first morning, the whole valley and surrounding scenery looked enchantingly lovely: straw-berries cov- ered the ground as he had never seen them, even in gardens; he could not step without destroying more or less of them. He, during that season built him a house, &c. ; the next April he removed his young fam- ily from Bath to this place: his wife and infant child on horse-back, his house-hold goods and farming uten- sils on a sled drawn by four oxen, and a hired man who drove the cattle. They staid the first night near, what is now called Blood's Corners, the second near the in- let of Conesus Lake, and on the third at sun-set, at his new residence. After some refreshment he said he must return to meet the man with the cattle, to which his wife could not be reconciled, and who can wonder. He found the man and cattle seven miles distant, he had ceased trying to advance, and wolves were on his track; when they arrived at home in the morning, they found that Mrs. Hammond had not been in bed during the night. The exquisite mental anguish which she suf- fered during those long and fearful hours no one can estimate. This valley had been the favourite abode of the In* dians, they had at this time an extensive burying ground near, or a httle west of where L. Bradner, Esq., now resides, on main Street, and the Monument of a de- ceased Indian Chief, where Mr. Picket resides. They were entirely friendly, they were here to hunt and occasionally held their dances here, but their chief residence was at what is now called Mt. Morris. Deer were abundant in, and especially around this val- ley: they were taken by the Indians in great numbers. Some time in this year, a Grist and Sawmill were erected and put in operation by Sir C. Williamson and Capt. D. P. Faulkner, nearly where Mr. Opp's Mill now stands Capt. Faulkner had purchased 6,000 acrei of land here and brought on ten or fifteen families. This Sir Charles Williamson came up the Susque Hannah, cut a passage for his boats up the Tioga river, and came to Bath as early as 1793 or 4. He was land agent to the Pultney Estate. Mr. Hammond says, when business called him to Bath, he slept one night under some bushy Hemlock tree, going and also re- turning; as the journey could not be performed in one day. When his first grass needed cutting, he had to go to Tioga Point to get Scythes: he went there, purchased two which wiih his travelling expenses cost him eleven dollars. It was common during the early settlement of this place, for the men to take provision with them and go into the woods to cut roads a week at a time, encamping on the ground at night. Canandaigua, and soon Genesee were points where 10 Bome few articles could be obtained for a families' com- fort, Capt. Faulkner brought the first goods to this place from Albany by sleighing, by the contraction of whose name and the addition of the word " ville," this place was named " Dan's-ville," and also the town- ship in which it then was. He seems to have been a worthy, enterprising gentleman, and having identified his name with the village and with the township on the south, his memory will be honored to the latest poster- ity. For more than fifteen years, says Mr. Hammond, there were no Rats in the place. It was stated at one time that there were one, or two in a box containing some fruit trees which were brought here: the people came together and put the box in a light room and found two rats and killed them. Long after this, the first settlers will tell you that they came here in droves, and every barn seemed to receive them at the same time. It is supposed that they came from Canandai- gua. If they had been received from there on the same terms that sheep are let out to double in three, or four years, and strict justice should be observed in returning what might be found due our Ontario friends, they certainlv would be rich in that kind of live stock, if value attached to them. There were many here as early as 1797, but the fam- ily of Mr. McCoy were here a little befoie Mr. H.'im- mond's. After introducing this family into this valley we shall desire the reader to understand that there were some families in the town of Sparta previous to either Mr. McCoy, or Mr. Hammond and that near this place, Mr. McCartney had settled with some oth- 11 ers. Mr. McCoy came from Painted Post, he was the step father of Mr. James McCurdy of this village. — They staid the first night at Bath, the second they en- camped in the woods, near what is now Liberty Cor- ners, the third they encamped in the woods near the inlet of Conesus Lake, the fourth at Mr. Havens in ths' north part of this town, and the fifth arrived in this place. Mr. McCurdy says there was a small hut for a surveyor where C. Welch now resides on Ossian street. At this time there was no white inhabitant in what is now the town of Dausville. On the south none near- er than Arkport. There was a Mr. Gregory and Dun- can a little north at this time. During the first winters they heeded no hay as the cattle preferred rushes which were abundant along the Canaseraga, which gave it the name of Rushbottom. Of these rushes, Mr. McCurdy says, the cattle were extremely fond, they grew as much in one winter, he says, as in two summers: horses did well on them in the winter but not in the spring. There was no Grist-mill nearer than the outlet of Conesus Lake, and at one time Mr. McCoy not being able to get the corn ground which he had bought of the Indians, the family had on- ly potatoes for three days. This family and others purchased meat of the Indians, at a settled price, the rate of exchange with this family was settled by Mrs. McCoy, Mr. McCurdy's mother. The price of a good hind quarter of venison was, two pumpions, six turnips, or two quarts of Indian meal. This was so perfectly understood, and so satisfactory to both parties that 12 there was no demurring; the Indian threw down his venison and took his pumpions or turnips without speaking and all wa« right. This currency Mr. Mc- Curdy says was a lawful tender through the valley. Mrs. McCoy seems to have been admirably quali- fied to originate a currency and establish the rate of exchange in an emergency like that of the first settlers: indeed she seems to have been highly qualified to coun- sel and advise in any trouble or emergency. She possessed a very strong mind of a peculiar cast which enabled her to originate expedients where ordi- nary minds entirely failed. She could have led an ar- my in advance, or retreat, where Generals have failed whose names have come down to us. It is true, it must sometimes cost more time and trouble to kill a deer than at some others, but it also costs more to grow pumpions and turnips some years than it did others which balanced exactly. If some- times some smaller denomination of this currency was called for than an entire pumpion or turnip, who does not perceive that a pumpion could be cut into parts, and that a turnip sliced into small pieces, for every pur- pose of change. This currency was independant of the general government, nor did they attempt tinkenng it to death, it was beyond their reach. It was equally beyond the reach of any president of veto memory. — Congress might debate, or quarrel, the president might exercise the veto power on bills which he himself had originated; little did Mrs. McCoy heed them, or the red man regard them. Rattlesnakes, says Mr. McCurdy, were so plenty, 13 that we killed from four to six daily. Whippoorwilla were also abundaint; he says that these snakes and bird8 delight in the same soils, and the same timber. He thinks that neither rattlesnakes nor whippoorvvills,:Will live on soils which are unfriendly to winter wheat. — His brother purchased a firm in the town of Burns* but finding none of these snakes nor birds, he told hia brother James, he would not stay where rattlesnakes and whippoorwills would not live, and sold according- ly. It would not be in accordance with our sentiments to believe those creatures qualified to select habitations for our land speculators, yet we may well suppose that one of these ci-eatures would not live forty or fifty years in vain. During that period they may have lec- tnred the rising generations to the profit of thousands. In 1797, there was a horse race here or near by; got up by Mr VViliiamson. Gentlemen and horses were here from Virginia, and if the gathering was not as when Xerxes set out to invade Greece, there was enough to see that the horses actually run. The ven- erable Hugh McNair who wasemi loyed by Mr. VVil- iiamson to survey the Pultney land??, says that Mr. Williamson got up many horse races to get people from a distance that he might sell them land, and that more or less of the number that came to these races, ejcpiended all their cash and could not get home. These staid and many of them became settlers. Mr Mc- Curdy also informs us. that when their plough-shares %ecanie dull, ihey sharpened them upon a large stone, like a grind stone, as there was no black-smith in the county. Patent ploughs have since then dissmissed 14 those old fashioned instruments; a pntenl which if ta- ken in the entire extent of its usefulness, stands, per- haps at the head of all recent improvenienis. 1 conclude these remarks of Mr. McCurdy by giving the public a lett(!r directed to nie on the subject of the first settling of this place. I give it in Mr. McC^urdy's own graphic style; it tells the whole siory in u few words and in his own straight-forward way. Mr. McCURDY'S LETTER. *' The first events which took place, in lbis toum and in the second year after our family came to this town — and the first that ever was in town known hy man. " Tlipfiru Summer we or the m<>st of the famihj had the fever and a^ue, but in the fall of the first summer my ^tep-fdthci , JVIcCoy and myself mudi' out to ch< ji logs enmigh In budd a log cabin 18 fet by 14 whiilfwe thought a very large house; the next thing was in (mr opin- ion t'le hardest part of all about oui log c ib.n, that nas to get itra.scd. But we found no troicbl'- in that, as we gave notice of our raising-day and some cirnie from. Gen- esee. Big-tree then, and Ind ans from JSIt. .Morri--. Jll- len's H.ll then, of the name of Jamiyon, ihr. old white woman's sons and other Indian.^. Si>7ne came Irom Post Town and somefnmi Bath. I yet rvviemtnr two of the gentlemen^s names that came from Post Town and Bath; the one from Post Tnwn was of the name of John Stag and the om from Bath, was of the name of Capt. Bull : for us boys sa;d that we expected a great fight when the Bull and -ytag would meet. *'Bu.t to ret urn to the -aiSing . We had hands enough and more than wc wanted, for the hands came mnstly lh€ day be fire and we got our f>uilding up and shingled in one day with bUfS-wuod bark which we had prepared m the summ' r. 15 "■T/ieJirst grist-mifl was built near or on the same spot where Mr. Op/is null now stands. The Jirst saw-mill tviis h:ilfon the sa/w- ground whei e the saw-mill noiO standi a small d sta>'Ce ahnoe Messrs. Bradleys' paper mill. The Ji'st tavern ivas kept by Samuel Faulkner. The first tanner and currier was Israel Fandiventer^ the first bl-n k-smith, iras James Porter, '•The first marriage, ica.^ WilUam McCartney to Ma^ ry Mci urdy; the Jirst school we. had was taught by Thmnas Maclrin. the first established preacher and founder of a church among its, was the Rev. Andrew Gi aij; the first justice nf thv -peace, wan Dr. James Faulk' tier, uncle to our James Favllver nt.w aviaug 11 -.■. The first Supervisor, was Amariah H'lmmorid; the. first town clerk was Lazarus Hamm-nTid, the first death. v:as Capt, Naihtni I Porter; ihr first constable was Henry Cruger. The first Post Master was Jared Irwin, the first goods was owned by (apt I). P Foulkner. fetched from Albany. The first militaiy captain was !). P. Faulkner, who form' ed a company of Grenadiers, mode application to the G(n:einor and gat the eqnijrnients sent from, or by order of him to the Capt., and so beautiful a company I never seen since. "My Mother was never much of a visitor, but one of her visits I yet remember; on the second, or next Suin~ mer nft'r we canie to this town,we heard that there was a family that had come and settled near the Bi that, and she chose me for her companion, and the next day off we put — got thtrc by eleven o^ clock, io-k dinnei' by one, and as ice had not much time to spare, U'e h'ld a hearty shake hands and put for home, which tee did in good time for milking." I ^ive this from the original because it sets things in 60 clear a light, and compresses so much upon a single 16 ppge. It gives more facts and incidents of first set- tlers, than the author ever read in the same compass, and in a way that does honor to the writer. Mr. McCurdy, ahho' one of the weahliiest men, and the father of a very respectable family, is not' ashamed to tell the world about the first house which they built,and how they shingled it — he is not asham- ed of that economy and industi y by which he has ad- vanced iiimself and family to wealth and to the first rank in society. He is not ashamed of the lionorable means which he has successfully employed to set his promisining and mocking most awkward- ly. Th(;so accomplished and most courily gentry ■would faint at once if brought in contact with the good old fashioned folks of "Communipau," ur the ster- ling habits ot "Sleepy Hollow.'' It was n'U fir from this time that the Messrs. Bray- tons and oth(;r respectable families made tfieir settle- ment in the town of Dans\ille between whom and this place there has .been so mueh muiual dependence, KStorc-keej)ing can never be fjund prf)liiable very near any considjrable place, especiallp if sueli place is on any navigable waiter. vSo many things combine their inlluence in centering the surrounding country up- 23 on such n spot, that business mon will commence their business ,whcr(; biisincss is. The |)i;rcf);ises ni;ulo hero in ni'Trliandise tor twenty yc;;irs ])ast vvoul.l nniount to a very heavy sum: yet the amount for the next twenty y(^•l»•s must throw tiial sum entirely into the shaiU;; (!vcn in these timts there are heavy sdes, and tlieseare ra[)e('ily iiicreasin^f. In 1JS22. the inhabitants of this quarter section, peti- tioned to be setoff from the town of Dansvilie, (.ounty of vSteul)en. and set onto JSparta, Ounty ol l.ivin^L'ston, which ojenei} a field ibr some tuctand and difilwmacy. The petitioners assigned as their reason, the extreme diflicnlties in the way of getting to Bath, and their bus- iness general y led them in tiie opposite direction, that the )(iansylv'ama to take the proof ^[\] Nov. '20th. iSiid and registered Dec 13//i. 18^''9. Jhis " terror toos not discovered till after the sale, when on the \ SthofJmie 1812, /A." powir was regularly proved, a'doji •. the [Ith of June duly record/ d. William Wil.sou died '. iiitestate. in 1313 and the oppellants. his heijs at law. — , Since the sale at auction in 1811, Troup, as cgcnt of the " ■. Puttncy estate had gone <>n sellino; different parcels of the miirtgagrd premises, till on the 2dih Sept. 1820, ihe appellants filed ihrir bill to redeem, and for on account. The bill also charged unjairiiess and fraud in cn- ducting the sale under the power. 'The fuels being up' ' .,, ,0/J the question with the additional facts which it is deem- *^"cd material to notice arc siiff,:iciitl.y stated in the opiniojl of the Judg s and by the ('KanteVor .in giving the reasons ..pfhisdtcre^', which was, io^isiais'i the bill without co^ts.^' The court decided unanimQusly^ yia^t the decree of , ,\1iis Honor the Chancellor, be confirmed with costs. - TCowon's Reports 2nd Vol. page 195.] \k):/'^ ••;•^.^ v.! %■■> .'iUtl This suit, the reaJer will percei'vd wiks''sbflttfi6rrt to greatly alarm the settlers, as a decision in favor of the appellants would have injured them extremely. Having purchased of ihe Pultney estate, they could . . only have recovered thft consideration money which ' Athey had paid, which in many instances was very little, ^,]i ^hiie they had made large and expensive improve- 27 menf s. Thfise' gftlftefs appointed A. 'R^tnrrtond Esq. their afircrit. to ffo to Albaiiv and offer such assistance ' as he could; and unqucj^tionahly they made an appro- priaf e'*seiect Jdni " Mr': Hanirtiond'6btliiirted 'the servibes' of bur Ex-Presrderit' Vtih B'uren, then orifv karfin Vaiilf-'"* Bufe^i'Esrl.-'^^' ■- :-:-r-..- :^ -./t i. •. : ■: : :> ..,u)rt The^ attorneys on both sides were of the first'brd^i* '' of tulbhts vvhich wore taxed to the utmost during three days." The sinnple,""easy riiid imposing way in which "^ Mr'l^iSii fiitren st;aterd'''fh(^"rtict^ of the crise, artd the' *' 4 this siiit;' liiu'st g'iV^evWerfce (o'aH, fhatliis'ihi^llectiy^ '* of fhe'^iilghest ord^r.' ' Th6J!e'art p^M-liVi'^is^ffbtTae' df ^^ '''^ fevv' spf^cimen^ ot 'thlit' ''inde"s6rrb'able soi'^iethlng aBbuf * thu liian, whl^lT(-hiis*^giyh'''''hir»i' % fritlBh-sLTcHiiSg.Wa*'* Poiilician. thG'otd'lt3tfR^rJ-''Wiy#il boteBMi iW^ him fpi;wh;U'h6 a(<\:bhipilshfed for'lfi^.fif'^ noiJfltioqznml l^tb'st of 'thbse/'Vho w: n; tlicn pci-^rnrilly intefVeSt&a m this kilt.' 'are* ntiw in- a world of spirits, andiiv^-fe'^ortly;^';'* in their vcrv res))ectable descendants. ''^^'^ 9!«fiJi»ig ^.x;i .MjC,G^rd,y^,,fpeakiiig of llic kindness of. ^thpS€i,^^. times, remarked,; '' that if any yvc^pc^ si^v all of us were ^ troubled, if", ^i]:^ one died, .we.f^jl ^.e^t,''.aud.thci^.no- .^. ticed.lhe (]/jath o.|", l)irs.^ IIiwwnont(..^Vk;h<^ bc^said.i'.'had, ^ endeared herself to thom by all her virtpe?., Whea she.died.aU wept,,who .had JieaiMs, aad^eyp^.,'.!^^ ;,. ., ,. Thoi^e 'is ro doubt bat the first's°ti[lei's' had ^helr vi*':» cesrdncJ'-somethnes exhibited sufficient evidfeficeotf*'^* strong depravity, as well as others, but as the*remairf- '*'* 28 ing few speak with mu«*h affection and in tern^s of high respect, it certainly becomes us to tread as lightly as they do. upon the ashes of all the dead. In 1825, the inhabitants of this valley united with those of the Genesee valley, in a petition to the legis- lature, for a canal from Rochester to Olean, with & branch to this place. There were large quantities of surplus produce which required a ready market; the article of lumber was an important one: timber was abundant on the Bouth, and in some places there seemed little else to be disposed of Considerable quantities of lumber have been rafted down the Canisteo and putting into sever- al streams, had reached the Chesapeake. But it wag found thai however well seasoned, it became water soaked and otherwise injured, sometimes by those un- avoidable misfortunes under which heavy losses have been sustained. The want of a cheaper and safer transportation was extremely embarrassing. As much had been done for other sections of thii gtate, we claimed this from the legislature, as our le- gitimate due. Some attempts had been made to obtain a canal, in previous years, but now our hopes were strong; but railroads had become the order of the day, and after eome time a grant was obtained for a railroad from Rochester to this place. The stock was subscribed, yet after the usual excitement, there, here and on the proposed route, it shared in the destiny of hundreds of cities and villages of the far west, of which nothing was ever seen but the lands on which they were intend- ed to stand. 29 It is truly astonishing that the entire population of the country should have been seized alike with a spec- ulating mania; all were to become rich without labor, purchases in what was considered favorite places was to heap wealth upon every speculator. The amazing rise of lands in consequence of this excitement was hej yond all rational estimates; hence the severity of the reaction. When men who had thought themselves wealthy were stripped of their imaginary ea])ital and their real estate began to receive a fair valuation and no more; when the fog and h.ize had left the atmos- phere and the sky, when the old fashioned arithmetic come again into use by which men estimated the val-« ue of what an acre of land would produce in the mar- ket, after deducting the costs and interest on the land, it w^as like defrauding a man out of his property or like cheating him out of his real estate. As a vast amount of properly was thus swept away so uncere- moniously, we charged the government with destroy- ing the country and reducing us to very unpleasant circumstances. It was truly piteous to see many cost- ly Palaces» Cities, villages and all that imposing livery in which all things glittered so courtly and so aristo- cratic, swept, as the baseless fabric oi a vision, leav- ing but the mere wreck behind. During those times of creating capital by calling one dollar, ten, the states in their legislative capacity be- came phrensied with the prevailing epidemic, ;md at- tempted things beyond the reach of all ordinary means; asifakindof omnipotence had been conferred upon them. Such is the embarrassment of some of the 3» % States in consequence of this unsound Jegislatioh, that Wth'ef"iV-*' tier of counties have suffl;red ander a long deferred justice, will be a sufficient apo'ogy for this digression. ' The preparing t!us arj.er,^ ,whi^-Ji j^va«;^t^),gjyQ^lj|ie^., and vigour .to ^pu.r.;Acill;ige'? gave scjpne ,jmj^^ls^jto;,t>h^;,, place, but when it^ was completed, ,and ji.Gcoryed thq., wateri^, pf j>lill ,Cree,l^^,ai, ils.te];uiiaj^tir^ijY^^v^-^^^ bo^tYopv^d HJ??f>'^'^-'rf'>^>'^^'-'i"? ^-J?if*l^>^'frgf^f'frn tQirpn- gle with tliose of the lakes ;md rivers qf this, ,v\^ndeijf; ful state, and find their level at last in the bosom oi'the AtlatilTc it Was ce'rtainly''a,pcHod Of mufe'h r:^#cii6({i and f\;elii.g. ufJ^ar .hyro.. Th e re w a s so m c t h i ng 'f tiRl i hi e i n ^ h S% e a , t ! i a t s t re a m s ' of%ft*t*r so letsired' 'dnd iinadvertis'ed, sid'Wni51b'fe-?ri?*'^' theii* clalrfis, ^Hbd^d ' coiiirfiinglc^ arid %!«so(-i';fte'iri -f Itat'-^ * bay wh'6V^ 'the %if ip'iWg of b^l tiatrOnk'd fspla'y ihdi r fld^^SV''' ' But wheii'a distant.' inland village 'tvdfe'fddnd lei' bb' neS.ftii^"fhe*|;reat j)oriil oF t!dmmercia'] at/facfio'h'rarid "' all the siih-buh'dirtg countrymalung'ihe same hd<-iatices,'.* '" and broucrhl into close hciahliorhodd \'vilh the line of-" cities^bn 'the Effe' cahrtl.'-Silti- w'hivh' wace 1 he 'banks of * i » ■ ■ "^ ' f"' the Hudson, eniovinLT irftfnVat'c c««hneci ion With that "^ great l^mporiurn whose wharves he Vvct with the''^' waves of the Atlantic, it seemed mipossible to rcpres^ ' 35 ^j^that gush of feeling which the heart pours forth in its own relief. Tiiu coinparatively cheaj) and easy trans- j. portation of the increasing products of the country, to- •gether with the importing su-^mi articles as the country demanded, to our very doors, was both novel and in- teresting. , Tht^ g'*eAt saving to consunners, and ihe quantities and kind of produce which il^ became safe to .transport upon ihis highway of water affbided an in- teresting estinriate in calculating minds. Those sec- tions of country which ftad been so far retired, as not to have been favored with even the twihght of a com- mercial sun, began now to stand out in prominent re- lief with the light of day upon them. Sections which .'.-had been looked upon as the shreds and patches of a cast away g.irment came forward in the, vigor of man- hood to share in a long deferred jusiice. ■ This w.iter communication gave a new valuation to every thing about us, by an estimate which placed us among I'avored communities. It called into active employ enei'gies which were almost dormant, and mul- tiplied tbejndustry of a large re:.: ion of country by hold- ing out the legitimate inducements. It searched out those distant forests which could not tr*have hoped to participate in any favorable market. — It was said of ihat great man DeW itt Clinton, at the completion of the Erie Canal, '' The smallest rill, the mightiest river Flow minghng with his fame forever." When we look seriously at the natural and legisla- tive difficulties to be overcome, and that internal im- provement had ceased to be popular, there is some- 36 thing due the agent from this place, and as locaF feel- ings wear away that senator will be appreciated. In 1839 a Bank was established in this village, call* ed the " Bank OF Dansville " under what is called the new banking law, or free banking; based upon Slate Stock and mortgages on real estate. It seems to have been the policy of the Board of Directors to make it strong, as no dividends have been declared. The following report will show its state: Statkment January 1st, 1814. Bonds and Mortgages, Michigan Stock, Dis. BiiJs - Due from Banks Real Estate, Personal Estate, CASH. Office, Notes of other Banks, Specie, - . - 22,783 9,336 4,853 53 1 145,591 46 50.000 47,622 80 34,691 17 784 .69 2,097 60 30.972 53 117,760 25 Capital Stock, - - . Surplus Fund, - - - - Office Notes, - . . nuK commissioners: Canal Fund, - - . . Treas. State N. Y., " Banks, - - - - Individual: — Depositors, - $317,760 25 L. Bradner, President; L. C. Woodruff, Cashier. 153',2i>0 33.073 77 91,250 5,711 24 477 32 44 00 33.953 92 37 It may be interesting to some to see the first esti- mate which was made of the rout of this branch canai, when first surveyed for the information of the legishi- tliro, in 1834 or 5. The entire cost $150,604 25.— But' when it was finally located it was contracted for ^375,554 89. This excetds the first esiimate, $218, 950 64. This siiows some part of the difficulties that lay in the wav. Distance from Mt. Morris to Dans- ville, is \Gh miles. At Mt. Morris dam the canal as- cends by two locks 23 feet to the hill side, and there passing along the slope of the hill upon which the vil- Inge is situated, it continues up the west side of the Canaseraga valley to Dansville, crossing Buck run, Cashuqua creek, Bullers run, Stoney creek. Bradner's creek and Canaseraga creek, by wooden aqueducts on stone piers. The aqueducts for passing the second mentioned streams are most important. The former has three and the latter four stretches of 25 feet each. From the end of this level to l)ansvii!c, there are eight locks, overcoming an ascent of 83 feet. Lock No. 1 is 8 leet lift; Nos. 2 and 3, 11 50-100; Nos, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, 10 40-100. The total cost from Mt. Morris to Dansvillc, as reported to the legislature, was $165, 388 96. Mill creek, which it receives at its termina- tion, was estimated at 1 980 cubic feet per minute. — The Canaseraga creek which it receives near Woods- ville, was estimated at 3,271 cubi'c feet per minute.— The amount of water needed from Mt. Morris, is es- timated at 2,032 cubic feet per minute. [See Engi- neer's Report.] These measurements were made in O;tober; in August they may have been less: indeed, the estimate of these waters made at another time, may differ considerably from the above. Evaporation, 3^8 filtration nnd I'^ckage on the Genesee vaFIey canal, is estimated at lOG cubic feet per nninute per mile: 66 of this is lost by evaporation and filtration, and 40 by leaLige at the mechanical structures. Hence, for 10 miles, the loss would be 1. OGO cubic feet per minute, which must be supplied. This estimate does not take into the account any other loss of water than such as is found to exist under favourable circumstances. It seems to have been a question with some of the engineers who first made a survey of the premises, whether this branch canal should stop at McWhorter's mill, one mile from the village, or pro« eed as far as Faulkner's dam If it terminated at the dam, it was reported by ihe engineer, it would divert the water from the paper factory and diminish the quantity at McWhorter's grist mill, and the n.ills owned by John Wood & Co. Terminating at the dam, the ascent was reported at 126 feet and fifteen locks. If it ter- minated at McWhorter's, it lessened the distance one mile, and the expense, $30,079 73, and reduced the leakage 46 feet. On the final location there is but 83 feet to bo overcome by 8 locks. It is estimated that the lockage at each end of a summit level is 500 feet cubic, per minute. By experiments on the Chenango canal it was found that an eight feet lift leaked 382 cubic feet per minute, and one of eleven feet, 4i7. There is some difference in the degrees of cold along the Erie canal, when it is observed that the tempera- ture of Utica is occasionally 20 degrees below 0; and of Albany, from 20 to 40 degrees, and at Rochester for the corresponding time, from 20 to 40 warmer, the conclusion is irresistable, says Mr. O'Riley, that the 39 lakes operate as immense heaters upon the air in win- ter. But when wo find by actual experiment that the Genesee valley canal is open for the purposes of navi- gation, after the Erie canal is closed, it shows that other asrcnts combine (their infLueinec with those of the lakes to favour the cnn:il from Rochester to this place.. On a comparison of the present with the first year of its being in operation, a strong argument is obtained in favor of an increase of shipments for many years to come. The amount of toll is not the most important item of profit which is produced to the state, but the value which a cheap and easy transportation gives to personal and other estates; together with ihc saving to consumers, wh't;h becomes capital created, giving so much more value to the state i'tsclf Another im- portant advantage arising from our internal improve- ments is, the bringing together and associating persona from distant and extreme places which gives them much the same habits of thinking, which strengthens our republican institutions. It may be interesting to some to see the quantities of some of the ileading articles of produce which have been shipped from this port ihe present season. The following is taken from the Collectors report. This accounft is official as was reported by Mr. Tag- gart. to the Comptroller. Boards and shingles, 5,633,460 feet, valued at 844, 079— timber, 41,124 feel, valued at $2,4f»7 — shingles, 0,810,308, valued at $ 13,020— slves, 580,899, valued at $5,809— ashes, 819 bbls., valued at $16,380— cheese, 125.0S0 lbs., valued at $ 0,254— butter and lard, 55, 875 do., valued at .|S4,470 — wool, 05.073, do., valued .at $ 23,702— ilour, 5,103.bbk, valued at $20,412— 40 sundries of which paper is a principal article, 323,141 lbs , valued at $ 64,625. These are ihe leading articles, the bala-nce of whicU makes up the sun\ of $ 218, 144, as valued here. 'J'his amount of produce must have sold in the city of N.Y. at more than $ 300.000. The excess of toll over last year, $2,155 70 — ma- king the tolls of this year $8,3S3 14. If the increase of shipments shall continue for six years to come as the present ye:ir has exceeded tho past, the tolls will then amount to about $20,000 annu- ally, even should they remain stationary after that pe- riod. Reasoning from analogy it seems clear that there must be a large increase. That the country de- pending on this canal is only in a state of preparation to effect heavier shipments is apparent to all. If the transpoitation shall do justice to the preparations which are making, the increase of tolls will very soon be (ioub- le the present amount. The lumber cannot be soon exhausted, the pine for- ests are numerous. Making staves for maiket has scarcely commenced; the price which they bear in the cities IS not in proportion with the low price at which they are sold here, which must urge millions to the city markets. The product of the dairy is becoming a heavy busi- ness and the time cannot be far distant, when ten tinies the present amount will be lrans|iorted from this place. An extensive grazing country is connected with this canal, and why it should not produce as much as the state of Vermont, on the same territory, is not easily perceived. When it equals that <*heese making state in quantity, on the same territory it will have wiped from it.s soil the reproach of barrenness. 41 fvince the roniplelion of this canal we have fetid a good wheat market in this place: sotnething has been done the present year; a few barrels of flour have been sent from h(;re, but this does «0l aflortl any just estimate for after years. The town of Sparta and some others about US are wheat growing towns, if we say nothing of those more distant. 'i'lhe wool that was shipped this season, was valued at only thirty cents per poundVand yet it produced the sum of $28.72-0, at forty cents, it would have differed that sum aliout $ 10.000. The excess of wool is very great over last year: and if it shall become worth for- ty cents per pound in the market, it will then be a very profitable business to grow wool, and the amount would be greatly multiplied. The increase of manufacturing must have a good influence on this deparlment of bu- siness and il" the tariff should become wtiat the manu- facturing interests of the country demand, the growing of wool might occupy the foreground amonfj the farm- ers of this slate. There is much which now finds a market, which were it not for the canal would remain almost worth- less. The amount of all this is capital created. When we trace the numerous canals and railroads in this state, the astonishing amount of business trans- acted in consequence of these improvements, and the steady increase of these business transactions, we feel a pride that the '• Empirr St>tk" is ours, nor have we much reason to complain of its administration. The amount of property brought to this place must greatly exceed the atnount shipped. The value of this amount of merchandise could not easily be obtained. Some principle articles which were taken from the col- 42 lectors report seem sufficient for our purpose. Mr. Taggart, the collector, has taken much pains to afibrd me all the information of which he was possessed on these subjects, from which the extracts are made. — Property left. — pig iron, 75,095 lbs.; iron ware, 194, 512 do.; salt, 10,372 bbls.; merchandise, 3,318,057 lbs.; gypsum, 228,500 do.; mineral coal, 68,480 do.; furni- ture, 46,032 do.; sundries, 107,421 do. These items are but a part, but sufficient to show something of the consumption of the country. ^ It can hardly be said that families over trade in«ier- chandise during thcipresent times of embarrassment, but it is undoubtedly true, that many individuals deny themselves many things that would be for their com- iQi't rat her than incur;an indebtedness. As our exports increase, our imports must also increase. The saving to consumers on account of this water transportation must amount to a very large sum per annum; how much cannot be easily ascertained. But the saving on some of these items can be computed with sufficient accuracy. There has been 10.372 bar- rels of salt brought and accounted for at this office for collections, the present year; on which those who deal the heaviest in that article, tell us, there is saved on each barrel. One Dollar, when compared with the former transportation by land. j This is a handsome sum saved from one article only.; and when we take into account that salt is indispensa- ble to every family; that it enters necessarily into al- most all our food, the saving is as much to the poor as lo the rich, which gives it a higher value. The sum of $ 10,372 is as really saved, as if that sum had been , distributed among the indabitants of this and surround' t 43 ing neighborhoods. Were this a luxury it might be dispensed with; or the rich might pay for it as a lux- ury, but the poorest family must have salt in about the same quantity yearly. When double the present quantity is required, the savipg will of course be double, and that period cannot be very distant. If the time should come that the sa- ving in the price of saU alone should amount to all the interest on the cost of this canal, it would seem ration- al, that an opposer of this inland navigation should oc- casionally eat his meat without salting it for holding a sentiment so repugnant, and for arraying himself against the interests of the poor. The saving on iron must also be great; an article indispensable to the business of the country. If we suppose but |i5,000 saved in this important item, and that the increase of the demand shall equal that of the other indispensable articles brought to this place, a short period only can be necessary to save enough on salt and iron alone to pay the interest on the whole sum which this canal cost, saying nothing about tolls. Taking this view of the subject, we perceive, that the country benefited by this branch canal had better pay the entire interest on the cost, by a direct tax, than to dispense with the canal itself. The profit ari- sing in numerous ways from this little branch, small as it may be counted, will soon pay the entire expense of making it, and give a surplus to the state. This cal- culation of profits by what is saved to consumers, and the value which is added to real and other estate, gives so much more value to the state of New- York. It would astonish a Newton, or a La Place, to count up the entire value which has been added to this state 44 by its internal improvements. If, for instance, the ca* nal from Rochester to liiis place is worth one million ■of doljiirs, what is the Erie and jilJ our other canals and railroads worth I If three terms could be found, s'» that the answr could be obtained by a simple operation in the rule of three, the result would undoubtedly aston- ish the world. We can only say in view of the Fup- posed result, that the idea of such a sum as must be produced, is quite overwhelming. We cannot contemplate such wonderful results with- out experiencing sublime sensations, nor without dis- covering something grand and lofty in hiiman minds who project at'd accomplish such high achievements. All these advantages attach us more closely to our .soil, and make us more patriotic, as we have more to love, cherish and defend, by the sum of all ihese mil- lions conferred upon us by our internal improvements. There is no doubt but internal improvement may be and sometimes is carried to the extreme. Some of the states are experiencing the legitimate result of that er- ror in legislation; yet 'his is no sufficient reason why internal improvement should not progress in a sound and discreet way. If the amount of business will be such that the avails of these works will overcome the interest in a reasonable time, or if the benefit of these improvements add greatly to the country through %vhich they pass, and in which they terminate, the state has sufficient inducements to carry forward the first and the country with the assis*ani-e of the state, the iatter. Those who have, and shall hereafter favor this liberal policy will be considered the benefactors of community. Without intending to enter the political arena, it 45 *»iay be asked, what would this state have Ix'cn in com- parison, without her 'nternal improvements? To say nothing of N. York or Bro')klyn.or Hudson, what would Albany, Troy, Utica. llodicstcr and BuH.ilo have been; leaving out all stn-b iinportant villages as are soon to become cities: what in one word would the country have been? — what number of milhons will you subtract from the present value of this state, to dt.'gradi; it to what it would have been; with a hi'art it is true, but its palpitations, how feuWe, and dead, or nearly so at its extremities If such a disgusting picture is in taste with any read- er, ht him in ac(!ordance with his sentiments, entieat for the return of an age of semi-barbarism, or the old and almost exploded systems which have offered few, real benefits to nnen. If any would like to return to that state peculiar t(i human society in its first and ru- dest state, the rocky mountains are ours; let him pre- pare his bow and arrow and climb their dizzv heights. There is no intention to speak of this village in a way of boastii g, or to undervalue any f»ther place; but the impul^je given by the canal was certainly very considerable. l*reviously this village did not extend west of main streeit any farther than the brow of that low hill, which sepaiates the older part of this village from that part which has been more recently built on the flat toward the can;ii. Mr John Haas has furnished me with the numbec of houses which have been built in this village within the last four years. Mr. Haas, is a prmcipjo builder himself; he took time to see each i-f these buddings and to know the lime of their being built, and also made un estimate of the cost of each. His note, handed to 46 ■me makes the number about 450, saying nothint* of barns and other out houses; he estimates the ivyrage cost at $ 550, each. These buildmgs he says, are some of them costly buildings, ranging from $5,000. down- wards. But many of tht-m are small, and he had rather be on the sale side by estimating them below, than above thpir cost. The known modesty and sound judgment of Mr. I !.aas is apparent in fliis estimate, and there is no one of his acquaintance that can be- lieve that he has made an extravagant estimate. Rnssel H. Winans estimates 450 buildings, average S 550, each. There are many who believe that these buildings cost much more than that average. On his estimation, the whole cost is $247,500. When we remember that all these buildings h:ivc been made in these unpropitioiMs times, it f-ertainly speaks favorably of the iitcrease of our village. It shows most conclusively some of the influence put forth by iidand njvigation. If there were but one family in each of these new tenements, the population must have received a large accession. >If this increase of houses shoijU continue for ten years to come it would add 4,530, to the present number. That it will greatly incrense there can he no tloubt, and that it will increase as rapidly as'it has within the last four years, cannot be doubted. One considerable (>otten, or Woolen Factory would add a large amount of pei'sons to the present popula- tion: a thousand ate soun added where there is much done al manulacluring. It is presumed that the tune 47 is not very distant! when One Thousand individuals' will be added in a year. IMor does it seem unreason- able to suppose, that this village will become a city of fifteen or twenty thousand inhabitants. The advan- tages for manufacturing; the extent of country center- ing upon this point, with other favoring circumstances argue in favor of such an amount of population. This branch canal terminates near Judge Faulkner^s Pa,per Factory, on his own premises, and adds much to the value of his landsi The Judge has incurred considerable expense for the accommodation of the public. An estimate of these expenses will be found as follows. Store house on the canal and adjoining buildings, $2,100; coopers shop, $200; store house at the mill, $250; flouring mill. $13,500. Buildings on premises which he has sold for building lots since the location of the canal. $20,000. He supposes from a hasty estimate which he had made that the cost of buildings on the flat since the canal was located to be over $80,000. The value of all the buildings and accommodations which have been made in consequence of the canal, and rise of land and other property is so much capital added to the place, of which the $247,500, is but a part. It is among the benefits conferred by mternal im- provement, that it confers a new value upon lands. — This canal adds much value to some part of the lands owned by senator Faulkner, and upon those owned by some others. If a less value is added to mine, I desire to be thank- ful that I am benefited at all, and most certainly if olh- 49 ers receive $ 1,000 benefit and 1 receive l)U( $100, my one Jiundred is not llie less valuable because my neii^hhor receives one tlio,is:ind. Tho following wa.s handed me fir pnbli(;ation, by Messrs. (Jonrad Welch, Frederick House and others^ '•In order to acconunodale the Inisincss of th(; vil- la^ije, the greater part of which is transacted on the main St., a distance of half a mile from the canal, the citizens of Dansville h ive constructed a hmnch canal, at an expense of about $(5,000, commencing about 30 rods from Main St., and connecting with the main canal immediately above Lock No. 8. ThiscanaJ is of the same d niensions as the Genesee Valley canal, and will prove of great advantage to the merchants and others doing business on i\Jain Stieet " There must be a very heavy .nnount of money in-^ vested in Basins, Warehouses. &c, in this state, and the increase of business |)rayingof agreat man, '=buy only what 'you need, and pay for what you buy." Some years since, said the Hon. Henry Clay, Mrs. Clay and myself agreed to never be indebted for any thing which we should buy, and for a term of years, he declared to the senate that they had not. The founders in this village have done a respectable business. Mr. Commins has at his establishment, ac- commodated the public with steam engines for saw mills and such other steam aparatus. as has been demanded to a considerable amount. The mechanical business must amount to a large' sum annually, but it would be very difficult to m:ike an estimate. The mechanics do not lose when compared with those in other neighboring places; some of them have accu- mulated very valuable amounts of property, and most of them, it is believed, are doing well. In 1824, A. Bradley & Sons commenced manufac- 51 turing paper on ihcirown premises which at p»-escnt is an important establishment. '1 hey ha^e on their premises 18 dwelling houses, 4 shops, 2 pnper mills and a book binderv. Some of these are very good ones, built at a cost of $ 1.000, to $2,500, the'oihers of a lower estimate. Their mills are excellent, their machinery of the first class, and the entire arrangement business hive. The amoimt of business ^t these two mills is estimated at $ 100.01)0 yearty. The cost of stock $ 3.^3,000 and iho cost of labor $20,000 annually. TIkmv is a large pe^ centage of waste on rags, which must lessen the profits; it must however be a good business undei' the discreet management joined with the industrious habits of th(5 present owners. The paper factory of Judge Faulkner is the 'ijdest in the place. This mill hag accomplished much business, and is doing from nine to ten thousand reams [)er annum, which is something less than is ac- complished by one of the Messrs. Bradley's; but must be doing $:33j 00 yearly, the stock must cost$ I !,Gr>6^ and the labor (J.OGfJ dollar.s. Mr. Portei's is about tho same as .ludgc Faulkner's, its business 8 33.000. cost of stoi-k, S I l.tGG, cost (it lahor, fjj G.GiJG. Tn place ull this in a clearer liiiht, we set A. Bradley & Sons paper I'us- ine?s anniiallv. nt $100.00() .TikIo;*' Fanlkiier's at 33.333 Mr.""Porl(M-'s at .... 33.333 Mr. [jradner's wliich will soon goinlo operation at 33,333 Making the entire paper business, annually. $200, OUQ, Cost of Stock, annuiilly, .... 70,0(){> Cost of labor annually 40,000 $110,000 The nainber of persons employed, allowing one person to each $1,000 - - - . - 200 Hnre is $1 10,000 distributed among the poor and middling classes in this sec- tion of country. 52 Thi.-< is a feiifure in the paper making business which •hould be remt'mbert^d by all. A business which receives fill its stock from these classes of people, and theti eniploys ?00. or more of these 3an>e classes of persons tn nF>annfarmre this stock into pape^r. The $ 7>0,00() annually is the same as a gratuity, scattered over a wide region fur the benefit of the poor. If a government should create a bnsines of S 200 €00 annually, and to commence their work of benevolcnC'e, should give $ 70 000 to the poor and middling classes an- rually, who would not aditiirf such a government. But the government is only required to proterlihis business against a competition which exists to embarrass our manufacturers by refusing the operatives sufiiciet)t wages to keep them from starving. We cannot name any one branch of business which is so decidedly merciful as the manufacturing of paper. Enter these mills and notice how neat and comfoitable they appear:^ how cheerful and cleanly the laborers: how still and mod- est the several departments of labor progress. Here you are not disgusted with a squalled wretchedness uhich is insep.irable from an E 'glish Factory under their jireseiit abominable system, a Syatein which cries to heaven for vengeance. Here are no spay feet: no distorted, ruined creatures: no children melted at the wor^ted mills and thrown to the quick consumption by the hundred, da ly. How diflereni is this business from the manufacturing of ardent spirits, which da- ting a scarcity lakes the bread from the hungry poor and converts it into that which destroys and damnscotnnnjniiy by the thousand. The honest, industrious manufacturer of paper deserves 4o prosper, and it does seem thu the business must be pleas- fng to Him, who regardeth the cry of the poor. $200,000 in some places sustains a whole neiohborhood, Mechanics, Physician and Clergyman; indeed, there are 53 many places which have much less cnpital. If this busi- ness should cease, the loss to the country would amount to the sum of the stock u'sed in making paper in all these states, and many thousand would be destitute of the means to sup* port themselves and families, the business which our own manufacturers of paper are d';ing so generously would be accomplished by fori-ign countries, by our bitter opponents, and these states sustain the loss of some millions every year. It seems impossible to take any view of this impoitant branch of industry without seeing the necessity of that pro- tection which shall enable our ovvn manufacturers to keep the ascendancy in our markets. An opposite policy is ruinous, and so far as it has been pursued has ministered to the prostration of business and a general poverty, of which no one administration can have reason to be proud. Our inland situation has excused us from the flouring business, yet something has been doing at the mills owned by Opp and McCartneys, and during the last year Judge Faulkner's new flouring mill has done a respectable business. Besides these, the grist mills of Mc Whorter and Portt- r are doing much. The following is from the report of the En- gineer in 1833 who made a survey of a canal route to this place, as reported to the Legislature in 1835. " The paper mills employ about 84 persons, manufacturing about $80, 000 worth of paper annually. The Clover mill hes pre- pared for market 1,500 bushels of clover seed in one season. South of the village the land abounds with pine limber of a quality not inferior to any in this section of country; and within the circle of a few miles are 55 sawmills making large quantities of lumber. The soil in the vicinity of the Tillage is alluvial flats, and superior bottom lands. The principal part of the valley as well as the uplands is fine qual- ity wheat lands. Sparta in which the village is located, ia the largest town in the county, &c." Since the above date the lumbering business has increase- ed greatly : steam mills have become numerous, and very heavy qianliiies of lumber are being prepared. The advantages and facilities of tliis place for manufactur- ing are such that there seems no other way to account for its neglected water power, but to pass it to our former insu- lated situation. There are places where there is more water power, but wliere else do so many advantages centre: where else are streams of the same quantity of Vv'ater and having as much descent, on the common level of the hinds on each side of them: where else car. as many sites for factories be found where so little need be expended in obtaining their founda- tions: where else is there the. same cubic feel of water ptjr minute and yet subject to no injurious ireshets : where else can all the materials hr buildings be obtained in the i;"nmedi- ate neighborhood and at so low a cost? Where else does nature and the advantages of the place, together with the wants of the surrounding country mahe the same demands with equal promise of profit. On an examination of the wa- ter power any one must perceive the inducement to manu- facturers' to be great. We take only the w^ater vviihin the range of the village. The Canaseraga Creek contains 3, 871 cubic feet per minute : ihe iVIill Creek 1,980 ; Little Mill Creek 990, and .Stoney brook 1,000 cubic feet per minute. We will use but two sites on the Canaseraga. On Mill Creek only ten. On liale mill creek we will use but six. Throwing away Stoney brook and half our other water pow- er. — taking the paper mills of A. Bradley & Sons as speci- mens of business, those on that stream will do the same amount ot business. 2Paper mills annually, - - - $100,000 10 Factories on same stream, - - - 500,000 2 on the Canaseraga, 3,271 cubic feet per minute 165.000 6 Tiiltle mill Creek 990 cubic feet per minute 150,000 Factory and Mills already in operation - 80,000 $995,000 Judge Faullcnei's paper mill , - ♦ 33,333 Mr Porter's do. - - - - 33.333 Mr. Bradner's do. .... 33,333 $1.094,99d 55 Making more than one million of business annually. We have on this calculation, in business annually, the sum of $1,094,999. Cost of stock for paper, annually $70, 000. Cost of labor, making- paper, annnally, $40,000. — Cost of stock for the other factories allowing it to be fifty per .cent on the entire product, about $450,000. Cost of labor, estimated asat paper mills $220,000! There is no account made of eighty thousand dollars irj the cost of its material. We subtract the amount of business to $1,000,000 and, allow twelve years to reach that sum, which does not seem to be an extravagant calculation. When this estimate is realized, this place will contain fifteen or twenty thousand inhabitaiits, and rank among iho third class cities ofthis state. It is confidently believed that the surrounding country will urge this place onward until it becomes a city of at least that amount of population. There could be one, or two hundred thousand dollars spared bycapitalists in this village, for manufacturing pur- poses, with out any embarrassment to the present business, but we have not got the men who have been educated to the business ofmanufacturing. To make the business safe and profitable.the owners should understand every department of it and manage it themselves. For the want, or in the absence of these establishments on an extensive scale we are losing the interest on a large amount of natural capital. Suppose this capital to be $100,000, the simple interest would be $7,000 annually. But subject our water power to certain well known laws and the profits are commonly much higher; sometimes 25, or 30, which would yield 25,000 or 30,000 annually. That capitalist who hoards up $25,000 and keeps it idle, wrongs the public out of the business which it might do, and 5G liimself out of the interest which is $1,750 a yenr. Water power is capital, as really as the soil ofour lands. Our lands ere useless except they are used, and mines of the preriaus metals are valueless unless they are opened and the ore tes- ted by well known rules. Were it known that considerable mines of, even Iron, or Lead, existed in this neighborhood, ^oes any man believe that miners could not be obtained, to work them. But mines may deceive the most experienced end sagacious miners, while our waters roll on, undiminish- ed and forever. Here are no gulfs, or precipices to descend, where thou- cands must be expended in obtaining a precarious founda- tion for a factory building, which will probably be removed or injured by the approaching fieshel. Mere our streams ere not subject to any injurious freshens. All these calcula- tions, and supposition? will be more than realized when the fictory bell shall call the appropriate number of men women end children to step lightly to the buzz of a million of spindles. The location of this village is such, that strong induce- ments are offered to capitalists and to such as possess but moderate means: being at the head of navigation for an ex- tensive and industrious region of country. Here mu?t be the central business point, and here the purchases for the wants of business and fa nu lies will be made. If in some •ectioas there is not a surplus of wheat for the market, there is and will be that which is quite as necessary and profitable. As an illustration of the foregoing, we publish the annual exhibit of the statistics of manufacturing at Lowell, from the New-York Tribune. •' Wk obtained last week at the e&at the annual exhibit cf the con- tfiiion of the manufaf-tories at Lowell, embodying facts ^*hich we thiak will interest our readers. There are eleren regular manufacturing companies in Loivell, in- eluding the 'locks and canaU,' or water privileee company, which 9M iacorporated in 1792, but did not commence operations unitl 1622 57 which n>ay be regarded as the year of the foundation of Lowell. Be» fore thai time, it was a rugs;ed, rocky, barren spot, inhabited by two or three families of buatnien and tisherman, and not worth ten dollars per acre, inclndine every thing upon it. The Merrimac comi^any commenced business the next year, and no other until the Taiilf of 1824 was passed. In 1825, the Hamilton company siarted; in 1828^ the Api)leton and Lowell; in 183.), the Middlesex; in 18:52. ihe Suifolk and Tremont: in 18^.3, thi- Lawrence; in i8)!6, ihe Booit; and in 1810 the Massachusftl.s, b<-inir ih»- last. These eleven compani'-s employ an aggregate rapiial of i$l(>, 7()i),000, ein;ili-ying 6.295 fi-tnak's and 2, 345 niiiles. JJesnif these, iherp are in Low-'ll e.xtfnsivt* Powder mills, a Flannel' Mill, a Blanket Mill. Bolting Mill, Foundry. Paper mdl, Bleachcry. ( ord arid Whip lactory. Plaining maihitie, Reed machine, Grist rt,.d Saw nulls, employing a capital of .-IS'^OjOOO and 51)0 v ork- men. making the whole maiiufacturinir capital of Lowell $1 1,200, 000, employing over 9,000, men and women. The ten principal Manufactories already designated have .311 mills, 'beside print works, run (5,194 Looms and 2r'l,()7.) Spitidl^s proiui-ing J. 425.8.) ) yards cf cloih per week, or74,14l,(i('0 within the yt-ar 1843. The Cotton fabricated by them durinieon-ly employed ar.d is pai 1 on an average of ^57, 53 pe."- month beyond th° cost of board. And we challenge tl;i.< or any country to produce a section in which women who work for their liv- ing a:-e more intellig*nl, bet.ereducated, more truly virtuous, religious and independani than tho;pe to see become universal, and which, when it shall have resulted in making the Workmen large and general owners of Stock in the establishments in which they are em- ployed, sharing fairly in their profits, will put an effectual stop to the demagogue resort of exciting laborers against employers, to the ruin and injury of both. The towns around us need no eulogium; their inhab- itants pay their debts. Sparta, Groveland. Springvva- ter, Cohocton, Howard, D;insville, Hornclsville, Al- mond, Burns, Ossian, with others, are increasing in soundness and in wealth; so also are those more distant^ The look of the country in all directions from this village, is somewhat mountainous; but such is the pe« culiarity of the opening into this valley, that a gradual decent favours all the approaches to this village, except that from the north. Such is its position in a commer- cial and manufacturing point of view, that competition within the range of its customers need not be antici- pated. There are some places where both nature and Providence urge a compliance with their united de- signs: this appears to be one of these places, and their intentions must be accomplished. There are in this village, one I^utheran Church, one German Reformed, two Presbyterian, the second of which has recently built them an excellent Meeting house; a very large Methodist Society, one of Episco- palians, and a Roman Catholic meeting some part of ihe time. There are a sufficient number of individual Baptists lo form a church, which is likely to take place soon. It n\ay be said of the Clergymen who have charge of those religious bodies, that they lose nothing CO tvhen compared with those of our iieighborii.g villages. Altho' the author is opposed to the practice v\h;ch has sometimes obtained, of seeming to exhaust the pro- fessed piety of the place by excessive handling, and stutling the book so full of the lemarkable proceedings of the religious societies, as to ensure the book a mar- ket, even, in the absence of all merit yet, there were some things in the life of the late Mr. Huf)bard, former- Pastor of the first Presbyterian Church in this village which deserves some notice. I say Mr. Hubbard, rath- er than ' the Reverend Mr. Hubbard," not from any disrespect, but from conscientious scruples. The title, "Reverend," is never applied to any crea- ture in the Scriptures; but is applied to God alone, as " Reverend and holy is his name " Should the word Holy, be substituted for that of Reverend, and we should read in some publication, of the Holy Mr. the Holy Dr. ,&c., any one would at once perceive that the "writer intended to convey a meaning directly opposite the word itseK — that he in- tended to convey the idea of the want of holiness, or pro- priety of character. Hence the extreme impropriety of giving flattering titles which the inspired word dis- allows. The following brief sketch is from the pen of Major Van Campen who knew Mr. Hubbard long and inti- mately. *' Robert Hubbard was persevering in his efforts to increase in piety, and knowledge of the word of God: he deserves to be remembered and imitated. In his intercourse with his feUow creatures he was always affable and obliging; noted for a deportment the resultof enlarged and active benevolence. Exceedingly social in his feelings: polite and graceful in his manners.-— GI He consciously avoided an intimacy with those whose sociiiy ncUher promised, nor aflbrded opportunities of usi'Culi ess. \\\\h ihe saints, the excellent ones of the oartli. was his delight. 'J'he more spiritual any one appeared to be the more did he seek and enjoy com- munion wiili ihom. . . It mattered not with him what wii's the C(Miditi(>n or color, every one who showed the he rt of" :r true diciple he recognized, as a brother, or SlSt.,;!'. . -! • •• lie rejoiced to be an instrument to minister to ihe edification and ctmsolation of all those who loved the Lord Jesus (vhrist in sincerity. To this end ho visited tile sicU and ihe afflicted; conversed, wrote letters, hcM meetings, vfec, He was fdthful in exhort;ition and pr.irur,jnTd all the means he could use to build up the kiiig(ioni of C/lirist in the hearts of the saints. While he thus labored to piomote a growth in grace in the (,'hurcli, ihe bui'den of his prayer and labors wen; for the (:on\ersion of souls: he had consecrated himself to the si rvK-e ot" the I^oid,' ihe'gldry of his name, and the advaaeement of his cause. " ' ' , •• \ot (ii)ly in his intercourse and correspondence with Ins ffllow men ihd he endeavor to sirengihen the iiiti.'i-esis of pitily in those under his'infiuenee, but by all'nieans possible did he labor to gain some from the ranks ol' tiie eneniy. ••Actuated by this zeal for the divine glory and com- passion lor pf.'r.slnng souls he sought, aiul seized every opportunity to beseech men in ('hiisl's stead to be rec- oiicilec! lo God. Thus he continued in the s(;rviceof the Lord until his feeble body lailed and he went peace- fully to his rest." This sketch is undoubtedly very modest, much might be said of that excellent man, who Tor piety and benevol(;n'-,e had few equa's. It would seem nncourteous to pass the Legal. and Medical IVofessions in silence when so much is'deserv-* ediy due the highly qualified and useful Gentlemen .who fill them. 6 If'we assign to the first an intimate acquaintancief with ihe ph losophy of truth and justice in coniujction willi the safety of reputation and property toii(!ther with the remedy which the sufferer may obtain where liis rigiits are invaded: if we assign to the other, that deep and thorough knowledge which can only be ob- tained by an untireiny studiousness of the organic, and mental ( onstitution of man, which qualifies to make ihc nice distinction, between a healthy and unhealthy ac- tion, wiih the remedies for restoring one or more of these organs, or facid.ies to their legitimate cours •. we only assign them the deep research and morality of purpose which places them where they belong, on the great circle of the sciences. If any gentljman of theso professions fails of this lofty standard, it is owing lothatawlul depravity which has corrupted all hearts^ and not to any impurities in the fountains from which all truth flows out in transparent streams. Taking this viciw of those professions, we can hut yield them the seats which the guardians of our rights and of our health should o<;cupy. The inhabitants of this villag; have heretofore been reniiss in sustaining thai higher class ol schof)ls which were imperiously demanded The academ}' has some- times received a degree of patronage. I'Ut the subject has nil received all the attention w^'lich it cK;serv- ed. The higher branches of English education, togeth- er with a thorough preparation to enter our ('n excellent school for young ladies, taught by the highly qualified and accomplished Missf^s Talcot and Post, from New- York: none need go abroad for an education now, ex- cept such as enter our colL-ges; 63 We are encouraged to believe that the important suhjcMi is appreciated with incroasintr interest. This statt; is ( nly (luldtme in h( r adniiraib e common school system, by seme f>arls <>f Germany. The Kingdom of Prussia has surnmnded herself with a bright Halo ofglorN, by her liberal system of conunoii education. In almost anypart of Germany ed- ucation is fnore easily uWained than clse-vvhere. The justly celebrated Thulock, was initiated into the temple of science by this national charity. It is singular, that governments so very absolute, shoL.ll be so very jiatcmal to the humble poor, while those whose policy seems much more l.beral should s6 criminally neglect ihi^ir jirasantry. ' In these U. States, statesmen have ceased to amuse the [tubjic with speculations re^'arding the human mind, hut are laboring to provide the means lor its develop- ment. I'llenientary books have l)ecome abund mt, and many of them are truly excellent. Our language is being devc-loped and its stiength tested by the great n\imi)er of urammars and DifUionaries of recent date. Ti.ere have been more than 350 in our language, more than half of these arc American. Whether this is com- j)limentary, orwhether this great number of American graminars is not the result of over-doing, so peculiar to us Yankees is scarcely questionable. * There is a spirit in us. Jlmcr'xans, which seems pe- culiar; if a new path is opened, or some ancient avenuo enlarged, such numbers press into it, as to embarrass each otiier. This has been the fact, regarding our Spelling books ;md Grammars especially. It is no longer a question whether the English Lan- guage is spoken more correctly here than in England, nor whether our pronouncing Dictionaries are inferior to theirs. There is something sublime in our antici- pations of the high destiny of our Language, and of the Anglo lSax^)n ra< e of men. There is ve y much due to Dr. Johnson, that Colos- sus of LUei-atura, for arran^ic^ and setLliiiig noany inl- «4 ^ortnnt rules for the Insiing benefit of our Mother tongue. It needed jusier rules of interpretation and tdiscipline. it was ambiguous to an alarming degree. It was rieh but not sufficiently restrained. Much of its ambiguity must forever remaitr. but the diricrent «pelling of the same word-has accrmphsihod something. But as a dissertation on ihis subject is not ciliod for, the subject is dismissed with many thanks to Mr. Web- ster and other accomplished American scholars who have contributed much to the language dear to us ail. Whether minerals abound in our hills has not been ^ascertained; but Alum is believed to exist in large quantities near Mr. Porter's mills. Springs of water .are strongly impregnated with it, and the ore is said to possess a very high per cent of pure ahim. It is probable that it may become a profitable business — There are indications of minerals in our hills, and they probably «^xist, perhaps to a large extent, Init we are yet to young for the discovery. Such mines as may hereafter employ many workmen, secrete their gliiter- ing ore with much propriety, as other departments of l)usiness are not yet filled up. In some new places, Galena, for instance, the Lead seems neccssa'v, to .balance the disadvantages of the ])lace; but heie it is Otherwise. Nor is it very desirabh; that rich mines of silver or Gold, should be frequently discovered. — ,The Spanish nation and soil are both enduring a heavy curse, whr.h their South American mines' have minis- .tered to them. The Coal mines of England and of Pennsylvania are greater blessings than if they were Gold, or Silver, so .far as national prosperity and morals : are concerned. It was the abundance of these metals, easily obtained, which produced the idleness and efl^emijiacy of Spain, and corrupted the government and her people. It was this which despoiled her of her Chivalry, and which •cast away the once glittering Lance of Arragon and iCastile. 65 The public square in this village has been greatly encroached upon and neglected. It is hoped it will be soon redeemed, (enced and laid out into walk-s and planted with trees and shrubbery; by what name it should be called is for our village to decide. Perhaps, ♦' Rochester Squire/' or possibly, " Primitive Square," in honor of the first settlers who gave the ground. Judge Faulkner will lay off'a square near his basin, which will be suitably fenced, &c. which we will cull, *' Faulkner's Square." The Messrs. Bradleys will lay off one in their sec- tion of the village, as soon as it shall be necessary, which we will call " Bradley's Square." As the village increases , there will probably be a public square near the north part of Main St, which will be called by the name of the donor. Such squares are necessary to densly populated pla- ces, and add much to their beauty, health and conve- nience. It was this which influenced that great states- man, Wm. Penn, to so bequeath the public Squares to the corporation of Philadelphia, that if ihey were en- croached uf)on, they should revert to his heirs. These squares add much to that elegant city; they are capa- cious and nnmerous, and so located as to favor every part of the city. When all these squares shall be called for, and rich- ly fenced and decorated, it will be a luxury to ramble along their gravel walks with some, dear friend, inha- ling a thousand sweets from the opening flowers, and admiring the rapid change of an inconsiderable village, to a smiling and delightful city. The natural curiosities of this place are not numerous, nor very imposing^. Yet nature has made some records of her proceedings around us. The hills of sand on the south of ttie village are worth visiting. One of these stands out from the rest as if desirous of being inspected and admired. This Pyramid ascends on all sides at an eqijal angle to its lop. There is that circular exactness aroimd its basie, and in its entire ascent, that it seems to have been adjusted 6* C6 by higher rules than the Lead and Line alone are capable of enforcing. One would suppose thai some accomplished Kn_ineer had superintended the building to test the perfec- tion of his mathematical instruments and his ov^'n skill. On this sandy memorial of the ancient Flood, a flag should continually wave.. 'J'his monument which wa* produced by the whirling waters under the guidance of the divine Ar- chitect, has endured the baulingof the storms, for more than^ 4,000 years: during which period, the snows have marked its number of winters, while a mantle of green has number- ed its springs. We cannot contemplate it, but as an ancient bistoric relic which speaks of the distant past, and which secretes within itself the Archives of 4,000 years. It looked abroad upon this valley before the red man's hasty step had brushed the dew. or tlie twanging bow string had launched an arrow for the Bison or the Deer. As early, as 1797, the few inhabitants of this place were alarmed by a heavy, unusual sound, and treinbling of the ground. The sound increased and became excedingly fear- ful, when looking in the direction of the apparent thundering a volume of water larger than a barrel issued from the side of the mountain east of the village. The force and velocity of this stream was such, that you would suppose sonae wonderful reservoir of water had been tapped sufficient- ly low to give it the advantage of all its pressure. Large trees weie torn out by the roots and sent down the mountain as if discharged from some mighty engine. Alter some time the volume of the stream lessened, and consequently its velocity. From that time, a beautiful stream of clear, cold water has issued from the place and has served lo suply a tannery many years. This breaking forth of water from the hill the first settlers denominated the "Out break." It was ascribed to various causes; some may yet re- main doubllul regarding it. Mr. Hatrimond ascended the triountaui, nearly half a mile above the "Out break," and found a Lake, or pond wliich appeared to have drawn off a considerable part of its water. He sup- posed that a channel was forced through from this pond & that the great pressure of the water was the occasion of the "Outbreak." This opinion seems arationaf one, and in afjreenient with the laws by which water is governed. A little distance from the "Out break," there is a Cavk in the side of the hill wjiich has been c;dled "thk DiiviL's HOLE." vSomo singular things have been sa'd regarding it which might be worth something to a Sir Walter Scott, if they had been n-iatcd on the High- lands of Scotland. This cavern, ii is said will only ad- mit a man's body at the mouth, but after descendmg you come to a room of beautiful appearance, with an opening into another, more spacious and elegant, and another, &c. It is possible that these rooms are nu- merous and extend a great distance into the mountain, which if carefully and scientifically searched out might add a new wonder to the catalogue of Caves. I'rep- arations aj*e being made for a thorough investigation, when if it is found that extensive excavations exist, it can appear no more wonderful than that the attribute of Power, should have been exercised elsewhere, or in producing the Mammoth Cave in Kentucky. There is a little west of us a Spring of superior wa- ter which comes out of a rock. or 7 leet at its base, and one foot in diameter at the lop, into which you can dip a cup, as at the rock sj)ring at Saratoga. It affords a generous stream of water. It is difRr-ult to describe, but should be visited. It deserves a more accurate examination and description. Patterson's falls, a little to the north-east of the village has become a place of resort; if there were suitable accommodations they would be visited much. The stream of water is not large, but has not been desecrated by art. It is intended to have sufTicient accommodations for company, which added to the scenery of the place, will make a favorite retreat. There is a Medicinal Spring near this village on the premises of Judge McNair, of considerable impor- tance. Its water has been found of great service in 68 curifrg diseases. This water has been analyzed by Professor Dewey of Williamstown College and found lo contain the following ingredients. "1885. Dear Sir: I have examined to considerable extent the mineral water which you sent me. One property of it is clear, its fetid odor. This is owing to sulphur- etted hydrogen gas. It gives name to this class of mineral water, viz, the sulphuretted waters. Whether they contain much of other ingredients de- pends upon circumstances; some do like those near the Congress Spring at Saratoga, and some do not. I have tested this water with acetate of Lead, nitrate of silver, pure potash, and carbonate of potash, nitrate and muriate ofbarytes and pure barytes, oxate of am- monia, lime water and ammonia, Prussiate of Potash, Fecula and regitable blue. I evaporated a portion of it and got the solid s.dt in small quantity of solid earthy matter, slightly colored ia spots with a yellowisli- sub- stance which is oxide, or Carb. of iron; but the iron is in too small quantity to be detected till the water is jDvaporated, and then it is found insoluble so that it must be a minute quantity of Carbonate of iron dissolv- ed by Carbonic acid. There is contained in the water, 1. Sulphuretted hydrogen gas in considerable qnan- .tities, probably as much as at the Spring at Avon and other places. 2. Muriate of soda, (common salt) in small quantity. 3. Sulphate of lime, this makes the common hard water, and is in usual quantity here. It is salt posses- .sing no medicinal properties. 4. Carbonate of iron in minute quantity, held in so- lution by Carbonic acid in the water. 5. Carbonic acid. This is shown by lime waterand may be nearly as much as the volume of the water. It is this which dissolves the Carbonate of iron, — 6i) These ingredients did not render it probable that any Iodine is in it. I tested ioi it and saw no indication of Its presence. ~ ' This water is like that of Aix La Chapcll and Har- rowgate. The water of the former has a temperature of lOOdeg. or more, the hitter, only that of the coun- try 50 deg., or GO deg. perhaps. Of the llarrowgate water it is said they are very otfensive to the smeU and taste; in small quantities, and as an alternative in l-arge quantity purgative, anri useful in scrolulus or cu- taneous diseases, destroying worms and removing chronic obstructions and diseases of the stotJiach. I cannot now turn to any book on this subject. 6. Carbonate of soda. This is in small quantity, but enough to be readily detected, rendering it proba- ble there is little pure carbonic acid. When the wa- ter is evaporated, this alkali alone effects the blue test. ' All the ingredients, except the sulfihate of lime make this water valuable, and this one does no hurl.*' This Spring is situated on rising land of a dry soil and easily approached. It is proposed to accommodate the public by erecting suitable buildings for boarding bathing, &c., the coming season, when it is presumed, the water will be found of much service to such as may be imiuced to use them. The situation of the spring is so elevated that the water may be carried a great way in simple conduct- ors if necessary, and used for showering at almost any elevation. They have proved efii(;acious in nu- merous instances, and undoubtedly this spring is one among the many tountams of mercy which our benev- olent Creator has opened for the benefit of a diseased race. SVe look upon our medicinal waters as so many ex- pression* of the divine favor, and desire to be humbly grateful in our acknowledgements of so much undeserv- ed compassion. There are some other peculiarities which might be enumerated, but as they are not prominent in their 70 features the subject is dismissed \^ith one remark — These Pheiioiniiia whieh nre scattered abroad upoa the earth are so many demonstrations ot the existunce of the great first cause, and of his unsearchable designs^ •as well as his supervision of th'» works of his htmid«. We see hini every where in his works, but at Hihese fspecial places we are njore especially called uipoii to revereirute the Divinity. These seem acts, or testimonials, by whose; light we .discover more of his eternal jiower and (Jodhead, than in contemplating things on an onliniry level. JSonie of these peculiarities, or curiosities .ire strong ex|)rcssions •of the attribute of iVfercy. regardmg the bodies of men, which taken in connection wiih a high and gracious cconomv, develo|)t; a lich benevolence in liim. w-f^ose we are, anrt whom we s^hoidd reverence and ol»ey. 11" by the wortl, Scenery, we mean, the appenrancc of a pl.ice and what is about it. blending their infinen- ces s » as to enforce no ordinary claims U| on persons of taste and refinement: if this is uhat we n e:m by the •word, this village and vicinity yields to no inland place in our knowledge. The imposing gr mdeur o| oiir high lands, whose sides during the season of venbirr. appear dike an almost mi^asureles contiguity of curtains on lofty ^langings, to shield us fr.'m tlie C"ming winds. In Au- 1iurrin*lhey are changed U> a rainbow line, ;is if alJ the •dyes of Tyre, Persia and Etrypt had been lavished to «dress us out in purple (»( the rjciiest party colour. These colors are arranged in the happiest manner, ito sotten into loveliness with pleasing effect. When the leaves of our forests have fallen, their varie-^ tints of the richest coloring, present to the eye. wherever the winds have (dus'ered them, the appearance of bloomini: parte/Tcs of tlowers, which tempt the admi- >rrr to lay liimgeil.f down in the mid>t of such exquisite •paintings and iervjovy theem-hantiiMMit untlistur'ned. 'I'he claiius (Of .our rainbow coloref j, .ndon, or the smoke of Li crpool; especially. ^\x\x\\x\^\\\\v[\, \\vdi smokehouse of the vvMiIil, if set down on our hill side, amidst an ocean of flowers and then lo<»king abroad upon our western sky of burnis'ied '.old and purple. Add to all this, the rich garniture of the entire heavens during an Autnnmal sunset whde thin pellucid clouds float over him in all the rich coloring ol Ilim who made the Rain- bow, and has 0[)ened every flower. When he has be<"ome familiar with so much splendid beauty and loveliness, ask him for his Knglish Heavens; ask him for the Sun, Moon and Stars of London. Liv- erpool and Birmingham, swathed in fog and smoke: constrained from day to day t*»» put on sackcioth and wcai the habiliments of mourning forever. Ask him to paint an English November upon the canvass with mel uichnly ;ind suicide in the fort'g.'ound. Add to this delighilul scenery, our extensive plains?, dotted with cattle. ;)iid whitened v\ith sheepMhe cheer- ful whistle of our B'armers, as they. " drive meir teams afield,'' mingling with a thousand mellow voices and the pic'ure, together with the undefinable feelings of the fon-igner iK.-cds no addition. ****** ^\'ec;^n but anticipate the time, when our isles shall blush at tlieirown ingratitude and our L'ontinent heigh- ten that blush tocrimson, that so few and jjoor returns have been made to Him. who has placed ns amidst so much pictured beauty and' painted loveliness. However imperfectly this Miniature may have been taken, it has cost the author much per[)lexity and toil. ]n writing on ordinary subjects the difliculties are less. Whatever have been 'he embarrassments, if not over- come, they remain for some abler pen. These sketch- es do not pretend to pres<^nt a full length portrait, but only a Aliniature imperfectly drawn. It does not claim to have been •' taken to the life," and it is only hoped,, I it is held up lo the public view, that good judges^ ^1 72 who possess some little f icndship for ihis villnge, and for the author, will say '* it is a resemblance." Fmally, 'he author IS well satisfied that it does nrt require any more talent to find fault with the book, than it did to write il^ and as the Piess is accessible, he gives, his free and full consent, for such as arc great- ly displeased with this, to write one and have it Ste- KEOTVPKD. THE END, •% . (Tff, i « 7 r^~^ MT.T. HK197-78 r 9- '^^ ■4' ^\^ '• ■-, ^ :^i« o « o :■ f: ■-^^.-^ -^ I ,0* yi^lY^^-i j> % > ^ .c^''^ -^WIK^ .^H -^e 0' I-'*"' > * . » " -^^ 0^ (> i' -'t "^ ^:i^>^^ 'v ■3- ^k ,1^ • -^^ ■ .<^ ^'^^^s^:^ <^ ,-^^ :f ■ym<^ Ov\ yfi. //■■'. -f ,-J^" ■^z. ^'i \\ ^-^ .^ ^^ ^ J "■-. ^.:^ s^^ M;Vf 73 |N. MANCHESTER. INDIANA ''^■^-/ ^^