Marcus Dwight LARROWE

Marcus Dwight LARROWE

Male 1828 - 1896  (67 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Marcus Dwight LARROWE was born on 5 May 1828 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY (son of John B LARROWE and Elizabeth HOLMES); died on 5 Feb 1896 in Palace Hotel, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Professor Alphonse Loisette
    • Birth: 5 May 1832, Cohocton, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 2 Aug 1850, New Haven, New Haven, CT
    • Education: 1854, Yale College, New Haven, New Haven, CT; The 1854 school catalog lists Marcus Dwight Larrowe, New York City, as a lawyer.
    • Census: 17 Jul 1860, Ripon, Fond du Lac, WI
    • Event-Misc: Between Nov 1864 and Nov 1866, Austin, Lander, NV
    • Event-Misc: 1867, Cohocton, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 12 Jan 1870, 21 Bank Street, New York, New York, NY
    • Event-Misc: May 1879, London, ENGLAND
    • Event-Misc: Between 1886 and 1888, New York, New York, NY
    • Event-Misc: Apr 1886, New York, New York, NY
    • Event-Misc: 1888, Washington, DC
    • Event-Misc: Between 1893 and 1894, CANADA
    • Event-Misc: 5 Nov 1894, New York, New York, NY
    • Event-Misc: 11 Aug 1895, Sydney, AUSTRAILIA

    Notes:

    Census:
    In the 1850 census Marcus, age 21, is enumerated as a teacher in the home of the Rev. Judson A. Root. Rev. Root was the principal at the "Young Ladies' Collegiate Institute" of New Haven, Conn.

    The institute was found in about 1830 and was located off Wooster Square.

    Census:
    The 1860 census lists M.D Larrowe and Mrs. M.D. Larrowe living in a "public house." His occupation is listed as lawyer.

    Mrs. M. D. Larrowe is a mystery at this point. She gives her age and birthplace as 22 (ca 1838) and VT.

    Event-Misc:
    Marcus Larrowe was the state senator from Landry County. He was a member of the Union party.
    He was absent from the 1866 Session and an election was held to fill the vacancy.

    Event-Misc:
    Marcus and his brother Albertus inherited the family farmstead upon the death of their father. Marcus sold his right to the home to his brother. Albertus was the founder of the Larrowe Milling Company which went on to become one of four companies combined to form General Mills.

    Census:
    The 1870 census shows Marcus and Nina at 21 Bank Street, NY, NY; Marcus, 37, b. NY, occupation"Literary Library"; Nina, 36, b. NY.

    Event-Misc:
    Professor Alpohonse Loisette first seems to appear in May of 1879 in London, England. He promises to teach French in one fourth the usual time at his residence at 44 Newman Street. By 1882 he has moved to a new abode at 37 New Oxford Street and is advertising “Instantaneous Memory” by post or private lesson.

    Event-Misc:
    Robert Frederick Foster (1853-1945), a native of Edinburgh, Scotland and "connected with some of the best families in Great Britain" was hired to be Loisette's business manager. It is said that Loisette's classes prior to Foster's hiring never exceeded two or three hundred, Foster "secured for his introductory lectures such as he had never before addressed, and his classes suddenly increased to more than a thousand."

    "Loisette Exposed" published the terms of Foster's employment. Compensation was "20% of the total amount received from any class organized by Foster, after the expense of organizing the class have been deducted." The author cited as an example a 14 week period between Dec. 10, 1887 and March 14, 1888. Classes were held at Michigan University (400), Baltimore, MD (1087), Detroit, MI (1005), Philadelphia, PA (1500), and Washington D.C. (1100). " Estimating the average expense for each city at $500, we have $2,500 to deduct from $25,000, realized from 5,000 pupils at $5 each. Of this Loisette received about $18,000 and Foster $4,500, besides expenses. From this it would seem that a man must have strong reason for resigning a position that had paid him over $50 a day for more than fourteen weeks and for which he had a four years' contract. It might also be interesting to know what induced Loisette to release a man who was puttiing $1,300 a week into his pocket, which he had to travel only a few miles, and talk about four hours a week to earn."
    The author further states that upon meeting Foster he learned he was thoroughly ashamed of ever having any connection with Loisette. "Mr. Foster soon discovered that he himself knew a great deal more of the "marvellous" system of memory in its practical application than Loisette, who was as subject to mind-wandering and had as poor a memory as any of the mental wrecks whom he so vividly portrays as "mnemonical teachers."

    "Loisette Exposed" even went so far as to publish Foster's letter of resignation, written on April 25, 1888 at Baltimore, calling Loisette a humbug and a fraud.

    Foster later published, in 1897, "Foster's Complete Hoyle: An Encyclopedia of All the Indoor Games Played at the Present Day." It was still being updated and re-printed as late as 1953.

    Event-Misc:
    The first ads touting a marvelous memory discovery which allows "any book learned in one reading." begin showing up in the United States. A search of newspapers finds ads from Vermont to California and Texas to the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota. Pictured is the ad that appeared in "The Progress" in White Earth, MN, typical of most. The professor claims he is recommended by Mark Twain and W.W. Astor and that he has given classes at Yale, U of Penn., Wellesley and Chautauqua University.

    At about this time ads also begin appearing in Melbourne, Australia.

    Event-Misc:
    George S. Fellows publishes a book that contains the complete "Loisette System" claiming several reasons that Loisette does not own a copyright to the system. In addition he states the system is not original to Loisette but a Dr. Pick. Fellows states he "has no interest in any Memory System whatsoever, and is actuated solely by that keen sense of justice and innate love of liberty, characteristic of every true American." Fellows feels if the system works it should be available to all, free of charge. From the preface of "Loisette Exposed," "The so-called Loisette System here presented, complete, has hitherto cost from FIVE to TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS and the signing of a contract binding to secrecy in the penal sum of FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS. If the system is worthless that fact should be made known. If it is all it claims to be, the whole world ought to have the benefit of it, and at last can have it, and at a price within the reach of millions. Here it is, and the intelligent public can judge for themselves."

    The book includes a section of "Testimonials of the Loisette System" including one written by Mark Twain at Hartford, March 4, 1887:

    Dear Sir:-Prof. Loisette did not create a memory for me; no, nothing of the kind. And yet he did for me what amounted to the same thing, for he proved to me that I already had a memory, a thing that I was not aware of till then. I had before been able, like most people, to store up and lose things in the dark cellar of my memory; but he showed me how to light up the cellar. It is the difference, to change the figure, between having money where you can't collect it, and having it in your own pocket. The information cost me very little, yet I value it at a prodigious figure.
    Truly yours,
    S. L. Clemons

    Loisette must have brough suit because on July 27, 1888 the New York Supreme Court ruled Prof. Loisette's system was original, being a new departure in the education of the memory. The court ordered Fellows to deliver up to Prof. Loisette the stereotype plates and all the books in his control.

    Note: The book is readily availabe on Amazon.

    Event-Misc:
    Ads begin appearing in Canada. For the most part ads in far flung places are for learning the system "by post." The Professor is still doing some lecturing including a stint in St. Paul, Minnesota where he gave both private and public lectures.

    Event-Misc:
    Alphonse Loisette applies for a passport for himself, his wife and manservant. He gives his occupation as "memory educator."
    He is described as 62 years old, 5'9' in stature, with a high forehead, blue, brown eyes, straight nose, average mouth, round chin, grey and thin hair, florid complexion and full face.

    Event-Misc:
    Professor and Mesdames Loisette arrive in Sydney aboard the "Tarwera" having departed Auckland, New Zealand.

    Died:
    Larrowe's obituary incorrectly identifies him as a musician.

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    Marcus married Nina CHURCHMAN on 16 Aug 1864 in Lander Co., NV, and was divorced on 1 Jun 1878 in San Francisco, San Francisco, CA. Nina (daughter of James CHURCHMAN and Samantha MIREE) was born on 26 Mar 1844 in Dubuque, Dubuque, IA; died on 16 Mar 1921 in Portland, Multnomah, OR. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    In her autobiography Nina does not elaborate on her marriage except to say he died young. "He enters her story making visits to her parents house, visits which increase in frequency, and, in her words, "ended as most such visits do, in a trip to the hymeneal altar."

    Note: Marcus died in 1896 at the age of 68.

    Note: When Marcus was enumerated in the 1850 census at Ripon, WI it included a Mrs. M.D. Larrowe, age 36 (ie: 1838), born in Vermont. There is no record of Marcus having a wife prior to marrying Nina in 1864. Nina always lied about her age but I can find no record of her ever being east of Iowa during this time period. So, Mrs M.D. Larrowe remains a mystery.

    Divorced:
    A court notice appears in The San Francisco Examiner (San Francisco, CA), July 2, 1878, page 3, summoning Marcus D. Larrowe to appear before the court to answer the complaint filed by his wife Nina C. Larrowe. "The said action is brought to obtain a decree of this Court dissolving the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing....."

    Marcus married Ida May HOUGH on 23 Aug 1891 in Manhattan, New York, NY. Ida was born on 25 Aug 1853 in Sunbury, Northumberland, PA; died in 1953; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John B LARROWE was born on 14 May 1801 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY (son of Albertus LARROWE and Janette AULLS); died on 4 Jun 1867 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: John B LaRue
    • Census: 1830, Cohocton, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 1840, Cohocton, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 25 Sep 1850, Cohocton, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 10 Sep 1860, Cohocton, Steuben, NY

    Notes:

    DNA:
    MKM

    Census:
    1830 census lists the following:
    Free White Persons - Males - Under 5: 2
    Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 9: 1
    Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: 1
    Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 9: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 20 thru 29: 1

    In addition to the parents would account for Franklin, Albert. There are 4 children I do not have record of, 2 boys and 2 girls. All records of this family record that John and Elizabeth had only 4 sons. Given the ages of John and Elizabeth it seems unlikely that they had 4 children prior to the birth of Franklin in 1823 when they were each only 22 years old. My guess is that the extra 4 were relatives.

    Census:
    1840 census lists the following:
    Free White Persons - Males - Under 5: 1
    Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: 2
    Free White Persons - Males - 15 thru 19: 1
    Free White Persons - Males - 30 thru 39: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 9: 1
    Free White Persons - Females - 30 thru 39: 1

    In addition to the parents this would account for Franklin, Albert, Marcus, Susan and William.

    Census:
    1850 census shows John Larrowe, 49, farmer, b. NY; Elizabeth, 49, b. NY; child b. NY: William, 10. In the same household are the John and Pliny Bashford family as well as an Amanda Frink.
    The next family enumerated includes a Susan Larrowe, age 16, b. NY. The family includes a set of one year old twins as well as a three year old, Susan may be there to help out.

    Census:
    1860 census at Cohocton, Steuben, NY shows John Larowe, 59, farmer, b. NY; Elizabeth, 59, b. NY; Wm., 21. Also enumerated are several "laborers."

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    John married Elizabeth HOLMES. Elizabeth was born in 1801; died on 17 Jan 1862; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth HOLMES was born in 1801; died on 17 Jan 1862; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    Children:
    1. Franklin LARROWE was born in 1823 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY; died on 7 Oct 1862; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.
    2. Albertus LARROWE was born on 11 Jul 1826 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY; died on 27 Jul 1899; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.
    3. 1. Marcus Dwight LARROWE was born on 5 May 1828 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY; died on 5 Feb 1896 in Palace Hotel, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.
    4. Susan LARROWE was born about 1834 in NY.
    5. William Wheeler LARROWE was born in 1839; died on 26 Jul 1864; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Albertus LARROWE was born on 29 Dec 1776 in Princeton, Mercer, NJ; died on 12 Jan 1858 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Land: 1800
    • Census: 1810, Bath, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 1820, Wheeler, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 1830, Wheeler, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 1840, Wheeler, Steuben, NY
    • Census: 13 Sep 1850, Wheeler, Steuben, NY
    • Cen-Alone: 4 Jun 1855, Wheeler, Steuben, NY

    Notes:

    Birth:
    "Albertus Larrowe (LaRue) was probably of Huguenot descent. He was born in New Jersey within sound of the guns of the battle of Trenton. In 1795 he started on foot for Canada, but when he arrived in Bath, NY, he was too lame to go farther. He subseqently purchased land in the area of Wheeler, NY. He raised a family of distinction, some of whom lived in nearby Cohocton and Hammondsport. In spite of increasing farm activities, he found time to serve as supervisor of the town of Wheeler and as Master of the Masonic Lodge in Cohocton.
    Descendants spell the name both ways LaRue and Larrowe."

    Note:General George Washington’s army crossed the icy Delaware on Christmas Day 1776 and, over the course of the next 10 days, won two crucial battles of the American Revolution. In the Battle of Trenton (December 26), Washington defeated a formidable garrison of Hessian mercenaries before withdrawing. A week later he returned to Trenton to lure British forces south, then executed a daring night march to capture Princeton on January 3. The victories reasserted American control of much of New Jersey and greatly improved the morale and unity of the colonial army and militias.

    DNA:
    MKM

    Land:
    From the History of Steuben County: "Albertus Larrowe came from New Jersey in 1800 and settled on the farm now occupied by his son Albertus. He built a log house near the present dwelling, and cleared the most of his land. He was a successful farmer and died on the same farm in 1857."

    Census:
    Census lists: Albertus Larrowe, 3 M under 10, 1 M 26-45, 4 F under 10, 1 F 10-16, 1 F 26-45.

    Census:
    1820 census at Wheeler, Steuben Co., NY shows: Albertus Larrowe, 3 M under 10, 2 M 10-16, 1 M 16-26, 1 M 26-45; 1 F under 10, 2 F 10-16, 2 F 16-26, 1 F 26-45.

    Census:
    1830 census at Wheeler, Steuben Co., NY shows: Albertus Larue, 2 M 10-15; 1 M 15-20; 3 M 20-30; 1 M 50-60; 2 F 10-15; 1 F 15-20; 3 F 20-30; 1 F 50-60.

    Census:
    1840 census at Wheeler, Steuben Co., NY shows: Albertus Larrowe, 1 M 10-14; 1 M 15-19; 2 M 20-29; 1 M 60-69; 2 F 15-19; 1 F 50-59.

    Census:
    1850 census at Wheeler, Steuben, NY shows: Albert Larrowe, 74, farmer, b. NJ; Jennet, 75, b. PA; Jane, 33/23 (illegible), b. NY; Charlotte, 28, b. NY; Albertus, 37, farmer, b. NY; Lucretia, 28, b. NY; Jennet, 6, b. NY; Robert, 3, b. NY.

    Cen-Alone:
    Albertus is enumerated in the 1855 New York State census living with his son Albertus, Jr.

    Died:
    From the Steuben Farmers Advocate of February 3, 1858: "Died - At Wheeler on 12th ult., Albertus Larrowe in the 82nd yr. of his age. He was born in NJ in 1776; in 1797 he moved to Steuben and was employed by Col. Williamson as a carpenter. He married the daughter of late Wm. Aulls, one of earliest settlers of Urbana. Albertus located in Reading in 1800, then in Wheeler in 1807. His son is Hon. Jacob Larrowe, late a County Judge."

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    Albertus married Janette AULLS on 2 Aug 1798. Janette (daughter of William AULLS, Jr. and Elizabeth DANIELS) was born on 15 Sep 1775 in NJ; died on 9 Apr 1853 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Janette AULLS was born on 15 Sep 1775 in NJ (daughter of William AULLS, Jr. and Elizabeth DANIELS); died on 9 Apr 1853 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Birth: 1776, Lancaster, Lancaster, PA

    Notes:

    DNA:
    MKM

    Died:
    From the Steuben Farmers Almanac dated May 4, 1853. "Died - In Wheeler on Apr. 9th, Mrs. Jenette, consort of Mr. Alburtus Larrowe, mother of Judge Larrowe of Bath; 78 yrs. of age. She was born in Lancaster, PA in 1776, daughter of Mr. Aulls, who was one of the first settlers of the town. The family removed to this county in 1793. She was Married - about 22 yrs. of age and had 12 children, 11 of whom survive her. "

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    Children:
    1. Daughter LARROWE was born about 1799; died after 1810.
    2. 2. John B LARROWE was born on 14 May 1801 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 4 Jun 1867 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY; was buried in Larrowe Cemetery, Cohocton, Steuben, NY.
    3. Elizabeth LARROWE was born on 23 Jun 1802 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    4. Sarah Ann LARROWE was born on 20 Sep 1803 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died after 1880.
    5. Catherine LARROWE was born on 27 Dec 1804 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died after 9 Apr 1853.
    6. Minerva LARROWE was born on 28 Aug 1806 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 31 Aug 1866; was buried in Oldfield Cemetery, Hornby, Steuben, NY.
    7. Judge Judge Jacob LARROWE was born on 19 Dec 1807 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 21 Mar 1878 in Hammondsport, Steuben, NY; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Hammondsport, Steuben, NY.
    8. James Madison LARUE was born on 15 Apr 1809 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 29 Nov 1874 in Pinckney, Livingston, MI; was buried in Pinckney Cemetery, Pinckney, Livingston, MI.
    9. Albertus LARROWE, Jr. was born on 17 Oct 1811 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 29 Dec 1895 in Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    10. Mary Jane LARROWE was born on 10 Jan 1813 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 18 Nov 1876 in Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Grove Cemetery, Bath, Steuben, NY.
    11. William A. LARROWE was born on 28 Sep 1814 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; died on 31 Jan 1816 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    12. Jonathon B. LARUE was born on 24 Sep 1816; died on 5 Sep 1880 in OH; was buried in Rock Creek Cemetery, Eden Township, Seneca, OH.
    13. Franklin B. LARUE was born on 25 Dec 1818 in Bath, Steuben, NY; died on 30 Sep 1912 in Corning, Adams, IA; was buried on 2 Oct 1912 in Walnut Grove Cemetery, Corning, Adams, IA.
    14. Charlotte LARROWE was born on 8 Jan 1822 in Bath, Steuben, NY; died on 15 Dec 1888; was buried in Graceland Cemetery, Webster City, Hamilton, IA.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  William AULLS, Jr. was born on 21 Jan 1748 (son of William AULLS, Sr. and Elizabeth CALHOUN); died on 23 Feb 1816 in Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Pleasant Valley Cemetery, Hammondsport, Steuben, NY.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigratn: 1767
    • Note: 1775
    • Note: 1793
    • Census: 1810, Bath, Steuben, NY

    Notes:

    DNA:
    MKM

    Immigratn:
    Of Scotch ancestry, William came to the United States from Londonderry, Ireland. He returned within a short time and came to the US again in 1771 when he settled in New Jersey after a short period of teaching in Boston.

    Note:
    From the Aulls genealogy: "About 1775, Revolutionary War action being too close for comfort, he decided to go to the Scotch-Irish settlement in the vicinity of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where he again engaged in the mercantile and milling business. All of his children except two were born there. During his stay in Pennsylvania he served in the Revolution with Captain James Clark's Company, 6th Battalion of the Pennsylvania Militia. Sometime later he decided to sell his property and join a cousin by the name of Calhoun who had come over with him on his second trip from Ireland and settled and prospered in South Carolina. After liquidating his property, Aulls found inflation setting in and his Continental currency badly depreciated, so he gave up his plans to move south and subsequently decided to homestead in the 'Genesee Country' of New York State. The 'Genesee Country' included at this time all of western New York and northern Pennsylvania. There were few roads and most travel was over Indian trails, often with directions only by blazed trees. In the spring of 1793 William Aulls accompanied by his younger son Thomas, a lad of 16, made the journey by horseback from his home in Drumore Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, to a locality called Pleasant Valley, between Harnmondsport and Bath, New York, near the southern end of Lake Keuka. They built a small log cabin and planted corn and potatoes. Tom was left on the site by his father, who returned south in August for the rest of the family--his wife, stepdaughter, son, and six daughters. When near Pleasant Valley on his return trip, William sent his older son, Ephraim, by a short cut over the hills to join Tom. Ephraim found Tom sick, but with the arrival of the family in September 1793, he was soon restored to health. Their crops that fall were 63 bushels of corn and an abundance of potatoes. William Aulls decided to settle permanently in the Valley, so, in 1793, he purchased 200 acres of land from the Pulteney Estate of England, through the resident agent, and thus became the first settler of Pleasant Valley, New York. He and his wife were among the founders of the Bath Presbyterian Church, Bath, New York and William served as an Elder in 1811, as attested by a plaque in the front of the present church edifice. He was a commissioner of highways for the town of Bath in 1797."

    Note:
    "Thomas Aulls, settled with his father, William Aulls, in the town of Urbana in 1793 and about 1800 removed to the farm in the town of Wheeler, now occupied by his son Ephraim Aulls. He there made the first clearing and erected a log house and afterwards made a frame addition thereto. He gave diligent attention to clearing and improving his farm. He was the first justice of the peace in that part of the town of Bath afterwards set off to Wheeler. He was a good man and a member of the Presbyterian Church and died on the farm he settled about 1847."

    Pleasant Valley--(Town of Urbana.)

    The settlement in that well known prolongation of the bed of Crooked Lake, famed as Pleasant Valley, was the first made under the auspices of Captain Williamson, and was for many years the most prosperous and one of the most important in the country. The soil was exceedingly productive, and yielded not only an abundance for the settlers, but furnished much of the food by which the inhabitants of the hungry Pine Plains were saved from starvation. For the young settlers in various parts of the county, the employment afforded by the bountiful fields of the valley during haying and harvest, was for many years an important assistance. In the midst of pitiless hills and forests that clung to their treasures like misers, Pleasant Valley was generous and free-handed--yielding fruit, grain and grass with marvelous prodigality.

    The fist settlers of Pleasant Valley were William Aulls and Samuel Baker. Mr. Aulls, previous to the year 1793, was living in the Southern part of Pennsylvania. In the spring of 1793, he made the first clearing and built the first house in the valley. In the autumn of the same year he brought up his family. The house which he built stood on the farm now occupied by John Powers, Esq.

    Samuel Baker was a native of Bradford County, in Connecticut. When 15 years of age, he was taken prisoner by a party of Burgoyne’s Indians, and remained with the British army in captivity till relieved by the Surrender at Saratoga. After this event he enlisted in Col. Willett’s corps, and was engaged in the pursuit and skirmish at Canada Creek, in which Captain William Butler (a brother of the noted Col. John Butler), a troublesome leader of the Tories in the border wars of this State, was shot and tomahawked by the Oneidas. In the spring of 1787, he went alone into the West, passed up the Tioga, and built a cabin on the open flat between the Tioga and Cowenisque, at their junction. He was the first settler in the valley of the Tioga. Harris, the trader, was at the Painted Post, and his next neighbor was Col. Handy, on the Chemung, below Big Flats. Of beasts, he had a cow, of “plunder,” the few trifling articles that would suffice for an Arab or an Arapaho; but like a true son of Connecticut, he readily managed to live through the summer, planted with a hoe a patch of corn on the flats, and raised a good crop. Before autumn he joined by Captain Amos Stone, a kind of Hungarian exile. Captain Stone had been out in “Shay’s War,” and dreading the vengeance of the government, he sought an asylum under the southern shadow of Steuben County, where the wilderness was two hundred miles deep, and where the Marshal would not care to venture, even when backed by the great seal of the Republic. On Christmas day of 1786, Mr. Baker leaving Captain Stone in his cabin, went down the Tioga on the ice to Newtown as previously mentioned, and thence to Hudson ,where his family was living. At the opening of the rivers in the spring, he took his family down the Susquehanna to Tioga Point in a canoe. A great freshet prevented him from moving up the Chemung for many days, and leaving his family, he stuck across the hills to see how his friend Captain Stone fared. On reaching the bank of the river opposite his cabin, not a human being was seen, except an Indian pounding corn in a Samp-morter. Mr. Baker supposed that his friend had been murdered by the savages, and he lay in the bushes an hour or two to watch the movements of the red miller, who proved, after all, to be only a very good-natured sort of a Man-Friday, for at length the Captain came along driving the cow by the bank of the river. Mr. Baker hailed him, and he sprang unto the air with delight. Captain Stone had passed the winter without seeing a white man. His Man-Friday stopped thumping at the Samp-morter, and the party had a very agreeable re-union.

    Mr. Baker brought his family up from Tioga Point, and lived here six years. During that time the pioneer advance had penetrated the region of which the lower Tioga Valley is a member. A few settlers had established themselves on the valley below them, and around the Painted Post were gathered a few cabins where now are the termini of railroads--the gate of coal and lumber trade, bridges, mills and machinery. Elsewhere all was wilderness.. The region, however, had been partially explored by surveyors and hunters. Benjamin Patterson, while employed as hunter for a party of surveyors, discovered the deep and beautiful valley which extends from the Crooked Lake to the Conhocton. Seen from the brink of the uplands, there is hardly a more picturesque landscape in the county, or one which partakes more strongly of the character of mountain scenery. The abrupt wooded wall on either side, the ravines occasionally opening the flank of the hills, the curving valley that slopes to the lake on one hand, and meets the blue Conhocton range on the other, form at this day a pleasing picture. But to the hunter, leaning on his rifle above the sudden declivity--before the country had been disfigured with a patchwork of farms and forest--the bed of the valley was like a river of trees, and the gulf, from which now rise the deadly vapor of a steam sawmill, seemed like a creek to pour its tributary timber into the broader gorge below.

    In his wanderings the hunter occasionally stopped at the cabins of Tioga, and brought report of this fine valley. Mr. Baker did not hold a satisfactory title to his Pennsylvania farm, and was inclined to emigrate. Capt. Williamson visited his house in 1792, (probably while exploring the Lycoming Road,) and promised him a farm of any shape or size, (land in New York, previous to this, could only be bought by the township,) wherever he should locate it. Mr. Baker accordingly selected a farm of some three hundred acres in Pleasant Valley--built a house upon it in the autumn of 1793, and in the following spring removed his family from Tioga. He resided here till his death in 1842, at the age of 80. He was several years Associate and First Judge of the County Court. Judge Baker was a man of a strong practical mind, and of correct and sagacious observations.

    Before 1795, the whole valley was occupied. Beginning with Judge Baker’s farm, the next farm towards the lake was occupied by Capt. Amos Stone, the next by William Aulls, the next by Ephraim Aulls, the next by James Shether. Crossing the valley, the first farm (where now is the village of Hammondsport,) was occupied by Capt. John Shether, the next by Eli Read, the next by William Barney, the next by Richard Daniels. Nearly all of these had been soldiers of the revolution. Capt. Shether had been an active officer, and was engaged in several battles. Of him, Gen. McClure says:--He was Captain of Dragons, and had the reputation of being an excellent officer and a favorite of Gen. Washington. He lived on his farm at the head of Crooked Lake in good style, and fared sumptuously. He was a generous, hospitable man, and a true patriot.” The Shethers were from Connecticut.

    Judge William Read was a Rhode Island Quaker. He settled a few years after the revolution on the “Squatter lands” above Owego, and, being ejected, moved westward his household after the manner of the times. Indians pushed the family up the river in canoes, while the men drove the cattle along the trail on the bank. Judge Read was a man of clear head and strong sense of orderly and accurate business talent, and was much relied upon by his neighbors to make crooked matters straight.

    The Cold Spring Valley was occupied by Gen. McClure in 1802, or about that time. He erected mills, and kept them in activities till 1814, when Mr. Henry A. Townsend entered into possession of the valley, and resided in the well known Cold Spring House till his death in 1839. Mr. Townsend removed from Orange County, in the state, to Bath in 1796. He was County Clerk from 1799 to 1814--the longest tenure in the catalogue of county officers.

    Mr. Lazarus Hammond removed from Dansville to Cold Spring in 1810, or about that time, and afterwards resided near Crooked Lake till his death. He was Sheriff of the county in 1814, and, at a recent period, Associate Judge of the County Court.

    Census:
    The 1810 Federal Census of Bath, Steuben, NY lists a William Aulls with 1 male age 17-26, 1 male over 45 and 3 females age 17-26 and 1 female over 45.

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    William married Elizabeth DANIELS on 11 Oct 1772 in NJ. Elizabeth was born in 1746; died on 17 Aug 1823; was buried in Pleasant Valley Cemetery, Hammondsport, Steuben, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Elizabeth DANIELS was born in 1746; died on 17 Aug 1823; was buried in Pleasant Valley Cemetery, Hammondsport, Steuben, NY.

    Notes:

    Note:
    Elizabeth accompanied her sea captain husband at sea.

    DNA:
    MKM

    Buried:
    Find A Grave e-Memorial

    Children:
    1. Ephraim AULLS was born on 17 May 1773 in NJ; died on 18 May 1829 in Pleasant Valley, Steuben, NY; was buried in Pleasant Valley Cemetery, Hammondsport, Steuben, NY.
    2. 5. Janette AULLS was born on 15 Sep 1775 in NJ; died on 9 Apr 1853 in Wheeler, Steuben, NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    3. Thomas AULLS was born on 17 Jan 1777 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died on 10 Aug 1846; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    4. Mary AULLS was born on 23 Mar 1779 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died on 23 Nov 1858 in Steuben Co., NY; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    5. John AULLS was born on 14 Mar 1781 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died on 1 Apr 1782 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA.
    6. Sarah AULLS was born on 29 Apr 1785 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died on 14 Aug 1825; was buried in Wheeler Cemetery, Wheeler, Steuben, NY.
    7. Rhuhama AULLS was born on 15 Apr 1787 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died in 1845.
    8. Margaret AULLS was born on 17 Aug 1789 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died on 12 Mar 1848 in Cohocton, Steuben, NY; was buried in North Cohocton, Steuben, NY.
    9. Eliza AULLS was born on 7 Dec 1792 in Lancaster, Lancaster, PA; died on 6 Sep 1867.