PENN TOWNSHIP
Penn
township is situated in the north center of the
county, and is of more recent date as a township than the other divisions of
the county, having been formed in 1854, of parts of Liberty, Reserve and Sugar Creek townships,
and in shape resembles the letter T. It contains twenty-one full and five half
sections (the latter being situated on the north line) in T. 15 and 16 N., R. 7
W. Its boundaries are Liberty and Sugar Creek
townships on the north, Howard and Washington on the east, Adams and Reserve on
the south, and on the west Liberty
and Reserve. The two business centers, Annapolis
and Bloomingdale, are situated within its borders and attract a great deal of
business from other parts of the county. A very
compact and tenacious white or ash-colored clay is found immediately below the
coal measures in this township, which runs by almost imperceptible gradations
into clay shale. It is at present used for making a kind of pottery known as
stoneware, and produces a very desirable article. This clay is worked at shops
at Annapolis.
If care were taken to select only the fine white kind of clay and ground feldspar
used for glazing, in place of salt, a white ware of durability and beauty might
be produced here equal to that manufactured in eastern cities. The soil of this
township is a rich clay loam, which yields large crops of wheat, corn and other
cereals; the surface being slightly rolling, with sufficient fall to admit of
thorough drainage, and is fenced off into large and carefully cultivated farms.
The land in the northern part on each side of Sugar creek is very broken and
picturesque. Rocky Hollow and other favorite resorts of
tourists being in this vicinity. Sugar, Leatherwood and Roaring creeks,
flow through this territory, on the banks of which numerous mills and other
establishments are located. The construction of the gravel road from Rockville to Annapolis, and
the building of the Indianapolis,
Danville & Southern railroad, which runs across the township, having a
station at Bloomingdale, have both helped greatly in developing the interests
of this neighborhood, which the addition of a north and south railroad now in
process of construction will greatly increase. Though one of the smallest
divisions of the county, it ranks fourth in population according to the census
of 1880. The value of real estate by the same returns is $478,180, and of
personal property $176,885. It is peopled with an enterprising and intelligent
class of citizens, who take great interest in education and religion, the
majority being members of the Society of Friends.
North
Carolina furnished most of the pioneer families who
settled in Penn township and made the wilderness
blossom as the rose. They were men who with strong arms and stout hearts had
been endeavoring to snatch a living from the poor and stony soil of that state,
and struggling against the adverse influences of slavery, at that time existing
there. That institution interfered to a great extent with the moral and social
comforts of the citizens who were unable or unwilling to own slaves, while the
slaveholders, being the upper class, wielded such influence in the legislature,
and in the administration of public affairs, as to make it uncomfortable and
embarrassing to those who objected to it. Hence it was natural that those
freedom-loving citizens should be on the outlook for a more congenial place of
residence, and that the opening of the northwestern territory which had been
dedicated to freedom by the act of 1787, a large exodus should take place. So
we find them arriving here with all their possessions in a wagon, happy when
they had money enough to enter a piece of land, even if they had not a cent
left for future use. Among the first arrivals in this township was that of
Perley Mitchell, who came about 1823 and was shortly followed by the Tenbrooks
and others, the great bulk of the settlers arriving in 1824-5, the most of whom
were members of the Society of Friends; prominent among the names of which are
those of Simon and Thomas Rubottom, Payton Wilson, Jacob Hocket, J. N. and Adam
Siler, William and Jonathan Pickard, Jerry Mote, Mahlon Reynolds, Samuel Kelly
and others. In 1829 John Woody and his sons, James and Thomas, settled here and
were soon followed by Joseph Finney, James Nelson, Stephen Kersey, William Hunt
and Eli and James McDaniel.
About 1825 or 1826 the village of Annapolis
was first settled, and shortly afterward the ground was cleared off by William
Maris and John Moulder. About the same time Bloomingdale, at that time known as
Bloomfield, was
originated. Seeing that the two villages could not both succeed in the then
sparsely settled state of the country, efforts were made to have the two unite
their interests and locate a town on a neutral site; this, however, failed, Annapolis refusing to leave
her first choice. A few years after the laying off of the village the first
store was opened by Thomas Woody, the next being started by a company
consisting of Wm. Maris, John Moulder, and Aaron Maris. The first blacksmith
was Thomas Woody, and the first harness-maker John Moulder, while Dr. Mackey,
father of Dr. Mackey of Russell's Mills, was the first physician. The first
postmaster was either John Moulder or Wm. Holliday, the present incumbent being
John D. Connelly. The business interests now comprise two dry-goods and grocery
stores, one drug store, two blacksmith and one harness shop, two wagon shops, a
pump factory, saw and planing mill, a pottery, and a few other smaller
establishments.
The Methodists have a handsome meeting-house here,
which was built about 1850, Rev. H. Smith being the organizer of the
congregation. The membership is now over one hundred, with the Rev. McLain as
pastor.
The
United Brethren meeting-house, 30x40 feet, was erected in 1868 or 1869, the
congregation having been organized in 1840 at a point a mile east of the
village, in Washington township, by Isaac Pickard and John Ephlin.
The upper stories of both of the meeting-houses
are used as lodge-rooms, that over the Methodist church being occupied by the
I.O.O.F., the Masonic fraternity holding their meetings in the room over the
United Brethren meeting-house.
Annapolis Lodge, No. 127, A. F. and A. M., was
chartered May 26, 1852, and in the year of Masonry 5852, the first officers and
charter members being W.M., John M. Wadding, S.W., Edward D. Laughlin, J.W.,
James P. Tucker, treasurer, John D. Gifford, secretary, John S. Dare; Simon
Vestal, John Kelly, L. B. Dunigan, C. N. Harding, David Best, William Sweeney,
R. A. Coffin. The society now numbers forty-five members, and is in a
prosperous condition, having now in office: W.M., Joseph C. Vickery; S.W., John
T. Cole; secretary, John Kelly.
Annapolis Lodge,
No. 431, LO.O.F.
The charter of this organization is dated January 7, 1874. The first officers
and charter members are as follows: N. G., J. D. Connelly; V. G., R. W. H.
McKey; treasurer, Wyatt Morgan; secretary, John J. Garrigus; warden, Miles Ratcliffe;
William and Samuel Brooks. All of the above, except the first mentioned, are
now members of Park Lodge, in Sugar Creek township,
they having left to form that institution. The present officers of this lodge,
which now numbers twenty-three members, are: N. G., James M. Gossett; V. G.,
John M. McIntyre; secretary, Omar O. Hall: treasurer, R. J. Jones. The society
is in splendid working order, with great interest manifested in the objects of
the order.
A graded school is in operation in a handsome
two-story frame building, erected in 1873 during the trusteeship of Jesse
Connelly. The present trustee is William Welch.
BLOOMINGDALE
Bloomfield, as it was first named,
was first started about 1825 or 1826, south of the present site of the village,
where the first store was opened in a log building by William Pickard, his son
John opening a drug store, it being through the efforts of the latter that the
village was begun. Annapolis
gradually took all the trade away from this point, until the village once more
woke up and took a second growth, rivaling her neighbor on the north, and
finally passed her in the race. The gravel road was built in 1864, greatly
helping the town, while the construction of the Indianapolis, Decatur &
Springfield railroad in 1873, which passed through the township a short
distance north of Bloomingdale, placed her another stride in advance. Most of
the business establishments were moved north to the railroad, where a station
was opened.
BLOOMINGDALE ACADEMY
This
popular institution of learning was organized in 1846 as the Western Manual
Labor School,
to furnish a thorough education for young persons of both sexes, and give them
an opportunity to pay for their tuition in labor on the farm and in the
workshops of the institution. It originated with the Society of Friends in this
neighborhood, and has remained a strictly denominational organization
throughout its entire career, never having received a cent of public money in
any shape or form. The school is in charge of a committee appointed by the
Western Quarterly Meeting of Friends, of which James Siler, Exam Morris,
William Pickard, Solomon Allen and Alfred Hadley have been the most prominent
members and were reappointed for years. The real estate of the institution
originally comprised forty acres, and a suitable building was erected thereon,
which in 1848 was destroyed by fire but shortly afterward rebuilt. It was soon
discovered that the manual labor system, which was very good in theory, was not
at all practicable on the small scale here tried; so it was abandoned, the name
of the school changed to the Bloomingdale
Academy, and the land,
with the exception of fifteen acres which now form the campus of the academy,
was sold. Those who have filled the position of principal are B. C. Hobbs, John
Chawner, Seth Hastings, Thomas Armstrong and Josiah P. Edwards, the latter
being the present occupant of the chair. The staff of teachers has varied from
two to five, according to the number of pupils in attendance, which varies with
the season of the year, the largest attendance being during the winter months
The buildings are extensive and commodious, and present a very handsome
appearance located in the midst of the beautiful campus, in the shade of
handsome forest trees. The academy has an extensive and valuable library, and
possesses an endowment fund of between six and seven thousand dollars.
Penn Lodge, No. 87, Knights of Pythias, was
organized November 1879- the following being the first officers and charter members:
and chancellor, G. B. Chapman; vice-chancellor, K. Vickery ; keeper of records
and seals, W. H. Nelson; master-alarms, David Stout; prelate, J. E. Woodard : master
of exchequer, W. F. Graham; master of finance, H. C. Nelson: J. W. Chapman,
James Nelson. The Lodge now has a membership of twenty-seven, and considering
the short time it has been in existence has made rapid progress. The present
officers are grand chancellor, K. Vickery; vice-chancellor, James Nelson;
master-at-arms, David Stout; prelate, J. E. Woodard; master of finance, H. C.
Nelson; keeper of records, W. H. Nelson.
INDUSTRIES
The
early settlers in this neighborhood carded and spun their own wool by hand, the
cards being fastened on two pieces of board about a, foot long and five or six
inches wide, with handles in the center.
The wool was put on one of them with the hand, and when carded enough
the back was used to take the roll off.
About 1825 Perley Mitchell started a carding machine, and it was but a
short time until several others were put in operation. The machines in use at that time were
similar to those now existing. The
rolls were about two feet long and when carded were rolled up in a sheet or
blanket, being pinned together with thorns, and weighed from ten to forty
pounds. These were generally carried
home on a horse in front of the rider, where they were spun on what was known
as the big wheel. From twelve to forty
cuts was a day's work, the pay for spinning warp being sixteen and two-thirds
cents, and for filling twelve and a half cents per dozen cuts, and for carding
rolls with machinery ten to twelve and a half cents per pound. The wages paid for weaving were for plain
ten cents per yard; for twilled twelve and a half cents, from three to five
yards being a day's work. Two hands,
with machinery, could easily card and spin 100 dozen per day of as coarse yarn
as was used at that time, and one girl with a power loom could weave from
thirty to sixty yards per day. Every woman understood the art of dyeing all
colors perfectly, excepting blue, which was more difficult to manage, and was
governed by luck or the sign. The
colors were obtained from various barks, those principally in use being walnut,
which produced the favorite brown color, yellow from black oak bark, and swamp
ash for drab. About the year 1834 Mahlon Reynolds erected a fulling
establishment in partnership with Jerry Siler on Section 23, on Leatherwood
creek. The machinery, which consisted of a shearing machine, press plate,
screw-press papers, and copper dye kettle, which would contain about sixty
gallons, having been brought from Dayton, Ohio, a special trip having been made
there by Todd Maxwell, with a two-horse wagon to purchase them, and who
afterward rented the mill and conducted it for several years. The fulling-mill
was run by a water wheel and the shearing machine by hand. The following is a
list of the prices-charged: fulling, coloring and dressing cloth, twenty-five
cents per yard; without dressing, twenty cents. Coloring and
scouring flannel, ten cents. Coloring and fulling janes,
ten cents. For several years the dyestuff was hauled in wagons to the mill from
Dayton, Ohio.
About the year 1827 Simon Rubottom built a
grist-mill on Leather-wood creek, on Section 23, the millwright being an old
man named Antony.
The machinery consisted of an undershot wheel and one run of burrs, or
nigger-heads, - each burr in a single piece without any plaster about them. The
bolt was a single reel, twelve or fourteen feet long, enclosed in a chest, and
was operated by hand. The flour, middlings and shorts, fell into the chest, the
bran coming out at the end. The miller separated the flour, middlings and
shorts with a wooden shovel, the former being afterward carried upstairs in a
half-bushel measure to the bolting hopper. The building was a rough affair,
constructed of logs, without chinking or daubing, and no floor except a little
around the hopper. When a tire was needed it was made on the ground, and the
smoke allowed to escape through the cracks.
The first saw-mill in this vicinity was erected by
Perley Mitchell on Leatherwood creek, in 1826. The next by
Isaiah Pemberton, half a mile above, on the same creek, in 1828. The
latter was a failure on account of insufficient fall, and was shortly afterward
removed and rebuilt on the other side of the creek, by William Pearson, in
1829. The next was constructed by Adam Siler, in 1831, half a mile above the
last mentioned one, which could be operated about six months in the year during
the first few years, but as the country was improved and drained the water
passed off more rapidly, thus shortening the sawing season. The mills of
Mitchell and Siler failed about 1845; that of Pearson was kept in operation
until 1862. From 500 to 800 feet per day was considered a good day's work with
those mills, and such was the rush of business that they were often run all
night, and frequently on Sunday. Saw-logs were generally hauled during the
winter on sleds drawn by oxen, some few of the settlers having horse teams, the
harness upon them being of the most primitive description, consisting of shuck
collars, home-made rope harness, destitute of iron, with the exception of the
bridle-bits; also a rope log chain (?). The prices for sawing were twenty-five
cents per one hundred feet for poplar and thirty-seven and a half for hard
timber. Lumber sold at the mills at from fifty to sixty-two and a half cents
per one hundred feet, and had a dull sale at that, until the prairies west of
the Wabash began to be settled, when large
quantities were sold. The first steam saw-mill was built by Jeremiah Siler,
one-fourth of a mile south of Bloomingdale, about 1860.
In 1848 a mill was erected at the Devil's Den, on
Sugar creek, in Section 36, by Prior Wright, whose store at the Narrows had been washed away by the freshet of the
previous year. A large business was done at this point during the operation of
the canal, the boats reaching this point by the feeder. The large mill of Deer,
Canine & Coy is now situated at this place, known as Rockport mills.
About 1837 William G. Coffin erected a foundry on
Leatherwood creek, two and one half miles northwest of Bloomingdale, where he
manufactured the first cast plow used in this part of the state. Owing to its
being heavy and clumsy it never became a favorite, and was soon driven out of
the market.
Another of the leading industries in this part of
the country was flatboat building. The first built was in the winter of
1833-34, at the narrows of Sugar creek, and immediately afterward at Cox's
boat-yard three miles below. The next established was Campbell & Tenbrooks,
at what is now known as Rockport mill, then going by the name of the Devil's
Den. A few years later the business was carried on extensively at Jessup's
mill, on Mill creek, at Coffin's boat-yard, where the old foundry stood, and at
several other points above the narrows of Sugar creek. At the time Mr. John
Kelly, to whom we are indebted for the most of the information on this subject,
engaged in the business, in 1833, at Cox's boat-yard, the usual dimensions of
boats was sixty feet long and sixteen feet wide. He was advised by old boat
builders not to exceed that size on account of the danger and difficulty of
getting them out of Sugar creek, it being a crooked and rapid stream. This
advice, coming from men older and of more experience than himself, he accepted
as sound doctrine until his own experience taught him different. Mr. Kelly
states that the most difficult boat to manage he ever handled was fifty feet
long and twelve feet in width, while the easiest one he ever run out of Sugar
creek was eighty-five feet long by eighteen in width. About the average price
of a boat sixty feet long, delivered in the Wabash,
was $100, the size of the gunnels, to secure a ready sale, being thirty inches
at the bow-rake, which was the largest part, and ten inches thick. A tree
suitable for gunnels used to cost from $1 to $5, according to distance from the
yard, the tree being split into the necessary size where felled, and the gunnel
logs hauled by oxen to the boat-yard. When the boat is framed and ready for the
bottom, the planks are fastened in their places with wooden pins, it requiring
from 1,000 to 1.200 of them to complete the job. It requires 7,000 feet of
lumber to build a sixty-foot flatboat, and this must be all first class, as
there is no place where inferior lumber can be used except in the false floor.
From twelve to twenty pounds of hemp are required to calk a boat of this size,
after which was done the vessel was ready for launching. The boats were built
from three and a half to four feet above the gunnel, and sided up with two-inch
plank, the same as the bottom, the roof, which had a pitch of sixteen inches,
being covered with five-eighths-inch boards. The vessels were run out of the
creek with two oars, one at the bow and one at the stern, none being used on
the side while in the creek except upon going over dams when the water was low,
when it was necessary to get up as much headway as possible, that being the
safest method. The steering oar is made the same length as the boat, and so
constructed as to balance in the middle. The steersman stands, or rather walks,
on a bridge in the center of the vessel, so that by the time he reached New Orleans he would walk
a great many miles from one side of the boat to the other while steering her on
her course. At the date of the first construction of flatboats here the cargoes
consisted entirely of corn and pork, but a few years later freights of wheat,
flour, lumber, staves, hoop-poles, potatoes, poultry and live hogs became
common. The amount of ear corn which a sixty-foot boat would carry was 1,800
bushels, but there was a constantly increasing demand for larger boats, and
before the business went out of existence boats were built which would carry
double that amount.
Among the first blacksmiths in the township were
Jack Husband, a colored man, John Rubottom, and Thomas Woody. At that early
period the common smith was expected to make edged tools, such as axes,
chisels, drawing-knives, adzes, etc., besides making horse-shoes, and repairing
all kinds of ironwork. Rigid economy was practiced with iron and steel in those
days; wagons were constructed with as little of it as possible, those most in
use being the North Carolina and Virginia vehicles.
Horse-shoes were manufactured by splitting wide bare of iron into pieces one
inch wide, one-half inch thick and seven inches long for small, and eight
inches long for large horse-shoes, which were afterward rounded and fitted.
There was great care exercised in collecting scraps of iron to he welded
together from which to make shoes, the nails being usually made from worn-out
shoes and discarded tires. The price for shoeing a horse all round was 62 1/2
cents, if the owner furnished the iron; if supplied by the smith the price was
$1 or $1.25. Up to 1849 all smith-work was performed with charcoal, and the
introduction of stone-coal was closely watched by the smiths, the idea being that
its intense heat and sulphurous flames would damage the metal to such an extent
that it would be impossible to make horse-shoe nails from the worn implements
which had been forged with it. In this year, 1849, it was proved that steel
could be welded by heat from stone-coal without damaging the metal, and that
one bushel of it would produce as much heat as four bushels of the other. This
was a great step forward, the process of making charcoal being a slow and
laborious system.
THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS IN PARKE COUNTY
For the following information regarding the
Society of Friends we are indebted to the Hon. Robert Kelly, who has devoted a
great deal of time and thought to the subject.
The first meeting of Friends held in Parke county
took place at the residence of Adam Siler in 1825, and were kept up at that
point for about a year, when the settlement at Bloomfield and Rocky Run began
to assume shape; then the place of meeting was changed to the house of Simon
Rubottom, where they continued until 6th month, 5th, 1826, At this date the
first meeting-house was erected and a preparative meeting established by the
authority of the Honey Creek monthly meeting. Jeremiah Siler and Mary Kelly
were the clerks of this preparative meeting, the records of which up to the
12th month, 1st, 1827 have been lost.
Bloomfield monthly meeting was
established 12th month, 1st, 1827, by an order of the Blue
River quarterly meeting, dated at Lick
Creek, Orange county, 10th month, 27th, 1827. The committee having charge of its establishment were
John Bray, J. Jones, James Rhodes, J. Hadley, and C. Hill, who appointed the
first 7th day in each month for meeting. -At this meeting M. Kelly, Payton
Wilson, N. Newlin, S. Allen, and Isaiah
Pemberton were appointed to have the meeting-house grounds surveyed, and a
graveyard staked off, and M. Reynolds, John Newlin, and Isaiah Pemberton were
appointed trustees of the house. The first representatives to the yearly
meeting from this point were Jesse Hockett, James Siler, and M. Reynolds. At the
monthly meeting held 2d month, 2d, 1828, M. Kelly and J. Siler were appointed
to receive and report accounts of sufferings to the meeting. The sufferings
here alluded to were such as originated from fines collected by law from
members in indigent circumstances for nonconformity to the military laws of the
state, which at that time, and for several years afterward, required every
able-bodied citizen between the ages of eighteen and forty-five to muster at
stated periods, or on the call of the proper officers, failure to respond being
punished by fine. Friends, to be consistent with their well known peace
principles, refused to pay, or directly or indirectly to give up property,
hence they were more or less annoyed, and sometimes distressed, by the loss of
indispensable articles which the poorer members could not of themselves
replace. This being brought to the notice of the yearly meeting, it, true to
its principles, came to the relief of the distressed, and itself bore the
burdens; and the more successfully to accomplish this it required each monthly
meeting to appoint a committee to take cognizance of all cases of distress
within their respective limits, and report, when they were forwarded to the
meeting for sufferings, which furnished the proper relief.
Another serious trouble which the early Friends
had to contend with was that difference of opinion on a doctrinal phase
denominated Hicksism, which resulted in a widespread and damaging separation
under the leadership of Elias Hicks. On the peculiar doctrine set forth by this
new sect the following article on the subject, by Prof. B. C. Hobbs, of
Bloomingdale, is very explicit:
“THE CAUSES WHICH LED TO THE
HICKSITE SEPARATION”
BY
PROF. B.
C. HOBBS.
Sixty years ago the New Testament was common
as a school book, but a complete copy of the Bible was not often to be found in
the families of Friends. When read it was not expected to be explained except
by ministers, and as a consequence there was a great indefiniteness in the
religious opinions of too many on doctrinal subjects.
They accepted the opinions of those in whom they
had confidence when they were positively asserted, and capable and plausible
men had great influence in society.
The
Society of Friends at this time was distinguished, as it ever has been, for
benevolence, temperance and the social virtues. They were practical Christians.
This lack of establishment in Christian faith rendered the hearts of too many a
favorable soil for the seeds of heresy to take root and bring forth evil.
About the
years 1818 to 1825-8 Elias Hicks, a man who embraced in his character the
appearance, language and manners of the straightest •of his sect, and was most
sympathetic and benevolent toward the poor, the afflicted and the oppressed,
was known to advance sentiments which undervalued the mediatorial offices and
atoning merits of Christ, often spoke of Him as only a good man. That the Holy Spirit was in Him as it is in
us; that His death and sufferings on Calvary were no value to us only as an
example in a devoted life; that His blood was only a metaphor meaning His life
or the life of the Holy Spirit He denied the existence of a devil or an evil
agent apart from man's passions, and taught that we are all by nature like Adam
in the creation, and fall like he did; that the account in Genesis of the
creation, the fall of our first parents, and the garden of Eden, were
figurative an unreal; that we must be saved alone by the Holy Spirit in us; an
that the scriptures were not all inspired; such as were written b inspiration
of God are to be believed ; such as were not are of no more binding authority
than other books; and that each must
judge for himself.
His plausible and winning manners and persuasive
eloquence led many unsuspecting men and women astray. Many saw the error of his teaching from the
beginning, and gave timely warning.
Some took one side and some the other.
The controversy waxed earnest, and: culminated in a separation, in 1828,
in several yearly meetings in America,
beginning in New York and ending in Indiana. Meetings, families and friends were
divided. Wounds were made never to be
healed. Some were led on in the separation by their love of a libertine faith
while others were influenced by the strong ties of friendship and relations.
There
are some still living who can remember the work of
dark angel. Such recur to it with sad
hearts.
The effects of this separation were, however, not
without some good. It stirred up the
whole society to an earnest searching for the faith once delivered to the
saints, and from that day to this the Society of Friends have held a sound
faith in the doctrines of redemption by the blood of the Lord Jesus and by the
spirit of our God.
Although the date of the beginning of this trouble
in the United States was
some years prior to the settlement of Friends here, yet its first appearance in
this part of Indiana
was not until 1828. A paper was
prepared that year by the Indiana
yearly meeting directed to each monthly meeting on this subject, in which,
among other things, the doctrine of Friends was clearly and fully set
forth. This paper was read at
Bloomfield monthly meeting, 3d month, 1st, 1828, which endorsed it and took
action, confirming its acceptance by an order that be spread upon the record,
and by the appointment of a standing committee to look after certain spurious
books and pamphlets, purporting to contain the doctrines of Friends, which were
being circulated. It is a fact worthy of
note that while almost every section of the country, from Canada to Virginia
and from Vermont to Illinois, was convulsed with the elements of
Hicksism, within the limits of Parke county proper
there was scarcely a ripple. In the
monthly meeting held 5th month, 2d, 1829, the representatives of the quarterly
meeting produced three copies of Evans' Exposition and a testament as a
donation from Philadelphia yearly meeting, and other books having accumulated
which were Intended for the use of the members, a committee was appointed to
establish a library and appoint a librarian, they recommending Wm, Pickard for
the position. Rules were afterward
adopted for the government of the library, and at various times valuable
additions have been made to it by purchase and donation, among others being a
present of several important works and pamphlets from England and Philadelphia,
consisting of 140 volumes, and 15 volumes purchased by the
librarian, Philip Siler.
The establishment of White Lick quarterly meeting
was made on the third 7th day in 2d month, 1831. White Lick, Fairfield,
Bloomfield and Vermilion
monthly meetings joining in the request
The first proposition for the establishment of the
Western quarterly meeting came from Sugar
River and Vermilion
monthly meetings 3d month, 5th, 1834. A committee of the above mentioned and
Bloomfield meetings was appointed and met at the latter place on 8th of 4th
month, 1834, which agreed to ask for a meeting to be known as the Western
quarterly meeting, and that its assemblies take place on the second 7th day in
the 3d, 5th, 8th and l1th months, The report was adopted by the yearly meeting,
which answered the request of the committee by establishing it as desired, on
the second 7th day of 2d month, 1836 nearly two years after the proposition was
first made.
The first meeting held in the quarterly
meeting-house, built by Reuben Holden in 1834, was on the 8th day of 6th month
of that year, only one end of the building being completed. At this meeting
Exam Outland, Stephen Kersey, Jesse Hobson, and Lot Lindley were appointed as
the first representatives of the Western quarterly meeting.