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return to: Water
Transportation of Allegany Co,NY
OIL CREEK at Cuba,NY
Oil Creek & Oil Creek Reservoir (Today known
as Cuba Lake)
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Cuba was formed in 1822 from
Friendship. It originally included Clarksville and Genesee. Some
individuals trace the town’s name to a roman word meaning “Goddess
or Protector of the Young.” However, there are others who think that
the name is Spanish, like many of the towns nearby. In 1880 Cuba was
the place of a great celebration for the fourth of July as 5,000
plus people attended the gathering.
Cuba was second in the state on the list of notable cheese makers.
It held the county record for producing the largest amount of milk
from one cow in one year. A Holstein-Friesian cow from Holland
produced 30,318.5 lbs of milk in one year! Cuba started a Temperance
camp in 1882 and a YMCA in 1887. North Cuba was home of Charles
Ingalls, the father of Laura Ingalls Wilder, who wrote “Little House
on the Prairie.” Cuba Lake, constructed in 1858, is located two
miles north of the village. It is a man-made lake 1545 ft. above sea
level, the highest reservoir in Allegany County.
The most notable thing about Cuba is that it is the
site of Oil Creek
Reservation. This reservation was home of some of the Seneca
Indians. The name comes from oil springs on the reservation. This
oil was described by Joseph De La Roche D’Allion, a Franciscan
Missionary in1627. This was the first recorded mention of oil in
North America.
Resources: John S. Minard. A Centennial Memorial, History of
Allegany County, New York (Alfred, New York: W.A. Fergusson& Co),
pp. 813-51, pp. 34-42.
1806 History of Allegany County, New York (New York: F.W. Beers &
Co, 1879), pp. 247-71.
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Map below shows Oil Creek flowing near the
Village of Cuba,NY from the Oil Creek Reservoir.
The map also shows the route of the Genesee
Valley Canal across the Town of Cuba from the Town of New Hudson (upper right)
to Cattaraugus County (lower left).

Map above is section from "Atlas of Allegany
County New York; From actual Surveys & Official Records Compiled & Published by
D. G. Beers & Co.; 95 Maiden Lane, New York - 1869" D.G.Beers, J.H. Goodhue, &
H. B. Parsell
Interesting Letter of Unhappy Travelers!
(1819)
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Geneva Gazette, Wed.,
May 9, 1819
TO THE PUBLIC.
A sense of the duty we owe to the multitude of enterprising
EMIGRANTS; to justice, and to ourselves, induces us to make the
following exposition of facts in relation to the treatment we
received at Oil Creek, 14 miles from Olean Point.
Night overtook us at
said place, and we put up at Griffin's
tavern. In the course of the
evening some persons came in, and offered to sell us Boats, after having
learned we were destined down the
river. Having made what we considered the necessary enquiry
about the safety and expedition with which the Creek might be
descended, and having had the strongest assurance of its being
attended with no
hazard or difficulty, we purchased a Boat, discharging our wagon, and
put our baggage, to the amount of five or six cwt. on board.
We received additional
assurance from his honor Judge Griffin, whom we afterwards learned
was concerned in building Boats at that place. But to our
disappointment and chagrin, we found the most tedious as well as, in
many places, the most dangerous route
imaginable. There are five Mill dams to run over, numerous shoals
and
other impediments, which makes it peculiarly hazardous.
The design of this
publication, as already stated, is to prevent the unsuspecting from being
deceived by a set of unprincipled characters.
NORMAN KIBBE, Augusta,
ELIAS R. COOK,
GARRADUS NOBLE, WM. HASTINGS, Geneva; DAVID BARBER, Onondaga.
Olean, May 3, 1819.
Above article submitted by Richard Palmer
from The Geneva,NY Gazette) |
to: >"Remembering
the Genesee Valley Canal"
or, to:
Water Transportation of Allegany Co,NY
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