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Historical Summaries
1]
(Excerpt from “Allegany County and its
people : a centennial memorial history of Allegany County, New York Alfred,
N.Y.: W.A. Fergusson & Co., 1896, 984 pgs.” –John S. Minard)
The town of
Allen
, named in honor of the hero of
Ticonderoga
, was formed from Angelica,
Jan. 31, 1823
. Its population in 1860 was 991; in
1870, 794; in 1880, 818; in 1890, 717; in 1892, 728.
As created Allen comprised
all of township five, range two, of Morris Reserve, the west half of township
five, range one, of same tract, and in addition, the six northeast lots of the
last mentioned township (present Birdsall).
By act of
May 4, 1829
, the Birdsall part was set off and since that time the town has remained as now
defined, being township five, range two, and has an area of 22,764 acres.
It was embraced in the 100,000 acre Church Tract, and settlement was
begun before the subdivision of the town was made, which was done in the fall of
1810 or spring of 1811 by Major Moses Van Campen.
Its surface is generally hilly upland, broken into ridges by Baker’s,
Wigwam,
Plum
and Rush creeks. The hills in some
cases reaching an altitude of 600 or 700 feet above the lowest valleys.
The soil is in most part clayey, underlaid with hardpan, while gravelly
loam is shown in some of the valleys. Beech,
maple, basswood, elm, pine, hemlock, oak and cherry were the leading kinds of
timber found by the first white visitors.
Local historians without exception have ascribed to James Wilson, who
emigrated from
Ireland
in 1804, the honor of making the first settlement in this town in 1806.
While this may be true as to the fact of actual settlement, it is quite
possible that Robert Barr preceded him in his advent into this wilderness, as
Major VanCampen, in his notes of lot 61, begins at “a cherry post standing in
a lot of land surveyed for Robert Barr the 12th day of August,
1805,” which post stood on the south line of the township.
This was, in all probability, the first piece of land surveyed for
anybody in the town of Allen, whether to be occupied or not.
Mr. Wilson had stopped for a short time at
Geneva
and Angelica, but in 1806 “took up” the farm on Baker’s creek, which he
cleared up and upon which he spent the remainder of his life.
His son, the late Col. William Wilson, so well and favorably known by our
county people, achieved an enviable position in town and county, becoming a
member of the legislature, where he demonstrated his fitness for the position
and served his constituents faithfully. It
is said he was the first white child born in Allen, making his appearance
Jan. 10, 1810
. Joseph G. Wilson, another son of
James, is still living on the state road, and is postmaster at the
State Road
postoffice. This postoffice was
established in March, 1881, with Jesse L. Whiteman, postmaster.”
2] (Excerpt from “History of
Allegany County, N.Y. : New York:
F.W. Beers, 1879, 444 pgs.)
P.151:
“---Not long after the advent of Wilson, Robert Barr settled on
Baker’s creek in the south part of the town; and a little later came Archibald
Taylor, an Irishman, who had lived in New York for a time, and who settled on
lot number 54, in the southeast part of the town.
Probably the next settler was Robert McBride.
Few settlers came in during the succeeding few years.
Among those who found a home in the town during the period were Nehemiah,
John, Ichabod, Isaac, Joseph and Joshua Peavy, who settled on the road which
afterward came to be known by their name, in the southwest part of the town,
about 1815. Eleazer Scott and his
sons Friend, Hiram, Simon and William came in the next year from
Watertown
, Litchfield county,
Conn.
, and located east of the center of the town.
The Teller and McCoon families were early settlers.
Erastus Walker came with a span of horses and a wagon in 1817, from
Vermont
, and took up a farm on lot number 62, where he lived during life.
About the same time two men named Lefever, and Otto and Chester Roach,
whose name often appears on the town records at a later day, settled at the
Centre, and widow Armstrong near the southern boundary.
She came from Angelica, where she had previously located.
In 1820 George Glover, from
Ontario
county, settled in the southwest part, and Daniel Baldwin on the Otto farm the
same year or the next.
In December 1822, Joseph Jennings, from
Bristol
county, Mass, settled in the southern part, on the farm now occupied by his
son. He was a resident there till
his death. Other settlers from the
“
Old
Bay
State
,” Robert, Joseph and Jonathan Walker, located in the eastern part during the
same year. In 1824 Asher Miner and
Martin Miner, the latter from
Norfolk
,
Conn.
, came to Allen, the former locating in the southwest part of the town, and the
latter a little east of the center. The
first saw-mill on Wigwam creek was build by Asher Miner in 1825.
The Willison brothers (James and Samuel) located on lot number 48 in
1826, and James, John, Robert, George and William Burthwick, with their mother
and three sisters, from
Genoa
, Cayuga county, in the western part of the town.
Joshua Smith, also from Cayuga county, settled near the Burthwicks during
the same year. He took up a farm and
cleared and improved it, and lived on it during the remainder of
his life. At the date of his
settlement there was scarcely a road in the western part of Allen.
In 1827 Andrew Clark, from Sullivan county, located north of the center,
and Abram Post moved in from Angelica about the same time and settled in the
southeast part. He was a son of
Abram Post, who settled in Angelica early in the century, when Abram, jr., was
only a year old. John Hooker and his
brother Ruel, also from Angelica, located west of the center about the same
time; and Ege Pierson moved in north of the center perhaps a little earlier.
Several settlers moved in during 1828, among whom were Austin Manley and
Henry Light, from Cayuga county, in the southeastern part; Henry Burt, from
Springfield
, Mass, on lot number 35; Thomas Cole and Robert K. King, from Steuben county,
the former on lot number 33 and the latter on a farm in the western part, and
Jared Atwater, Uriah Cook and Solomon Woodworth, from Cato, Cayuga county, all
in the western part, Atwater locating on lot number 34 and Woodworth lot number
18. Cole came the 2nd of
May. King was from the town of
Pultney
. In 1829 Conrad Benjamin, from
Sandisfield,
Berkshire
county, Mass, settled a little east of the center.
A few months later he moved into the northeast part of the town and took
up the farm he has since occupied. James
Crandall, from Trumansburgh, Tompkins county, settled at the Centre in 1832.
A man named Cole, or Cowle, was an early settler on lot number 41.
How long he remained we are unable to state.
The property afterwards passed into the hands of another and a later new
comer named Worth, who allowed the place to “go back into the office.”
When David C. Grummon moved into Allen, in 1851, from Hume, where he had
settled previously, and bought the farm of Philip Church, he found that a
clearing of about one hundred acres had been made, which was then grown up to
brush. An old log house that had
once served as a dwelling was so dilapidated as to be unfit for occupation.
At the present (1879) there are no hotels or stores within the borders of
the town. The inhabitants are
essentially an agricultural community and number among them neither a doctor,
lawyer, or preacher; for though the
interests of Christianity are zealously guarded and advanced, there are no
resident pastors. There are two
post-offices in the town, Allen and Allen Centre, the latter being a small
settlement, centrally located containing two churches and eight or ten houses.
There is another small settlement on the north border of the town, near
the western boundary, at the Botsford saw-mill.”
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