XXVII
Perry Township
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Organization of the Township – The Pioneers – Their Work and their
Hardships – Early Roads and Primitive Manufactures – The Pioneer Schools –
Truby’s Mill – The Borough of Queenstown.
Perry Township was formerly a part of Sugar Creek. In 1845 it was organized as
Parry, with the following limits: Brady’s Bend township on the south; Butler
county on the west and the Allegheny river on the east, thus including all
that part of the county lying north of Brady’s Bend township. In 1870 that
portion lying north of Bear Creek was taken from Perry and erected into a
township by the name of Hovey. The land lying west of the Allegheny river in
the northern part of this county, on account of its rugged and hilly
character, was little sought by the pioneers of Western Pennsylvania.
consequently few settlements were made within the territory of Perry township
until after other portions of the county had become considerably populated.
The progress of settlement and improvement was very slow, and this part of the
county remained the favorite hunting-grounds of the early settlers and the
wandering Indians many years after the encroaching population had banished
game from the surrounding neighborhoods.
A few courageous pioneers located in this township as early as 1796, and began
the arduous task of subduing its stubborn soil. They subsisted largely upon
game at first; but as years went by their strong arms and axes made
perceptible inroads upon the forests, and here and there small fields appeared
to brighten the monotonous aspect of the surrounding wilderness.
William Love was among the first settlers. He located on a 400-acre tract and
made a small improvement, for which he received a deed for the land from its
owner, Charles Campbell. Charles, James, Robert and Samuel Campbell each owned
a tract of 400 acres. The land lay in a body, and was settled by Love, Truby
and others. Love sold his right to the land to John Binkerd, who came to this
township about 1798. Binkerd was a native of Virginia, who moved from Eastern
Pennsylvania to Butler county, and thence with his father and mother to the
tract above mentioned. The original farm is now mainly owned by his sons,
Isaac and John K. Binkerd. Another son, Dr. A. D. Binkerd, now of Cincinnati,
Ohio, is well known in this county, having practiced medicine in Parker
several years, besides being long identified with t he interests of Perry
township.
Binkerd was of German descent, as were most of his neighbors. Chistophel Truby,
best known as “Stophel” Truby, settled upon an adjoining tract, and
owned the land which is now the Walley and George farms. He once offered to
sell “Dogwood flat”, containing over 200 acres, for John Binkerd’s
small black horse, but the offer was declined. After some years Truby sold his
property here and moved to Catfish, where he died. He left no children.
Jacob Truby, a brother of Stophel, was likewise an early settler and lived
upon the farm now belonging to John Williamson. He reared a large family. Four
of his daughters, Mrs. Rambaugh, Mrs. Seibert, Mrs. Barger and Mrs. Walley,
still reside in the neighborhood.
William Parker* built the first gristmill in this part of the county. It stood
on Bear creek, nearly a mile from its mouth. A few years later Stophel Truby’s
log mill was erected.
These mills proved a great convenience to the settlers, who, prior to their
erection, had depended for flour and meal either upon the few mills run by
horse-power then in the county, or else upon the result of long journeys on
horseback to the distant mills of Westmoreland county. Mr. Isaac Steele states
that Truby’s mill, occupying the site of Barnet Fletcher’s present mill on
Binkerd’s run, was erected by William Love some years after the arrival of the
first settlers.
About the year 1797 Isaac Steele came from Westmoreland county and took up a
tract of land in the woods of this township. He brought all of his goods and
his family (consisting of his wife and two children) by means of two horses
and packsaddles. Michael Shakeley had settled on a tract in the edge of Butler
county a few years before and had made a small improvement which Steele had
agreed to purchase. But when the later arrived he found that Shakeley had
changed his mind, concluding that the price agreed upon was too little. The
Steele family sought admission to the house, which was refused. Shakeley was
inside and had the door fastened. Steele found a mallet and broke in the door.
A consultation ensued, during which Shakeley persuaded Steele to settle upon
another tract. Mr. Steele resided in this township until his death, and reared
eight children, two of whom are still living – Isaac and Elizabeth (Hyle).
Isaac Steele, born in 1805 is the oldest native resident of this township, and
has a vivid recollection of the experiences of pioneer life. Despite his
advanced age he proved himself too smart for a gang of burglars who, a few
years ago, broke into his house and sought to rob him of a large sum of money.
Mr. Steele fought them single-handed until the neighbors were summoned and
arrived, and the robbers fled without having accomplished their purpose.
The early settlers found game abundant, and very little hunting enabled them
to keep a constant supply of fresh meat on hand. Grain food was not so easily
procured. The farmer’s supple of wheat and flour was often exhausted before
harvest-time; and in such cases wheat was cut while in the milk, and boiled,
making a very palatable and wholesome food. Salt was a valuable commodity and
very scarce. The settlers were obliged to go to the eastern counties to obtain
it. When a man made a trip “east of the mountains”, or to Pittsburgh
or Westmoreland county, he went literally loaded with errands, generally
taking several packhorses along to bring back supplies.
Cabins were made without nails being used in any part of the structure. The
principal implement employed in constructing them was the ax. With this tool
the timbers for walls, floors and doors were fashioned. A saw and a drawshave
shaped the shingles for the roof. When the weight-poles had been adjusted and
the open spaces between the logs forming the walls carefully chinked with mud,
the cabin was warm and comfortable. Chimneys of sticks and mud, fireplaces of
stone and mortar, greased paper in place of windows added the finishing
touches to the dwelling. Rude benches served as chairs and tables, and troughs
hewed from logs largely took the place of pans, pails, tubs and other kitchen
vessels.
On the farm wooden plows were used after one or two crops had been planted
with the hoe and mattock. The first scythes were known as the “Dutch
scythes” and were of soft material. They were sharpened by means of a
hammer and an anvil. when clearing, it was customary to burn the brush at
night. As soon as the fires were lighted the wolves set up their mournful
howls from every hilltop and valley, nor did they cease as long as the brush
continued burning. Such were some of the accompaniments of pioneer life.
George Knox, whose descendants are very numerous in Armstrong and Butler
counties, was one of the earliest pioneers of old Sugar Creek township. He had
one of the first orchards in the new settlement and visitors came many miles
to test the quality of his fruit. Not infrequently were these visits made
without the knowledge or consent of the proprietor of the orchard. He
manufactured apple and peach brandy, which articles were in great demand.
Thomas Miller and Jacob Edinburg were the first settlers at Miller’s eddy. Dr.
Hovey was the proprietor of considerable land in that neighborhood.
About 1808 Jonathan Hyle came from Westmoreland county with his family and
located on land adjoining the Steele tract. The family lived seven weeks in a
wagon while a cabin was being erected.
In early days every cabin was a factory where clothing was manufactured. Busy
hands kept the spinning-wheel and loom buzzing and slamming early and late. In
almost every household there were a large number of mouths to feed and bodies
to clothe. Shoes were used sparingly by the lucky few who possessed them, for
leather was high and money scarce. Often girls and women could be seen walking
to church barefooted, carrying shoes and stockings, which they put on when
near the house. Tow and linen, buckskin and similar home-made goods formed the
clothing worn by males of all ages. The girls’ best dresses were frequently
spun, woven, dyed, cut and made by the wearers. An old resident remarks:
“The girls were just as pretty in those days as they are now, but could
one of our fashionably-dressed belles have stepped among them, some might have
gone wild with envy and excitement”.
All the travel of the settlers was performed on foot or on horseback. Wagons
were almost unknown within the memory of men now living, while carriages are a
comparatively modern innovation. As in most new settlements, the first lines
of travel were paths marked by blazed trees. Afterward trees and underbrush
were cut away, and some of the principal routes of travel were converted into
highways. There is, however, scarcely a rood in the township that follow its
course as originally traced. Thoroughfares were built at the cost of a great
expenditure of time and labor.
John Beatty and Daniel Revere were among the early settlers of this township,
and resided here until their deaths. Gideon Gibson, near the river, was an
early settler and had a fine farm.
Henry Byers located in this township about fifty years ago. Samuel and William
Crawford and David Hutchison are also among the oldest residents.
James Steele and John Hyle were the noted hunters of early years. A man named
Foster was the first settler on the farm afterward owned by David White. White
erected a frame house, which was perhaps the first in the township. No later
than 1845 nearly everybody lived in log houses.
The oil developments in this township since 1870 have produced many changes.
Many old residents disposed of their farms and moved away. Others remained,
and received in one year such incomes as the results of scores of years of
labor in tilling the soil had not produced. The little oil village of Criswell
sprang up on the farms of James A. Parker and Sidney Crawford. All the wells
in that vicinity are fourth sand-wells, and two of them were very large. A few
are still producing, though the yield is small.
In 1880 the population of Perry township was 1,309. The oil business largely
increased the number of inhabitants.
Schools
Perry township now contains six schoolhouses, and the schools are generally
well conducted. At Miller’s eddy there is a school building which is also used
as a church, and is free for all religious denominations, having been
specially constructed for the double purpose of affording educational and
religious privileges.
Before the free school system was inaugurated, the schoolhouses of the
township were few and far apart. Many of the children of the pioneers attended
schools in Butler county, and were taught by Archibald Kelly, “Dominie”
Cook, Thomas McCleary, and others of the “old masters”.
One of the earliest schoolhouses stood on the farm of James Hunter, near
Queenstown. Hunter was the teacher. He was jovial, good-natured and popular.
Edward Jennings was an early teacher at the Peters schoolhouse. He taught
several years. At noon he often gave a very long recess that he might go to
Jacob Peters= distillery and fortify himself with whisky for the remaining
duties of the day. Any man who could read and write, and possessed a very
slight knowledge of arithmetic, was a competent teacher in those days.
Queenstown
The borough of Queenstown was incorporated in 1858. The town was named after
John Queen, who located in the place in 1848. At that date the only persons
residing within the present limits of the borough were Daniel Day and
Abraham Teegard and their families. Teegard, now deceased, was a farmer. Day
is now a resident of East Brady. While he resided at Queenstown, he worked
for the Brady’s Bend Iron Company, building log houses for employes, and
performing other kinds of work.The first houses built in the place were the log buildings of Day and
Teegard. Day’s cabin stood on a six-acre lot, afterward owned by Rev. David
R. Davis. Teegard’s house stood where Edward Jennings now lives. No regular
survey of lots was ever made, but pieces of land were sold to purchasers as
they were wanted, by J. Queen, R. Jennings and Daniel Day, who owned the
land now comprised in the borough. These lots were taken up by the employes
of the Brady’s Bend Iron Works, and in a few years Queenstown became a small
but flourishing village.The first store was established by R. Jennings, in 1851. It stood a short
distance north of his present place of business. The second store was
started in 1866, by John Queen, who still continues the mercantile business.
When he first came to the place, Mr. Queen followed carpentry and building.
The third store was established also in 1866 by M. H. J. Meldron. Mr.
Meldron died in 1867, and the business has since been conducted by his
brother, William J. Meldron. The stores receive custom from a wide extent of
the country, and do a much larger business than is usual in small places.The first hotel in Queenstown was opened by James Morely, in 1852.
Subsequently it was conducted by Richard Meldron, Jr., then by Thomas
Jennings. Mrs. Mitchell, daughter of Thomas Jennings, is the present
proprietor.In 1853, a gristmill, run by steam power, was erected by J. Queen, R.
Jennings and Daniel Evans, who operated it until 1866 under the firm name of
Queen & Co. J.L. Meldron is the present owner.The first blacksmith in Queenstown was Giles Morgan, who began business soon
after the settlement of the place.Oil production, while it did not greatly increase the population of
Queenstown, materially aided its business interests. The Armstrong well, on
the Meldron farm, was the first producing well struck in the neighborhood.
This well began flowing April 17, 1870. It caught fire and burned three or
four days. Good judges estimated the first day’s flow at one thousand
barrels. Other wells were soon completed in the vicinity of Queenstown, some
of which are still producing. In 1872, Chas. Phillips began manufacturing
all kinds of oil producers’ implements at Queenstown. He employed from eight
to ten men, and carried on a very successful business until 1881, when he
moved away.The first schoolhouse was erected soon after the borough was incorporated,
and continued to be used until 1876, when the present school building took
its place. The new schoolhouse was erected partly by subscription and partly
by taxation. It is two stories in highth. The lower story is for school
purposes, and the upper part as a place for public worship. There are no
churches in the place except for the Catholic church, erected in 1845, was
occupied until 1864, when its congregation united with churches more
conveniently situated.Queenstown is situated on a small tributary of Sugar creek. The southern
limit of the borough is the northern line of Brady’s Bend township. In 1860,
the population was 127; in 1880, 217.___________________ *See history of Parker City.
Source: Page(s) 571-574, History of Armstrong County,
Pennsylvania by Robert Walker Smith, Esq. Chicago: Waterman, Watkins &
Co., 1883.
Transcribed December 2000 by Bonita O’Connell for the Armstrong County Smith
Project.
Contributed by Bonita O’Connell for use by the Armstrong County Genealogy
Project (http://www.pa-roots.com/armstrong/)Armstrong County Genealogy Project Notice:
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