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The Beginning, the Settlement of Ticonderoga

Early Mills along the Upper Falls – Milbert Print Circa 1830s

December 6, 1767

Dear Brother,

I must inform you of the melancholy death of my Brother John.  He was crossing from Fort George (Fort William Henry) the 25th of November with Hall.  They set out from Fort George at 12 o’clock and encountered a fierce wind until they got above the narrows (Lake George) when they perceived a squall arising.  My brother ordered Hall to down sail which he did and then turned for an island which was at a short distance but before they could reach it the boat filled with water and perceiving that they were sinking they endeavored to make their escape but my Brother was entangled with a rope about his body with the sheep, as we suppose and was drowned.  Hall made his escape to the island.  We set out after them Saturday night and found them on Sunday and Monday at 4 o’clock in the afternoon.  Hall had been upon the island three days and four nights.  One horse, six cows and five sheep were saved. He had three wagon loads of goods on board which he had brought from Albany which are most of them lost as far as we can find out.  He had 15 bushels of corn and 30 bushels of turnips which were all lost.  Joseph with his family has returned to the block house.  I should be glad if you would pay us a visit if possible.  My sister desires the favor of one of your sisters to come up and tarry with her this winter, for further particulars inquire of Hall. My duty to parents – love to brothers and sisters and proper regards to friends.

So I remain your loving brother – Nathaniel Stoughton”

(This was the fatal ending of John Stoughton, Ticonderoga’s first settler.)

Background:  The French and Indian War was fought in North American during the mid-1700s.  The principals were England, France and Spain, who at that time were also engaged in wars in other areas of the world.  In North America their interest was primary an economic one, to protect their established colonies.

Like most conflicts this War was costly.  The conflict was scarcely underway when the English king, in order to enlarge the ranks of his army, promised grants of land to each discharged soldier that had faithfully served his enlistment.  Once the War was formally ended by the Treaty of Peace in Paris in 1763, this land grant contract between king and soldier was widely utilized.  (Terms:  Field Officer – 5,000 acres, a Captain – 3,000, Lieutenant 2,000, a non-commissioned officer 200, and a private 50 acres.   Additional stipulations included restrictions for Gold and Silver Mines, large diameter trees suitable for nautical use, settlement of other families, rents, etc.)  Up and down the Lakes Champlain and George valleys many discharged soldiers made application for their land grant entitlement, and many former military men were successful in being award land here.  However, most who were awarded these land grants had no intention to settle down on their grants and quickly sold their claims to land dealers for some “quick cash.” Here in Ticonderoga, there were several British soldiers that made application, and were awarded land grants.  The first three awardees were:  John Stoughton, Roger Kellett and John Kennedy.

Elizabeth Stoughton Wolcott (1766-1805), Daughter of John and Ruth Stoughton
Elizabeth Stoughton Wolcott (1766-1805), Daughter of John and Ruth Stoughton

Roger Kellett, a Lieutenant with the 44th Regiment, was granted 2,000 acres on August 7th, 1764.  On that same day, John Kennedy, another Lieutenant with the 60th Regiment, was also granted 2,000 acres.  On the death of John Kennedy, the patent passed to Henry Kennedy, who sold the 2,000 acres to Abraham P. Lott and Peter T. Curtenius, both New York City merchants and friends of Samuel Deall.  On December 16th, 1767, Lott and Curtenius sold the patent to Deall for 180 pounds sterling.  On July 25th, 1764, Lt. John Stoughton, Independent Company,  was granted 2,000 acres.

John came to Ticonderoga and began his settlement at the old French Landing place near the rapids. In 1765 he brought his wife, Ruth, his brother Joseph and his wife, Martha (Wolcott) and their two children, and his unmarried brother, Nathaniel.

The Stoughton tract was roughly in the form of a trapezoid that today we can identify by starting along the northern boundary of the old downtown business district (excluding approximately 15 acres at the Lower Falls, reserved by the Crown)  south to the top of Mount Defiance and then westerly across the Lake George outlet to Rogers Rock and back in a northerly direction, taking in the easterly edge of the Trout Brook valley.

Later after the death of John Stoughton his lands were purchased by Edward Ellice of England, which for nearly a century restricted a more rapid growth upon his lands.  He and his heirs were not as visionary as Samuel Deall.  Subsequently, Deall built both a saw (1771) and a grist mill (1772) on his land north of the Lower Falls. To assist with his enterprises here in Ticonderoga, Mr. Deall engaged his nephew,  John Arthur,  to be his local agent.

John Arthur was brought over from England in 1763 as an indentured servant but made to feel part of Samuel Deall’s family.  John’s indentured expired in late 1770s and he was paid a wage for his work.  Samuel was a great benefactor to John, and he mentored  him in all aspects of merchant and other business enterprises.  In 1769 John travelled with Samuel to Ticonderoga to give him first-hand knowledge of water based transportation, employing men, and the operation of mills.

Shortly after the war’s end, the British built a sawmill on the site of the old French sawmill, known as the “King’s sawmill,  on the reserved land south of the Lower Falls.  At this point a broad military road was also built, cutting  through the heavy forest to the head of Lake George known at the Landing Place.   This military road was later an important benefit for the early settlers.

During the period between the end of French and Indian War in 1763 and the beginning of the American Revolution in 1776, , Fort Ticonderoga was garrison by the British, but was allowed to deteriorate.   At the fall of the British Fort Ticonderoga in May 1775 to Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold, Samuel Deall’s Ticonderoga enterprises ended.  In 1777, following the Burgoyne invasion and the reoccupation of the fort by the British, the mills were burned and Deall’s New York City operations reduced. He died in March, 1778.  After the Revolution, Deall’s lands in Ticonderoga were restored and the development of farm and timber land was continued by his son, Samuel Deall, Jr., and by John Arthur, who remained acting  agent until his death in 1816.

Early Settlers and Town Development

James Mackintosh lived here from 1766 to 1777.  He ran the tavern, 1766, near the Fort on the Kennedy tract.   Before the Revolution John Kirby lived in the area north of Fort Ticonderoga on Kirby’s Point. (International Paper Co.’s Mill).  During the Revolution he was stationed at Fort George.   On one occasion of returning  home, he was captured by Indians, later rescued by Capt. Fraser and sent to St. Johns. (ref: Rev. Cook)  His family was taken to Canada along with others in 1778 by Sir Guy Carleton, as he retreated from Crown Point.  Mr. Kirby, wife and son returned to Ticonderoga in 1792, after being compensated for their loss during the war.   Later in life he had a large business here and was a Justice of the Peace for over thirty years.  He died in 1830.

Charles  Hay was a wealthy merchant in Montreal before the Revolution.  The British asked him to take up arms against the colonists but he refused to do so. His property was confiscated, and he was sent to prison where he served three years.  He brought suit against the British for false imprisonment.  At the close of the War, he removed to Poughkeepsie for three years and later moved to Fort George.  It was at this time that he engaged one Mr. Nesbit to oversee his interest in the Old King’s Store near the steamboat landing at Fort Ticonderoga.  Mr. Hay, who had an interest in starting a farm here, sent Mr. Nesbit cattle, implements, and grain for the farm, in addition to merchandise for the store.  Mr. Nesbit  was one of our town’s first tradesmen and a most dishonest person.  He sold the goods Mr. Hay had purchased and moved to Vermont where he “lived in defiance of the law.”  Mr. Hay moved his family to the empty Store and opened a hotel. Soon after his move  he was made a Judge and held that position until his death.

It was here, at the Old King’s Store”  that elections were first held for the Town of Crown Point, which then embraced Ticonderoga, Moriah, Westport, Elizabethtown, Schroon, Minerva, Newcomb, North Hudson and a part of Keene.  The first town meeting was held in December, 1788.   Old King’s Store was built in 1755 by the same French builders that constructed Fort Carillon (Ticonderoga).  It was torn down in the mid 1850s.

George Tremble, was given the site of the old Deall mills on the north side of the Lower Falls by General Philip Schuyler.  Following the revolution, he  was the first to establish a business at this location by re-building the Deall mills.   Tremble purchased most of the local wheat and marketed the flour; the sawmill output was sold to markets  north and south of the region.   He used the profits from his businesses to accumulate a considerable amount of real estate.   After Tremble died of consumption, the New York State Legislature restored to the Deall heirs their right of title to this land.   Alexander, Tremble’s brother,  sued for the property to no avail and he died around 1818.

Mr. Hetherington was Ticonderoga’s first teacher.  Judge Hay found him in Poughkeepsie.  The school term was usually four months in summer and three in winter. The first schoolhouse in Ticonderoga was reported to be located on the “Tobias place” (ref: Rev. Cook) south-west from the “bloody gallows gate.”  (Today near the Community Worship place, maybe better known to some as near the eastern edge of the paper mills’ old wood yard located south of the basin at the Lower Falls.)  One of these early students was a “black girl” who was part of the Samuel Deall, Jr. family.  Rev. Cook notes that other students, circa 1800,  would not sit on the same seat with her, so she was taken home.

Journal page from Ti’s first teacher – John Hetherington circa 1792
Journal page from Ti’s first teacher – John Hetherington circa 1792

In 1793, Gideon Shattuck, a noted hunter and guide, built a log cabin in Trout Brook Valley.

Isaac Kellogg, born in Winstown, Mass., lived on the east shore of the “Rapids.” Known for his education and ability, he served for several years in the NYS legislature and was a local judge.   Silas Sayre came from Vermont in 1795 and William Skinner came from Connecticut the same year.   Both settled within the “old village” boundaries.   Samuel Cook came from New Milford, Conn., in 1796 and settled near the Lower Village.  Nathan Delano, born in Mass., came from Cornwall, Vermont and settled at the Upper Village.   Isaac Morse settled on a farm in the south part of town.  Two years latter, William Coats and John B. Covell came from downstate New York.  James Covell came from Vermont and William Canfield came from the northern part of the Essex County.

John Porter had a blacksmith shop at this time and Levi Cole established a blacksmith at the same time at the Upper Village.   Robert Hammond came in town about this time and settled on the lake shore north of the “old village.”  He soon was followed by Thomas Rogers who settled near Hammond. Captain Elijah Bailey settled at the Upper Village.  Levi Thompson came from down state NY and Nimrod Rich came from Vermont in 1799.

Early Mills along the Upper Falls – Milbert Print Circa 1830s
Early Mills along the Upper Falls – Milbert Print Circa 1830s

Francis Arthur came from Dutchess County, NY in 1800 and settled near the lake. Alexander Clark came from downstate NY and cleared a farm in the town.

Ethenlinda Deall returned from England in 1801 and occupied some of the land formerly owned by her husband Samuel.  The same year George Thompson and Rufus Wood came from downstate NY.   Talman Spicer came from NY and Abel More came from New Hampshire and engaged in farming.  The next year in 1803, John S. Burt came from Mass.  In 1801 George Grant came from NJ.   In 1805 Charles Doolittle came from VT as well as Augustus Moses and William ClarkJeremiah Burnett came from Sullivan County, NY and George Ballou came from the northern part of Essex County.

Benjamin Burt settled at what is now Streetroad and started the first tannery in the town.  At this time Noble Ives had a shoe shop, Judge Kellogg ran a general store with the necessities of that time and William Wilson operated the Inn in village.   He later began a building contracting business.

In 1808, John Arthur erected a woolen factory at the north side of the Lower Falls, and in 1809 he started a store in the Tefft’s Hotel.  The first carding machine was set up John Porter.  In 1809 Paul Harvey built vats and a tannery at the Upper Village and continued for about three years until 1812.  At that time, he sold the tannery to S. Morse.  Later Harvey took in Augustus Moses as a partner and started another tannery in the Trout Brook Valley.  Kelly and Douglas started a store at the Upper Falls.

From the center of the Essex County came Bradford Catlin and Moses Canfield and Aaron Wright came from Mass.

In 1814, S. A. Gibson, maybe the first lawyer, settled at Alexandria (Upper Village.) The same year James Tefft came from Washington Co. and established a cloth dressing business which he continued for twelve years.  Gabriel Dolbeck came from Canada and settled in the western part of the town.

Black lead (graphite) was discovered in 1815. The first to mine the lead were William Stewart & Sons – they continued in the business until 1840.  Apollos Skinner was in the business for a decade soon after the Stewarts.  Clark P. Ives and W.A.G. Arthur also engaged in the lead business, but subsequently separated into two companies, Ives being in the Alexandria section of town and Arthur at the Lower Village.

There were no churches between 1800 and 1809.  Residence would go to Vermont, invited a minister from Vermont here, or attending meetings with traveling missionaries. There were also “reading meetings” where a deacon or some other active member of the congregation led those in attendance from a printed sermon.   The Congregational Society was organized in 1809, but it was ten years later before an edifice was built.  In the meantime, services were held in schools and homes.  The Methodist Episcopal Society was started in 1811 and for many years was a part of a circuit composed  of Crown Point, Moriah, etc.

A public house was opened at the Upper Falls by Prince Taylor, an African-American.  A full account of Prince Taylor’s life, as far as it is known, was recounted by Amy Godine in the Jan/Feb 2000 issue of Adirondack Life and was republished in Adirondack Life in 2021: https://www.adirondacklife.com/2021/11/01/taylor-tankard-and-king/.

In the village Abel Potter opened a hotel, the largest yet build in the town and with the most up-to-date ballroom in Northern New York.

10/31/17 wgd
#TiconderogaNYhistory