Mary Nye drew
her bench closer to the doorway to catch the late morning light.
The scent of freshly baked bread wafted through the cabin, and
a pot of rabbit stew bubbled in the iron kettle suspended over
the fire. If she hurried, she had time to finish the dress she
planned to wear to the Fourth of July celebration tomorrow at
the Chapmans' home. Timothy wouldn’t come for the midday
meal for at least an hour.
She gathered
up the folds of bright calico cloth she’d brought from their
home in the east and smoothed down the wrinkles. She threaded
a needle, fished a hand-carved wooden thimble from her sewing
basket and began to stitch the sleeve. Her needle glinted in the
sunlight as it dipped in and out of the cloth. Every so often,
Mary stopped and looked around the room. The men made a good job
of it, chinking the logs, hanging a sturdy door. One day she’d
have a frame house, with lace curtains stirring in the breeze
at the windows, she thought dreamily as she knotted the thread
close to the cloth and bit off the extra.
There might
be dancing, like Polly Cook’s wedding last month, when the
music lasted well into moonrise, and many people made their way
home by torchlight. She smiled and pushed the needle faster through
the fabric, enjoying the sound of the little clicks when it bumped
the thimble.
Independence
Day 1819 dawned hot and bright, and the Nyes rushed through their
chores. Mary’s dress swirled around her ankles as she walked
beside her husband on the dirt path to Chapmans’ homestead.
She waved to the other wives standing near the cook fires and
made her way over, putting her basket of bread on one of the plank
tables. The women stood in the shade and fanned themselves.
“They’re
going to talk forever,” grumbled Jane Morton, hoisting her
1-year-old daughter, Fanny, to her hip, as the men traded news
of progress on the organization of the township.
Mary smiled
and held her hands out to Fanny. “Maybe,” she said,
“but I see Richard Marshal brought his fiddle. We’ll
be dancing after the meal.”
Jane sniffed.
“Yes, but see there, the whiskey’s deep in that jug.”
The women clapped
when Marshal finally tucked the fiddle under his chin and set
the bow on the strings. The notes quavered and skipped as he drew
the notes out. He paused between numbers to raise his cup, and
the music grew more interesting after each swallow.
“Richard,
why don’t you come down heavier on the bass?” George
Collier shouted over the crowd.
“I can’t
do it, Collier; and danged if you can, either, unless you do it
with an ax!” Marshal responded, swaying a little bit as
he spoke.
The laughter
continued as the men left politics behind and swapped stories.
Timothy Nye
slapped Hanmer Palmer on the back. “Tell the one about the
“panther.’ ”
Palmer grinned.
They’d heard it before, but the whiskey loosened tongues
and memories, and the men grinned foolishly over their cups as
Palmer recited his adventure. It happened six months after he’d
come to the township, on a fine October day. He set out on foot
to visit Isaac Ford, following the blaze marks cut in the trees
along lot lines.
“But
it got dark before I reached Isaac’s place,” Palmer
said. “I hollered, figuring I was close, but Isaac there”
— Ford lifted his cup in a mock salute — “heard
me, but thought I was some kind of panther. He buttoned himself
into his cabin good and tight, leaving me to fend for myself in
the woods.”
The men snorted
as Palmer finished.
“Let
me tell you, as soon as the sun rose, I headed for home.”
After supper,
families began to head for home, too, as late afternoon stretched
toward nightfall. Some had a cow to milk or animals to feed.
Storytelling
filled the hours of many winter evenings, and settlers kept their
families’ adventures and misadventures alive. Lettie Henry
Ward, born in Westfield before the Civil War, reminisced in a
presentation for the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1936
(History of Medina County, 1948).
“Our
house (like most of the houses in Westfield Centre) was painted
white with green blinds. I remember sitting on the broad board
on top of the front fence to say goodbye to the boy who marched
away to enlist in the Civil War. Some of them never came back.
“I was
especially interested in them because my father had organized
a company and drilled it; he had had military training in Massachusetts,
It was the greatest disappointment of his life that he himself
was not accepted on account of physical ability.
“I recall
what a shock it was to the community when the report of Lincoln’s
assassination reached here. How the men with blanched faces gathered
in the Post Office and store to hear all about it.
Ward also reminded
people of many family-run businesses in the area although she
admitted the growth of the township was “due in great measure
to the continued prosperity of the Ohio Farmers Insurance Company.”
Her own father, J.C. Henry, “made boots and shoes by hand,
almost a lost art nowadays. He went to Akron to select his leathers,
and I well remember how the beautiful colors of the fine morocco
leathers, used for trimmings, fascinated me. We had to wait until
every one else town was supplied, but the boots and shoes he made
for us were the envy of all the other children.”
She remembered
her own work, drying apples with her brother and sister.
“My sister
Josie and Brother Sammie pared them on apple paring machines.
Mother cored and sliced them, two at a time, on the corer which
worked with a foot lever, and my job was to look over the ‘snits’
and cut out all bad spots.
“We had
a kiln with stove and sliding racks. My father tended the kiln,
as it was near his shop. When dried, the apples were stored in
a vacant room — piled on the floor — sometimes reaching
to the ceiling. Here the merchants came to inspect and buy them.”
Children, Ward
wrote, learned a trade early, “especially necessary if they
contemplated pioneering in Ohio or frontier life anywhere.”
She held up her grandfather Henry’s family as an example,
with men and women learning shoemaking, farming, teaching, mercantile
business practices, tailoring and dressmaking.
Although most
women knew how to handle needle and thread, it also was the age
of Godey’s Ladies Book and Petersons, and Clara Ellis held
court in her LeRoy millinery and dress-making shop. Ellis was
clever, Ward recalled, at taking styles from those fashion books.
“We could
wear the same straw hat year after year. Mrs. Ellis would sew
the straw over, bleach it with burning brimstone and reshape on
a plaster of Paris hat block, which had to be replaced with a
new block every season to keep up with the styles.”
No homestead
was complete without a kitchen garden, and it was not uncommon
for at least one woman in the settlement to raise herbs as well,
like Grandmother Daniels. She “made a study of the native
plants and herbs as to their medicinal values so she could doctor
her own family or help a neighbor who was ill. A letter from Mariam
Daniels Gaylord states ‘she very early won the good will
of the Indians by her unfailing kindness to them. She taught them
many things, such as how to make maple syrup, and they exchanged
knowledge about different herbs. She set apart about three acres
of land with a creek running thru (sic) it, for an herb garden.
The Indians would bring choice plants and set them out for her.
This garden I have seen many times and it was in existence until
recently.’ ”
To close her
wanderings through the past and stories of grandmothers smoking
small clay pipes and using snuff, Ward quoted a poem: “Let
him who will, go wander/To distant towns to live,/Of some things
I am fonder/Than all they have to give./The gold of distant places/Could
not repay me quite/For those familiar faces/That keep the home-town
bright.”
Written
by: Judy A. Totts of the Medina County Gazette, April 3, 2007