This first week of summer has brought some wonderful weather to our area. The summer folks who gather around our many lakes and reservoirs have arrived and camp cleaning and summer dinning are evident in the area near the ponds, lakes and reservoirs. From Leland's Ponds in the east to Hatch Lake in the west the Town of Eaton still sparkles in the summer sun!
The history of these bodies of water are an interesting reminder of what was accomplished by men who did not have earth moving equipment... only rudimentary tools and horses. Some of these are a marvel when you think about the years they were engineered and the success of the idea of a canal feeder and its feeders materialized. One such pond, which was just that a pond, was expanded to be one of the most beautiful summer get-a-ways for people....in the old days it was called Camp's Pond and today we call it Hatch's Lake. Have been a bit under the weather this week but figured you might enjoy a trip into history!
Camps’ Pond
Today’s Hatch’s Lake, in the corner of the Town of Eaton,
once fed the historic Chenango Canal but dates its original name, Camp’s Pond,
back to the late 1790s.
Dr. Abner Camp was an early resident of what he named Camp’s
Hill, a man of great humor and interest in the local community. Tales of
his adventures hunting and with his efforts to stop the local Native Americans
from peering into his cabin at all hours still exist in the area. He once
set about to scare the local intruders by threatening to raise a company of men
to run them off after they threatened a war party to get even with him.
He won when he and two other men shouted about like a troop of men and put a
bullet over the head of a sleeping old Indian, scaring him almost to
death. The man ran away back to his village thinking a whole troop of men
was after him.
Camp’s Pond gave way to Hatch’s Pond when Peter Hatch took
the property over in the early 1800s. By 1833, and the opening of the
Chenango Canal, the pond was enlarged as part of the feeder system of canal
reservoirs and is today named Hatch Lake.
At one point, the lake’s outlet at the southwestern end was
dammed so that the water would no longer flow to the south over the Tioughnioga
River and instead would flow to another man-made reservoir, Bradley Brook
Reservoir.
Today, the level of the lake and its outlet are controlled
and summer camps dot the shores, a great fisherman’s paradise. This part
of the Chenango Canal’s feeder system still feeds the Erie Canal far to the
north, at its end starts a man-made reservoir called Bradley Brook. Bradley Brook Reservoir, constructed also in
1835 and '36, covers an area of 134 acres.
Our summer Lecture series is ongoing with a lecture on Muller Hill and its mysterious owner set for Wednesday July 18th at 7pm. Refreshments to purchase include ice cream, pies and goodies, all to benefit the Old Town of Eaton Museum. The speaker is Back Street Mary, former Madison County Historian.
Summer has brought some wonderful hot weather to our area. The summer folks who gather around our many lakes and reservoirs have arrived near the ponds, lakes and reservoirs. From Leland's Ponds in the east to Hatch Lake in the west the Town of Eaton still sparkles in the summer sun!
The history of these bodies of water are an interesting reminder of what was accomplished by men who did not have earth moving equipment... only rudimentary tools and horses. Some of these are a marvel when you think about the years they were engineered and the success of the idea of a canal feeder and its feeders materialized. One such pond, which was just that a pond, was expanded to be one of the most beautiful summer get-a-ways for people....in the old days it was called Camp's Pond and today we call it Hatch's Lake. Have been a bit under the weather this week but figured you might enjoy a trip into history!
Camps’ Pond
Today’s Hatch’s Lake, in the corner of the Town of Eaton,
once fed the historic Chenango Canal but dates its original name, Camp’s Pond,
back to the late 1790s.
Dr. Abner Camp was an early resident of what he named Camp’s
Hill, a man of great humor and interest in the local community. Tales of
his adventures hunting and with his efforts to stop the local Native Americans
from peering into his cabin at all hours still exist in the area. He once
set about to scare the local intruders by threatening to raise a company of men
to run them off after they threatened a war party to get even with him.
He won when he and two other men shouted about like a troop of men and put a
bullet over the head of a sleeping old Indian, scaring him almost to
death. The man ran away back to his village thinking a whole troop of men
was after him.
Camp’s Pond gave way to Hatch’s Pond when Peter Hatch took
the property over in the early 1800s. By 1833, and the opening of the
Chenango Canal, the pond was enlarged as part of the feeder system of canal
reservoirs and is today named Hatch’s Lake.
At one point, the lake’s outlet at the southwestern end was
dammed so that the water would no longer flow to the south over the Tioughnioga
River and instead would flow to another man-made reservoir, Bradley Brook
Reservoir.
Today, the level of the lake and its outlet are controlled
and summer camps dot the shores, a great fisherman’s paradise. This part
of the Chenango Canal’s feeder system still feeds the Erie Canal far to the
north, at its end starts a man-made reservoir called Bradley Brook. Bradley Brook Reservoir, constructed also in
1835 and '36, covers an area of 134 acres.
It was another busy week down
here in “Old Eaton”, events take time to set up and unfortunately time to take
down and end.I thought I would give a
few more thank you's although I cannot possibly thank everyone.A special thanks to a good friend of our events
Tommy Hoe…entertainment always a fun thing on a hot afternoon.Next year we might expand on this…could be
fun!
Morse House
Thank you to the many bakers
who contributed…yes many people cranked out the bake goods…Michele Kelly, Barb
Keough, Cathy Nagle, Lyle and Nancy Warren, Pat Utter, Jen Caloia, Penny Caloia
Mecer, Judi and Steve Goodfriend, Judy Oplinger and anyone I have
forgotten….thank you!
I had a great response from
the article on the Skaneateles Turnpike and the Morse land office so I dug out
the American Building Survey of Historic House in America and had Barb Keough
type parts of it up for you.Then I took
pictures contained in our Old Town of Eaton Museum Archives and made the video
that is at the bottom of the article.I
hope you enjoy it and pass this on to everyone to help our little museum and
perhaps spurn restoration of this historic landmark. Nextto that video will be a video we have done of
what it looks like today in June of 2016
Land Office
The Stone Morse house dates
to 1802 when it was built by Joseph and Eunice Bigelow Morse who came to Eaton
(Log City) from Sherburne, Mass. in 1796. At Joseph’s death the house passed by
will in 1819 to Ellis Morse his eldest son.
In 1869 Ellis Morse died
leaving it to his second wife, Adaline Bagg Morse, and his children by both
wives.All the children quitclaimed to
Adaline at this time. 1874 in went from Adaline Bagg Morse by will to all
living children of both wives.So Jane
Morse, the daughter of Ellis and Lora Ayres Morse, the only unmarried child
living, occupied the house until her death in 1908.
Then in 1923 on October 13,
Adaline Morse Mott, daughter of Walter Morse, who was a son of Ellis, became
sole owner as all possible heirs quitclaimed and the deed was recorded.In December 7, 1923 by deed, Walter Webster
Mott and Rowena Mott, children of Adaline Morse Mott became joint owners. In
1946 by deed, the house passed from Rowena Mott to Walter Webster Mott and his
wife, Josephine Holcombe Mott. They became the owners who in 1963 also became
the occupants.The house was vacant from
1908 to 1946, and then only occupied on vacations and weekends until 1963.
Over the years the house
changed from a one-story house with outside wall fireplaces to the structure we
see today.The main alterations coming
in 1846, when Joseph’s oldest son, Ellis Morse, who had inherited the “home
place” from his father, remodeled the house.In a letter, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Mott, written April 29, 1846, by
Adaline (Ellis’ wife) to her “Aunt Dana” in Princeton, Massachusetts, we can
get a glimpse of that work.
Adeline wrote, “We are now on the eve of great changes.Mr. Morse proposes… to make alterations on
the house, to tear out chimneys and take down the battlements and finish with a
cornice, remove the bedroom from the east end of the house to the west end and
have folding doors between the two rooms on the south side, a piazza on the
east end with four large columns…. (He) is expecting something like thirty men
in less than a month from now and designs to prosecute with vigor until
finished…”
They made all these changes
as planned, and many more also.The
fireplaces and chimneys were removed.A
chimney was built between the northeast room (now parlor) and the southeast (now
library) wall with a fireplace in the southeast room.In it is a Franklin “set in” with a handsome
mantel and hearth.Unusual feature of
the mantelpiece is a panel in the pilaster-like projection at either side of
the entablature under the mantelshelf that contains a picture frame complete
with glass for pictures of “latest dear departed.”A chimney that is now used by the furnace was
built from basement to roof on the west wall of the northwest rooms.The chimneys had stovepipe holes in all rooms
to accommodate the small iron stoves provided in lieu of fireplace.Four of the little stoves still existed at
the time of this survey.
Today the house remains
vacant and neglected not even the lawns are clipped and vines have overgrown
one of the most beautiful colonial homes in Southern Madison County. As
neglected, with a large gash in the roof, is the old land office from 1802 that
sold scripts for the Skaneateles Turnpike and acted as a firehouse for the main
house called then a manor. The old hose reel it contained is gone like all of the
past occupants.
A video of the Stone Morse House when owned by the Morse Family!
This weekend's Memorial Day Event was a success and in reality it was because of a lot of folks who stood up to help and to the many who attended. We had a bunch of winning rafflers and a bunch of different people who baked and it was a true blessing for me to have the co-operation of so many, truly I and the Eaton Museum needed it.
The thank you list is long and I will try to list as more as the month goes on. Here is a short list... a thank you to Jen Caloia, Michele Kelly, Jim Monahan, Barbara Keough, Cathy Nagle, Pat Utter, Steve and Judy Goodfriend, & Judy Oplinger ...our main group who held it together. Also to the press...the O-D, Mid York Weekly, Hi Neighbor, Madison County Courier and my friends at the Oneida Dispatch.
The stone Morse House...the little brick land office
is across from the hour itself on Rt.26.
While at the museum main question I received queries about was about the stone Morse House and the little brick building that is standing with a large gash in its roof. The Morse house is one of the most historic landmarks in southern Madison County and the little brick building....well, it was responsible in part for the communities that sprang up from Monticello and Richfield Springs to Otisco Lake...including West Eaton, Erieville, New WoodStock, Fabius, Tully and so on westward. So I thought I would give you so history on it. The building was the land office from which the Skaneateles Turnpike was mostly formed.
The Skaneateles Turnpike that wended its way through town was
incorporated on April 2, 1805, under the title “The President and Directors
of the Hamilton and Skaneateles Turnpike Company”. The route was to begin
in Richfield, located on the Third Great Western Road (Cherry Valley Turnpike,
today’s Route 20) and continue through Plainfield in Otsego County, through
Hamilton, Eaton, Erieville, New Woodstock and on to the northern part of the
town of Fabius, then through the northern part of the town of Tully to Otisco
Lake’s outlet, and on to Skaneateles. A venture that was no easy feat to
accomplish considering the unbelievably steep hills and the dense forests of
the early 1800s.
Skaneateles Turnpike thru - Eaton
*The original New York State Act set out
the dimensions and nature of the proposed road as follows: “ The road is to
be laid out four rods wide, 26 feet of which to be bedded with wood, stone,
gravel or any other hard substance well compacted together of a sufficient
depth to secure a solid foundation and was to be faced with gravel or stone
pounded or another hard substance in such a manner as to secure an even firm
surface, rising toward the middle by a gradual arch. There was also to be a
side cut that was to be used by sleds.”
The capital stock of the road fund was to be comprised of 4,000
shares of stock at $20 a share. The Act also allowed for a short fall.
if needed, the company could add two extra dollars per share.
This amount of money proved less than enough for the daunting work at hand and
by an Act of April 11, 1808, the company was authorized to raise further
subscription by selling 1,000 more shares.
Last standing stop on Skaneateles Turnpike in Eaton
The need for this road was evident to the businessmen who were
in existence at that time. They needed a way to get their goods and livestock
to market. Mill businesses along the swift-flowing streams of southern Madison
County needed a way to get the finished products to market, while Joseph and
Ellis Morse’s Distillery needed a way to not only ship their goods, but also a
way to bring grain and corn to the large business in this early time. This
indeed was the reason that Joseph Morse of Eaton invested the unbelievable sum
of $30,000 in the endeavor.
The Morse family owned mills and foundries, as well as the
large Morse Distillery. Its millponds ran sawmills and gristmills. Morse’s sons
each had a business or opened a business along the turnpike’s proposed route:
Joseph, a woolen mill; Alpheus, foundries in Eaton and Erieville; and Bigelow,
a foundry in Fabius. The foundries needed iron ore from the east and the Morse
cattle business needed to get its cattle to the Albany market. All in all, it
is recorded that the road would never have been built except for the money of
Joseph Morse. *
By 1813, a New York State Act had to be passed allowing the
directors more time to finish this road and so the completion date was extended
to December 1, 1817. As money continued in shortfall, a supply bill of 1814
gave the company authority to collect tolls under the regulations that were set
down in a general Act in regards to turnpike tolls dated March 13, 1807. Even
though the road collected tolls, it never recouped the money spent by its many
investors.
The small communities & the people along its route ultimately garnered the benefit if they were headed
east or west looking for a place to settle. It is in this vein that the roadway
was a success.