Monday, November 06, 2017
Life Back in the 1800's in Vermont For Tullers and Robinsons
Nadene Goldfoot
What was it like back in 1840? The country was in a Depression. Did people have presidential woes like we do today?
How did people ever build cabins? How did they cut down trees so that they could build them?
This place, found in Stowe, Vermont, is 800 sq feet, quite large for a cabin. It can sleep 4 people. It's available to rent. One can sit on the porch and listen to the stream as it flows. It's not a log cabin, however, like the one Julia Ann Tuller's father, Alonzo, might have built.
Typical Vermont log cabin |
They ski at Stratton Mountain today. |
President William Henry Harrison He gave a 2 hour speech, the longest when he became president. |
Harrison served for one month, dying in office from pneumonia. His Vice President, John Tyler-a Whig, then became the 10th President and served for the next 4 years.
Abe Lincoln, our 16th president, was brought up in a log cabin in Illinois. Here is an original at his birthplace. Lincoln was born in 1809. This appears to be more like our toy Lincoln logs, doesn't it?
Our ggrandmother, Julia Ann Robinson nee Tuller, had parents who lived in St. Albans Vermont and then moved to Royalton, Vermont where she must have met up with Abiathar Smith Robinson as she was a 15 year old there on the 1850 census. They married in 1852 in the town next door, Tunbridge.
The town of Royalton was chartered in 1779. Before that it was a nice-sized setttlement. The people here had been farmers in the old countries and had large stocks of cattle already with them. People "loved their neighbors as themselves."
On the 16th of October, 1780, 300 Indians of various tribes led by the Caghnewago tribe, had left Canada to attack another town, Newbury in eastern Vermont. However, Lt. Horton, a British lieutenant, who was the Indian's commander and Le Mott, a Frenchman, his 2nd, were led by a villain, Hamilton. Hamilton had become a prisoner of the Americans in 1777. He had been at Newbury and Royalton on parole.
"The Royalton raid was a British-led Indian raid in 1780, one year after being chartered, against various towns along the White River Valley in the Vermont Republic, and was part of the American Revolutionary War. It was the last major Indian raid in New England." He led them to Royalton, knowing it would be defenseless and went through Tunbridge to get to Royalton.
Entering before daylight, they entered the house of John Hutchinson who lived close to the border of Royalton from Tunbridge. They took John and his brother, Abijah prisoners and plundered the house., then went to Robert Havens' house. Havens was outside tending his sheep, and when on a hill, heard Hutchinson's dog barking. Seeing Indians at his door, he hid behind a log. He heard his wife screaming and his sons running away.
Thomas Pember was killed by a spear as he ran from the Indians. Eventually, the 300 set the town on fire. Such were the dangers of these brave ancestors of ours seeking a better life.
http://vermonthistory.org/educate/online-resources/an-era-of-great-change/politics-government/log-cabin-rally
http://www.history.com/topics/us-presidents/william-henry-harrison
https://prezi.com/o11vnipy3cxp/vermonts-history-of-architecture/
https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=https://img6.onthesnow.com/image/la/89/89867.jpg&imgrefurl=https://www.onthesnow.com/vermont/stratton-mountain/ski-resort.html&h=385&w=616&tbnid=hROSUhpB7SjhKM:&tbnh=160&tbnw=256&usg=__poYDfbSvTPzXHW1uUUP2B67uv9o=&vet=10ahUKEwicjOuJuKrXAhUOyWMKHWuSBKkQ_B0IkgEwEQ..i&docid=X8AusYxRFTvpGM&itg=1&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwicjOuJuKrXAhUOyWMKHWuSBKkQ_B0IkgEwEQ
Durkee Family Newsletter, Spring 1993, Volume Xii, #1.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royalton_raid
Labels: Cabins, Canada, Indian Attack, Politics, Revolutionary War, Robinson, Royalton, Tuller, Vermont