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Brief History of Goshen Gore / Stannard
Primary Source: The Vermont Historical Gazetteer: A Magazine,
Embracing a History of Each Town, Civil, Ecclesiastical, Biographical and
Military, Vol. 1. Edited by Abby Maria Hemenway,
"Goshen Gore," By Joseph Clarke, Burlington, Vt : Miss
A. M. Hemenway, 1867, (pp. 434-435).
There were two Gores in Caledonia county by
this name. The largest contained 7339 acres; was situated in the
northwest part of the county, bounded north by Wheelock, east by Danville,
south by Walden, and west by Greensboro. The smaller Gore contained
2828 acres, and was located in the southwest corner of the county.
The smaller Gore, sometimes referred to as "the less," was set off to Washington
County. These Gores derived their name from the town to which they
formerly belonged. By a singular act of the legislature, these two
Gores, in Caledonia county, and one still larger in Addison county, 70
miles distant, containing 13,000 acres, were incorporated into a town by
the name of Goshen; chartered February 1, 1792, to John ROWELL, Wm. DOUGLASS,
and 65 others, and re-chartered to the same, on November 1, 1798.
The inhabitants of the part of the town in
Addison county, organized March 29, 1814. The Gores in Caledonia
county were severed from the town of Goshen by the legislature in 1854.
The larger of the Gores in Caledonia county was referred to as "Goshen
Gore, near Hardwick" and "Goshen Gore by Wheelock" to distinguish it from
the smaller Gore. There were frequent petitions by the inhabitants
of the larger Gore in this county to become organized into a town, the
first being presented to the legislature in 1835. The larger Goshen
Gore was organized, in 1867, and was called Stannard by the time the 1870
U. S. Census was taken.
The first settlements in the land which became
known as Stannard were made by Elihu SABIN and Warren SMITH in 1802.
SMITH did not settle permanently. SABIN built a frame house which
he occupied until his death some 41 years later. Other settlements
were made soon after that of SABIN, by Reuben SMITH, Elisha SHEPARD, Reuben
CROSBY, Thomas RANSOM, Azariah BOODY, Ephraim PERRIN and Andrew BLAIR.
Improvements were made about the same time by several other transient residents.
Although the settlement of the place was at
comparatively a later date, the hardships incident to new settlements had
to be encountered. Supplies of grain and necessaries had to be procured
in a measure from adjoining towns; the method of transporation frequently
upon their backs, and the method of payment, often by a day's work.
The frosty season of 1816, and others which occurred previously, was severely
felt. Mary SABIN was the first child born. Freeman SMITH was
the first male child, and Edmund BARKER and Betsy SABIN, the first couple
married in Stannard.
By about 1867, the western portion of Stannard,
towards the Lamoile river, comprised about two-thirds of the territory,
and had been improved by resident occupants. There were reportedly
over 40 families in Stannard by 1867. Two or three farms on the eastern
extremity, adjoining Danville, had been under improvement since 1805; James
CLARK and Thomas YOUNG made the first improvements there.
The eastern portion, though well timbered,
was chiefly unimproved and mountainous. A pond, covering about 80
acres, in the northern part, the outlet of which found its way to the Connecticut
River, was the site of a steam saw mill erected, in 1856, by T. G. BRONSON.
BRONSON died in 1857, and the mill passed into the hands of others--HAWKINS
& ROSS were the proprietors in 1867. At that time, nearly 1,000,000
feet of lumber was manufactured at this mill annually, which was principally
drawn to St. Johnsbury, and used in the manufactory of E. & T. FAIRBANKS.
About a mile west of this pond is/was "Beaver Meadow," also called "Blueberry
Meadow." A stream once called "Gore Brook" arises from this meadow
and empties into Lamoile River.
The first saw mill was built by G. W. COOK,
on a stream which is the outlet of a pond in Wheelock. This mill
was burnt, and another built by William SHURBURN on the same spot.
The second was burned, and the third was built by Enoch FOSTER in 1833,
which was still in operation in 1867. Another mill was built in 1840,
by Levi UTLEY, in the Gore brook, leading from Beaver Meadow.
In 1867, the first meeting house, first public
house, first grist mill, first physician, and the first lawyer, remained
among the things that had not yet existed within Stannard.
The first school was kept by Barilla MORSE,
in Reuben CROSBY's barn, in 1812. Judith CHASE, Betsy SABIN and Lucretia
WASHBURN were the next succeeding teachers. Mrs. Andrew BLAIR sent
her girl to the first school, and paid the tuition with a pink silk handkerchief.
"Schoolmarm know'd I had it, and she wanted it to make her a bonnet."
(Reportedly, "Good old Mrs. Ann BLAIR's testimony.) The first frame
school house was built in 1823. In 1834, a second school district
was formed.
A Freewill Baptist Church was organized in
Goshen Gore in August, 1841, and the Elder John Garfield ordained pastor.
It consisted originally of 12 members; growing to over 50 members by the
late 1860s. In 1855, H. W. HARRIS became their minister; he was succeeded
by Elder Geo. KING, who was ordained pastor of the church in 1857.
After Elder KING left, the church was supplied by itinerant ministers.
Biographies
Elihu SABIN
Born in Dudley, Massachusetts, in 1772, died in
"Goshen Gore, near Hardwick," July 9, 1843, aged 71 years. He was
one of the 26 children of Mr. and Mrs. Gideon SABIN, commemorated in the
Hardwick History (No. 3, p. 324).
He was the first permanent settler of this
Gore. A generous-hearted, worthy man, talented for his day and opportunites,
energetic and persevering, he had the respect of all the settlers of the
neighboring towns, and was, for about 20 eyars, a justice of the peace.
He was, moreover, distinguished for uncommon muscular strength, in so much
that the history of the Gore is not without an example of the courage and
prowess requisite for a hand-to-hand mortal combat.
Once on a time, well verified it is said,
SABIN did face the foe in a single-handed struggle for life. It appears
that he had caught a cub, whose cries brought forward the bear robbed of
her young, whom Elihu unflinchingly smote with a breech of hus gun; the
bear was dispatched, and so was the breech of Elihu's gun. Lest,
however, it may be said, in cavil, that sudden desperation which has been
known to give supernatural strength, nerved our hero's arm, we have a more
deliberate feat with which to crown our point--the prodigious strength
of Elihu SABIN--a feat of no thrilling moment, a plain, practical test,
however, evincing not less arm-strength in the man. A living witness
testified that he had seen Mr. SABIN knock down with one blow of his fist,
a two year old bullock, striking him between the fore shoulders, and breaking
a rib.
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