Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Chapter III- A Community Grew

 

Millville - The First 200 Years 

 Chapter III

A Community Grew




    The years immediately before and after 1900 were eventful for Millville and the surrounding area. Developments included the establishment of the water company, laying of sewer lines, organization of a telephone company, institution of rural delivery of mail, the opening of the bank, and creation of Millville borough.

    The Millville Water Company was organized as a private company on March 8, 1898, with William Masters, Josiah Heacock, John Eves, C. M. Eves, and Charles W. Miller as directors. Ellis Eves was the treasurer. The pumping station was located near Little Fishing Creek, at the lower end of what became the community picnic ground. The original pumping station has now been relocated to its present location to allow for the expansion of Girton Manu­facturing Company. Water was first obtained from wells, and later from a huge spring alongside the creek about a quarter mile upstream. Today a large spreader system of pipes has been installed under the fields and woodland. These feed a settling basin prior to pumping to the original reservoir. The Company was sold to the borough in 1961.

    The reservoir is located on the highest spot in town, near the eastern borough line and above the cluster of homes east of the cemetery, which was known as Shin Street. The origin of the name is not recorded. A block or two of houses on the north side of town, just before the open fields which separated them from Bentown, was known as Swampoodle, but again no one knows why.

    Construction of the sewer system soon followed and cesspools and sumps were abandoned. The residents of the community built the sewer. The spring on the Meetinghouse grounds was cemented shut, for the water was found to be contaminated, as were most of the wells about town. These steps put an end to the frequent epidemics of typhoid fever. Installation of fireplugs around the borough also reduced the fire hazard, which had been the scourge of the village for years.

    The local telephone company was organized in 1895 and the construction of lines was started. This was known as the United Telephone Company and had a connection with the soon-formed Greenwood Telephone Company, which was unique. Each of the Greenwood lines were in reality a separate company, built and maintained by the subscribers to a party line. A number of these companies arranged for joint switchboard facilities at the Greenwood store. Elmer Parker, the proprietor of the store and the postmaster, was for many years the operator. Service was suspended at 9 p.m., not uncommon at many exchanges.

    Maintenance was always a problem and lines were at times out of use for days after a snow or windstorm. On one occasion a line was connected with a wire fence to bridge a gap of a considerable distance. The result was that for years the Greenwood company was known as the "barbed wire" line. The appellation was resented by many whose money and work had gone into the construction.

    Later, the Peoples Ideal Telephone Company was formed through the work of a promoter, Pettibone. Its lines extended more to the west of town to the Jerseytown and Strawberry Ridge areas rather than into the territory served by the Greenwood Company. Later the Bell Telephone system came to town and afforded the first real long-distance service. Mergers gradually took place until Bell controlled all the companies. Until that time arrived, it was necessary for a business place to have two or three telephones, each offering only limited service. One account says the first Bloomsburg‑ Millville line was built in 1888.

    The first effort to create a borough was made in May 1890, when a group of citizens filed a petition, which was approved by a grand jury. Dissidents, however, filed exceptions, and an appeal was taken to the State Supreme Court which on April 14, 1892, approved incorporation. The first election was held May 3 of that year and Joseph W. Eves was elected burgess (or equivalent to mayor).

    Great hopes were held in the period of trolley line expansion in about 1900. A line from Bloomsburg to Millville was projected with an amusement park to be constructed on the site of the Beagle Mill near Mordansville. Considerable stock was sold in Millville with the proviso that it need not be paid for until the tracks were laid into town.

    The first tracks were laid from Eyersgrove into Millville and grading was done as far as Mordansville. Money was collected for the stock sold to residents of the community, but then work stopped and the line never was finished. This was a sad blow to many investors. Part of the graded right-of-way was used when the road to Bloomsburg was paved.

    The establishment of rural delivery of mail was a boon to the whole area and three routes were assigned to Millville. The first carriers used box-like buggies, much on the order of the familiar Mennonite buggies still in use where people of that sect reside. The first carriers were Ed Eves, Joseph Kitchen, James T. Lawton, and Perry L. Eves.

    This service created quite a controversy, for postmasters in small communities were put out of business and their friends tried to have the little offices retained. Among those abolished, almost at once, were Sereno and Greenwood. In later years, rural delivery replaced the postmasters at Jerseytown and Eyers Grove, also. Iola's office closed in 1912. Eyers Grove now has a non-personal office with box service.

    Railway mail service was instituted before the end of the century and Orval Johnson was long the clerk on the local line. This service was first tested in 1864 and a little-known historical fact is that two mice were responsible. Until that time, it was customary to drop mail off trains at certain designated cities, where it was sorted and then forwarded to the individual post offices. These sorting points often served whole states and the system suffered extensive delays.

    One of these points was Green Bay, Wisconsin, much better known in recent years for its professional football team. The mice made their home in a pouch, which had lain in the post office for some days. When the pouch finally reached its destination on the upper shores of Lake Superior, the postmaster found a whole colony of mice that had made soft beds of chewed-up letters. The postmaster sent ruined letters and mice to the Chicago post office and George B. Armstrong, assistant postmaster there, is credited with conceiving the idea of sorting the mail on the trains while in transit.

    When rural delivery was instituted in this area, carriers left the post office around noon, after mail arriving on a train at approximately 11 o'clock had been sorted. When roads were deep in mud or clogged with snow, they often did not get home until early evening. The job was rigorous and most carriers here and elsewhere were required to have two or three horses. It was not unusual for carriers to perform errands for two or three patrons each day, for many rural residents did not get to town for several weeks at a time.

    This period was also marked by the advent of the automobile. Three, one-lung Cadillacs were the first cars, owned by Ellis Eves, John Eves, and John Emory Eves. Their performance was somewhat erratic and their speed was never great, but they did expedite travel to nearby points.

    Random items were taken from the Weekly Tablet, show creamery butter sold at 26 cents a pound, turkeys at 10 cents, and chickens at 7 cents in 1887. The borough had 52 bicycles in 1897. Millville had a population of 375 in 1880, 463 in 1888, 602 in 1898, 593 in 1900, 611 in 1910, 658 in 1920, 666 in 1930, 761 in 1940, 878 in 1950, 952 in 1960, and 896 in 1970.

    The decade after 1900 was ideal for growing boys. They were at liberty to roam the entire town and countryside. Few properties were fenced and the owners tolerated trespass as long as there was no vandalism. Seldom was any reported.

    The first movies came to town, shown in Union Hall, with 5 cent admission for one‑reelers. Medicine shows were another form of entertainment, and almost weekly picnics, family reunions, and festivals in the grove marked the summer months. A new road to it was built across the swamp and headrace of the grist millpond. One group of men used the pavilion in the grove on Sunday afternoons for poker games, which were transferred to one home or another among the participants in bad weather. Small fry often spied on the players.

    A youngster bent on building something could always snitch an egg from his own family's chicken pen or a neighbor's and trade it at one of the stores for nails or any other small item needed. When quizzed by the family as to the source of material, the reply was "Stole eggs and bought it." Both parents and merchants countenanced such minor thievery.

    Youngsters noted for being careful were allowed to play in almost any of the industrial establishments including the tannery, around the railroad, and at the planing mills, and creamery. Waste bits of lumber at the planing mill were often necessary in their small construction projects, and a little assistance in ice cream making yielded many a spoonful of free ice cream at the creamery.

    Summer garb for boys usually consisted of a pair of overalls plus sometimes a shirt, which made it easy to shed if going swimming. Bathing trunks were few, so the swimming hole at the iron bridge beside the gristmill was usually shunned in favor of what was known as the "old dam" which fed the gristmill pond. This had an eddy of backwater free from waste that came down the tailrace from the woolen mill. The dam at the tannery, which fed the wagon works, was shunned because tannery waste was sometimes dumped there and produced skin sores. These occasions could never be determined in advance, yet there were few times when that dam did not supply good pike fishing. Even today "skinny dipping" is practiced below the forebay at "the old dam".

    Skating on the grist millpond usually lasted several months except when snow ruined the ice. Ice-cutting operations went on there on a considerable scale to fill ice houses at the butcher shops and at many farms, for mechanical refrigeration had not yet arrived. Chunks could be obtained for making ice cream at home. The youngsters were allowed to help with butchering, rendering lard, packing sausage links, and other chores, the reward for which was often a good-sized piece of scrapple, often called pan hash, or a handful of cracklings‑ the residue from fat from which the lard had been pressed.

    When a good crust covered the snow, coasting might take a boy some miles from home and when it was after dark before he returned from an excursion, he frequently was warmed by something other than fire. On occasion, the result was that he ate standing for a meal or two.

    Farmers were especially tolerant of juvenile assistance in shocking grain, driving a horse hitched to a hayfork in stowing hay in the barn or operating the "windstacker" in distributing straw over the mow at threshing time. Rarely was one permitted to feed the thresher, for that was dangerous business. But he could help sack the grain or feed coal into the engine. Barn fires, resulting from sparks from the threshing engine, were fairly common despite the use of spark arresters in the stacks.

    Millville, in this period, had one of the first Boy Scout troops in the nation, but whether it ever obtained official recognition is not on record. Montgomery Boyd and Herbert Henrie were among the scoutmasters during the troop's short life. Early members included Eugene and Harold Cadman, Joseph Christian, Wallace Eves Marion Reece, Paul Trescott, and Raymond Kester.

    The chestnut blight had not yet struck down all the trees of that species and many a fall Saturday was devoted to gathering nuts. It was a successful day if a lad came home with a five-pound sugar sack filled with chestnuts.

    In the barbershop, haircuts were a dime and shaves a nickel. Boys kept a keen eye on the livery stable at the back of the hotel to check when horses were being clipped, for they could then get their heads clipped free and save a dime, an amount not easy to come by in those days.

    Before the water system was installed in town, the Saturday night bath was no myth. A wash tub placed alongside the kitchen stove served for the scrubbing, the water usually being heated in a tank at the back end of the stove.

    Where families kept livestock, most boys had daily chores to perform, feeding chickens or hogs, currying horses or milking cows. Cows owned in town were usually pastured on the grass along the edge of alleys.

    One result of this freedom was a liberal education of a kind rarely found in books or in planned recreation. Boys achieved an early self-reliance and a sense of responsibility. At the blacksmith shop, they were allowed to turn the bellows to keep the forge hot and when the blacksmiths were not busy, to use an anvil and hammer to fashion themselves a set of quoits. On rare occasions, when the smithy knew he had a gentle horse, a lad might even be allowed to pare a hoof or tack on a shoe.

    The town in this period had several colorful characters. One was Henry Swisher, man-of-all-work at odd jobs around town, and another was Peter Spring, who lived in a sparsely furnished house on the edge of town and eked out a precarious living mending shoes. A small brook ran past his house and rats flourished both inside and out. Peter usually worked with a .22 caliber rifle across his knees and whenever a rat showed a nose through the numerous 'holes around the edge of the room took a shot at it. He rarely missed.  Still, another was Joe D. Potter, who lived in Pine township and carried an umbrella every time he walked to town. His appearance was considered to be as good a weather forecast as could be had.

    It was customary for some sharp traders to await a rainy day to bring loads of hay or straw to town for sale, for the rain would add considerably to the weight. Purchasers were fully aware of the fraud and usually discounted the weight in proportion.

    Many a youngster learned the Morse code on a dead telegram key in the railroad station office and it was a happy day when the station agent thought him talented enough to send a word or two on an open wire. Perhaps many of these boys would be considered underprivileged today, but the word had not been thought of then.

    Organized activities for girls were little considered. They helped with household chores, took music and painting lessons, learned to sew and a few played tennis. Two courts were in town. Frank Heller built a clay court behind his home and John Eves, a well-shaded grass court near his home. Use of both was permitted generously.

Additions and corrections made for this Second Edition. DBG

Second Edition- Copyright Dean B. Girton Dec. 30, 2022



Chapter II- Others Follow

Millville - The First 200 Years 

 Chapter II

Others Follow

 

    Although the John Eves family was numerous enough to establish a community alone, it was not long left by itself in the wilderness. Many of the new arrivals, however, chose sites well removed from what is now Millville. From 1785 to 1790, Lemons, Lundy, Battin, Oliver, Rich and others arrived and settled in the Greenwood Valley.

    The result was that the community of Millville grew slowly. The lack of highways was a principal drawback. Lundy settled on the farm later occupied by Sylvester Stere. John Lemon purchased a tract of over 300 acres and in 1800 built the brick house later occupied by the Guy Bangs family. To the east of the dwelling, he gave land for a cemetery and a church long known as the Lemon church. John Lemon was a wheelwright and during the Revolutionary War followed his trade. In 1802, he built a sawmill on Little Green Creek on the property later owned by Roy and Marie Miller. In 1820, his four sons, Joseph, Jonathan, Isaac and William rebuilt it and did a thriving business. They owned a tract that extended from the creek three miles to the west. Jacob Link, in 1797, opened the first tavern along the creek in Greenwood Township.

    When the John Eves family returned in 1785, they built two houses and a gristmill on the west side of Little Fishing Creek. Piles at the site of the old millrace were in a good state of preservation after 100 years. Very shortly the mill was replaced by one on the east side of the creek, north of where the later familiar mill stood, but where better advantage could be taken of the waterpower.

    While the early population was scattered, provision was made for both worship and education. Services and classes were held in the homes in the first years of the community, the school being taught by someone with educational advantages. Such a school was started in Millville in 1785. A two-room log Meetinghouse was built in 1795.

    Sawmills and gristmills were the first industrial considerations, for they met the needs of the early arrivals.

    In those years things moved slowly and events often overlapped. Thus, through worship and education had begun in 1785, years passed before the Friends Meeting gained recognition. In the meantime, a remarkable document was executed by John Eves. On eighth month (August), 28th day, 1794, he signed an indenture between himself, John Kester, Thomas Eves, Paul Kester and Jesse Haines, whom he made trustees for two acres of land for a Meeting House, "for 999 years, next ensuing." The consideration, for one, was required by law, was the "yearly rental of one peppercorn on the 28th day of eighth month in the respective year should the same be lawfully demanded."

    Only once in modern times has the rental been paid and it was made the occasion for a ceremony that attracted wide attention. The Federal government has declared the present Meetinghouse a historic building that should be preserved.

    Aside from the saw and grist mills, the first industry worthy of the name was the woolen mill started in 1813 by John Watson on the north side of the creek at what is now the upper end of the town. Two carding machines and a fulling mill were installed. Wool was brought in by farmers to be cleaned and carded. Spinning and weaving were performed in the homes. Some were returned in the shape of homespun to be colored and pressed.

    Chandlee Eves succeeded Watson and built a frame building on the opposite side of the creek. The business was continued by his son, Benjamin, and later Benjamin's son, Charles W. Eves, who built the brick structure and enlarged it. The brick used for the building was made nearby.

    The mill dam, just above, was built about this time and so was the suspension footbridge across the creek, which was removed only within the past few years because it was unsafe. A cluster of brick houses grew up around the mill, and the small immediate area became known as Bentown.

    For years the suspension bridge was a source of delight to young people in the community. It was anchored on the north side into the rock wall, and steps led down from the other end.

    In later years, a cinder path led almost a half-mile from the built-up part of town to the mill. On a Sunday afternoon, a dozen or more boys and girls often disported on the so-called "swinging bridge" and the girls screamed when the boys caused the bridge to sway and shake.

    Child labor was common for many years after the mill was in operation, and even as late as 1907 boys dropped out of schoolwork for work in the mill when they had reached no more than the third or fourth grade. Wages were usually about $1 for a 12-hour day. This mill was no exception to others about the country.

    Brick plants seemed numerous in the area, and one wonders why none remain. Several kilns were in operation around the town, but the last brick houses put up in the community used brick brought in from Watsontown.

    Somewhat better fortune followed the establishment of a wagon shop by Charles Eves in the building in which he lived at the lower end of town. This was in 1837 and the southern end of the village attained the name of Charleytown. After his death in 1855, his four sons, John, Ellis, Webster W. and Bart carried on the business. Additional shops were built but were destroyed by fire in May 1879. They were rebuilt on a larger scale and the firm was changed to Ellis, John and W.W. Eves.

    They added the mercantile business in a storehouse built by Thomas Eves at the corner of Main and State streets and rebuilt the wagon shops, which again burned on May 11, 1897. They were rebuilt and enlarged by John Eves and his son, Charles. Farm wagons and carriages were turned out as well as bob sleds, buggies, spring wagons, huckster wagons, prop wagons, coal wagons, sleighs, dead stock wagons, land rollers and truck bodies.

    Mechanization and the automobile took their toll on this industry. In 1907, 144 wagons were sold, in 1927, 28, and in 1930 only two. The regular force of men was laid off on December 1, 1929, but during the next eight years from one to three men were employed making up the stock on hand into wagons or repair parts. The sturdiness of the products was noted and the name "John Eves & Co." painted on a wagon usually resulted in a used wagon bringing a far higher price than any other make at a farm auction.

    Waterpower was of major importance in the early days. The gristmill at Iola, the woolen mill, the gristmill in Millville, and the wagon works all depended on waterpower.

    Strangely, the community was long in the backwash of the electrical age. Except for individual power plants, neither homes nor industries had access to electric power in any quantity until 1914.

    One spurt to the growth of Millville was given when the road from Bloomsburg to Laporte was constructed. This afforded access to the canal and later the railroad at Bloomsburg and made marketing of farm and wood products comparatively easy. The town experienced considerable growth in the years immediately following this construction. Such plants, as existed, were thus able to accept contracts from the government for materials during the Civil War. The woolen mill turned out Army blankets by the thousands.

    The second period of rapid growth came with the construction of the railroad, which entered the town in 1887. Storage yards for lumber, railroad ties, and telephone poles were opened. Long, roofed sheds erected where shingles, baled hay and straw could be stored in the dry. These sheds became trysting places for couples of all ages for many years and bales of hay or straw would be broken open for reasonably soft bedding. Often the clandestine lovers had an unseen audience of small fry.

    While Millville was in this period of expansion, other settlements sprang up in Greenwood township. Rohrsburg was named for Frederick Rohr, a Prussian who fought against Napoleon, who secured the site of the town in 1825 from Samuel Shorts. It was part of one of the Chew surveys. In 1826, the wheelwright shop of Robert Campbell comprised about all of the village. In 1828, Peter Venett opened a store in his shop and later Shoemaker and Rees opened a second store.

    Rohrsburg Grange was organized in 1874 with 30 members and by 1886 the number had grown to 84.

    Joseph Fulmer of Limestoneville built a flouring mill on Green Creek below the town, but the structure disappeared long ago. In 1832, Joseph Sands opened a fulling and carding mill on the same stream. In 1820, the Lemon brothers opened a sawmill and in 1847 Kester Parker opened a pottery on Greenwood Road. It continued in operation for many years.

    Eyers Grove came into being before 1860, when Jacob Eyer built a mill and opened a store. It was on the same site where Robert Montgomery had put up a similar structure in 1807. What happened to the original building is not recorded. By 1887, Eyers Grove had 15 dwellings.

    Jacob Eyer was the son of Ludwig and Catherine Long Eyer (Dyer) and the mill he built more than a century ago is still in operation.

    Mrs. Ruth Eyer reports that he had a leading role in the construction of the Lutheran Church in Bloomsburg, which originally was known as Oyertown, and achieved its present name after travelers along the river noted the blossoming trees on the hillsides and gave the place the name it has today.

    Jacob Eyer also gave the land for the Eyers Grove Methodist church, which is believed to have been built by Isaac Kline and Wesley Miller. The church was dedicated June 3, 1869, and char­tered December 6, 1870. Services are still conducted there, and the present minister is the Reverend Carmer P. Shelhamer.

    Iola's first business was a mill, established in 1828, by Joseph and John Robbins.

    The arrival of the Wilkes Barre and Western Railroad, which ran from Orangeville, on April 6, 1887, was also marked by the first publication of the Weekly Tablet by G.A. Potter. The railroad never reached either Wilkes Barre or the West. It connected at Orangeville with the Bloomsburg and Sullivan, which ran from Bloomsburg to the large tannery and sawmills at Jamison City. The railroad opened new avenues for the shipment and receipt of supplies, and Millville became a considerable center for handling lumber supplies and other wood products in even greater numbers. Coal docks also were constructed.

    This railroad continued in use until the steel plant was erected in Berwick, but soon after 1904 this was abandoned. The new line was built from Berwick to Watsontown to bring supplies into the American Car and Foundry Company plant in Berwick. A spur ran from Eyersgrove Junction into Millville. The connection with the Bloomsburg and Sullivan was then at the paper mill near Light Street. The road changed ownership and became the Susquehanna, Bloomsburg and Berwick. Later it passed into the hands of the Pennsylvania and shared that road's troubles after the Penn Central was established.

    It always was a homey sort of rail line. Youngsters were allowed to play in and around freight cars on sidings and often picked up 50 cents a day assisting in loading railroad ties or unloading carloads of fertilizer. At one time, four passenger trains a day were in operation. On numerous occasions, the departure of a train would be delayed so that some intended passenger could scoot home to pick up a forgotten handbag or some other item. Passengers known to the crew and short of money were allowed to bring their fares to the station the next day.

    An indication of the extent of the wood products business is given by the record that Ellis and Webster Eves on one day, September 21, 1896, sold 100,000 railroad ties.

    The popularity of the automobile cut into the passenger business and also terminated the "stage" service between Millville and Bloomsburg. This had started even before the railroad was built and first consisted of a team and spring wagon, and later an automobile. Owners of the line usually gave up after a few years and nobody ever got rich from the business.

    Few of today's residents realize that in the early days most of Millville lay on the west side of Little Fishingcreek. Here was the gristmill, several residences and a tavern run by William Sproul. It created quite a sensation when an altercation in this place between Thomas Polk and John Darnall (Darnall or Yarnall, records differ) resulted in the death of the latter. Court records do not indicate that Polk was ever prosecuted. The incident, coupled with religious beliefs, was sufficient to prevent a license for the sale of liquor in Millville for many years.

    In connection with the development of the town in the latter part of the 1800s, it is interesting to note that the courts have held the wording of the early grants and deeds for property meaningless in recent years. These documents, even when they were grants from the Governor, like the patent to John Eves, read:

"To have and to hold the said parcel of land, with the appurtenances to the said Thomas Eves, executor of John Eves, deceased, in trust for the use of the heirs and legal representatives of John Eves, deceased, and their respective heirs and assigns forever."

That word "forever", according to court rulings, is entirely without meaning. It is a carryover from old English law and has been subjected to repeated court tests.

    Millville, as the 19th century came to a close, was a far different place from the borough as most residents of the area know it today, and many of the habits and customs of the times have changed.

    Streets were deep in dust in summer and clogged with snow in winter and it was said that every spring, not only in town but all around, "the bottom fell out of the roads" because the mud was so deep as frost disappeared. Winters were severe and the ground often froze to a depth of three feet or more.

    Such streetlights, as existed, were kerosene lamps mounted on posts about seven feet high. The area of their glow was limited, and their number was few. For many years, the lamplighter was paid $8 a month to attend to the lighting and the dirty job of cleaning the globes once a week. An odd provision was that in the week of the full moon the lamps need not be lighted. Most lamplighters interpreted that to mean that even if it rained all that week, the lamps needed no attention. A device that could be set to turn the lights off in daylight controlled the fuel supply.

    Typhoid fever epidemics were yearly occurrences in summer and continued for some years after the organization of the Millville Water Company and the installation of the sewer system.

    Banking was done in Bloomsburg, often by courtesy of the driver of the "stage", until the organization of the First National Bank. As a result, many residents of the area made it a practice to keep large sums of money on their persons or in the house. Due bills were the forerunner of checks. These were issued by business firms to those selling their products and often were in considerable sums. They were negotiable and made of heavy paper, which would withstand much handling. Often the complete back was filled with endorsements before they were turned in for redemption. They were an unusual form of bank account but amounted to the same thing.

    March 1 was settlement day for most due bill accounts, though many were carried on from year to year until after the bank was established. On settlement day, the businessmen visited one another and set off their accounts, much in the order in which a clearinghouse works with bank accounts today.

    Oxen were still used on a few farms and their appearance in town created something of a sensation. With many people, walking was not a form of exercise, but of necessary transportation, and many thought nothing of walking four or five miles to town and then walking home unless they could pick up a ride.

    It was customary to toll church bells on the occasion of a funeral and usually the number of taps of the bell indicated the decedent's age. Church sermons were often long-winded to the point of exhaustion of the minister and the soundness of sleep of the congregation.

    In addition to the stocks available in the small stores of the town, peddlers made their rounds once or more a year with laces, needles, special linens, and the like. Many became well-known, and some went on to become owners of department stores in commun­ities not far away.

    Tramps were numerous, begging for handouts. They had a system of marking homes with cryptic symbols indicating wheth­er or not a dog was on the premises and what the likelihood was of getting a meal or even lodging. Usually, the itinerants slept in the shingle sheds or in the open sheds around the neighborhood and occasionally in barns.

    Tramp printers were hired regularly by G. A. Potter in his operation of the Weekly Tablet. They were usually good craftsmen, some college graduates, and some completely unreliable. Often, they were alcoholics. Once Potter gave an overcoat to one especially good typesetter, who promptly traded it for a couple of bottles of liquor at the Iola hotel. Another, with some grievance, once dumped much of the type from the printing plant onto an ash pile. Weeks were required to clean up the mess.

    Another, lacking space to place type that was to be saved for future use, promised to solve the problem before morning and did. What turned up was a tombstone, and diligent inquiry never revealed where he had lifted it. Still, another, needing a higher step at an old Martha Washington hand press to be operated by a small boy, produced a coupling from a railroad freight car, which served for some years. The hand press is today an antique treasured in museums. It was slow, cumbersome, and backbreaking, but yielded a good impression. Anything up to a full-sheet poster could be printed on it.

    Weekend leisure, such as is today enjoyed, was unknown then. The workweek consisted of six 12 hour days and Sunday included church and perhaps a chicken and waffle dinner. Barbe­cues, as known today, were not heard of then.

    A normal breakfast often consisted of buckwheat cakes and sausage with plenty of maple syrup, locally produced, and lunch for a school child might range from nothing to a sandwich of some kind in an old-fashioned metal dinner bucket with a container for milk in the top. The sandwiches at times were buckwheat cakes left over from breakfast rolled around a filling of apple butter.

    Apple butter was a staple throughout the region and was made at home, a chore few would relish today. The preparation of apples required hours, and the outdoor fire and the constant stirring consumed most of the day. Usually, a number of families combined forces to turn out a good supply.

    Most families grew pigs and chickens, and some had milk cows for their own supply. Truman Eves long had a milk route in town. The housewife set out a container into which he poured the milk. Price around the end of the 19th century was four cents a quart delivered.

    Several slaughterhouses existed in or near the community. Wild horses were brought in from the west by the carload to be broken and sold at auction. Some were driving horses, but mostly they were of heavier breeds, designed for farm work.

 

Additions and corrections made for this Second Edition. DBG

Second Edition- Copyright Dean B. Girton Dec. 30, 2022


Chapter I- The First Settlers

Millville - The First 200 Years

Chapter I

The First Settlers

    Usually, it is possible to pinpoint a date - give or take a few days - when a community was established. Millville is an exception. The events incident to the founding of the town is such that almost any date between 1770 and 1785 or 1786 could be chosen.

    In some respects, the details of the settlement were unusual. John Eves, a native of Ireland, had his eye on the land and made a trip to look over the Greenwood Valley in 1770. He came from Mill Creek Hundred, Delaware, to what is now Harrisburg and up the river to the vicinity of Milton, where he inquired about the location. None, but several Indians, could give him an idea of how to get there. He hired them as guides and crossed through the valley of the Chillisquaque until they reached Little Fishing Creek.

    Accounts differ as to what followed. The most authentic seems to be that he was taken to Mount Fairview, overlooking the country, and was pointed out the property in the valley which he contemplated buying. Legend has it that the Indians were willing to cede him all the land he could see. This encompassed parts of seven counties. He took the title to only a small portion. Whatever truth there is in this story, the fact is that it established a relationship between Eves and the Indians, which was to prove invaluable. John Eves soon returned to Delaware. The next year he and his son, Thomas, followed the same route, cleared a tract near a spring, and built a log cabin.

    In 1772, the Eves family came from Delaware with all their belongings on a wagon pulled by four horses. They established themselves in the cabin previously built and began tilling adjacent fields as they could clear them.

    The site of the spring and cabin was along the Indian trail that led from Nescopeck to a point near Muncy. Indians passed frequently and always were welcome to the Eves' home for a meal or lodging. It was about a half-mile from the creek along the road that led to Spruce Run. Many years passed before a road better than the Indian trail was established.

    The family lived and prospered there in comparative solitude until mid-summer of 1778 when the Wyoming Massacre occurred. A friendly Indian, reputedly named Job Shiloway, passed on his way to the North Branch, but was back early the next day with the word of the massacre and advised the family to leave. They loaded their goods and by noon started to Bosley's Mill, a stockade on the site of the present Washingtonville.

    An account by Mrs. Perry Eves says: "Grandfather's quotation was `Bad white man got among bad Indian and I can't protect any longer.'" Larry Flinn and his wife were with the Eves family. Larry wanted to keep a young horse to ride back and forth to cut the ripening grain. He made one trip and on the second morning was captured by three Indians. He was traded around until he got into Canada. After the war, he returned and lived with the family for the rest of his days. The Eves family did not return until 1785 or 1786 and found their cabin burned and were required to start again from scratch.

    The spring at the cabin site was probably named later for Larry Flinn, also Irish. He and his wife came to America under consideration that the Eves family in return for a fixed number of years of service would pay their ship fare. The arrangement was common in those days.

    Great faith was placed in those days on verbal promises, and while the Eves family was living on the property from 1772 on, it was not until 1774 that they received the deed for 1203 acres for 145 pounds. It was the largest land holding at the time in what later became Columbia County. William and Elizabeth McMean had obtained the original patent for the area. Their application for warrants was dated April 3, 1769, and the corresponding surveys were among the first in the area. The title to the McMean property and some adjoining passed to Reuben Haines, a Philadelphia brewer, and then to John Eves.

    When the Eves family came in 1772, they brought with them a number of hogs, but the first venture with domestic livestock had unfortunate consequences. The hogs were sheltered among the branches and dead leaves of a fallen tree, but after a few days were attacked during the night, probably by a bear. One was killed and the remainder took off. Much has been written and many authentic instances cited where animals have found their way to former homes, and the hogs apparently possessed this ability.
The pigs were traced and after several months were found to have crossed the West Branch of the Susquehanna River near Milton and made a beeline for their former home in Delaware. Whether they ever reached it is not known. The word "Hundred," as used in Delaware, designated an area where 100 families lived and were not necessarily a definite measure of territory. The same term was used for a long time in Virginia and Maryland, and while discontinued there, still prevails in Delaware.

    The Eves family lived in Leicestershire, England, in the 1600s. Some moved to County Wicklow, Ireland, in 1660. John Eves was born in Clanmoore, Ireland, in 1720. When he was 20 years old, he was in the wool business in Edenberry and came from the Dublin Friends Meeting with a letter to the Exeter Meeting, near Maiden Creek. He arrived in Philadelphia in 1750 and became a tutor to two daughters of Thomas Yeatman on a farm about eight miles out of Wilmington, Delaware. The farm was still in the Yeatman family in the 1950s, though not the house in which Thomas lived.

    When John Eves was about 31 he married Edith Yeatman, then 17, and for 20 years they lived at Mill Creek Hundred. He was 50 when they moved to establish the community in the Greenwood Valley. With them were their six boys and four girls. Two children, Sarah, nine, and Mark, two, had died in 1762, and confusion exists because later children were given the same names, a practice common in those days. This confusion came up when the Atlantic Refining Company bought the hotel property.
According to the account of Miss Helen M. Eves, they had four children born after coming to this area, the second Mark, Ann, Samuel, and Ezra. Helen Eves' account also says another was named Sarah. The confusion over the two Marks has clouded deeds, and Miss Eves reports that Boyd Trescott explained the affair when the hotel property was transferred. Her account, however, contains some disparities. She says that when John and Edith Eves returned to the area in 1785 or 1786, they had 15 living children. He was 65 and Edith about 58. This does not square with the ages given at the date of their marriage, and apparently is in error, for she reports the oldest child was 30 and the youngest three. It would be something of a medical record if Edith had given birth to a child when she was 55.

    When the John Eves family and their numerous children returned after the Revolution, they were accompanied or soon followed by other families, whose names became familiar through the years. These included Masters, Kisner, Battin, Parker, Lundy, and Lemon.

    This time the settlement was to be permanent. With 17 children and 104 grandchildren, John Eves looked after the building of two homes for the family, a gristmill that was to stand for a hundred years, and later a sawmill and other essential structures. The dwellings were of logs, and little of the development was on the west side of Little Fishing Creek. Building on the east side of the creek took place simultaneously. Later brick and frame replaced the logs. Siding often was applied to log buildings.

    Growth of the community was slow, for it was off the mainstream of travel, which principally followed the two branches of the Susquehanna. When the Eves family returned, their cabin had been burned and the fields were overgrown with brush. Land clearing was necessary for a second time and required a considerable period.

    Other families who arrived about the same time scattered throughout the Greenwood Valley. The Lemon family, located in about the middle of the township, and the Lundy family built the house later occupied by Reuben S. Rich, a descendant, and still later by Raymond Eves. Its grove of sugar maples was long a landmark.

    Settlement of the Green Creek Valley occurred about the same time. Jacob Link opened the first tavern in the township in 1797. In the same year four brothers, Thomas, Samuel, John, and William Mather moved from the Buffalo Valley to approximately the site of Rohrsburg. Joshua Robbins, Archibald Patterson, George, and William McMichael, native Scots, arrived about the same time.

    Originally, Greenwood Township had been part of the vast Wyoming Township, later a portion of the Fishing Creek. Portions of Mount Pleasant and Jackson townships were included in the boundaries when Greenwood was set apart as a separate entity in 1799. Indian trails crossed at the site of Millville. One from Catawissa to Towanda came up Little Fishing Creek and ran along the ridge just below the town at a place long known as The Rocks, on the farm of T. 0. Fortner and later of Walter Pursel. As late as 1910, portions of this trail were still visible, for it had been so heavily traveled that the path was worn to a depth of a foot or more. The other crossed from the West Branch to Nescopeck.

    Until 1798, this trail was the only road to the North Branch of the Susquehanna. In that year, a road was surveyed across the Mount Pleasant hills to the river. Berwick’s first families were arriving about the same time as the Eves, and Bloomsburg did not then exist. It was founded in 1802. It was 1856 before the road from Bloomsburg to Laporte was laid out through Millville. In clearing the land, large quantities of timber became available, far more than could be worked into lumber by the few primitive sawmills then in existence. In later years, logs were floated down the Susquehanna in great quantities, but early historians record that both Green Creek and Little Fishing Creek were used during the spring floods. The timber was felled during the Winter and stored along the creek banks in spots where it could easily be pushed into the swollen stream in rafts. In this modern day, such a feat seems incredible. The timber from this area went mostly to mills in Harrisburg and Marietta.

    The early residents were almost entirely self-sufficient. Thomas Eves succeeded his father in ownership of the grist mill and built the first house in What is now the borough. It was on the site of the home built later by Josiah Heacock, whose grandson, Marion Reese, used much of the lumber in building his own home in more recent years. David and Andrew Eves opened the first store in the township in 1827, according to an early historian. It was on the site of the later Heacock home. If this account is correct, the residents were forced to travel long distances to purchase such necessities as they could not grow or make. This would have covered more than 40 years and hence seems somewhat unlikely.

    In 1831, David Eves was commissioned as the first postmaster. Andrew Eves followed; James Masters held the position from 1842 to 1849, and George and William Masters served until 1886. Mail was brought from Berwick once a week, later twice, until 1879, when a route was opened from Bloomsburg to Sereno. Service then became thrice weekly, and later daily. Subsequent postmasters were Uriah P. McHenry, Ellis Eves, D.F. Herring, W.C. Eves, Joseph C. Eves, Joseph S. Cole, Dr. John W. Biddle, Jay C. Watts, and Donald J. Watts. 


Additions and corrections made for this Second Edition.DBG
Second Edition- Copyright Dean B. Girton Dec. 30, 2022

Table of Contents

 Millville - The First 200 Years

Table of Contents


Table of Contents................................................................... iii



List of Illustrations.................................................................. v



Preface.................................................................................. vii



I. The First Followers.............................................................. 1



II. Others Follow..................................................................... 6



III. A Community Grew........................................................ 14



IV. War to War....................................................................... 21



V. Like It Is........................................................................... 28



VI. Churches......................................................................... 34



VII. Education....................................................................... 44



VIII. Early Businesses Now Gone........................................ 68



IX. Early Organizations Now Gone...................................... 94



X. Commercial...................................................................... 99



XI. Government and Related............................................... 128



XII. Organizations Today..................................................... 149



XIII. The Townships............................................................ 169



XIV. Town Layout............................................................... 174



Index.................................................................................... 175


Edition Notes

Copyright Date

1972

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class

917.48/38

Library of Congress

F159.M64 G5

Additions and corrections made for this Second Edition. DBG

Second Edition- Copyright Dean B.Girton Dec. 30, 2022