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From: David Minor <<[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Odds & Ends, December 1998
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GenevaEB Odds &
Ends
A Newsletter of Eagles Byte Historical Research
December 1998 No. 34
Life of a Salesman II
Ever the master juggler, Williamson kept his various enterprises in
constant motion in 1793. Advertisements appeared in the spring in
Maryland and Pennsylvania for laborers to erect his seat of empire on
the Conhocton. He brought family friend "Muckle" Andrew Smith over from
Scotland to act as crew boss. Smith, acting in concert with former
Indian trader George McClure, newly employed by Williamson, set to work
with his horde of boatmen and axemen, with an energy and panache that
would help fuel the legend of the half-horse, half alligator river
roustabout later epitomized by boatman Mike Fink.
Up at Bath, Pulteney Square had been laid out by midsummer and a home
constructed at the site for Williamson. A nearby square, St. Patrick's,
was added for balance. His grandiose plans were for the namesake to
rival the English original. At Geneva plans were underway for that
settlement to become the center of a road stretching from Albany to the
Niagara frontier, with an arrangement giving the Pulteney interests the
exclusive contract to transport government mails across the state. But
more settlers were needed, many more, and Williamson knew, in these
pre-Barnum days, that nothing draws crowds like an entertainment. He
was quite familiar with Scottish agricultural societies and their
accompanying market fairs, and as the summer of 1793 approached, he
determined to duplicate the tradition in central York state. The world
would beat a path to his door. Thanks to the German problems the world
almost had to do exactly that.
Invasion of the Opera Singers
What was uppermost in the minds of the ruling class throughout New
England at this period [c. 1813] was the peril from the "licentious
turbulence of democracy," and both social and political life were
organized to scotch this particular serpent.
-Paxton Hibben - Henry Ward Beecher (1927)
Once he had established that Jack and Hervey were connected with
families he knew, he treated them as human beings; all the others as
dogs - but as good, quite intelligent dogs in a dog-loving community.
-Patrick O'Brian - HMS Surprise
The Germans brought over by Berczy and his fellow recruiter Father
Georg Siegmund Liebich have made excellent scapegoats for some of the
shortcomings of Williamson's early plans. (Folklorist Carl Carmer even
made Berczy the villain of his historical novel Genesee
Fever .) They have been described in most accounts as
shiftless, lawless scum from the streets of Hamburg. Williamson himself
has described Berczy as, "a designing villain...salesman...he has sold
pictures in Hamburg...living in drunkenness, idleness and insolence."
Berczy's immigrants are, "former Sailors, old Soldiers, Barbers,
Butchers, Bakers in abundance, Sugar bakers, Banditti, Opera
Singers...everything but farmers." They would fare no better when they
finally moved on and emigrated to Canada. Their initial reception on
the other side of Lake Ontario would be no friendlier.
The account written by Margaret Cowan in 1941 (admittedly at a time
when Germans were about as popular as body lice) is very anti-Berczy,
as are most other accounts of the fiasco. The victors write the history
- in small, bloodless skirmishes as well as in major battles.
Descendants of the Berczy immigrants in Canada have had an uphill
battle trying to dispel the traditions fostered by the Pulteney agent
and his adherents. In fairness to them we should explore the hostility
displayed against their ancestors. It seems to be a combination of the
British class system of the time, with its anti-democratic attitudes,
combined with unfortunate miscalculations from the beginning, not to
mention a personality clash of temperaments too much alike.
Jeffersonian and Jacksonian democracy in the U. S. had yet to elbow to
the forefront of national affairs. It may be an oversimplification to
say that the political faction of George Washington and Alexander
Hamilton was not unlike that of the English under George III; but more
allied them than separated them. They were, or recently had been,
English. That set them (and their cousins and business partners) above
all others, made them a race destined to run the affairs of the world.
Rule, Britannia! Rule Recently British America! Particularly upper
class Britannia and America. Anglo-Saxons were God's chosen, especially
the Anglo component. The Saxons could be useful, if one didn't expect
too much of them. Much like quite intelligent dogs, actually. Their
care and feeding was important enough, but could always be a bit
sub-standard.
Wilhelm von Moll (Berczy) was more than a picturemonger. His father had
been a German diplomat, a minster for the duchy of Brunswick at the
Court of Vienna. He had joined the military and fought in Hungary,
where he had been captured and held hostage by a local baron. (Not
unlike Williamson's experience, except that no wife came of it.) Moll
and the baron struck up a friendship over time and when Moll was
finally released he'd been given an affectionate nickname - Berczy.
Like Williamson, he returned home and looked around for employment
suitable to his station, adopting the nickname as surname. Somewhere
along the line he'd developed a talent for painting and many of his
works, displaying impressive talent, hang in museums today. Some
"salesman"! By the time the Pulteney Associates began seeking "hands"
to labor on construction projects in the U. S., Berczy had become an
assistant to the Baron de Damar. The baron assigned him to the American
venture and Berczy began gathering his work force.
The original plan called for recruiting German farmers, but harvests
had been good and there were no volunteers. Berczy turned to the city
of Hamburg. The only pool to draw from seems to have been small
shopkeepers and tradesmen fallen on hard times, with few prospects
except debtor's prison or army service. America looked good by
comparison. The agreement the seventy families accepted (most family
heads could at least sign their names, at a time when literacy was not
common) covered a six-year period. Houses, cattle, tools, meat, and
flour were promised them. In return deductions were made from their pay
of $2 per week to pay for a minister, medical expenses, fees for
laundering and other necessities. Much like tenant farmers at a later
period they were reduced by these terms to virtual serfdom.
They made the voyage in two groups, landing in early August of 1792.
One group, under Liebich, landed in New York City. The other, Berczy's
group, was diverted to Philadelphia, then sent to Northumberland, to
begin construction of the roadway to Williamsburgh. Liebich's group was
sent on to Jemima Wilkinson's settlement at New Jerusalem and from
there to Williamsburgh.
Benjamin Patterson and others had already worked out the route and, on
August 26th, construction began. At first the work was light, widening
an already existing path, and things went fairly smoothly. Four miles
had been improved by the 28th. Then the land became more rugged and the
pace slowed dramatically. A few, perhaps the sailors mentioned by
Williamson, were somewhat familiar with the use of a saw. But this was
a task for sturdy woodsmen, requiring the use of spades, hoes and axes
weighing nine pounds. The job called for bushwhackers. It received
butchers and bakers. It's been said that the felled trees left in their
wake looked as if beavers had been at them. In three weeks they had
only cleared another four miles. And early snows had begun. Added to
all this were bears, wolves, wildcats, rattlesnakes (perhaps even
savages) and other fauna not encountered in downtown Hamburg. Arguments
about the route retarded progress even further. Six more weeks. Five
miles gained. The reluctant woodsmen were discouraged; their overseers
probably even more so. Had there been no terrors lurking just beyond
the campfire's light, escape was still not an option; the men's
families had been brought along with them.
Charles Williamson had his own problems. It was at this time that the
Genesee fever had attacked him, and when he was again fit to travel
reports had reached him of the miserable, quarreling party of road
builders nearby. Still weak from his fever, he set off into
Pennsylvania to meet them, prepared to take over the enterprise and see
that it was done properly. No objective account of the first meeting
between Williamson and Berczy exists. Historian Lawrence Turner
believes the bad blood between the two men that immediately surfaced
was simply a case of two proud, headstrong, visionaries - empire
builders who were so much alike that they couldn't stand each other. It
seems as good an explanation as any. Williamson had arrived with Ben
and Robert Patterson overseeing a crew of thirty frontiersmen, and soon
the veteran workers were felling the trees while the German road
builders came along behind, clearing the underbrush and doing the
necessary spadework to level the road. Real progress was made.
Williamson had moved on to the Genesee and Berczy and the Pattersons
pushed the road forward. When mid-November arrived the Pattersons built
several log blockhouses along the route and prepared to hunker down for
the winter. But foul weather soon arrived and the hunters would return
empty-handed at the end of each day. Supplies of all sorts began
running low. Berczy was not prepared to sit around until spring and
starve.
Up the Tioga
He had been promised that provisions would be available to his party as
soon as they arrived at Painted Post, a settlement on the Tioga River,
just over the border into New York. Selecting fifteen of his fittest
countrymen, he sent them on ahead under Ben Patterson, to clear a trail
across the border, while he went back for the others. Together they
passed out of Pennsylvania and reached the Tioga. Disappointment met
them.
Berczy had ridden on ahead as the party neared the Tioga and
encountered millwright Peter Roberts, who informed him that the only
provisions awaiting his crews were a few beef cattle. When this was
confirmed at the next settlement, Berczy swung into action. He returned
to Roberts and learned that a supply of meat and flour was about to be
shipped from Newtown, New York, down the Susquehanna by barge to
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He dispatched one of the Pattersons to
Newtown to purchase some grain and ship it ahead to Painted Post. Then
he returned to his main camp and set the American woodsmen to building
a small flotilla of dugout canoes to fetch everyone along.
And found himself with a near-mutiny on his hands. The Hamburg
contingent spotted the unsteady-looking craft and nearly panicked. They
announced they would rather starve than enter a floating tree. Berczy
immediately had their tent poles chopped up and forced the women and
children into the canoes, at the same time loading all of the equipment
onto packhorses. He again went on ahead to Painted Post, being forced
to abandon his horse because of deep snow, and continued on in a
commandeered canoe. He arrived at his destination and arranged for
another flotilla to go back up the Tioga and help bring everyone in. It
was not a happy band of adventurers that disembarked in the village on
December 5, 1792. The quick arrival of the Newtown provisions cheered
them considerably, helping them to forget their terrified introduction
to one of America's oldest and most common modes of transportation.
Reunited with the group from New Jerusalem, Berczy's Germans were moved
into small wooden cabins but soon began complaining about the primitive
conditions and inadequate supplies (tools, wool, food) and looked to
Berczy as their advocate. Williamson himself was not having an easy
time of it in the early months of 1793. While on a business trip to
Philadelphia in February he got word that his young son Alexander had
just died of fever over in Northumberland. He was unable to get away
before early March, leaving Abigail to deal with the loss of their
child alone. When he did arrive he could only stay a short while before
he was off again, to Williamsburgh.
Here he soon began to worry that Berczy could be undermining his
authority and he began spreading word among the local Scots that Berczy
and the Germans were attempting to sell them goods stolen from him.
Berczy in turn accused the Pulteney Associates of giving the his
settlers false promises from the beginning. The whole situation had
Williamson frustrated. He had other matters on his mind; he was
preparing to launch a campaign to attract needed new settlers to
Williamsburgh. He had only recorded three deeds and eighteen mortgages
at Albany so far this year. Also, he had seen land on the Conhocton
River that intrigued him. Plans for a new, more accessible wilderness
capital began forming in his mind. But the problems with Berczy's
settlers got in the way, retarding all of his plans.
He was out of the village one day when Berczy, Liebich and a group of
their settlers came to confront him. Having looked for him in many of
the village houses they went on to his office and demanded of his aide
John Johnstone that Williamson show himself. There were threats made on
Williamson's life, as well as on Johnstone and on Thomas Morris. Morris
headed off for Canandaigua for help.
Williamson arrived, saw the increasingly dangerous situation and took
refuge in his office. The protesters gathered at the door and angry
negotiations began taking place through the crack underneath his door.
Gradually tempers began to cool and Berczy was able to begin calming
his men. It was at this point that officers from Canandaigua arrived
and arrested a number of the protesters.
Berczy, along with four others, headed off to Philadelphia to appeal
for aid from the newly formed German Company, which had been organized
to finance migration and settlement and aid their newly-arrived
countrymen. The suppliants brought along an address (appeal) written by
Liebich and signed by "52 husbandmen". Meanwhile Williamson had left
for the Conhocton site the day after the arrests, leaving Thomas Morris
and another aide, William Cuyler, to appeal to authorities in Albany.
It would not be until the following June that a circuit court would
hear the case. Indictments were not obtained against the protesters
("rioters" some claimed) but Williamson swore out his own complaints
and the Ontario County sheriff arrested a number of the Germans.
Witnesses may well have been bought by the local Federalists. The
upshot was a number of convictions, and the settlement quieted down.
Most of those arrested were fined and became indentured servants to
various residents of Canandaigua until the amounts were worked off.
Across Lake Ontario in Upper Canada, Lieutenant Governor John Simcoe
had learned of the situation. Although he'd been advised to do nothing
to stir up trouble south of the lake, he offered refuge to Berczy and
his settlers. Most accepted the offer and moved away from the detested
Genesee region. Their experiences eventually paid off. Instrumental in
the growth of Markham, a section of York (later renamed Toronto)
Berczy's road builders were engaged in clearing a path to the north
that would one day become Yonge Street. They would become influential
in the early political and social life of the future metropolis.
Margaret Cowan sums up the entire episode, saying, "Civilization had
put down roots in the Genesee Country." Perhaps there may have also
been some prejudice planted there.
Meanwhile, Williamson's challenges were far from over. As plans for
Bath began blossoming Williamsburgh was languishing. The recent civil
strife may have soured some potential settlers and, even more
importantly, investors. The crude carriage road up from the south still
discouraged anyone not traveling by foot or on horseback. "Bread" was
not easily come by. "Circuses" might do the trick. The salesman became
a showman.
To be continued...
NOTE:
Historian Lawrence Turner spotted some inaccuracies in Part I,
pertaining to the actual physical and temporal layout of the village of
Williamsburgh; I want to set the record straight. Most importantly, the
town was on the site where Route 63 passes today, not Route 36 (which
runs down the other side of the Genesee).
There was actually no church building as such, services were held in
the granary occasionally. No school building existed either. Classes
were instead conducted later by Sam Murphy in his Tavern. The ballroom
was on the second floor of the Starr Tavern; Starr's Tavern was built
earlier, around 1792. As far as can be known Murphy's didn't come along
for another thirty-some years. Much of the history of the village can
only be surmised.
ADDITIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
Hilbert, A. G. - The Williamson Road (The Crooked Lake
Review , July, August and September, 1993)
© 1998 David Minor / Eagles Byte
David Minor
Eagles Byte Historical Research
Rochester, New York
716 264-0423
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http://home.eznet.net/~dminor