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VERNON was formed from Westmoreland and Augusta, February 17,
1802. A part of Stockbridge, (Madison Co.,) was taken off in 1836. It lies on
the west border of the County, south of the center. Its surface is rolling,
the mean elevation being 200 feet above the Mohawk. The principal streams are
Oneida Creek, forming the west boundary, and Skanandoa Creek, flowing through
the east part. The soil is a fine quality of gravelly arid clay loam,
underlaid by limestone, water-lime and gypsum.. It is one of the most fertile
towns in the County. A mineral spring is found about one mile north-west of Vernon Center. The territory of this town was
included in the original Oneida Reservation. The principal Oneida village was called
Kan-on-wall-o-hu-le. A small remnant of this once powerful tribe still live
in the south-west part of the town.
Vernon, (p. v.) on Skanandoa Creek, north of the center of the town, was
incorporated April 6, 1827, and contains four churches, two academies, a
bank, two hotels, a knitting factory and carding mill, a flouring mill, a saw
mill and about 500 inhabitants. The Fair Ground of the Agricultural Society
in the vicinity contains a half-mile track.
Vernon Center, (p. v.) situated south-east of the center of the town,
contains two churches, viz., Presbyterian and Methodist, a hotel, a grist
mill, two saw mills, and about 100 inhabitants.
Oneida Castle, (p. v.) on the west line of
the town, contains two churches, a union school, two hotels, a hat
manufactory, two stores and about 600 inhabitants.
Turkey Street
is a thickly populated part of the turnpike between Vernon
and Oneida Castle.
The first settler in this town was Josiah Bushnell, from Berkshire County, Mass.
He came here in 1794, and settled upon the north-west corner of Bleecker’s
South Patent. The Indian title to this territory was extinguished in 1797,
and immediately a large number of emigrants from the New England States
settled here, and within two years most of the land was taken up. The first
settlers upon “Baschard’s Location,” were Rev. Publius Bogue, Deacons Hills
and Bronson, Samuel Wetmore, David and Levi Bronson, Seth Holmes, Anosn
Stone, Asahel Gridley, Heman Smith, Eliphas Bissell, Adonijah Foot, Stephen
Goodwin, Seth Hills, Eli Frisbie, James and John DeVotie, Samuel Austin, and
others named Stanton, Griswold, Alvord, Thrall, Wilcox, Church, Spencer,
Carter, Marshall, Tuttle, Bush, Wilcoxsou and Webber. Most of these were from
Litchfield County, Conn. They laid out a plot of six acres,
called Vernon Center. On this green all Protestant
denominations have a right to build meeting and. school houses. Around this
plot the land was surveyed into acre lots, upon which some of the first
settlers located. On the “Reservation,” in the east part of the town, were
settlers named Skinner, Lawrence, Shedd, Gratton, Deland, Spaulding, Grant,
Kdlogg, Carter, Tryon, Morse, Simons, Doane, May, Mahan, Page, Ingraham,
Crocker, Graves, Soper, and others. In the south-western part of the town the
settlers were Griffin,
Webster, Freeman, Grant, Stone, Hotehkiss and others, and on VanEps’ Patent
the early settlers were Richard and Benjamin Hubbell, Gad Warner, Benjamin,
Alanson and David Pierson, Joseph Patten, and William and Elisha Root. The
early settlers of this town were possessed of more wealth than those of any
other town in the County, and as a consequence were able to hire some of
their improvements made, and were exempt from many of the hardships and
privations to which most of the early settlers of the County were exposed.
The first marriage in the town was that of Aaron Davis and Amy Bushnell; it
took place previous to 1798, but the time is not precisely known. The first
birth was that of Edward Marshall, and the first death that of a daughter of
Josiah Bushnell, in 1795. Mr. Sessions taught the first school, in 1708; A.
VanEps kept the first store, the same year, and Asahel Gridley built the
first grist mill. The first religious society, (Cong.) was formed in 1801, at
Vernon Center.
The population in 1865 was 2,931, and the area 28,649 acres.
The number of school districts is twelve, employing fourteen teachers. The
number of children of school age is 865; the number attending school 605; the
average attendance 276, and the amount expended for school purposes during
the year ending Sept. 30th, 1868, was $4,569.09.
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