Anecdote |
- A wayfaring Dutchman enters a rustic tavern at the edge of the Genesee wilderness in 1792. The robust young proprietor asks the visitor his name--and if he has a marriageable daughter? The Dutchman replies. "Mabee"
Like generations of pioneer farmers before him, Orringh Stone counted on raising many sons--a necessity at the frontier where a man had to tame the land, clear forests and defend against overwhelming natural and unnatural forces. Courtship might be thought of as an insupportable luxury so Orringh married the Dutchman's daughter, Leisje Mabee, without delay. [1]
Orringh, the son of a pioneer, who was a son of a pioneer, who was a son of a pioneer, and so on, did his best to perpetuate the family name. [2] Leisje bore nine children and died shortly after delivering the last, a boy who lived only a few months. Of the surviving eight children, only two were male--and one of those died young without issue. According to historians the other son disappeared into the Gold Rush of '49. They conclude: "With Orringh's death on April 2, 1839, his branch of the Stone name was extinct in Brighton."[3] A sad ending--made even more poignant by recent findings. Orringh's son Enos, the 49er, actually survived and returned to Brighton in old age and died there. He left no children--only a sparse list of chattels as his legacy:
"gold watch and chain, 2 chairs, old trunk, 2 razors/strop, hand bag, mattrass, pillow, old underwear, hose, photographs, memorandum books, two suits old clothing considerably worn and soiled, two pairs old pants, and one old overcoat, discolored by salt water."[4]
So ends the male line of Orringh Stone--but not the female
Northfield
In the spring of 1790, Judge Enos Stone an investor from Lenox, Massachusetts came to the Genesee Valley wilderness where he had just purchased some frontier land.[5] His party drove oxen, cows, hogs and a few sheep past Utica to Lake Cayuga and then loaded their stock in two Durham Boats and continued by water for another treacherous four days. Satisfied at having stocked his land, Judge Stone returned to Lenox and persuaded his eldest son, Orringh, to follow his route west, take up the land and farm it.[6]
Orringh did so the following spring and built himself a cabin on an Indian trail next to an imposing rock--a rock he later learned was a 'council rock' of the Seneca.[7] Orringh had been hard at work many months hacking out a little clearing in the dense woods--a little patch of sunshine to grow some crops and pasture his father's stock--most of which had already gone wild and escaped into the forests. He was alone in the wilderness except for an occasional visit by a Seneca or a rare visit from his brother. Once his brother brought Joseph Brant, the great Iroquois warrior chief, to his cabin. [8]
Then one day he saw a small party coming toward him, pulling a boat on wheels down the Indian path from the landing on Irondequoit Bay. Orringh provided shelter as was his custom. His cabin being the only habitable place around, was called, optimistically, a tavern. His guests were the aforesaid Dutchman, Jacobus Maybee from the Mohawk Valley, and some investors from Vermont.C>
Orringh referred to Liesje by the English equivalent, "Elizabeth"--"Betsy" for short. She bore her first child, a daughter Sally, in 1795. [10]
The Stones led a life of contrasts--hard work and hospitality. While they cleared and cultivated land, they entertained celebrities in the tavern: Aaron Burr in 1795 and in 1797 Louis Phillipe (King of France in 1830).[11] Betsy bore three more daughters, Olive, Malana and Elizabeth by 1804, while Orringh took a leadership role in the growing settlement. In 1805 he obtained $50 from a neighboring town and the help of four other men to dig a road four miles long and two rods wide from his farm to the river. He was rewarded with the office of Highway Commissioner.[12] In 1806 Betsy bore yet another daughter, Harriet. Then finally in the summer of 1808 she bore a son, Orringh Jr., followed by yet another son, Enos, in 1810.
Betsy Mabee Stone died in 1813. Orringh remarried within six months. Betsy's infant son died three days after Orringh's second marriage. [14]
Orringh's second wife, Sally West, produced two more daughters, Caroline and Eliza. By then the Stone's log cabin had been transformed into a modest two-story frame dwelling in the Federal Style. It continued to serve as tavern and prominent meeting place. The Town of Brighton formed at the Stone Tavern in 1814 as did the Brighton Presbyterian Church in 1817. Sally passed away in 1819. Orringh married a third time but had no more children. Orringh's eldest daughters had already reached adulthood and had married. Brighton was soon eclipsed by the emerging city of Rochester. The city attracted more celebrities--in 1825 General Lafayette visited the Stone's Tavern.[15]
Orringh entered his mature years with a legacy of accomplishment.
Tragedy struck one spring night in 1834 when Orringh's 26-year-old son, Orringh Jr., fell from the steamship Michigan on Lake Erie. It was weeks before his body washed ashore. During that time many feared he had been murdered. When the corpse was finally found at a place appropriately named, "Chagrin," Ohio, the young man's personal belongings and papers were found with him. This convinced Orringh and the authorities that Orringh Jr., had drowned by accident. He was buried in Brighton Cemetery with his mother and infant brother. [16]
from Pioneer Legacy: Orringh Stone and Elizabeth Mabee of Brighton, New York
[1] Margaret Schmitt MacNab, Katherine Wilcox Thompson, and Shirley Cox Husted, Northfield on the Genesee (Rochester NY: Monroe Co. Historian, 1981), [hereinafter Mac Nab, Northfield] pp. 23, 199. Folklore tells how a pioneer travelling with a circuit minister observed Liesje's sister doing the wash and married her on the spot.
[2] For the ancestry of Orringh Stone see "Descendants of Orringh Stone and Elizabeth Mabee," by author, August 5, 2000 as submitted to the Board for certification of Genealogists, in the category, Certified Genealogist. See also "Orringh Stone," in Mac Nab, Northfield, p. 305
[3] Mac Nab, Northfield, p. 304
[4] Photocopies of papers Enos Stone Estate File 1889-495, Monroe County Surrogate, Rochester, NY, Ltrs. Adm. Ref. in Book 9, p. 329-331 [hereinafter Enos Stone Estate].
[5] William McIntosh, History of Monroe County, New York (Philadelphia: Everts. Ensign & Everts, 1877), p. 423 [hereinafter, McIntosh, Hist. Monroe Co.] p. 423.
[6] McIntosh, Hist. Monroe Co. p. 424.
[7] Henry O'Reilly, Sketches of Rochester (1838; rpt. Geneseo: James Brunner, 1984) [hereinafter O'Reilly, Sketches] p. 247.
[8] "Reminiscences of Enos Stone," McIntosh, Hist. Monroe Co., p. 425-426.
[9] MacNab, Northfield, pp. 23, 199.
[10] West-Stone Bible Records (unpublished birth, marriage, death, 1735-1889) eight photocopies images of anonymous, handwritten vital records donated to the Landmark Society of Western New York [LSWNY]. The records of the families of Pelatiah West, Daniel West, and Orringh Stone appear in one hand and seem to be transcriptions. Later records for the familis of Orson West and Henry Knickerbocker appear in different handwriting and therefore robably were written at the time of the event. The records consist of names and dates, not places, [hereinafter West Family].
[11] Tengwall Scrapbook #3, March 24, 1924, Local History Div. Rundel Library, Rochester, NY, [Rundel 26] scrapbooks contain dated and undated clippings of early local newspaper articles.See also Mac Nab, Northfield, p. 304.
[12] "Northfield Records, Printed from the Originals," Mac Nab, Northfield, pp. 35; see also McIntosh, Hist. Monroe Co.NY, p. 428.
[13] Tengwall 3, n 11; see also Mac Nab, Northfield, pp. 69-73; McIntosh, Hist. Monroe Co. NY., pp. 517-519.
[14] Tombstones, Brighton Cemetery, Hoyt Place, Brighton, NY, author's photos, Lots 99 and 120, Sept. 17, 1999 (Tombstones appear to be quite old and are believed to have been placed at or near time of death; [hereinafter Brighton Cemetery]; see also West Family
[15] Tengwall 3
[16] Orringh Stone, Letter to Rochester Daily Democrat-microfilm [RDD] July 26, 1834, p. 2, col. 5; see also Brighton Cemetery; West Family.
[17] Mac Nab, Northfield, p. 304. These authors incorrectly state that Enos Stone died in California.
[18] Orringh Stone Will, referenced in Monroe Co. NY Index to Wills 2:707; photocopy of document from estate File 1839-43, Monroe County Surrogate, Rochester, NY [hereinafter Orringh Stone Will].
[19] Kevin Harrington, "Chain of Title for Stone-Tolan House," unpublished research report, LSWNY, 1966, [hereinafter Harrington, Chain of Title].
[20] Hans Finke, "Harriet Stone Hagaman," n.p., unpublished manuscript, 1998, Ontario County Records and Management Office, Canandaigua, NY [hereinafter, Finke, Hagaman].
[21] "The Stone-Tolan House", brochure for historic home, Rochester, NY, LSWNY.
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