The early settlers from the Old World
first peopled the eastern shores of the Atlantic,
and founded the New England States, New York State,
and the whole seaboard from Maine to Florida.
A New England village was a collection
of log houses on the edge of a deep forest.
Snow drifted into the room through the cracks in the
walls, and the howling of wolves made night hideous
around them. The children were taught in log
schoolhouses, and the people worshipped in log churches.
Savage Indians kept the settlers in
a state of continual fear. Sometimes they would
suddenly surround a solitary house, kill all the inmates,
and set fire to the dwelling. Again and again
have the children been aroused from their sleep by
the fearful Indian war-whoop, which was more dreaded
than the howling of the wolves. Even women learned
to use guns and other weapons, that they might be able
to defend their homes from these savage assaults.
The log house villages grew into populous
places, and the descendants of the “Pilgrims”
were not always satisfied to remain in the cities
founded by their forefathers. Wonderful stories
were told in the towns of the amazing fruitfulness
of the forest and prairie land out West, which induced
large numbers to sell their property and set out on
the tedious and adventurous journey.
Before the great lines of railway
were constructed, which now stretch across the North
American continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
there was a constant stream of emigration from the
East to the West. Large waggons carried the women
and children, and the stores of necessary articles,
which must be conveyed at all cost, for they could
not be obtained in the localities to which the pioneers
bent their steps.
Slowly the emigrant trains made their
way through roadless regions. They had to ford
rivers, wade through swamps, and cut paths through
thick forests. Weeks, and even months, were spent
on journeys which are now accomplished in less than
twenty-four hours.
Numerous difficulties and manifold
dangers beset the wanderers’ path; yet, regardless
of both, they pushed on with infinite courage and
patience. Nor was the journey through the wilds
without a tinge of romance to the younger and more
adventurous spirits, who enjoyed the freedom they
could not have in the towns and cities.
About eighty years ago, a widow and
her family a son and a daughter packed
up all their worldly possessions in an emigrant waggon,
and started for the West. Widow Ballou made her
home in the State of Ohio, which at that time was
only peopled by a few scattered settlers. Five
years afterwards, a young man named Abram Garfield
started on the same journey. It is said that
he was more anxious to renew his acquaintance with
the Ballou family than to make his fortune. The
widow’s daughter Eliza was the attraction that
drew him into the Western wilds.
On the third of February 1821, Abram
Garfield and Eliza Ballou became man and wife, and
their first home was a log cabin, which the young
husband erected at Newburg, near Cleveland. It
was an isolated spot, for Cleveland, the larger place,
then consisted of a few log cabins, containing a population
of about one hundred persons.
The humble dwelling of Abram Garfield
and his young wife had but one large room. The
three windows were of greased paper, a substitute for
glass, and the furniture was home made and of the rudest
description. Wood was the chief material used.
There were wooden stools, a wooden bed, and wooden
plates and dishes. A frying-pan, an iron pot,
and a kettle, made up the list of utensils which were
absolutely necessary.
Nine years passed away, during which
the young couple were very happy in each other’s
love, and three children were added to their little
family circle. Abram worked on the land, and
was for a time employed in the construction of the
Ohio and Pennsylvanian Canal. To provide for
his growing family, the young husband then bought fifty
acres of land, a few miles away from his first home.
At the same time, Amos Boynton, who had married Mrs.
Garfield’s sister, also bought a tract of land
in the same locality.
The two families removed to the new
scene of their labours at the same time, and lived
together in one log cabin, until they had erected a
second dwelling. When this was done, the Garfields
and the Boyntons settled down to reclaim the wilderness.
They had to depend on each other for society, as
their nearest neighbour lived seven miles away.
Garfield’s new home was built
of unhewn logs, notched and laid one upon another,
to the height of twelve feet in front and eight feet
behind. The spaces between the logs were filled
with clay and mud, to keep out the wind and the rain.
The roof was covered with boards, and the floor was
made of logs, each split into two parts and laid the
flat side up. A plank door and three small windows
completed the primitive dwelling. There was but
one large room on the ground floor, twenty by thirty
feet, and a loft above, to which access was obtained
by a ladder. In the loft were the straw beds
on which the children slept.
The land which the pioneers had bought
was part of the forest, and was therefore covered
with timber. This had to be cleared away before
the land could be brought into cultivation.
Much hard work and steady application were needed
to accomplish this purpose. Abram Garfield was
a strong, well-made man, who shrank from no labour,
however hard, and boldly faced every difficulty with
a stout heart and a determined will. Early and
late he toiled on his farm, cheered by the presence
of his wife and children, who were all the world to
him. The trees fell before his axe, and ere
long he had room to sow his first crop. With
a thankful heart he saw the grain ripen, and his first
harvest was safely gathered in before the winter storms
came on.
In January 1830 he removed to his
new home, and in November 1831 his fourth child was
born. This baby boy received the name of James
Abram Garfield. Little did the humble backwoodsman
dream that the name he lovingly gave his child would
one day be on the lips of millions of his fellow-countrymen;
that it would rank with those of princes, kings, and
emperors; and that it would be linked for ever with
the history of the United States of America.