Warren County Local
History by Dallas Bogan |
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Dallas Bogan on 3 August 2004 |
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original article by Dallas Bogan |
Return to Index to see a list of other articles by Dallas Bogan |
A rather delicious treat served by the innkeeper was that of rabbit or squirrel.
Squirrels were so plentiful that they were legislated against in Ohio in 1808.
Other such delicacies of the times were venison, bear and buffalo.
With the population of the white man gaining by leaps and bounds, soon the larger
game of the Ohio country began to disappear, namely the elk and buffalo. In
contrast, bears and deer continued for decades.
In 1852, a supper was given in Social Hall at Fremont, which was advertised
in the local paper. It stated, "Kessler prepared a supper that must have
satisfied the most fastidious. A bear was served up in the best possible style;
venison, turkeys, chickens and other game in great profusion, and the other
accompaniments of a feast."
Wild hogs were so abundant in Ohio and Indiana that any farmer could shoot them
at will in his own woods. Two stories are told as to why they were so numerous.
One report reveals that during the War of 1812 hundreds of the animals escaped
from the army's commissary department, and that they multiplied in a few years
to great numbers.
Another rather plausible story goes that these animals were the offspring of
domestic animals that had been left by depressed settlers who had returned to
their homes in the East.
The wild hog had rather sweet meat, however, the lard would sour immediately.
With an abundance of foodstuffs in which to feed, such as nuts found in great
quantities in our virgin forests, they thrived in unlimited numbers.
Long before the extinction of this wild beast, domesticated hogs had come to
take their place at the home and tavern table; the same holds true for the ever-present
turkeys.
The American Indian taught the pioneer how to cure and "jerk" venison.
The method of salting and smoking of pork was brought from old England.
Fresh beef or pork was used less in summer time. The absence of this luxury
was substituted with the presence of fresh fish caught from the streams.
Rafters of the tavern smoke houses hung full with the choicest of fat hams,
shoulders, bacon and strips of "jerked" beef. The latter was prepared
by evenly cutting the fleshy parts of the animal into sheets rarely more than
one inch in thickness.
A preservative method was then commenced by dipping these strips into brine
or salt, then exposed to the sun and wind and dried before the decaying process
set in. In this way, all the nutritive properties of the animal could be sustained.
The entire animal would be consumed, but many prejudices still exist in which
the heart, liver, and especially the brains and kidneys, would not be eaten
by the pioneer, reason being these were considered the lesser part of the animal.
Mutton was not a favorable treat at the table. William Oliver,
an Englishman, wrote in 1842 "mutton is never seen at the table except
at the house of some person from the old country or from the eastern states,
and the natives cock their noses at it as we should do at a boiled rat. Sheep
are kept solely for their wool."
The reliable old milk cow came to the rescue of many a pioneer. Products from
this domesticated animal included then, as now, cream, butter, cottage cheese,
and a whole family of home made nourishing cheeses.
Many taverns had their own spring enclosed with a small upright building constructed
of stone or brick, it being named a springhouse. These compact buildings housed
the tavern supplies in all weather, except the coldest. Milk, butter and cream
were kept in the coolness of the building, and here in the summer the churning
was done. Rows of crocks of cream and milk were kept cool in the shallow stream
running from the spring.
If the tavern keeper wasn't fortunate enough to have a spring, he used a deep
well with a penthouse built over it. He would suspend the buckets of cream or
butter into the passageway from ropes for preservation.
Staple crops such as potatoes, beans, beets and peas were easily raised in
the pioneers' fine gardens. Cabbage was a treat, but its cousins, cauliflower
and brussel sprouts, were uncommon.
Tomatoes were taboo to our forefathers and many believed they were poisonous.
Originally called "love-apples" or "Jerusalem apples," they
were generally used as ornaments on the mantel or other conspicuous places.
Welby's journal refers to the many jam-packed fruit orchards. He had first entered
Ohio at Wheeling, journeying over Zane's Trace. His description of the land
was that of a wild and uncleared nature for the most part. Upon reaching St.
Clairsville he writes:
"The town is well-placed and the buildings good and neat; land thereabouts,
a grazing soil, is worth about $20.00 per acre. We bought here out of a waggon-load
half a peck of peaches at six cents. The peach and apple orchards are literally
breaking down with fruit: every morning we stop at the first orchard to take
in as many apples as we want for the day."
William Cooper Howells, in his Recollections of Life in Ohio,
writes:
"When the country was new peaches were the easiest fruit to raise. They
came forward very quickly, bearing in three or four years from the planting
of the stone, and they produced so abundantly, when the frost did not kill them,
that they were freely given away to those who would eat or dry them, and sold
at twelve cents a bushel to distillers who worked them up into brandy."
Howells states that this common fruit grew to great perfection in the new soil
of the new country. He tells us that in 1820 an unlimited crop of peaches was
"one of the glories of his early life."
A gentleman was hired to take a four horse-wagon load of peaches to the Steubenville
market to dispose of them. Some sold for twenty-five cents a bushel, while more
sold for eighteen cents a bushel. The peaches that did not sell were worked
up into "peach-leather," a refreshing confection prepared by spreading
out a layer of mashed peach-pulp upon a board and drying it in the sun. This
venture barely exceeded expenses.
Howells says that "rows of peaches were often alternated with apple-trees
and these were coming into perfection in the second decade."
Orchards could hardly be mentioned without the name of Johnny Appleseed
coming up. He first arrived in the Ohio country in 1801 with a horse-load of
apple seeds gathered from the cider presses of western Pennsylvania.
These seeds were carried in leather bags thrown over the horse's back. His first
plantings were on the banks of Licking Creek in Licking County. Working westward,
he planted nurseries and orchards everywhere.
Each year he would return with more seeds, which he carried, by horseback, and
in many instances, by canoe into many parts of the State. He also carried and
planted the seed in Indiana. Here he died and was buried at Ft. Wayne.
After the days of Johnny Appleseed, a man by the name of Nicholas
Longworth, a celebrated jurist of Cincinnati, who migrated to the Queen
City in 1803, imported skilled gardeners and horticulturists from France. Large
varieties of fruits and vegetables were raised in his nurseries. He was most
famous for his grapes and strawberries.
The bogs in the northern part of the State, particularly in the Black Swamp
area, produced wild cranberries, blueberries and huckleberries. So numerous
were these luxuries that people would pick them and load them into wagons. Barrels
were also used as gathering devices.
Indians often gathered the berries from the marshy ground on which Toledo now
stands and sold them to the housewives and inn- keepers of Perrsyburg.
The Ohio soil also produced wild plums. Thomas Ewing said they
were finer than any tame varieties he had ever tasted.
Wild grapes and strawberries were also found in superior numbers. The early
Ohio horticulturist found it a simple task to grow cultivated varieties. In
the southern part of the State growers began early the cultivation of strawberries
which produced fine and plentiful crops.
An article found in a Cincinnati newspaper a few years' later concerning strawberries
comments that "few people know what an immense amount of this delightful
fruit is sold in this city. About the middle of next week, if the weather be
favorable, you will see them sold by the cartload in our market. Probably as
many as two or three hundred bushels are sold in a single morning.
"One individual in this neighborhood sells about $3,000 worth in a season.
He employs on some days a hundred persons to pick them. In plentiful seasons
they are to be had at a very reasonable rate, about an average of ten or twelve
cents a quart.
"In addition to the common market in the acme of the harvest you will hear
in the warm afternoon the mellow voice of some old Negro singing through the
streets, - Strawberries! - strawberries - oh, fine strawberries! - strawberries!
- strawberries! - oh, fine strawberries!"
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This page created 3 August 2004 and last updated
28 September, 2008
© 2004 Arne H Trelvik
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