Wednesday, December 30, 2020

New Addition to Marietta

 Marietta Daily Journal, March 5, 1917

Marietta will have another residence subdivision in the near future, according to information that was given out today. The new addition will be located on the Strecker farm, just off the end of Third Street, and will be built by the Strecker estate, B. F., C. F. Strecker and others. It is planned to start work on the new addition just as soon as the weather permits and when completed the place will be one of the finest sites for homes in the Pioneer City.

The Strecker farm consists of a large tract of land just off the north end of Third Street, and it joins the Rathbone Addition. It is planned to build the new addition on the right hand side of Third Street on the high ground. A part of the new subdivision will be within the city limits.

The Strecker Brothers plan to start the grading work on the addition in the near future and when this work is completed, several modern homes will be erected. E. T. Jenney, of the firm of Jenney and Jenney, of Cleveland, will supervise the work on the new addition. Mr. Jenney is a landscape gardener of much repute and only recently had charge of the work of improving the fine estate of D. A. Bartlett. He should be able to put the new residence site into the finest kind of shape.

Definite plans as to the number of homes and their style have not yet been decided upon, but a number of the most modern residences will be built. The construction of this new residence site will aid greatly in relieving Marietta of her present shortage of homes which has been caused by an increase in the industrial wealth of the city, hence an increase in the number of laborers.


Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Sad Christmas

 Marietta Tri-Weekly Register, December 24, 1891

Marietta will have a sad Christmas. The prevailing epidemic is affecting someone in almost every family. This sickness appears to be seeking the weak places in the weak subjects in attacks and several deaths have occurred, while many others are dangerously sick. As we write, the notes of the funeral dirge of Col. Phillips fall upon the ear; the remains of Dr. Addy and George Irish are in affectionate waiting for the last rites. Dr. Seth Hart, the veteran physician, is hover on the border line, while anxious watch is held over the bedside of many who are frail and very sick. What we say of Marietta is also true of many places in the county. Many who for a day or two were quite sick are up and at their duties again, but not strong and vigorous.


Wednesday, December 16, 2020

The Old Folks at Beverly

 The Marietta Register, November 4, 1875

Editor Register: Did you know what a grand, good time we have been having here? But then we are always having so many "good times" you could hardly expect to keep posted.

This, however, was something quite out of the usual way, therefore, all the more enjoyable. We called it a relic gathering, or more pretentiously, a centennial dinner. I am sure if you had been within the boundaries of our comely town on last Tuesday morning, you would have sniffed excitement with the very atmosphere, for everybody was in qui vive, and on the street. All the country round about came to town in holiday attire. If anybody stayed at home to "mind the children" or "tend the fires," it was not the old folks, as usual. At eleven o'clock, A.M., the lecture room of the Presbyterian church was filled with happy faces "and still they came."

Five large tables stood in the south side of the audience room, loaded with articles of every conceivable kind which had belonged to former generations. What the tables would not hold was hung upon the wall and in other ways displayed, provision not having been made for so extensive an exhibition. Most of the articles were over a hundred, and many several hundred, years old.

On the other side of the room were three long tables loaded with the fatness of the land - an appetizing array, indeed a substantial old fashioned dinner such as our great-grandmothers loved to spread for their friends. Chicken pies, baked beans and pork, immense puddings and pones, potatoes with their jackets on, boiled cabbage, doughnuts, pound cakes, pies, gingerbread after the good old way, and indeed almost everything that goes to make up a good dinner.

We think you would have enjoyed most of all the sight of the ladies on table committee. They were in old style costumes, veritable belles and matrons of ye ancient times. They were a never ending source of interest and amusement to all the guests. The ladies in costume were Mrs. Thurza Stull, Mrs. Eva Reynolds, Mrs. Mollie Parker, Mrs. Mary Blondin, Misses Ella Fowler, Tillie Glass, Flora Parker, Rose Davis, Lottie Buck, Jessie McIntosh, Mary Cooney, Emma Robertson, Josie Davis, Flora Fowler, and Mary Robinson. 

The hour for dinner having arrived, the audience was called to order by our friend, Boylston Shaw, and that good old song, Auld Lang Syne was "lined out" by Prof. Smith and sung by the audience after the manner of ye olden time. Prayer was then offered by Prof. Smith in an earnest and fervent manner and appropriate to the occasion. The guests were then seated, the old folks first quite filling up the tables.

After dinner Mr. Shaw again called the audience to order and short addresses were made recalling events of the past by Col. Enoch McIntosh, Ezekiel Emerson, Joseph Nickerson of Morgan County, Gen. H. F. Devol, and Prof. Smith of the Beverly Academy. Col. McIntosh read a list of all the first settlers of this community and gave a brief biographical sketch of the life of each one.

Taking a look among the tables containing the relics, we were greatly surprised at the large number and variety. We can mention but a few of the most interesting and valuable. A sun dial 125 years old, wooden plates over 100 years old, beautiful butter dish 100 years old, an iron kettle brought from Massachusetts by Mrs. Owens, grandmother of Elijah Sprague, the first white woman who landed on the Ohio Company's purchase. In this old kettle she cooked the first meal ever cooked by a white woman in Marietta. This valuable relic is now in the possession of Elijah Sprague.

A cradle belonging to the Devol Family, in which was rocked the children of that family twenty-five in number, from Alpha Devol, 1789, down to 1873. What squalls it must have witnessed in its eventful life. Two salt dishes 420 years old, a china mustard cup 175 years old, a horn drinking cup, carried by Benjamin Shaw in the Revolutionary War, a silver teaspoon over 300 years old, brought from England by Miss Judd of Morgan County.

Sword and bayonet from Bunker Hill battlefield, the Ulster County Gazette of January 1800 containing account of Washington's funeral and battle of Zurick, The Maryland Journal and the Baltimore Advertiser, August 20, 1773; The American Friend, Marietta, Friday, December 4, 1812, printed and published by Royal Prentiss. Episcopal Prayer Book 1725, examples of catechising upon the Assembly's Shorter Catechism for instructing the young and ignorant, &c., 1737. The above are but a few of the valuable relics found upon the tables. Everyone was surprised at this display of relics, for it far exceeded the most sanguine expectation.

What added most to the enjoyment of the occasion was the deep interest manifested by the old men and women, and the intense pleasure it seemed to afford them to be allowed this opportunity of meeting together in such a way that they could recall to mind once more the days of old, when they were boys and girls, upon whose brows old time had not dared to strike a furrow.

In the evening a mush and milk supper was served at the same place and was well attended by the younger people. This event will long be remembered as one of the most pleasant episodes of 1875 in our village. All feel grateful to the kind ladies who gave the entertainment, and we can assure them that all, with one accord, pronounce it an honor to the fair ones who gave it.

Trio


Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Arrest Causes Surprise Here

Marietta Daily Times, December 12, 1924

Hearing of Hunter Set for December 16

Refusing to discuss his activities of the past eight years, during which he has been a fugitive from justice, George W. Hunter, missing Williamstown bank cashier, is in the district jail at Washington, D.C., where he is held for a preliminary hearing on Tuesday, December 16. Following his arrest on Wednesday evening, he was brought before a federal commissioner, where he declined to talk, even refusing to admit his name. His bond was fixed at $15,000.

During the greater part of the eight years that Hunter has been a fugitive, there has been a general belief here that he was living either in or near Washington, and there has been speculation as to why he was not arrested long ago. Different Marietta people have seen and talked with Mrs. Hunter in Washington at different times, and some of them have understood that Hunter was "staying nearby." This condition had prevailed for so long that it had come to be the generally accepted belief that no one cared to prosecute him, hence the surprise occasioned when federal agents arrested him.

Shadowed Mrs. Hunter

Washington reports indicate that department of justice agents shadowed Mrs. Hunter on the streets of Washington and in this way came upon and arrested her husband. He was taken into custody in one of the residential districts of the national capital. It is said that following his arrest he denied that he had spent any part of the past eight years roaming over the country, and further denied that he ever had been on the Pacific coast, in which section friends reported having seen him a few years ago.

Following Hunter's arrest on Wednesday evening, he got in touch with some of his former associates at Williamstown and Parkersburg, it is said, and arrangements were begun to provide counsel for him. It is understood that an effort will be made in Washington next week to secure a reduction in his bond. Then it is expected the case will be sent back to the northern West Virginia district for trail, possibly at Parkersburg.

Indicted After Disappearance

Hunter was indicted at the Wheeling term of federal court following his disappearance in 1916, and he is charged with appropriating to his own use $3,629.53 of the Williamstown National Bank's money. He is further charged with making false entries in the bank's books, which aggregate $2,073.21.

The alleged misappropriation of the bank's funds, according to the first of twelve counts in the indictment, occurred on or about June 16, 1914, at which time Hunter is alleged to have taken $454.29. 


Wednesday, December 2, 2020

A Lost Son

American Friend, December 24, 1819

On the 17th July I landed at Baltimore, from England, with a part of my family and immediately started for the western country. My son William Collis started at the same time for Pittsburgh, and we parted on our journey thence. After waiting at Pittsburgh some time, I left that place for Marietta, Ohio, where I now reside, waiting intelligence from my son, whom I have not since heard from and do not know where he is. If he is yet alive he will find me at Marietta, Ohio, to which place he is requested to write me immediately.

William Collis
Dec. 21, 1819.

Printers throughout the states of Ohio and western part of Virginia will confer a favor on me by giving the above a few insertions.

W.C.