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One
of the most active pioneers in the settlement of this
town was James Douglas. He came here, in 1739, from
Plainfield, Cream Hill was his lot; it received this
name from the superiority of the soil and the beauty of
its scenery. This name was given to it, as Town Records
show, before Mr. Douglas purchased. He bought two rights
of Timothy Pierce of Canterbury, an original proprietor,
in 1738, for £400; also, he bought fifty acres on Cream
Hill, on which his first house was built. The fifty-acre
lot was purchased of Jonah Bierce of New Fairfield, who
had bought it of Nathan Lyon of Fairfield, an original
proprietor. James Douglas was brother of Benajah, an
original proprietor in Cornwall, but who settled in
North Canaan, being the ancestor of the Douglas family
in that town, and great-grandfather of the distinguished
senator, Stephen Arnold Douglas.
James
Douglas and his wife, whose family name was Marsh taught
the first school in Cornwall, he teaching in the winter
and his wife in summer. Cream Hill, before the woodman's
ax was heard there, was covered with lofty trees of
various kinds, the surface not being entangled with
underbrush, as much of the forest in town was. Mr.
Douglas was an energetic and public-spirited man.
He expended much
labor in opening a mine one hundred and twenty feet in
depth, for gold. Specimens of the ore were sent to
Boston for analysis, from which small sums in gold were
returned. But the expense of obtaining it was too great
to make it a paying business. Another mine was wrought
for silver, sixty feet, with like results. He is said to
have wintered the first stock in town -- a horse and
yoke of oxen. Heavy snows caught him unprepared. Deer
were abundant; the boiled flesh made a nutritious soup
for the cattle, which, with browse from the trees felled
for the purpose, was their support. The horse refused
both, but ate hair from the skins, and moss from the
trees gathered in blankets.
Mr. Douglas, about
1748, erected a large two-story house, which, about two
years after its completion, was unfortunately burned
down, and he built the house now standing on the same
ground, which he occupied till his death. This is
supposed to be the oldest occupied house in town. Capt.
Hezekiah Gold, son of Rev. Hezekiah Gold, who married
Rachel Wadsworth, granddaughter of Mr. James Douglas,
purchased this property about 1790, of Mr. Joseph
Wadsworth, a son-in-law of Mr. Douglas. This house and
farm is at present (1877) owned by T. S. Gold.
Farmers were then
their own mechanics. The old tan vat, where James
Douglas tanned his own leather, was but recently filled
up -- on the bank of the small stream now called the
"Gutter," near his house.
Mr. Douglas had
three sons and four daughters. The eldest of the
daughters, Sarah, married Capt. Samuel Wadsworth; the
youngest, Eunice, married Mr. Joseph Wadsworth; another,
Olive, married her first husband, a Mr. Johnson, and
after his death, Dea. Eliakim Mallory. The other
daughter, Mary (or Rachel), married a Mr. Taylor, of New
Marlboro, Mass. Two sons, William and James Marsh,
having sold their property on Cream Hill, removed to
Vermont, where some of their descendants at present
reside. James Marsh married Rhoda, sister of Judge
Burnham, of Cornwall. The other son, John, died in 1763,
aged fourteen.
In
the old cemetery at South Cornwall, we find the
tombstones of James Douglas and his wife thus inscribed:
James Douglas, Died Aug. 18, 1785,
ae. 74.
Mortals Awake
Your time review, think on
Death, Eternity is near.
Rachel, wife of James Douglas,
died April 23, 1790, ae. 78.
Life how short,
Eternity how long.
I am indebted to
Charles H. James Douglas, of Providence, R. I., author
of the "Douglas Genealogy," for the ancestral record of
James Douglas.
Dea.
William1 Douglas, b. 1610; m. Ann, d. of
Thomas Marble, of Kingstead, Northamptonshire; landed at
Cape Ann 1639-40; removed to New London 1660; d. July
25, 1683. He had five children.
Dea. William2
Douglas, fifth child of Dea. William1, b.
April 1, 1645; m. Dec. 18, 1667, Abiah, d. of William
Hough, of New London, and had eight children.
Dea. William3
Douglas, third child of Dea. William2, b.
Feb. 19, 1672-3; m. Sarah Proctor, about 1695, and in
1699 removed to Plainfield. He was one of a little
company who, in 1705, covenanted together and formed a
little church at Plainfield, of which he was chosen
first deacon. He had twelve children, of which Thomas,
the eleventh, was also deacon, and settled in Voluntown
(now Sterling).
James Douglas,
tenth child of Dea. William3, b. May 20,
171]; d. Aug. 18, 1785, aged seventy-four.
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