Town of Oswego
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About this ebook
George R. DeMass
George R. DeMass was born and raised in the town of Oswego and is an ordained Presbyterian Church (USA) minister. He is the president of the Oswego Town Historical Society, a trustee of the Oswego County Historical Society, a board member of Safe Haven Museum and Education Center, and the current town historian, a role also served 50 years ago.
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Town of Oswego - George R. DeMass
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INTRODUCTION
The Town of Oswego was first settled in 1797 by Asa Rice and established from the Town of Hannibal in 1818. Rice, who arrived from Connecticut, traded land with a Revolutionary War veteran whose military tract allotment was west of Oswego, New York. Rice traveled up the Mohawk Valley to Oneida Lake, down the Oswego River to Lake Ontario, and along the shore to the allotment on what is Three Mile Creek (now Rice Creek). Upon arrival, he said, This is our land.
The date was October 6, 1797, about 2:00 p.m. His son, also named Asa, jumped out of the boat and said, I’ll be first to take possession.
The elder Rice named the settlement Union Village, but years later it was renamed Fruit Valley because of the prosperous orchards of apples and pears and fields of strawberries. The town is presently 2,633 square miles. The original settlement was somewhat larger, but in 1916, the village of Minetto broke away because of tax issues, forming its own township as the Town of Minetto. The latest census listed the population as near 7,400.
There are three hamlets within the town’s boundaries. They are Fruit Valley, Southwest Oswego, and Oswego Center, the latter being the seat of government. Many Irish immigrants came to town in the 1850s and 1860s, especially from Cavan and Monaghan Counties. They settled along Lake Ontario’s shore. One of the sons of these immigrants was David Hall McConnell. At the age of 18, McConnell left his father’s farm on Lewis’s Bluff and founded the California Perfume Company, which later became Avon Products Inc. He effectively introduced the original door-to-door sales method.
Two Town residents—Emma Adams and her sister Marietta Adams Ruttan of Oswego Center—began a cottage industry of doll making. Their dolls were made of cloth with a hand-painted face. These are the famous Columbian dolls, which received their name from the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago, where they were displayed. Today, the dolls have become popular collector’s items.
The most prominent of Oswego Town’s citizens was Dr. Mary Edwards Walker, born on Bunker Hill on Bunker Hill Road. Her father, Alvah Walker, came from the Boston area and christened the hill and road where his daughter was born, saying that he hoped it would be the site of many battles for reform in education and social justice. His daughter Mary forcefully carried the banner for these issues, as well as suffrage and dress reform. She received her medical degree from Syracuse Medical College and offered her services in the Civil War as a contract surgeon with the 52nd Ohio Volunteers. She was captured and exchanged for an officer of equal rank. For her services, on the recommendations of Generals William T. Sherman and George Thomas, she was awarded the Medal of Honor by Pres. Andrew Johnson on November 11, 1865. Dr. Walker is the only woman to receive the medal.
The pictures that follow show everyday life in Oswego Town through the years, as lived by its people at work and play and in schools and churches.
One
FAITH AND THE
THREE RS
The Southwest Oswego Baptist Church is pictured here in a famous Oswego snow. The church, the oldest in the town, is located at the intersection of State Route 104 and County Route 20 (California Road). This view was taken in the winter of 1950 by the pastor at the time, the Reverend Luther Bunting. He was a professional photographer as well as a minister. The church sits on a hill and is known as the lighthouse on a hill.
The Baptist church was organized in 1839 after an African American man passed through the area holding meetings. Its building was erected in 1852. The congregation had initially met in a building just south of what is Ontario Orchards today. It was called the Tabernacle.
One of the builders of the church edifice was Stephen Cobb, Southwest Oswego’s first blacksmith. This view of the church is from the early 1920s.