Ohio History Journal

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PIONEER LIFE IN ASHTABULA COUNTY

PIONEER LIFE IN ASHTABULA COUNTY

 

BY JOSEPH A. HOWELLS*

 

The days of the pioneers are past. We may move

into and settle a new country -- or a new part of our

country -- but with the settler or immediately follow-

ing him, come the telegraph, the railroad, the printing

office, telephone, electric lights, water works, churches;

and long before the first child born in the settlement is

of age, the place is an old town or city, with all the mod-

ern improvements, comforts and vices. No matter

where you go now, you will not do as the pioneers in

the East, or more recently in the West, did -- there is no

home built of logs green from the stump, and the house

furnished from the surrounding woods; often the only

tools being an axe and auger, and it was a fortunate

pioneer who possessed the latter.

A pioneer in the true sense of the word, who settled

in Ashtabula County before 1810, told us that when

he built his log house, he had no bedstead, but stepped

a few feet from the door of his new house, cut down

small trees, and with his axe made a bedstead, cutting

off pieces of the tree with a crotch. These were used

for the four corner posts. Poles were laid on these and

bark from the tree stretched from side to side, and on

this bark -- instead of a woven-wire mattress, as is used

today -- the bed was laid, and instead of curled hair,

it was filled with fine twigs and leaves, and the one

feather bed brought from the eastern home placed on

the forest-made bedding.

* Written early in the year 1898.

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