Ohio History Journal

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JOHN CHAPMAN'S LINE OF DESCENT FROM

JOHN CHAPMAN'S LINE OF DESCENT FROM

EDWARD CHAPMAN OF IPSWICH*

 

Compiled by FLORENCE E. WHEELER

With an Introduction by ROBERT PRICE

 

Who Was Johnny Appleseed?--Introduction

Even before the death of John Chapman in 1845, the "Johnny

Appleseed" story growing out of the man's colorful life had be-

gun to break away from the roots of fact and to flower purely as a

popular myth. In the years since, the apocryphal addenda, aided

and abetted by much fiction, poetry, and uncritical biography have

become a major item in American folklore. There is little wonder

that many persons have doubted that the man ever existed at all.

But "Johnny Appleseed" was not only an actual fact but an

important one. During the past few years, carefully accumulated

evidence, still largely unpublished, tends to prove that although

the real John Chapman was very unlike the creature of the legends

and pseudo-biographies, he was quite unusual enough, quite ad-

venturous and significant enough a part of the Middle Western

frontier to warrant not only the stories that monumentalize him

but a place in documented history as well.

One of the particularly difficult problems in "Appleseed"

research has been the matter of his paternal origin. More or less

seriously recorded statements have fixed John Chapman's birth-

place variously in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania,

Maryland, and Ohio; they have given him a parentage ranging

all the way from a Calvinistic divine to a half-breed redskin. For

half a dozen years now, however, it has been definitely known that

John Chapman was born in Leominster, Massachusetts. From the

records there, his mother's lineage can be traced with comparative

ease through the vital statistics of various towns to an established

place in an old and occasionally distinguished New England family.

 

* Copyright, 1939, by Florence E. Wheeler.

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