ATL PAGE TEN THE POST, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1951 lued in the last century for its C i 0 and. h Cl arl Fr h fl Velie : tn amp Onawandah Closes y French Influences In penn a rete | | THESE WOMEN! By Alessio] | Six Weeks Season CHOREMASTER it is notable today chiefly for its Northern Tier Counties t "hay Fr ae . Denis Cottineau of the vacation camps and hotels, its trout Camp Onawandah closed for the ” The ONE WHEEL streams and game, and its green season August 19 after a six weeks RY GARDEN TRACTOR By Elsie Murray, Ph.D nah, or New Orleans, a number | woodlands and laurel and rhodo- session, Girl Scouts from the Back ; Director Tioga Point Museum, of families remained (Homets, Le | dendron thickets. Mountain who attended’ were: ho Athens, Pa. Fevres, La Portes, joined later by From 4 (CONTINUED FROM LAST WEEK) | Prevosts, Piollets, Delpueches, and Many Qunets Co en Adventure With John Paul Jones | others). Intermarrying with local These back country holdings, Culver, Margo Davenport, Marian Through the pages of the 1951 brochure there stalks also Captain “Pallas,” joint adventurer with Paul Jones and his “Bonhomme Richard” in the famous raid in our behalf in British waters in 1779. A fellow exile, Saint-Memin, has preserved for us Cottinneau’s handsome Breton profile, displayed in the Corcoran gallery in Washington with those of nearly 200 of his countrymen and of early Americans, made at the time of the trial of Aaron Burr in Richmond. Another naval captain, Aristide du Petit-Thouars, deflected from his carefully planned voyage in * search of La Perouse (lost with all his scientific equipment in the Solomon Islands), we find maroon- ed also in northern Pennsylvania, struggling with only one sound - hand to! clear a land grant in the hills where Dushore now stands (county of Sullivan). Aristide, lured back to ward off British threats against his homeland, died fighting Nelson in the Mediter- ranean in 1798. Often overlooked by half-primed writers on Azilum history is the fact that all three, Noailles, Cottin- eau and Du Petit-Thouars, had served with distinction in our War of Independence; and while over here had savored the true. mean- ing of liberty and the republican iife. The Financier In these pages, though never in person at Azilum, one comes upon the Swiss banker, Jacques Necker, ex-minister of finance for France, and reputed the wealthiest man in Europe; along with him, his head- strong literary daughter,’ Madame de Stael. The latter, busy manipu- lating the strings of an under- ground in Switzerland during the Terror, never crossed the Atlantic to occupy the wooded height in present Orwell Township, County of Bradford, on which for ten years her father paid the taxes. Her title reverted to another distin- guished visitor, son of the well- known French manufacturer, Jac- ques Le Ray de Chaumont, who had befriended Benjamin Franklin and backed John Paul Jones in our Revolutionary conflict. ‘James Le’ Ray, turned American citizen, and his son and grandson, paid for surveys, roads, taxes, con- tributed to the building of schools “and churches, ‘and visited his in- vestments personally, in the early years of the 19th century; travelling through dangerous narrows, over villainous roads. Employing as land agent, a Sheshequin man no- torious locally for his dogged sup- port of Connecticut claims, the Le Rays derived insufficient revenue from their Pennsylvania tract of 80,000 acres to stave off bank- _‘ruptey (incurred primarily because oft unpaid claims on our Congress). Other investments, solicited by our Gouvérneur Morris and backed by Nicholas Biddle of the Bank of the U, S., were in northern New York State on the Black River, in the very region traversed or skirted by Champlain nearly 200 years be- fore. Claims for reinbursement for water and mining rights that have enriched Americans in this area over a term of years are now being pressed by the French heirs of the Le Rays. Jacques Le Ray, Senior is said never to have been paid by Congress for his/ loan of a home in Paris to Franklin, or the powder and ammunition with which he early supplied the Continental Army. Today his heirs seek re- © dress. { Some Pioneers Remained ‘While the titled or politically am- bitious exiles who backed or visited Azilum or hought stock in the Com- pany eventually returned to France, or retifed to older French settle- men/s such as Charleston, Savan- American stock, ‘they built roads, mills, frame houses and inns; push- | as. ed work on canals and railroads, and Northern Tier counties to the west. Their descendants are scattered up and down the Susquehanna Valley, and westward over the entire U. S. French names—Du Thouars (Du- shore), La Porte, Homet's Ferry— are sprinkled over the countryside. Fleur-de-lis reminiscent of their homeland decorate local residences and churches. Fantastic and misleading webs of romance have been woven about the colony by ill-informed or pre- judiced countryfolk, city reporters, and aspiring novelists. A simple but relatively accurate story, ‘New World or Old?” based on the let- ters of a group who settled first at Greene in New York State, com- ing down the Chenango to the col- ony at Azilum later when disputes over their land title arose, was pub- lished in 1945 by the author of the recent brochure, above mentioned. While there is ample evidence that it was in the original plan to provide in this remote area a ref- uge, possibly permanent, for Marie Antoinette, widow of the French king Louis XVI, and their children, the princess and the 8-year-old Dauphin, it is of course historic fact that Marie left prison only for the guillotine. It is further exceedingly doubtful that the Dauphin ever reached America or Azilum, though a hun- dred years ago, after a visit from King Louis Philippe’s son, a half- breed missionary among the Onei- das, Eleazar Williams, for a time put up a claim that kept many guessing. As for the Queen's jew- els, among them the stone later known (ironically) as the Hope Diamond, there is even less likeli- hood that any were brought to America by Azilum refugees. Most of the exiles escaped across the border in the final crash of the monarchy with their lives alone— and the clothes on their backs. La Grande Maison La Grande Maison, the Queen's House—for the King was guillo- tined in January 1793 before Azi- lum was started, and only those for whom French history is a blank have ever called it the King’s Man- sion—was an 80-foot two-to three- story planed-log structure, just off the block of town lots and facing the river. Here the colony man- ager, ex-judge Antoine Omer Talon for a few years played host to dis- tinquished exiles. About 1801 the great house was placed in charge of Barthelemi La Porte, to whom Talon was indebted for effecting his rescue from pursuing Revolu- tionists in 1792. emi’s son, Congressman John La Porte, home just off from the Great House, of similar proportions but on a les- Fearing fire, he had the old log structure razed, using some of the timbers and probably some of the woodwork and the glass of ser scale. its numerous windows. The La Porte House The La Porte house with its great swinging crane and H-hinges, now for sev- eral decades owned by the Hager- |, man family, has of late been open- ed by Mrs. Mark Hagerman as a A cluster of farm- houses, with lines of trees marking |, the old avenues, a white-steepled |, church and graveyard, known loc- in the town- ship of Asylum, mark the site of the village laid out across the river fireplaces, brick oven, show place. ally as “Frenchtown,” from the main highway in 1793. The records show it was designed as the river port of a million-acre area reaching back into the hills, and reported by its early surveyors to contain iron and other minerals. in legislature and congress worked for the laying out of other In 1839, Barthel- built a spacious summer organized by Robert Morris in 1794 the Asylum Company, have known many masters. Following the business troubles that converg- ed on Morris and his partner John Nicholson (as the French armies and Napoleon swung out over Europe, laying embargoes on At- lantic ports, and disrupting world finance) passed from one set of creditors to another. A remnant came in the middle of the last century to the Meilerts, Secku and his son Michael. The elder Meilert, a German emigrant who had served Napoleon, and was affiliated by marriage with the banker Roths- child, gave the land in the adja- cent county of Sullivan (erected in 1847) for a county-seat, and named it for his friend the state surveyor John La Porte. Dogged by Connecticut claimants long after Federal and State laws had adjusted their legal claims, Michael, whose fine old residence dominates La Porte on its high plateau near Lake Mokoma, died, it is alleged, of injuries received at the hands of agents of the old Susquehannah Company. A poster of the period in the Bingham Land office at Wellsboro offers a reward for the apprehension of the assail- ants who stole his trunk and burn- ed his papers. Tioga Point Museum Thirty miles up the river at At- hens, Tioga Point Museum, found- ed largely through the efforts of a La Porte descendant, houses loan collections of letters, accounts, maps, portraits and personal pos- sessions of the French refugees and the Asylum Company. Highly treas- sured is a sketch of the Queen’s house, and its ground floor plan, which ‘we owe to the elder La Porte’s granddaughter, Elizabeth La Porte (Mrs. Charles F. Welles, Jr.), who was born and brought up in it. Fairly recently, through the kindness of Gilbert Chinard, of Princeton, and ‘the comte de Leusse of Paris, a replica of a sketch made in 1798 of the entire village, including the house, has been added to the collection. A plan to reproduce a six-foot model of the village based on the 18th century map preserved by the La Portés and now on display at the Bradford County Historical So- ciety’s rooms in Towanda, with details added from accounts in old deeds and records, has been ad- vanced by the Tioga Point Museum, seconded by Mrs, Mark Hagerman. Authorities Given Records in the State Archives at Harrisburg, in the Wyoming His- torical Society at Wilkes-Barre, in the Locust Street rooms of the Historical Society ‘of Pennsylvania can Philosophical Society (near In- depéndence Hall), in the Manu- script Division of the Library of Congress, Library and Historical Society, in the White Library of Cornell Uni- versity, and in French Archives cor- roborate many of the details of the story as given out by the Tioga Point Historical Society, and by the Wyoming Historical Society in Craft's “Day at Aslyum” (1902). They do not, of course, confirm the gross distortions launched by DONT! Overlook These VALUES SEE T in Philadelphia and in the Ameri- { in the New York Public | 1950 Studebaker $458 Down . Champion Sedan 1949 Hudson $595 Down . Com. 8 Sedan “I want about this many books! 1 Honored On Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ruggles of Meeker were guests of honor at a dinner given on their fifty-fourth wedding anniversary recently. Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Wayne King, Theodore Lyle, Pvt. Richard King of Meeker; Mr. and Mrs. Roy King and son, Harveys Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Donald King and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wadas and sons, Wilkes-Barre; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ruggles and sons, Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Drabick and sons of Lehman; and the Ruggleses. various writers of fiction. Highway markers along the Sul- livan Route, of a fair degree of accuracy, call the attention of pass- ing tourists to what sentimentalists delight to dub a “ghost town.” Widespread interest is evoked, in bird’s eye view. of the site from the mountain opposite, with cloud shadows drifting over its grain fields, and distant blue ridges fram- ing the picture. Though slightly off the main highway, if developed by the State this might easily be- come one of the major attractions of Pennsylvania. —Tioga Point Museum, Athens, Pa. CAR SPECIAL WASHING service MOBIL GAS STATION Luzerne-Dallas Highway Phone 9067-R-7 20 tons of corn Mr. and Mrs. Ruggles Are |Return To Lakehurst part by the hauntingly beautiful. NOW YOU CAN CUT UP TO silage an hour! John MacDonald has returned to his air base at Lakehurst, N. J., after visiting his family in the Back Mountain Area. John who has returned to the States after spending two years in overseas, part of the time in North Africa, the last part in Lon- don, brought home an English bride, the former Violet Whatley. The couple now resides at Lake- wood, N. J. near John’s air base. SEE THESE I CAR IN TTI BunnER CHEVROLET CO. 1950 CHEVROLET $ i 4715 Town Sedan .... - $1295 1949 CHEVROLET Town Sedan .... 1949 FORD 1948 CHEVROLET 4 Door Sedan .... 1947 PLYMOUTH 2 Door Sedan 1947 CHEVROLET Town Sedan EASY G. M. A. C. 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