Warsaw in 1862-63
By George A. Nye |
John Lane
E. G. Burgess
Milice & Brother
J. B. Gallaher, photographer
Daniel Deeds
A. King
J. A. Funk
A. Baker
A. J. Mershon, lime warehouse
Fleming T. Luse, editor of the Northern Indianian
Foulk & Harvey
C. C. Stapler
John Bollom
Herman Lange
B. N. Shaffer
L. D. Sheaffer
Joseph Aspinall
Robens & Gallaher
W. G. Piper
William Haas
James Foster
J. W. Quayle
W. H. Davenport
Peter L. Runyan
Matlock & Scott
J. B. Davis
Frazer & Frasier
Carpenter & Long
Long & Haymond
A. Miller & Co.
Joseph A. Wright
Chipman Bros. & Co.
Daniel Shoup
Becker & Brother
Marx Frank
C. L. Knowles
William Cosgrove & Son
Leamon Brothers, notion and book store
Hudson Beck
Card Brothers, hardware
A. G. Callender
William Thrift
Bybee & Towl
William C. Gordon
Sam Loney
Thomas Thomas
Hetfield & Stewart
J. T. Morris
Aaron Ryland
Richey & Cole
A. Barnes & Co.
Henry Shane
Saine & Huffman
McKee & Co., bakers
A. B. Sipes
George W. Thralls & Co.
Bair & Wright
Pottengers, druggists
McGowan & Brother
Loney & Neff
Nye & Nye
Hats Made by Milliners
Mrs. S. M. Knull was a milliner over Dan Shoup's grocery which
was in the Empire block two doors north of Market street. The
Empire block reached from Market to the alley north on the west
side of Buffalo street. Mrs. Knull carried a full line of flowers,
ribs, head dresses and bonnets. It was then customary for a milliner
to start with the materials and build a hat. This custom was abandoned
in Warsaw for the most part by the year 1915. Warsaw always had
had several millinery stores. One of the old ones was Pierce's
which advertised wedding bonnets. This was a popular store in
the 50's before the war. Richey & Cole ran a grocery store
in a frame building three doors east of Sam Lauferty's general
store. Lauferty's was on the southwest corner of Buffalo and Center
streets in the building which is still standing as the oldest
brick building block in town. This was built in 1856 and has seen
very little change since. Richey & Cole sold groceries, wooden
and stoneware, nails and glass, flour, corn, potatoes and all
kinds of fruit. It was customary for the stores of the day to
keep on hand a large variety of articles. Woodenware of the day
consisted of barrels, kegs, churns, tubs, and butter molds. Warsaw
had at least two cooper shops in the west end of town run by Dennis
Thralls and Daniel Deeds. William Haas was one of the butchers
of the day and had a shop on the south side of Center street opposite
the Popham hotel commonly known as Popham's exchange. This hotel
stood where the Eagles' building is now. Mr. Haas was the father
of William, Bob, Dick and Ed. He owned a farm out north of town
about three miles on the Leesburg road. It is now owned by Mrs.
Perry Smith. Mr. Haas was the owner of a meat market in Warsaw
for many years. Markets then, of course, butchered their own beef
and pork.
Early Day Meat Markets
The Haas slaughter-house used to be out on the east bank of Center
lake about where the furniture factory is now. Mr. Haas purchased
all of this ground for $400 many years ago. Jackman's was another
old butcher shop of Warsaw. It was about where the present Elks'
arcade is now. The Milice shop rank here for years on Market street.
It was not uncommon to sell venison in shops during the war. Until
about 1915 it was customary for proprietors of meat markets to
drive around over the country and buy cattle and hogs. A good
job for a small boy of the day was to help Mr. Robinson, Perry
Brown, Gus Carteaux or George Jackman drive cattle or hogs several
miles to the slaughter house or to the stock yards. Ice around
Warsaw in the summer time was a very scarce article and it is
doubtful if these early owners of meat markets kept much fresh
meat on hand in the hot season. "Sinner" Philpott sold
ice for a cent a pound and gave it away to those who were poor
and sick. He ran a fish and jewelry store in a frame building
just north of Empire block where the drug store has been for sixty
years. Spring houses were used for keeping things cool. Ice cream
and cold drinks were a decided luxury. Dan Carlisle had an ice
cream saloon.
Warsaw's Harness Shops
John Evers and John Hipp were two of the town's harness makers.
Hipp was in Empire block over Card's hardware store. This was
a trade which during the Civil War called for many workers. Full
sets of harness were made in our harness shops. Harness for driving
horses was light in weight but the harness intended for work horses
was much heavier. All harness was more or less ornamented with
brass metal parts and the hames which went over the colar were
decorated at the top. Oxen were used in 1862 and little harness
was needed for them. The last harness-maker to still keep shop
of the 60's is Ed ("Speck") Ettinger, who in 1896 worked
in Peck's shop under Lantz's drug store. The late "Jimmy" Woods was an old harness-maker of Peck's shop and learned his
trade from Harvey Beazel in the old Republican building, a large
frame at the southwest corner of Market and Buffalo streets. The
harness trade, the blacksmith shop, the old livery barn, and the
wagon shops of long ago have all gone with the wind. The automobile
with its garages, filling station, and auto accessory stores have
taken their place during the last thirty years in Warsaw.
Old General Stores
In 1862 Sam Lauferty, who was of the Jewish faith, had a general
store where the Candy Kitchen is now on the corner. James Cretcher,
commonly known as "Watermelon Jim," and who is still
in good health, claims to have known Sam Lauferty and also his
daughter and he says that the most conspicuous things about Lauferty's
face was his large nose. Lauferty's wife ran a millinery store.
Lauferty would go east about twice a year to New York or other
eastern markets and buy goods for his store. This was an old custom
followed by merchants of Warsaw and by the Becks and Blaines of
Leesburg back in the 40's. Each trip meant a "puff"
in the newspaper if the merchant was a good advertiser; if not,
very little notice was taken of his going and coming. Benny Becker
was another member of the Jewish faith as was Marx Frank. Both
of these men had clothing stores in Warsaw in the 60's. Frank
was known as "the little Jew on the corner" because
his store was in a brick building on the southwest corner of Center
and Buffalo streets known for years as "the book-store corner." Benny Becker's store was in the Empire block south of the present
Lake City bank site. Frank left her and went to Fort Wayne where
no doubt his children are still in the clothing business. Some
things kept in a clothing store then would now be found in a museum.
Sold Red Flannel Underwear
It was a day of log cabins and houses heated by fireplaces and
so both men and women wore red flannel underwear. Men wore heavy
woolen stockings or sox, doeskin pants, blue jeans, and beaver
caps. For the Sunday suit men had broadcloths. Overcoats were
not commonly worn, especially by the poor. My father, who was
born here in 1836, used to say that he never had an overcoat or
a pair of overshoes until after he was a grown man. People probably
slept in the winter time with their underwear on, nestled away
in huge feather beds which could not help but to keep them warm.
Even in a cabin a few small logs in the fireplace would burn all
night. There was an abundance of good wood all around Warsaw until
late in the 90's. There was not much in Benny Becker's clothing
store in the way of comfortable dress shirts. Many shirts were
made at home. The most fashionable people had their clothing made
to order. D. Mulford was one of the town tailors. Henry Shane
came to Warsaw in the spring of 1863 from Cincinnati. He bought
out Sam Lauferty on the corner and ran a grocery store here for
forty years. As was customary in those days he had a barrel of
whiskey on tap back by the stove and whenever he was alone with
some of his special friends he would share with them a sample or
two of the Old Kentucky Colonel, or "snips" as he called
it. Henry Shane bought hides and wool for many years. The hides
were put in the basement and well salted, the wool was stored
up in the third story of the building. "Shane's Corner" was a landmark in the town for many years. The Shanes like many
of the other families of the town have almost become an extinct
family around Warsaw through death and travel to the west.
Old National Bank
Chipman Brothers & Company was a large store on the northwest
corner of Market and Buffalo streets in 1862. This was in the
south room of the Empire block which burned in 1871. Samuel Chipman
was one of the firm. Like other merchants they bought all kinds
of country produce paying one-fourth cash and the balance in merchandise.
They sold dry goods, crockery, boots and shoes, groceries and
clothing. They also acted as bankers and brokers. They made bank
collections in all parts of the state. They bought and sold New
York exchange and purchased gold and silver. Their store was the
forerunner of the First National bank which later became the State
bank. In fact stock for the first bank was sold from Chipman's
store and the bank started in the summer of 1863 with Chipman
as president. Billy Graves was cashier for years. The bank was
on the south side of Market street east of the Moon block on the
west side of the alley. The Moon block was built in 1868 on the
site of a small frame building which during the war was John Lane's
jewelry store. The postoffice was in a small frame south of Lane's
shop, the postmaster being Peter L. Runyan. Some other prominent
stores of 1862 were Cosgrove's in his new building, now the old
Globe building; Pottenger's east of the public square; Thralls'
to the south of the square; Card's hardware store in Empire block,
Thrift's hardware store on Center street; Thomas Thomas' store
and Hudson Beck's store opposite Popham's exchange. The Wright
house was a popular hotel run by Ben Wright on the northeast corner
of Center and Buffalo streets where the cigar store has been for
over fifty years. Both hotels had hacks running to and from the
old depot on Union street Two passenger trains each way constituted
the regular schedule on the railroad.
The Early Town Board
The town board in 1862 was busied with many things which we now
hae outgrown. They passed an ordinance for the building and repair
of sidewalks made of wood. They also forbade cattle and swine
to run at large on the streets and many people thought they had
a grievance. They also provided for some extra cisterns to be
dug for water for fires. One was to be near Chipman's store on
Market street. These old cisterns could be seen about town for
forty years. Ever so often they had to be pumped full, a task
which kept a man busy for several hours. It was not until about
1886 that Warsaw had the water works plant at the foot of Buffalo.
The town board also in 1863 took into the corporation the land
east of the old cemetery and east of Scott street and south of
Center. The tenth annual fair was held that year on the new fair
grounds just east of Scott street. Zenas Bratt was town marshal
and A. F. Leamon acted as town clerk. Wash. Lightfoot was president
of the town board. J. B. Davis was school trustee. D. T. Johnson,
who had been principal here since the first school house was built
in 1858 resigned in the summer of 1863 and Davis advertises that
there will be a meeting of citizens at the court house to select
a new principal. Judge James S. Frazer had recently returned from
Waukegan, Ill., where he had lived a number of years and he put
forth the name of Valois Butler of Waukegan.
Early School Superintendent
Mr. Butler was selected to take charge of the schools in the fall
of 1863 and those who remember him say that he made a very good
school superintendent. Johnson became school examiner. His duty
was to examine teachers as to their mentality and decide whether
or not they were desirable as teachers. About 1876 the state law
did away with the examiner and provided for a county superintendent.
During the war years our school was called the Union school. It
was on Detroit and Market streets overlooking a tamarack swamp
to the east. The Northern Indiana Conference of the Methodist
church met at Wabash in April 1863. J. J. Cooper was the minister
assigned to Warsaw. He had been here a year and had given very
good satisfaction. Some other ministers whose names are in the
list used to be here. Among them are T. Colclazer, F. F. Hasty,
E. M. Baker and T. Comstock. The church building here was then
a frame building that had been in use some twenty years. The Dorcas
Society was a society of women who during the war sent clothing
and other necessary articles to the soldiers at the front. The
only place in town in which they could hold a meeting was in the
courthouse or the Empire hall or in one of the churches.
Dorcas Society
On Christmas eve of 1862 the Dorcas society gave a musical and
tableaux entertainment at the Empire hall with an admission of
25c, the proceeds to go toward buying necessary bandages and medicines
for the sick and suffering soldiers. Mrs. Joseph A. Funk was the
secretary. The Episcopal church at Goshen and the court house
at Fort Wayne are mentioned as new buildings. The present fine
court house at Fort Wayne was built about 1900. The Northern Indianian
advertised that it would take several cords of good 18-inch wood
in on subscriptions. Coal was then unknown around Warsaw as a
fuel. The locomotives were fired with wood. Blacksmiths perhaps
were familiar with coal but they used charcoal to a large extent
and farmers around Warsaw made charcoal by setting a pile of logs
on fire and then covering them up. It is said that someone had
to watch such a pile almost day and night to keep it going and
yet not permit it to burn up. Charcoal is what remains of wood
after all the volatile matter such as acetic acid, pyroligneous
acid and other things have been driven out by heat. The process
is called destructive distillation.
Railroad's Wood Train
Miscellaneously we might say that in 1863 a wood train was a regular
train on the Pennsylvania railroad which was the only railroad
through town. This train was in charge of Conductor Risher. J.
Sipes had a store on Buffalo street. Shaffer and Ryland were running
one of the several saloons to be found about the town. A. J. Mershon
sold land plasters at his lime house. Otis Pratt was the proprietor
of a livery barn. His barn was on West Center street, west of
the Weirick hotel. He along with James Milice, J. C. Bratt, and
Caleb Hughes, was a candidate for Sheriff. A. J. Bair at his drug
store paid four cents a pound for old rags. They were used for
making paper. Bybee & Towl wer proprietors of a new grocery
store at the corner of Buffalo and Main streets. Very likely there
were former residents of the town of Sevastopol where the latter
had a drug store for many years and acted as the community doctor.
Washington Bybee came to this county about 1843 and recites that
he stayed over night at the old hotel where the Christian Science
church is now. Monday, May 4, 1863, J. B. Davis was elected to
be school trustee, S. Hartman, W. B. Boyston and Washington Lightfoot
were elected members of the town board. Perry Brown was elected
marshal; John Bybee, treasurer, and W. T. Baker, assessor, May
20, 1863, the sisters of the Baptist church met at the home of
Rev. R. H. Cook to organize a society for building a new church.
This church was dedicated in 1864 and was the first brick church
in the city.
War Rumor False
Sunday, May 10, 1863, a rumor was afloat in Warsaw that Richmond
had been taken. Cannons were fired and a great celebration took
place, but the next day the rumor was found to be false. On the
north side Furlong had a tombstone shop called the Warsaw Marble
Works. They advertised American and Italian marble, monuments,
tombstones, mantles, table tops and counter slabs. Marble-topped
stands were quite common then. J. R. & Henry Nye had tombstone
yards just east of the Popham exchange. Tombstones can be found
today in our cemeteries with the names of these old firms in the
lower corner. The new town board took office with a promise of
grading, graveling and guttering the streets and sidewalks. It
said: "Our town has always been, it would seem, too much
cursed with old fogies who are opposed to any improvements whatever."
Evidently it was not easy to be a satisfactory member of the board
even in 1863. Thrift's hardware store was south of the public
square and east of Thomas Thomas' grocery. Henry Lathrope, Herman
Lange and Albert Randels apply for licenses to sell intoxicating
liquors in less quantity than a quart. Dr. Roback's stomach bitters
are greatly advertised as a cure for bilious fever, fever and
ague, liver complaint, dyspepsia, indigestion, jaundice, and kidney
complaints. Bitters were a relic of Indian days when the squaws
would go about getting roots and herbs for medicine. Roback's
bitters were put up in quart bottles and sold for a dollar a bottle
or six bottles for five dollars. The bottle was rough such as
a rope wound round and round. A finely engraved label was used.
The medicine no doubt contained a liberal amount of whiskey and
was very bitter. The advertisement read that these bitters are
sold by A. J. Bair, George R. Thralls & Son all of Warsaw,
Ed Moon of Leesburg, Bowman & Anglin at Galveston (now Clunette),
Ben Yohn at Boydston's Mills, Dr. W. E. Sarber at Palestine, Sherron
Hall at Syracuse, F. M. Clark at Oswego, and J. W. Sparklin at
Milford. Dr. S. D. Hartman was an eclectic physician who came
to Popham's exchange ever so often. Saine & Huffman had a
family grocery one door east of Sam Lauferty's corner. Allan Saine
and Phil Huffman composed this firm. Upstairs over Miller & Company's boot and shoe store, Dr. Edward R. Parks had his office.
This was nearly opposite the Wright house. He had returned from
the army.
Military Companies Formed
It seems that during the years 1862 and 1863 there were a good
many military companies formed in Warsaw and the county. Some
were artillery, some cavalry, and some infantry. Companies that
were signed up for a period of time would return when their time
was up. The sadness and havoc that the war was making in the community
does not by any means show up in the papers of the day. There
were few doctors about Warsaw that did not go to the war for a
period of from one to two years. Dr. J. P. Leslie became a colonel
and was killed in the war. A company of home guards was formed
consisting of older men who were to go if an emergency made it
necessary. The draft was used; but not many, if any, were sent
this way from Wayne township, for enough volunteered from here
to fill up the quota. By the payment of so much money (several
hundred dollars) a person who had been drafted could buy his way
out. Any drafted person had a right to send a substitute if he
could hire one. The Civil War was very different from the world
war for in it the enlisted soldier in the field had to prepare
his own meal and the chances were that he underwent very little
drilling before he was actually in the conflict.
Army Camp in Indianapolis
The largest camp close to Warsaw and the one to which most if
our boys went was Camp Morton at Indianapolis. This camp comprised
the grounds which now have the finest homes in the city on them.
The camp was north of the old city of Indianapolis. General Reub.
Williams was in the war most of the four years and did a great
deal of traveling. He was a personal friend of General Sherman
and was with the General on the famous "March to the Sea." authorities now say that with the possible exception of General
Grant, General William Tecumseh Sherman was the most outstanding
and reliable general that the war produced. After the war Gen.
Williams had Sherman's promise to speak in Warsaw in some campaign,
but so far as the writer knows, it was an expectancy in which
the people were always disappointed because of train schedules
or some other good reason.
Early Furniture Made Here
On the corner where Phillipsons is now located, McGowan &
Bro. had a cabinet shop in 1863. They had purchased it from Johnson
& Ale. They made bureaus, bedsteads, chairs, tables, center
and parlor tables, sofas, lounges, cupboards, washstands, etc.
They did turning and lathe work. It was a day of heavy furniture
with a great deal of decorating work on it. Some of this old antique
furniture is still in use, and outside of the fact that it is
heavy and cumbersome compared to that of today, it is very desirable
because of its appearance and strength. Dennis Thralls had a coopershop
down on Union street near the depot where he made all kinds of
barrels for kraut, pickles, salt meat, and pickled pork. He also
made kegs for cider and vinegar. Barrels were made with wooden
hoops. The staves were of lumber suitable to the use. Vinegar
was best when made in hickory barrels. Hoop poles were sold to
these cooperages by the farmers. A fanning mill, a brewery, and
two foundries were in Warsaw about this time.
Life Hard Problem Then
It would be quite possible to write a great deal about Warsaw
as the town of 1862-63 but space does not permit. Life at best
must have been a good bit harder than now for there was not much
money in circulation. A man would have to work all day for seventy-five
cents. Women were weighted down with household duties. We read
in biographies of these old-timers where most of them survived
at least two wives and some of them four. "Man works from
sun to sun but woman's work is never done." To do a washing
for a family of ten or so with an old-fashioned cook stove fired
with green wood and rub and rub the clothes on an old washboard
with nothing but soft soap (homemade) was a job for a big strong
machine instead of a frail woman. There was a big fight going
on at the front but for all we know a much bigger struggle was
going on in the homes from which the father had left. Warsaw had
no lights unless we call a lamp set in a box on a post a light.
Streets was not graded. In the outlying districts which were not
far from the public square, there were nothing but cowpaths. A
man who owned several lots together would give a man one to clear
the brush from the others. There were few if any brick houses
in the town. Uptown Warsaw was graced with about four brick buildings,
all less than six years old. All the others were frames. A few
of them still stand in our business district today. However without
all the things which we now consider necessary for comfort, the
people of Warsaw and of the county in 1862 had a merry time. Dances,
literature, husking bees, rag-sewings, spelling matches, horse-races,
camp meetings, Sunday school picnics, Fourth of July celebrations,
strawberry and cream festivals, weddings, bob-sled rides, and
skating parties formed their amusements. No one generation perhaps
should look upon a past generation with a feeling of regret that
they had things so unhandy because it may be that generations hence
will look back upon us with the selfsame feeling of incompleteness
of so-called social necessities.
Warsaw Daily Times Monday Jan. 2, 1939 page 2
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