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| Christian Myers, Iron Master and Founder of Clarion County |
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Compiled by Paul E. Beck and originally published in the Lancaster County, PA, Papers, Vol. 31 (1927). Reprinted in the Western PA Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 21, No. 3 (Winter 1995), pg. 32. No copyright infringement intended. Christian Myers was born on a farm near Bareville, Lancaster Co., Pa., 24 June 1796. On May 30, 1819, being then 23 years of age, he was married to Martha Henaberger of Mount Joy at Cooper's Hotel, Lancaster City. The couple settled in East Petersburg. Their home was a large double house built of bricks brought from England and laid in Flemish bond. Subsequently, and for many years, it was used as a tavern, the Captain Lawrence, which carried a famous sign by Peter Lehn Grosh (1798-1859) showing the blue-coated Commodore above his brave legend, "Don't Give Up The Ship." The house is still standing (1927) at the NE corner of State & Lemon Sts. In 1816, previous to their marriage, a number of well-to-do farmers from Lancaster county had united to form what was known as the Lancaster Land Company, organized for the sole purpose of purchasing, as an investment, an extensive tract of land in what was then the wilderness of W. Pa. The tract lay in the area covered by the counties of Jefferson and Venango and included the greater part of what became Clarion county in 1839. The tract purchased contained 187,110 acres of land, for which $73,280.77 was paid. The purchasers were: Christian Kaufman, J. Sherer, D. LeFebre, Christian Huber, John Bachman, Daniel Reigart, Benjamin Long, Chris Stauffer Jr., George Morry, Lewis Urban, Henry Shippen, Samuel Miller, Gerhardt Buback, Daniel Reynor, George Snyder, John Houtz, James Humes, Joseph Ogilby, Thomas Crawford, Henry Carpenter Jr., Jacob Miller, Henry Bear, Benjamin Bear -- with Henry Shippen, James Humes, and John Bachman as the Executive Committee. They acquired this land from the Holland Land Company. Harm Jan Huidekoper, who represented the Holland Land Company, kept a diary in which there is recorded much early data on Lancaster. He was on horseback en route from New York to Meadville. In 1826, desiring to view the lands of which he had become part owner, Christian Myers, now aged 30, set out on a journey. He had heard that there were indications of vast beds of underlying iron ore in this new country. He prevailed upon his friend, Henry Bear, an expert iron master, to accompany him. Bear's eastern home had been Cornwall, Lebanon county. The great ore banks of Cornwall, with their blast furnaces, had been worked since 1732. Bear understood the construction and operation of the primitive iron furnace thoroughly. They made the trip on horseback. Upon arrival, they settled near the junction of Little Toby Creek with the Clarion river. The name Clarion replaced the earlier name of Stump Creek. They built a log shack and, in 1828, having found Iron ore, timber, limestone and waterpower in abundance, they erected the first iron furnace in the county. It was known as Clarion Furnace after the river. The furnace stood on the river just west of the mouth of Little Toby creek. In 1828, Myers returned to Lancaster county and came back with his wife and two young sons, Amos and Christian. Myers and Bear were so successful that their venture was quickly followed by others. Shippenville and Lucinda furnaces were built in 1832 and 1833. Eight new furnaces were built in 1845, and a few after that date.Henry Bear was the designer of Clarion Furnace, and all that followed were exact replicas. Bear's furnace was built of rough stone, dressed at the edges and keyed with wooden crossbeams. It was 30 feet high. The stack measured 24' x 24' at the base; the inside was lined with firebrick. Charcoal was the fuel used, in later years it was supplanted by coke. Ore was mined from drifts or banks. The process is described in detail. Furnaces produced 15-25 tons of pig iron per week at the beginning, and, in later years, produced as much as 50 tons per week. The iron was sent to Pittsburgh in great, flat-bottomed boats. Since they [the boats] could not be brought back, they were sold in Pittsburgh where there was a ready market for them. Chief loading points were at Clarion, at Hahn's Ferry, at the mouth of Piney Creek, at Callensburg, and at Redbank. These places were the scenes of much active life and bustle for several hundred men would be found there at one time, loading barges for the various iron companies. The larger furnaces, such as Lucinda, Madison and Shippenville, employed from 75-100 hands. The smaller ones, as Washington, Wild Cat, and Mary Ann, from 25-50. The men were miners, teamsters, woodchoppers, charcoal burners, and furnace men. Their wages ranged from $20-$26 per month. One quarter of a man's wages was usually paid to him in cash, the balance in orders on the company's store. Between 1845 and 1854, more than half of all the iron made in NW PA was manufactured in Clarion County. Christian Myers was a man of high public spirit. He and Henry Bear continued the operation of Clarion Furnace and were prosperous. They held their partnership for about 15 years, when it was dissolved by Bear, and Myers carried it alone. In 1836, he was elected a member of the Constitutional Convention when it met for the purpose of revising the State Constitution. In 1839, seeing that the new county was certain to be sanctioned, Myers, Philip Clover, and James P. Hoover, who then owned all of the land upon which Clarion now stands, offered it to the commissioners as a site for the proposed county seat, if they should receive half the proceeds of the sale of building lots. The county of Clarion was formed 11 March 1839, with the county seat located at Clarion. In 1840, Myers was commissioned by the Governor as an Associate Justice of the county, thereupon he became known as Judge Myers, and he served in this capacity until 1858. In 1844, he replaced the now exhausted Clarion furnace with a new stack in Monroe Twp. near Reidsburg. He called the new furnace Polk Furnace in honor of the then President. He re-christened the new furnace Martha in honor of his wife. The repeal of the protective tariff by Congress in 1846 was the deathblow to the iron industry in the county. Of the 31 furnaces once flourishing here, Washington Furnace alone remains a melancholy memorial to its departed fellows. It stands in the SW corner of the county on the road leading from Mechanicsville to Reidsburg. The lower part of Martha Furnace is still standing a short distance south of Reidsburg. Christian Myers died in Philadelphia 6 Oct 1877 aged 81 years. His wife, Martha Henaberger, died there in 1880. Both are buried in Mount Moriah Cemetery in that city. List of Iron Furnaces Formerly Operated in Clarion County
For names of owners and operators of most of the named furnaces, see Davis' History of Clarion County (1887). In addition to the 31 named, Caldwell's Atlas of Clarion County (1877) mentions two more: Callensburg Furnace & Perry Furnace. |