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"Boys, It Sure Was Great"
by William Dolby, of Helen Furnace
Excerpt from True Tales of the Clarion
River
I made my first trips
on the Clarion River to Pittsburgh in 1864 and 1865 but don't remember much
about those trips. I was back on the river again in 1874 and have
been at it ever since.
I remember making
one particular trip with O. R. Meddock from Spring Creek.
It was on a timber raft, and we had to go down the river a ways
to couple up. We stopped to rest on the head of Black Fox Island.
Say, boys, you have no idea how fast the willows can grow when you
stop in the middle of the river. We had to cut the raft up to get
it going again.
On another trip
I made with John Sampson, we tied up above Mad Dog Island
on account of fog and started before it all lifted, going to the left
of Mad Dog. This was the only fleet I ever heard of making it.
On another trip
I made, I walked from my place (half-way between Helen Furnace and Scotch
Hill) to near Black's Corners to go to work. A man had been sent
from Cooksburg to gather up men to run on the creek. I then walked
back to Cooksburg and went down the creek. I think the walking amounted
to about twenty miles.
On another trip,
I went from Cooksburg to the mouth of the creek and walked back that night
and was at Cooksburg in time to go to work the next morning. That
was a walk of about forty miles.
I also remember
a trip I made with Perry Maze. We struck the rocks
on the Licking Point and took two strings of timber off the full length
of the raft. The creek looked like a log drive.
On another trip
I made, I was the pilot. We broke a front oar at the foot of Thompson's
Eddy, so we took one from the hind end and put it on in front and ran
to Wilson's Point. The boys in front got tired and stopped pulling.
On account of running the point too close, we swung around, came
off, and I never went around easier. We changed oars again and went
safely to the mouth. The men who were with me this time were Charlie
Dixon; Elmer Aites, of Oil City; and, I believe,
big little Johnnie Waterson. I believe Johnnie
just about balanced the scales when we started, but he was all there when
it came to a pull.
I once went with
Bill Paup on a timber raft from Cooksburg. We went down
the creek and were to land at Miller's Eddy to couple
up. Bill had never been there and said he did not
know if he could get in. I had been in and told him I could run
it. He said it was all right for me to go ahead, so I started the
way I wanted to go. When we got nearly there, he said, "You are
going to hit those point rocks."
I said, "Not on
your life. You can't pull it on them."
He got uneasy
and wanted me to pull off. I told him if he ordered them to pull,
he could take charge of the raft, that I would have nothing to do with
it. He told them to pull left, and you should have seen that raft
go across the river. You could not have put enough men on it to
have stopped it. They had to send men out with a boat and line,
and we were then away down the river. They had to drop some more,
then, to couple up with it.
Well, you can
see my memory is bad. If I ever got out without any trouble, I have
not told it yet.
Talk about walking
back. I have started quite a number of times with a crew of men
from the mouth of the creek and have been the only one to reach home that
night, never having to stop to fix a tire, either. I have stopped
a number of times to change my socks -- just turned them wrong side out
to rest my feet. I suppose that would amount to about the same as
a flat tire. There were no autos in those days, so there was no
use trying to thumb a ride.
Boys, it sure
was great, this running on the creek. Every time there happened
to be a black cloud, you could see me with my coat over my shoulder, looking
for a chance to go. I always got my share, too. I think John
Smith and I were about the last to run on the creek from Rocky
Ripple to Mill Creek. We could only get as far as Smithport on account
of backwater from the Clarion dam.
There was no depression
in those days, either. There was work for everybody who wanted to
work.
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Lewis Dolby was born in Highland Township,
Clarion Co., on 09 Mar 1858. He died 25 Mar 1936 in Oil City,
Venango Co. Lewis, a farmer, lived most of his life in Clarion
Co. His father, Joseph Dolby, died in the
Civil War. Lewis ended up in an orphanage because his mother
remarried and could not take care of all Joseph's children.
Photo and biography, sent by, and copyright
to, Jackie Dolby. Click here
to visit her Dolby Family Web site.
Excerpt sent by Jackie Dolby, but it is copyright
to the book's copyright holder.
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True Tales of the Clarion River is an anthology
of stories told by men who worked on the river in the 18th
and early 19th Centuries. A reprint
edition is available from the Clarion
County Historical Society. See the bibliography available on this Web site. |