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The story of the Firelands of Ohio may be unique in American history in
that in no other instance were civilian victims of a war compensated
with land. The war was the American revolution and the land is what is
now mainly Huron And Erie counties.
During the American Revolution there was very little
military activity in Connecticut, but the citizens were busy
manufacturing goods and shipping supplies and material to the
Continental Army. These actions angered the British, of course and they
sent out a series of raids from New York City to destroy the supplies
and cripple the shipping.
The raids got out of hand and a good deal of civilian
property such as private home, churches and schools were also destroyed
or damaged.
These people who lost property had no insurance and no
federal disaster grants to help them rebuild. An example of the
destruction is found in the story of Norwalk, Connecticut. It was raided
July 11, 1779 and 80 of the 86 dwellings in the town were burned. Two
churches, 87 barns, four mills and five vessels were also lost in that
raid. The other towns raided during the war were New London, New Haven,
East Haven, Greenwich, Danbury, Fairfield, Ridgefield and Groton.
The 'sufferers' petition
Several petitions were presented after the war to the
Connecticut legislature by the citizens who lost property. They soon
became known as "Sufferers." Their 1787 appeal was referred to a
legislative committee which reported back in 1792 that the Sufferers
ought to be paid, but the state had only western lands for compensation
in lieu of cash. This western land was that part of northeast Ohio now
known as the Western Reserve. Connecticut's 1662 royal charter had
granted land from one ocean to the other. When the western claims of
various states were settled after the American Revolution, Connecticut
kept only a tract 120 miles long on the south shore of Lake Erie.
A half-million acres at the west end of the Western
Reserve was given to the Fire Sufferers in 1792. The claims totaled
$538,495.26 in 1792 dollars and the land was allocated at a value just
over $1 per acre. A major problem to be overcome was paying off the
Indian tribes who owned the land and then surveying it. This took until
1808 and by then most of the Sufferers had died or had sold their claims
to land speculators. Very few of the actual Fire Sufferers ever saw the
Fire Sufferers Lands (a name soon shortened to Fire Lands or Firelands)
in Ohio.
Geographically, the Firelands is the area which is now
Huron and Erie counties as well as Danbury Township in Ottawa County and
Ruggles Township in Ashland County. None of the Lake Erie islands was
originally included although they were later attached for judicial
purposes. Johnson's Island in Sandusky Bay was a part of the
half-million acres.
Even before the surveying was completed in 1808 there
were Americans "squatting" on the Firelands. Most of them lived along
the lake shore and traded with the Indians or hunted and trapped.
Frenchman John B. Flammand was operating a trading post on the river
just south of Huron when the first Americans arrived and it was the only
store on the Firelands.
Settlement slow at first
Settlement was slow before the War of 1812 due to the
remoteness of the tract and the difficulties in reaching it. Some of the
land speculators were holding out for high prices for their land and
this discouraged settlement.
When the War of 1812 broke out there was a small
militia unit stationed at Fort Avery, a stockade on the Huron River
north of Milan. These troops and local civilians fought a contingent of
Indians on the Marblehead Peninsula in September 1812. This was the
first battle of that war in Ohio and one of the few skirmishes in the
state. Almost everyone left the Firelands due to the Indian threat and
there were at least eight civilians murdered in raids in 1812-13.
Settlement resumed quickly after the War of 1812 due to
the natural westward expansion and due also to the Year Of No Summer in
New England in 1816-17. This phenomenon was caused by a volcanic
eruption in the Far East whose cloud of dust obliterated the sun and
caused frigid conditions across the northern U.S. and Europe.
As the roads improved and land prices were modified,
more and more settlers arrived. Most came from New York and New England,
although a few middle states residents moved to the southern tier of
townships of the Firelands. There were also great migrations from Europe
in the 19th Century, making the Firelands a real melting pot. The
architecture and physical surroundings of these areas reflect so readily
the origins of the early residents.
Huron County is formed
Ohio's Legislature organized the Firelands as Huron
County in 1809 and attached it first to portage and Geauga counties and
in 1810 to Cuyahoga. By 1815, the county's population was sufficient to
establish its own government and the initial meeting of Huron County's
commissioners took place Aug. 1, 1815, at the first county seat north of
Milan near the site of Fort Avery. In 1818 all functions of county
government were moved to Norwalk and it has been the county seat ever
since. During this time the western townships of Lorain County as well
as most of Sandusky and Seneca counties were attached to Huron County.
As soon as those areas had sufficient population they assumed their own
government functions.
Erie County is formed
When the wilderness had been tamed some people began
agitating for smaller counties. In 1838 Erie County was formed by the
Legislature in the northwest quadrant of the Firelands with the
townships of Groton, Margaretta, Portland, Perkins, Danbury and part of
Oxford. In 1840, Danbury was given to Ottawa County with Milan, Huron,
Berlin, Florence and Vermilion were taken from Huron County to make Erie
County the size it is today. Ruggles Township was removed from old Huron
County in 1846 to help create Ashland County.
Anyone wanting to learn more of the past can visit the
Firelands Historical Society, 4 Case Ave., Norwalk. This is the
second oldest historical society in Ohio, maintaining the second oldest
museum.
This story taken,
with permission, from the "Special Sections" area of the
Norwalk Reflector.
For more
information, try the links below:
The Firelands (taken
from Roots and Routes)
Firelands (taken from Wikipedia) |