Page:Historical and Biographical Annals of Columbia and Montour Counties, Pennsylvania, Containing a Concise History of the Two Counties and a Genealogical and Biographical Record of Representative Families.pdf/452

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COLUMBIA AND MONTOUR COUNTIES it by a dcq> g o im, making an ideal location for the causeway. T h is spot is a ]x>pular resort fo r picnic parties and anglers. 1*his section was settled soon after the Cata­ w issa valley w as populated. In 1783 John C leaver, a member of the Society o f rriends fro m Chester county, came here while on a v isit to friends at Catawissa and decided to buy land on the north side of the Susquehanna. H e was deterred from this by the great flood o f that year* whkh covered the kinds he had selected, so he took instead a tract on the hills west o f Roaring creek, near its mouth, on the south side of the river. Me brought his fam ily here the following year, built a home, and the third year erected a mill on the bank of the creek. He built the dam on a rock ledge a>K)ut h alf a mile above the mouth of the crc<^* anchoring the woodwork to the rocks by means o f iron hoh%. When this dam was replaced in 1 9 1 1 by a concrete one the old work w as still in a good state o f preservation. T his mill passed into the hands o f W elling­ ton Cleaver a fte r the death o f his father, lesse. and is now in the possession o f Henry K . Bohner. The old building is still in use, but a modem turbine wheel has rep1ace<1 the old wooden overshot one. The concrete dam is one of the best examples of (his class of w*ork in the county, while the forebay has also been cone ret e<l for a short snacc between the edge of the hill and the mill. The old millrace. blasted from the solid rock, needed no r q w ir s or improvemem. One turbine o f 35 horsepower operates the machinery, and the addition o f other turbines could develop over 1 25 horsepower. T he mill is fittc<l with mod­ e m roller process machiner)* and the output is twenty-five barrels o f flour daily. T he mast important industr)* in this section, a s well as in the county, was the Roaring Creek Furnace, which to a great extent contributed t o the development of the iron works o f Dan­ ville. .Ml that remains of the old plant now is the heap o f slag, which many of the

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summer visitors think is part of the natural rock formation, so completely has the story of the old furnace passed from memoiy. Another industry of the past w as the saw ­ mill o f R . Davison, at the mouth o f IJttle Roaring crcck, now abandoned. The grist­ mill o f Jacob Swank* in the western edge of the township, on the same creek, about the center of the territory, is now ow*ncd by Peter S . Cromlcy. aEllGIOUS The flrst church in this township was the Methodist, built in 1856 almost in the center of the township. There is also an old ceme­ tery opposite, one of the oldest in the south­ ern part of the county. 'Fhe church ts sup­ plied from Klysburg, .xorthumberland county. Rev. T . F. Ripple is the present supply. Vought's Church cornerstone w as laid Aug. 15. 1857, the building committee being: John Voughi, Thomas P. Vastinc, Peter ought, and Jcssc Wciklc. Valentine Vouglit was the builder. It was owned by the Lutheran denomination. On Nov. 3. 1907, the corner­ stone of the present church was laid, and Sept. 27, 1908, it was dedicate<l. Rev. J . V. Shan­ non was then and is now the pastor. The last building committee consisted o f : II. H . Swank, J . M. Vought. J . W . Vastinc, Isaiah Vought. John Klingman, P. S . Crossley. SCHOOLS

T licre are two school districts in this town­ ship, o f which the population is but souls, and the same numlier o f schools. T he first schoolhouse was built before the Methodist church, and was for a time used also for religious serx’ices. The present schools arc all new buildings. T he school directors fo r 19 14 a re : Isaac Adam s, H enry E . Bohner, William H. Fahringcr. d irislo p h er Vought, W alter Vought.

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