Footnotes to Long Island History
Many Migrated After War
by
Thomas R. Bayles
Footnotes to L.I. History:
By Thomas R. Bayles
Shortly after
the Revolutionary war a good many of the settlers on Eastern Long Island
seemed to get restless, and a number of them migrated to the “New
Country” along the banks of the Mohawk river in upper New York state.
The following
is from the diary of Miss Cynthia Hutchinson in 1808: “We went to
meeting last night but it was very sad. John Turner and his cousins,
Isaac and Cherry, were there, who we will never see again, as they are
going to move a great way off to the new country.”
Among the
prominent men from Brookhaven town who moved to “the new country” was
William Floyd, of Mastic, who was one of the signers of that immortal
document, the Declaration of Independence. (Every school child should
know this fact, but few of them seem to, and apparently local history is
not given much attention in our schools.)
General
William Floyd was born in the old homestead at Mastic December 17, 1734,
and took over the management of his father's large estate upon his death
in 1752. At an early age he became as officer in the militia, and was
advanced until he became major general. He was elected to a seat in the
Continental Congress of 1774, and was one of those who urged the
adoption of the Declaration of Independence.
During the
seven long, dark years when the British were in possession of Long
Island, they took over Gen. Floyd's beautiful 4,000 acre estate at
Mastic, and his family was forced to flee to Connecticut for safety.
Mrs. Floyd died in Middletown, Conn. in 1781, and in 1783 Gen. Floyd
returned with his children to the slow work of rebuilding his home and
estate, which had suffered much damage at the hands of the British
soldiers.
He was a
representative in the first Congress that met in New York city March 4,
1789, when George Washington was elected President.
William Floyd
seemed to have been a pioneer spirit, and shortly after his return to
Mastic in 1783 began to buy land along the Mohawk river in Westernville.
By 1803 he had build a home there similar to the ancestral one at
Mastic, and moved with his family there in the latter part of that year.
It seems
strange that he should have left his life-long home at the age of 69 to
start life all over in another part of the state but it may have been
that he felt his son, Nicoll, who had seven children, needed all the
room in the ancestral home. So in his new home on the banks of the
Mohawk river, he lived until his death 1821.
Thus came to
an end the life of this native Long Islander, whose name will ever hold
an honored place as long as the history of the United States is
preserved.
From the
records of the New York State Agricultural society for 1850 we find that
in 1792 Silas Halsey of Southampton, with two hired men, set sail by
sloop to New York, and then to Albany. At Schenectady he purchased a
small boat called a “batteau” and continued his journey through Oneida
lake and Seneca river into Seneca lake. He continued on and at Ovid
selected a tract of land, built a log house and cleared the underbrush
around it. He procured a quart of apple seeds from the Indian orchard
at Cooley's point, and planted them with care establishing the first
nursery in that region.
He then
returned home by the same route, and in 1793 left Southampton with his
family, together with his son-in-law and his family, numbering
altogether 18 persons, and after a six-week trip they reached their new
home.
Judge Halsey,
with an enterprise and public spirit which distinguished him through a
long and useful life, erected a grist mall on Lodi creek in the summer
of 1794, which ground the grain of the farmers for miles around. He
died at the advanced age of 90 years.