Wood Family Documents
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Chaska Herald - Thurs', November 26, 1992
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Chatting with a real pioneer
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II was 51) years ago Ihis mllnlh
that I had an opportunity as a
young Ikrald reporter-writer-
l~dill Ir '-Just a few years out of high
~:hl ~ II .. 10 srend part of a Sum1ay
:lflerncl(1n with a territorial pionl'er.
My re.:cntly acquired first car. a
u~d'-{lf course-Model T Ford,
orened new hori7.0ns hcyond the
walking limits of Chaska.
\I.lith a Novemhcr wind and
snllwnakes gently mixing. I w:tC;
hraded for what was then Chanhas-
scn Township, more specifically La
that area settled hy "Yankees" in
the \XSOs.
At the Ilerb Ac;pden home I wac;
going to hccome acquainted with
his mother, Mary Wood A<;pden, a
delightful lady gracefully enjoying
her upper Ms.
She and her family had the
experience of coming from
Mas.'-W1chusells to the frontier twit:e.
Abel Wlxxl had worked in the
colton mills of that state since
coming from England as a hay.
Learning of new opportunities in
the new Midwest, he hrought his
family, including two-year-old
Mary, to the Waukesha area of
WisConsin. However, it proved to
he a malaria area. The family went
lxlck east.
Some German families had come
up the Minnesotil River in IX52
and pre-empted homesteads on the
prairie and along the hluffs of what
would hccome Carver County, cast
of whal would hccome Chaska.
The steamboats let them off at a
landing cllled Yorkville. During
the following year, 10 families
from MilssachuSCllS gOt off at the
s,ame place and headed north to
claim land. In the group were Arha
Cleveland, George Powers, H.M.
Lyman, Joshua Moore, J. C.athcart,
George Galpin, Lemuel Griffin,
James Ryan, William Tillon and
James Hillery.
A minister came 10 visit lhe
Clevt:lilnds and was so favorahly
irnpre~,sed with the new area that
he wrote rellers to the Palmer
Journal. a Mas.'-W1chuSCllS puhlica-
t jon.
One of the readers who was
convinced and hccilme excited was
Ahcl W(xxl. He started west amI
left enough money for his family to
follow later. He landed at Yorkville
in 1854 and eSlahlished a home-
stead. After a year's prep;lralion of
the site, he sent for his family,
A contingent of IG SCI out from
Ma~c;achusells. making lhe first
legs of the trip hy rililrO.1d. (n the
group the Wcxx1s' cousins, Caspar
KnOll, John A'ipden, and the
Hobson, Lynn and M(xlre families.
On one leg of the journey they nxle
in a callIe cm, just vacated hy
animals. Planks were put in as sealS
for women.
After six days they arrived in
Chicago on a Sunday. Trains did
not ofX:rate on that duy. The nexl
day they were back on the rails
headed for Galcnil, III. There they
got on the steamhaat, Franklin,
bound for 5t. Paul. There they
boarded the Antelope and reached
the Minnesota River Valley ilt
Shakopee by nightfilll. KnOll, il
tinsmith, was impres.c;cd with the
selllement at Shakoree and decided
to sct up husiness there. TIle
Antelope stopped at Yorkville, a
sc.tltering of log homes east of
what wa<; to become Chaska. They
were greeted there by Juhn Mann, a
sclller. He had been requested to
take c.1rc of the newcomers until
their friends arrived.
Mr. Wood arrived with a lumhcr
wagon drawn hy a yoke of oxen he
had purchased. Reunited, the Wlxxl
family drove into the nearby
Chaska selllement, stopped at
David Fuller's store on the levee at
the south end of Walnut Street.
They purchased a harrel of salt
pork, a dollar's worth of sugar, a
barrel of nour and It gallon of
molasses. With those purchases,
the wagon and oxen and a $60 cow,
the Woods had $42.50 left a<; their
wealth. That woulll he contrihuted
to the COSt of a Jog sch(x)] neigh-
hors had dec.:ided 10 build. lbey
could then get education funds
from the territorial government.
As the filrmsteild ~me into view,
there was the 16 hy 24 fOOl log
house with twO windows. Inside
were ;1 "l'lI m:llk with tamarack
poles. a cross-leg pine hoard lahle,
some sltlols and an iron stove. 'Ibe
family unpacked the two chests of
clothing lhey hrought from the
East.
Now Ihere were eight hanus
insteatl of Iwo for further clearing
the entanglement of hrush, fern
growth amI reXllS under which thrre
was rich soil for cultivating. While
the son helped his father, nine-
yem-oltl Mary :Iided her mother.
churning hUller :lOd shooting
blackbirds to prolect the acre of
wheal her father had planted for
next winter's nour.
A young girl. Susan Hai',dline,
started teaching. school in the
Cleveland hOllle, hut, when the log
school was finished, that Ix:camc
the educ<ltional, cultural <Ind social
center. The newcomers from
Massachusctts were tjuite cultured.
(n the Sdllxllthey had such
activities as spelling bees and
lyceums, including dehates,
recitations, singing, and reading of
prepared parers.
The Rev. Edward Eggleston,
author famous for "TIle Hoosier
SchlXl)master" and "The Circuit
Rider," preached at the school
while Iraveling as a hlxlk salesman.
Mrs. As(xlen remembered the
occasion. She cou Idn 't allend,
because she didn't have sh(x:s.
Th(~re were no churches, hut in
the summer neighhors .....ould
galher in the sugar maple grove
near Ihe Lyman home for servil:es.
It wao; there that the first Protestant
scrmon was preached hy the Rev.
Charles Galpin of Minneapolis in
June I H54.
The Aspdens and Woods being
neighhllrs led to a mther natural
romance, and Henry Aspden and
Mary Ann Wo(xl married. By that
time Minnesota had become a
state.
There was so much more
Grandma A<;pden told me in that
1933 visit. In il future column I
shall relate some of her experiences
with Indians al home in Chanhas-
sen and while tcaching at
Shakopee.
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I!V-flO-'1f.f..
, 46.7 Update Date 10/2/1997
Lot
Grave Status Occupied
Occupant Information
Name Abel Wood
Sex Male
Social Sec. No.
Date of Birth 11/21/1809
Date of Death 5/13/1888
Interment Date
Cause of Death Softening of the Brain (CCDR)
Place of Birth Glossap, England
Place of Death Chanhassen, Carver County, Minnesota
Age
Marital Status
Mother
Father
Children
Occupation
Military Status
Baptized
78
Window
John, Mary Ann Wood
Purchaser Information
Purchased By Abel Wood
Street
City, State, Zip
Phone
Date Purchased
Amount Fee Paid
Date Int Fee Paid
Interment Fee
Name
Address
City, State, Zip
Phone
Name
Relationship
Address
City, State, Zip
Phone
2/15/1869
$5.00
0.00
Spouse Information
Margaret (Jackson) Wood
Next of Kin Information
..
Lot
46.7
Abel
Update Date 10/2/1997
Name
Wood
Comments/History Abel Wood's son, John (born 1842 in Massachusetts) married Ella Sarver, and he
is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery, Excelsior, Hennepin County, Minnesota. Abel's
daughter, Mary Ann (born in 1846 in Massachusetts) married Henry Aspden (see
Grave 46.2) and she is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery, Excelsior, Hennepin County,
Minnesota.
..
lot
Grave Status
46.8
Occupied
Update Date 10/2/1997
Occupant Information
Name Margaret Wood
Sex Female
Social Sec. No.
Date of Birth
Date of Death
Interment Date
Cause of Death
Place of Birth
Place of Death
Age
Marital Status
Mother
Father
Children
Occupation
Military Status
Baptized
Purchased By
Street
City, State, Zip
Phone
Date Purchased
Amount Fee Paid
Date Int Fee Paid
Interment Fee
Name
Address
City, State, Zip
Phone
Name
Relationship
Address
City, State, Zip
Phone
2/2/1815
11/16/1883
Glossom or Glossap, England
Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota
68
Married
Unknown
(1 st name unknown) Jackson
John, Mary Ann Wood
Purchaser Information
Margaret Wood
2/15/1869
$5.00
0.00
Spouse Information
Abel Wood
Next of Kin Information
Theresa (Diethelm) and
Arnold Notermann.
Notermann was among the
Chanhassen settlers from the
Limburg area of Holland.
Although he farmed in
Chanhassen, many people
associate him with Victoria
where he ran a store.
Site of battle between the
Dakota and the Ojibway in
1858. Photograph taken in the
1920s.
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CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY 43
Theodore Bost noticed the changes. He wrote, "This year the
price of land doubled on account of an influx of Dutch settlers, but
there's hardly anybody except the Germans who can sell to them be-
cause the latter tell the newcomers to have nothing to do with the
Americans." His new neighbors concerned him. "If another pack of
Germans should move in, it's not impossible that I might sell out, not
wanting to be stuck in the middle of such a bunch of ignorant Demo-
crats." Sophie complained that the Germans-"all ignorant lower-
class people-are becoming more numerous around us." Other
immigrants came from Luxemborg. They included the Klingelhutzes,
Paulys and Kleins.
The Dakota War
The land had been open for settlement for a decade. Although,
technically, the Native American population had all been removed to
reservations, they continued to have a presence around Chanhassen.
Descriptions ofIndian life have been filtered through the eyes of a
different culture. Family tradition says that Veronica Vogel would of-
ten give bread to Indian visitors. The Bennett family states the same
story about their mother. Even older residents recall similar tales in
their lifetimes. Henry Dimler remembers some coming to Carver
Beach every year to dig ginseng roots and gather lotus leaves. "We
were scared of the Indians," he said.
The early pioneers had seen the possible violence first hand. When
the Ojibway moved into northern Minnesota after white s(';ttlement
forced them west of their traditional homes, they pushed the Dakota
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44 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
1
to lands further south. Chanhassen stood along the imaginary border.
The dispute led to a fierce battle near Rice Lake on May 27, 1858.
Hundreds of Shakopee residents stood on the bluffs to watch the
combat. Mary Wood remembered several Dakota men riding through
the streets of that town, preparing for the battle. At night, she visited
their camp and watched their ceremonies.
The Chippewa's scalp was hung on a pole in the center of a
circle of Indians. As the bright flames of a campfire cast weird
shadows of the dancing Indians upon the trees and tents about
them, the braves shuffled their feet in an odd fashion as they
moved about the scalp, shouting "Hey-yah! Hey-yah! Hey-yah!"
This dancing was continued nightly until. .. the battle benvecn the
nvo tribes.
The Ojibway (Chippewa) used routes through Chanhassen and
they retreated through town to the relative safety of Lake Minne-
tonka.
The simmering tensions between the Dakota and the European
population erupted in the summer of 1862. Chanhassen was distant
from the bloodshed but rumors swept across the
fields like a prairie wildfire.
Theodore Bost scribbled a quick letter to his
parents, telling them in early August, "Early this
morning I learned that the Yankton [Indians] and
the Sioux were five miles from our home, killing
and burning everyone and everything, and I must
go to Chaska to join the forces being organized
there.. . I consider the whole thing another hum-
bug...The nearest they are known to be is eighty
miles away. You [would] have no idea what a com-
motion there was. Everybody stopped harvesting
crops, three out of four [had left] with their fami-
lies, bagage, animals, ete.; many had left their wheat
stacks half-finished outdoors." The Bosts had
"more occasions for enjoying a good laugh at the
expense of those who were most eagerly panicked."
Sophie Bost was not as cavalier. She wrote, "I dreamed night be-
fore last that my children were butchered before my eyes." Her neigh-
bors were even more fearful. Sophie wrote, "Mrs. Cheeseman carne in
with her four children whom she hadn't waited to wash and comb. On
the way home, I looked in at the Sarvers' and found the wife pale with
fear and the children weeping, the father molding bullets for his mus-
ket and about to leave at top speed for Chaska, which is the assembly
point. Great numbers of neighbors piled what they could onto their
wagons and departed; others were standing watch, ready to leave at a
Members of the Dakotas
remained a part of
Chanhassen life despite
government efforts to remove
them. This photograph was
taken in the early 1900s.
Many older people remember
annual trips by the Shakopee
settlement to Lotus (Long)
Lake.
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CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY 45
moment's notice. We were all at the point of bundling up a few valu-
ables and leaving for Fort Snelling where the garrison is."
Mary Wood Aspden remembered that her father had gone out to
cut hay with a scythe and Mrs. Wood was visiting a neighbor. The two
children set out to find their father but couldn't find him. When they
returned, they found the door open. Fearing the worst, they looked in
to see their father. "If the Indians want to destroy my property," he
said, "he might as well be killed by them." She said that some Excel-
sior people headed for Big Island in Lake Minnetonka
while others scurried to Fort Snelling. Ruth Bennett
relates a similar family escape to Big Island.
The Civil War
Edwin Aldritt, Civil War
veteran, in his GAR uniform.
When the Civil War began, there was
no surge of patriotic fervor that swept
other towns in Minnesota. Theodore
Bost, a Republican, supported the
war. In May 1861, he wrote, "Have I
ever told you I'm the only person
hereabouts who wants to see slavery
abolished? The Republicans want
only its non-extension but I want
abolition which is a different mat-
ter." In the end, fifty men from
Chanhassen served in the Civil War.
Most of these soldiers went reluc-
tantly, though, called up in the
drafts of 1864.
It was not easy. William Maxwell
enlisted and served in the Second
Minnesota Infantry. Sophie Bost
wrote, "Some of our neighbors have
suffered very badly-among others, Mrs.
Maxwell who, not having any able-bodied
men at home, can't have a snug, warm
house. We've found her all dressed up as
though she were going to pay visits, wearing a
hood and covered with shawls, sitting hunched over
me stove. tier nealth has been ruined. The poor
woman! The only son she has left at home is a drunkard." George
Powers' brother-in-law was captured while in the army and held in a
prison camp. Theodore Bost noted on January 24, 1865 that, "Mrs.
Powers' brother has just been liberated by an exchange of prisoners
from the mud hut where he was kept, and he was in such wasted con-
dition when he arrived in the North that he didn't even have enough
ambition to write anyone for six weeks."
28 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
Massachusetts in the fall of 1855 to marry Martha Pomeroy of
Southampton in the spring of 1856.
Lyman was the first postmaster and clerk for the first election.
Lyman was widely respected for his ability with agriculture and horti-
culture. He probably planted the first apple tree in Carver County in
1853, bringing with him six small apple trees and seeds. They all died
in the winter of 1856. The Northampton Courier, Nov. 22, 1853 re-
ported, "At Minnetonka, on the claim of Henry Lyman, is a meadow
of fifteen acres or more of the best quality of native hay, which yields
from three to five tons to the acre." Another person noted that prairie
grass stood fourteen feet tall in Lyman's fields.
Powers
George Powers was born on a farm near Belchertown, Massachu-
setts. Like many of the Northampton Colony, he was an educated
man, graduating from college with honors. His wife, Thelena White,
graduated from Mount Holyoke. Powers traveled to Minnesota with
the goal of claiming land, building a home, and then returning to
marry. He followed his plan.
A neighbor wrote that Powers was "an excellent, handsome young
man. Always happy, good Christians, very nice and pleasant." He was
active in local politics, holding offices at the township and local level.
'frumble
Joel Trumble was born in 1831 in Concord, New York. While liv-
ing in Illinois, he met Jemima Aldritt, followed her to Chanhassen and
married her in 1857. They had ten children.
Wood
Abel Wood came to America from England as a young boy and
found work in New England cotton mills. He brought his family to
the Waukesha area of Wisconsin. There was malaria so they returned
to Massachusetts. He began to read the series of letters that Henry
Martyn Nichols sent to the Northampton Courier and decided to try
the west again. In 1854, he and his family landed in Yorkville with a
contingent that included Caspar Knott, John Aspden, and the
Hobson, Lynn, and Moore families. The farmstead was a 16 x 24 foot
log house with two windows, a bed made of tamarack poles, a cross
leg pine board table, some stools, an iron stove and two chests of
clothing from the east.
Harrison
Edward B. Harrison, a native of England, was born July 21, 183l.
Mter duty in the English navy, Harrison settled in Chanhassen in
1855, shortly after his marriage to Hannah Richardson of England.
Harrison became a prominent community leader, serving as Chair-
Abel Wood
MargaretJackson Wood
Jemima Aldritt Trumble
32 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
the South in Sewanee, Tennessee and apparently supervised the con-
struction of the first campus buildings. They left a permament re-
minder of their stay~they named Lake Lucy after their five-year-old
daughter. Lake Ann was named after William's wife.
Theodore Bost
Theodore Bost came from Switzerland and settled in Chanhassen
in November, 1855. He was a regular correspondent throughout his
life and his many letters provide us with the most detailed look at life
in early Chanhassen. After landing at Chaska, he began walking
through the woods, checking possible claims. "The claim I've just
bought was occupied by a railroad engineer who thought he'd like
farming but got tired of it.. . .Another good point of this claim is that
the people round about are English or American, eitller Christians or
at least churchgoers, ready to lend a hand to their neighbors and to
protect one another's claims."
Bost was a strongly opininated man from a strict Protestant family.
Along with Cleaveland, Lyman and Powers, he immersed himself in
Republican politics.
Life on the Frontier
The pioneers remembered the early years of Chanhassen as hard
yet Edwin Aldritt wrote, "Those were happy days. We were all good
friends and every man helped his neighbor. Frequently we would drive
ten or twenty miles to visit some family and if a new homesteader
came to the country we would all help him build his cabin." There
were no tradespeople, no shopkeepers. Everyone farmed the land.
Theodore Bost described his home to his parents in Switzerland:
I moved into the old log cabin, which is eight feet square,
four feet high at the north end, and seven feet high at the south
end. Before moving in I took some earth from the cellar, mixed
water with it, and then threw it with all four fingers and my
thumb between the logs of the cabin walls so that I am cozy and
warm and in the morning when I wash I have hardly any ice in my
room instead of seeing my drinking water turned to ice.
The cabin is now my bedroom, living room, dining room,
pantry, etc. and if I stay near the door I can spin around three
times in a row. . .without knocking anything over. Seated on my
empty nail keg, I can do everything I need to do without getting
up; I tend my fire by leaning over to my right, where I also keep
my kettle; then I keep my lamp, a tin can, a cup, etc.; then still
perched on my keg, by leaning over backward I land on my bed
which serves me as a backrest.
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CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY 33
The farms provided most of the necessities of life. There were few
cash transactions. Benedict Schmid kept a careful accounting. For ex-
ample, his total expenses for the year 1862 were:
Jan. S
Jan 12
Jan 17
Feb 7
Feb S
Feb 11
Feb 15
Feb 22
MarS
May
MayS
May 20
June 1
Juncl5
June 29
July 11
Aug 16
Aug 24
Sept 3
Sept 21
Oct.
Oct 20
Nov. S
Nov. 15
Nov 23
Dec 20
Shoe soles
Pants
Postage and thread
Shirt material and spoon
Income Tax
Wash kettle, copper wash boiler
Salt, shoes for child, pants
paper and ink
Starch and braid
School tax
Hat and other small items
Blacksmith
Smith's plow and trivet ax
Shoes and material
Harrow teeth, fork and other items
Agricultural paper
Poll tax
Calf
Caliper, schnapps, strap; items
Cotton material
Boots, pants material, underpants
Fixing plow
Pig, bowls, string, glass
Wagon
Coat, underwear, pants, rope
Threshing, nails
Shoes, shirts
Linen for pants
Linen and small items
Geese
Midwife
.35
.S5
.25
2.65
3.S5
.75
4.20
.15
.40
.40
4.40
1.00
3.75
3.76
5.60
1.S0
1.00
1.25
4.10
9.70
7.15
.SS
1.S0
60.00
11.30
13.00
7.25
1.33
1.90
1.00
2.00
For cash, he sold wheat, corn, rye, potatoes, green beans, and two
and a half pigs.
The farmers found that the land was good. Nature provided the
direst threats. Clarissa Cleaveland wrote about one danger.
The prairie fires.. .have been raging all the month. Some
nights, when there is no moon, the whole heavens are illumined
and it looks like one mighty conflagration. Other nights, when
the fire is near I can see to pick up a pin anywhere, but it does not
34 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
frighten me at all, for I know it is harming no one, or at least it
will not, if they take the precaution they should to burn around
everything they have. I have heard of but one being burned out
near us and that was a German 3 miles west of us. The country is
so destitute of mountains or large hills that we can see the reflec-
tions of fires that are miles & miles, distant.
The threat of prairie fire was real. A few years later, the Bosts lost
their stable, fence, and hay. Bost explained, "There was a man about
two miles from here who set fire to a pile of weeds in his garden and
then was unable to prevent the fire from spreading into the woods and
marshes. Several of our neighbors had their fences burned up. If the
unlucky wretch who did such a good job of burning his weeds had a
penny to his name, he would lose it all in lawsuits but he is a poor
Methodist minister." Rufus Cheeseman, the minister, remained in
poverty for years to come.
Since the New Englanders were all educated, the establishment of
a school was very important. The Cleavelands brought Susan
Hazeltine to their home in 1855. She began the first school in Carver
County and made such an impression that two lakes were named after
her. Two years later, the county established official school districts.
The social life of the community centered around the new school-
house. Theodore Bost wrote, "Our surroundings are excellent; a
schoolhouse and church arc half a mile away; there are social gather-
ings in winter where men and youths hold discussions on all sorts of
subjects.... There aren't many places where he would find ways to
Susan Hazeltine started the
first school in Carver County
in 1855. The schoolhouse was
located along a lake that bears
her name.
CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY 35
spend money, unless he were to go to Shakopee, and I'm sure he
wouldn't want to associate with that crowd of young rascals."
Mary Wood Aspden remembered the spelling bees, debates, and
lyceum meetings at the District Twelve Schoolhouse. She wrote a
poem on mosquitoes:
And if they ever come again
To torment and to vex us.
I hope a good strong wind shall come
And blow them all to Texas.
Love and Marriage
Life on the Minnesota frontier was a challenge. Most of the
Northampton Colony brought families with them. Others came alone
with hopes of bringing their wives later. A few were bachelors who
needed to secure a farm before they married.
Theodore Bost worked alone on his farm for several years before
he turned to the pursuit of matrimony. Obviously, there were few
available women in the township and Bost evaluated each one with a
careful eye. "Fanny Maxwell is the only girl hereabouts that I could
love, but-always supposing she were willing to marry me-I hesitate
to tie myself in that way to such a family," he wrote his parents. "I
don't like to put my reasons on paper in detail; but the word
"debauche" could be used in a general sort of way....It is really dis-
gusting to see a lady who wants to pass for a Christian behaving this
way."
He wrote to his parents for advice and they suggested that Sophie
Bonjour, a young girl living in Switzerland, was interested. He re-
membered Sophie, although Theodore at first thought that her older
sister, Marie, was the intended. Still, he courted her for two and a half
years. He assured his parents, "Are they afraid that I am too isolated?
But, just as I am now, I have two neighbors within a half a mile.. .If
Sophie and I should want to, we could build a house between these
two neighbors, the Ma:x"\vells and the Moores."
Sophie finally consented and traveled to Minnesota. Bost met her
in Saint Paul and they were married the following day. They remained
together until Theodore's death in 1919 in San Dimas, California.
Benedict Schmid and Rosina Auer
Benedict Schmid returned to Minnesota in 1858 and built a home
northwest of Lake Minnewashta. Once the first growing season was
completed, Benedict's mind turned to his next acquisition- a wife to
help with the chores. His quest was not easy but he was single-minded
in his pursuit.
On December 13, 1858, he recorded his first attempt. He wrote,