by A. S. Avery
From The Morris Chronicle, 1898
Part One*
Excerpt from Morris, New York 1773-1923 by Joyce Foote, 1970
Number 1: You ask me for an item about the stone building (First National Bank) on the corner of Main and Broad Streets in this village which is undergoing extensive repairs by Mr. Kenyon. Well, in 1827 (71 years ago) a story and a half building, painted red and fronting on Main Street, stood on this corner. Over the door was the sign with the yellow letters reading E. C. Williams; Mr. Williams kept a dry goods and grocery store. In those days you could buy at the same store nails, screws, gimlets, etc., as well as broadcloth at $4.50 a yard, and white sugar 25c a pound. Aside from a hogshead of molasses and another of brown sugar, all the goods imported for six months could be drawn at one load on a two horse wagon ninety-one miles from Catskill in about six days, in good going.
I think that in 1829 Williams moved to New Berlin and Dan Smith and L.H. Donaldson occupied the store, and I am of the impression that during a part of this time Ansel C. Moore was the clerk. A man by the name of Sam Robinson (a relative of the Smith’s by marriage) also clerked here for a time.
The corner building was vacant until 1839. Then it was used for various businesses – Bergan and Angeli, a hat store by J.S. Bergan, a shoe store by Nathaniel Stevenson, and a harness shop by Holland Yates. Since 1844 it has been occupied as a dry goods, grocery, or hardware store by many different firms, of whom we mention Jarvis and Perry, A.C. Moroe and Co., Moore and Cooke, Moore and Thurston, Lull and Steele, S.S. Matteson and Co., E.A. Strong and Co., A.E. Yates. In the same building was also the private bank of A.C. Moore, then Moore and Cooke, and J.E. Cooke and Co. The latter firm failed in 1884.
When Mr. Bergan went out of business and began keeping a hotel, now the Gardner House (Morris Inn), S.G. and P. Weeden opened a harness shop in the room occupied as a hat store. This was in 1840. The post-office was in this building in 1857-60 and Charles A. Bowne was the postmaster.
The building is now owned by Mr. Kenyon, who is fitting it up for the use of the First National Bank, of which he is the president, and for another hardware store.
Number 2: The first building west of E.C. Williams’ store, mentioned in my notes last week as standing where the corner store now is, was a large two-story dwelling and inn built by Jeremiah Cruttenden about 1803. It stood where the Kenyon block (Telephone building site) now is. It was a fashionable white house twenty years ago, with a hall through the center and a front room on each side, the kitchen in the rear. A lean-to on the west end was the bar room. The front chamber was the ballroom of the town and three sets could comfortably dance there. There was no porch or piazza, but each side of the hall door was a seat, and a picket fence about five feet from the house enclosed the dooryard. About fifteen feet from the fence in front of the house stood two tall poplar trees. Teams driving up to the door went between the trees and the fence. Later the barroom part was raised to the height of the main building and a broad two-story piazza was built across the entire front. This was rebuilt into the present three-story block by Jas. E. Cooke and Co. A dozen or more different men and firms “kept tavern” in the old building. Just now I recall the names of Thorp, Douglass, Jonah, Davis, Bergan, Resedorff, Rufus Sanderson, Church and Yates, Johnson and Kimball, and Hasea Bundy.
West of the above building were the tavern sheds where the Weeden buildings stand now (Kinney). Here about 1826 was the first caravan that I attended on my Uncle Eliakim How’s paying four cents for my admission. I recollect there was the monkey riding the Shetland pony, the elephant old “Bet”, a cage of monkeys, a camel, and some other animals. There was no tent cover and the orchestra sat in chairs on a platform in the manger for feeding horses. Edward Littlewood (long years afterward a resident of our town) was the leader of this band, which consisted of four musicians. One of the instruments played upon was a Chinese hurdy-gurdy, shaped somewhat like a banjo, with a wheel, shaft and crank and four strings like a violin. By turning the crank the edge of the rosined wheel vibrated the strings.
The sheds were removed and the present building erected about 1844. In it Isaac Angell had a grocery. Later it was occupied by W.R.B. Wing, Geo. Hitchcock, Pearsall and Hitchcock (dry goods), and by many others down to the present, R. Cooley has occupied the part of the building where his store now is for thirty-three years. It is not my intention to mention all the occupants of these buildings but to preserve a history of the existence of some things and the beginnings of others.
Beyond the sheds was an alleyway, now occupied by Weeden’s harness shop building (Kinney), which was put up just fifty years ago. Beyond the alley was the store of A.C. Moore and Co., on the west corner of the lot. The building occupied by Sanderson’s hardware store is the same building rebuilt and enlarged. The carpenter work in this building was done by George Tew and the joiner work by my father in 1828. I have a distinct recollection of going in there before the floors were all laid, on my way home from school.
A street then ran sown by the side of the brook, and in the rear of the store was an old distillery. The road was closed up because twenty years elapsed without any highway work being done in it. The only dwelling house on the street was built by “Tailor” Wright (Knickerbocker) who had a shop in the west end of what is now the Club Rooms. There was a little one story house where John B. Elliott’s stands, now occupied by Lesander Curtis, who had a gun shop just out on Broad Street. On the corner of Grove and Broad Streets there was a stone blacksmith shop, occupied by S.E. Barrett, later it was enlarged by wooden additions and used by N. Bates as a wagon shop, still later by H. Bump as a furnace and machine shop, and finally all torn down and moved away.
*Editor’s note: This chapter of the book is lengthy, so I have divided it into four parts.
The previous text was taken directly from the book Morris, New York 1773-1923 by Joyce Foote, 1970. I made a few minor edits, but the content remains unchanged.