CHAPTER XVI.
Progress of the Maugerville Settlement.
The township of Maugerville, as described in the grant of October 31, 1765, began “at a Pine Tree on a point of land a little below the Island called Mauger’s Island,” extending 12½ miles up the river with a depth of nearly 11 miles. It embraced the principal part of the parishes of Maugerville and Sheffield, including Oromocto Island and “the Island lying off Wind-mill Point called Middle Island.” In the grant the “Rights” or “Shares” were fixed at 500 acres but the surveyor-general of Nova Scotia, Charles Morris, had intended that the grantees should have 1,000 acres each on account of their being the first adventurers and also on account of the large proportion of sunken lands and lakes within the limits of the township.
At the time the Maugerville grant was made out the obnoxious Stamp Act was about coming into force in America and the Crown Land Office at Halifax was besieged with people pressing for their grants in order to save the stamp duties. In the hurry and confusion existing Mr. Morris says that the shares of the township were inadvertently fixed at 500 acres each, whereas it had been his intention to lay out one hundred farm lots, each forty rods wide and extending one mile deep into the country, and to give each grantee the balance of his 1,000 acres in the subsequent division of the rest of the township. It is quite likely the Maugerville settlers were glad to accept the smaller shares allotted them in view of the fact that they had been so near losing the whole by the decision of the British government to reserve the lands for the disbanded regulars of the army.
By the terms of the grant it was provided that all persons who failed to settle on their lots, with proper stock and materials for the improvement of their lands, before the last day of November, 1767, should forfeit all claim to the lands allotted them. The township was supposed to consist of 200 shares but only 61 shares were included in the grant of 1765. At least two other grants were passed prior to the coming of the Loyalists—one in 1770, the other early in 1783; but there were still some vacant lots which were gladly taken up by these unfortunate exiles. For their accomodation also a grant was made Dec. 22, 1786, of the rear of the township and such men as Samuel Ryerson, Justus Earle, Joseph Ryerson, Wm. Van Allen, Abraham Van Buskirk, Samuel Tilley and Lodewick Fisher[59] were among the grantees.
Nearly all the original settlers in the township of Maugerville were from Massachusetts, the majority from the single county of Essex. Thus the Burpees were from Rowley, the Perleys from Boxford, the Esteys from Newburyport, while other families were from Haverhill, Ipswich, Gloucester, Salem and other towns of this ancient county which antedates all others in Massachusetts but Plymouth. These settlers were almost exclusively of Puritan stock and members of the Congregationalist churches of New England.
The list of the grantees of the Township of Maugerville, alphabetically arranged, includes the following names:—
- Benjamin Atherton,
- Jacob Barker,
- Jacob Barker, jr.,
- Thomas Barker,
- Richard Barlow,
- Benjamin Brawn,
- David Burbank,
- Joseph Buber,
- Jeremiah Burpee,
- Jonathan Burpee,
- James Chadwell,
- Thomas Christy,
- Joseph Clark,
- Widow Clark,
- Edward Coy,
- Moses Davis,
- Jos. F. W. Desbarres,
- Enoch Dow,
- Joseph Dunphy,
- John Estey,
- Richard Estey,
- Richard Estey, jr.,
- Zebulun Estey,
- Joseph Garrison,
- Beamsley P. Glazier,
- William Harris,
- Thomas Hart,
- Geo. Hayward,
- Nehemiah Hayward,
- Jeremiah Howland,
- Ammi Howlet,
- Samuel Hoyt,
- Daniel Jewett,
- Richard Kimball,
- John Larlee,
- Joshua Mauger,
- Peter Moores,
- William McKeen,
- Elisha Nevers,
- Jabez Nevers,
- Phinehas Nevers,
- Samuel Nevers,
- Nathaniel Newman,
- Daniel Palmer,
- Moses Palmer,
- Jonathan Parker,
- Francis Peabody,
- Oliver Peabody,
- Richard Peabody,
- Samuel Peabody,
- Stephen Peabody,
- Asa Perley,
- Israel Perley,
- Oliver Perley,
- Humphrey Pickard,
- Moses Pickard,
- Hugh Quinton,
- Nicholas Rideout,
- Thomas Rous,
- John Russell,
- Ezekiel Saunders,
- William Saunders,
- Gervas Say,
- John Shaw,
- Hugh Shirley,
- James Simonds,
- Samuel Tapley,
- Giles Tidmarsh, jr.,
- Samuel Upton,
- James Vibart,
- John Wasson,
- Matthew Wasson,
- John Whipple,
- Jonathan Whipple,
- Samuel Whitney,
- Jediah Stickney,
- John Smith,
- Johnathan Smith,
- Charles Stephens,
- Isaac Stickney.
The majority of the surnames in the above list will seem wonderfully familiar to the residents of the St. John river counties where their descendants today form a large and influential element in the community.