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Book

Source 156 – Book: History of Outagamie County, WI

January 1, 1911 by Admin

Authors: Weston A. Goodspeed, Melvin E. Bothwell, Kenneth C. Goodspeed
Godspeed Historical Society, Chicago, 1911

P. 1329 – reference to N.B. Draper settling in 1857 in the town of Ellington, WI

Link to view book: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89102436292;view=1up;seq=1711

Filed Under: Book Tagged With: WI - Outagamie County

Source 171 – Book: History of Ellington, Wisconsin

January 1, 1911 by Admin

History of Outagamie County, Wisconsin

Thomas H. Ryan – Editor in Chief

Goodspeed Historical Allociates, Publishers
Chicago 1911

Excerpt RE: Nelson B. Draper

Chauncey Smith settled in section 16 in 1851-2. John H. Jenne and family came in 1854; Byron M. Gurnee bought land in 1853, but it was two years later when he “cut the first tree and mauled out the rails to fence the first eighty.” David and Caleb Matteson entered land in 1848 on which they afterward lived in section 29; Patrick Newcomb came about 1854; Francis Weissenberg and the family of Michael Wunderlich in 1857; William R Manley settled on section 19, removing later to section 28 in 1854. Robert and Henry Manley came about the same time and were probably the first shoemakers Phillip Zimmerman, an infidel, had considerable influence with his neighbors in the southern part of town until he left in the ’60s. Nelson B. Draper settled in 1857 on section 27. Michael and John Bungert came about 1854. Charles Thiel and family came 1859. The Lairds came about 1855 to section 1. Jabez B. Rexford and family came to section 4 the following March.

Filed Under: Book Tagged With: Draper, Nelson B., WI - Ellington

Source 121 – Book: History of Cherry Valley

January 1, 1898 by Admin

Author: John Sawyer
Title: History of Cherry Valley, from 1740 to 1898
Publisher:
Publication Date: 1898
Page Numbers:
URL:
Excerpts regarding: Moses Nelson and widow Dunlop

Page 8
CHAPTER II – THE EARLY DAYS OF THE REVOLUTION

Page 15
On the hill at the upper end of the valley, in a direct line from the Fort stood the log house of Col. Samuel Campbell, on the site of the residence now occupied as a summer home by his great-great-grand-children; a half mile to the east and on the same level was the house and shop of James Moore, the blacksmith of the settlement, on the lands now owned by Elisha Flint, and North of him lived a Nelson family. About the same distance to the North of Col. Campbell’s was the home of his father-in-law, Matthew Cannon (disputed); while at an equal distance to the West, was the home of John Campbell, now the summer home of the writer. The present Jackson Millson farm was then occupied by James Campbell.

Page 41
… longer in the burning building, when he bethought himself of a cellar door close up to which grew a field of hemp. Creeping through this he was fortunate enough to escape through the hemp unperceived by the Indians, who continued dancing, yelling and shooting around the house until it was burned to the ground. Then they continued on their way, happy in the thought that the bones of the supposed victim were buried in the ashes of his dwelling.

The peace of the settlement was undisturbed during the following year and confidence was beginning to return to the settlers, when, without warning, on the 24th. of April, 1780, a party of seventy-nine Indians and two tories descended on the ill-fated settlement. Eight of the settlers were killed and fourteen carried into captivity, and the settlement was this time completely wiped out of existance; the Fort, church and the few buildings left after the first incursion being burned to the ground. Thus in a few hours were the results of the labors and struggles of nearly forty years destroyed; the valley returned again into the undisputed possession of the beasts and the birds, and Cherry Valley, a few years before, the largest and most prominent of the Frontier settlements of New York, was but a name.

Filed Under: Book Tagged With: Moses Sr, Nelson, NY - Cherry Valley

Source 167 – Book: Pioneers of Outagamie County, WI

January 1, 1895 by Admin

Pioneers of Outagamie County Wisconsin
Author: Elihu Spencer, 1895

Page 29
N. B. DRAPER – Mr. Nelson B. Draper was born in Otsego county New York, Dec. 13, 1823; he was married to Sarah A. Spencer, Nov. 21, 1855; they have one daughter, born Jan. 1, 1860, married to Adelbert Grant, June 13, 1882 ; they have two sons and three daughters; they now reside on section 27 in Ellington. Mr. Draper came to Ellington Sept. 21, 1857, and settled on section 27, where he established a home and resided there until his death, Oct. 26, 1880. His widow died in 1898.

Another Web Source: https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/008726999

Filed Under: Book Tagged With: Draper, Nelson B., WI - Outagamie County

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