Tuesday, 24 March 2015

The Caswells - What's in a Name



CASWELL ROOTS
     “Caswell” is a name derived from Anglo Saxon, and therefore one of the oldest English names.  A fair representation of the Anglo Saxon is “Caerse Wielle, “Cress Well”, or in modern English, Watercress Pond. (1) It is the name of a family that lived by such a pond.
     In the 13th & 14th centuries in Britain it was required that each family take a family name that would descend through the generations and simplify the collection of taxes.  Many of the names taken represented the family’s occupation or location.
     Mike Caswell (2) wrote a few paragraphs about the origin of the CASWELL name.  He speculates that our Caswells came from Wiltshire, which was known for its weaving, an occupation our Caswells engaged in when in Ireland.  Wiltshire was on the Celtic highway from London to the Bristol Channel, where ships departed for Ireland.  Mike believes this move west to Ireland would be a natural one for our ancestors.
     “To many folk the name Caswell means 'someone who lives near a watercress bed’. Others prefer to believe that it originates from the British War Lord CASWALLON, or CASSIVELLAUNUS as Julius Caesar named him. My own belief is a combination of both concepts, linked together by the county of Wiltshire.”
      “The Canadian Caswells", written by Shirley Mayse (so far, not related to our Caswell family), traced her Caswells back to Blackwater, Ireland, an area famous for the export of pigs to London, England. These pigs were driven east across country, right past the front  door of the CASSWELLS of Yatesbury, making them very aware of the goings on commercially in Ireland.”  (Note: It's a small world - Shirley was a teacher from the high school I had attended.  We had a number of visits trying to find a connection between our Caswells.  Too many inconsistencies to find a common ground - even the naming patterns in her line were completely different from our own.)

HUGUENOTS
     Two traditions that have been mentioned about the origins of our Caswell family in Northern Ireland and are not necessarily in conflict with the above.  Although some of these stories may belong to the Dicksons, the Wallaces or the wife of James #1.  Any of these stories could relate to another one of our lines in Ireland. 
     One story from Albert Caswell was that the first Caswell of our line in Ireland was a Presbyterian minister; another from Maryanne Hilliard was that they were French Huguenot weavers.
     In order to increase the number of Protestant settlers in Ireland, various encouragements were offered to immigrants of that faith. The earliest of these was “an act to encourage Protestant settlers to settle in Ireland’’, passed in 1662. This helped the wave of French Huguenots to establish themselves in Ireland in the late 1600’s.  Louis XIV had repealed the Edict of Nantes, which had previously granted toleration of the Huguenots.  Many who came to Ireland were tradesmen, such as goldsmiths, weavers, etc. and many became very successful merchants.

HOW DO WE SPELL OUR NAME?
     Like many “newbie” researchers, I discounted variations in the spelling of surnames.  Although I ignored Carswells when doing my research, I luckily recorded the entries.  Once in Canada our family used or dropped the “r” on a regular basis.  In Ireland the use of the “r” seems to be more consistent.
     From a book of surnames by P.H. Reaney, he lists no less than 16 variants of our name: Carswell (Berks & Devon), Carsewell (Renfrew), Casswell, Caswall, Caswell (Dorset, Northampton & Somerset), Caswill, Crasswell (Hereford), Craswell, Cresswell (Derby & Staffs), Cressell, Cresswell, Crasweill, Criswell, Crissell, Kerswell (Devon & Wales),  and Kerswill  (Devon).

                                    IMMIGRANTS IN IRELAND
     Did the Caswells flee England during the reign of Queen Mary the Catholic, during Charles I persecution of Puritans, or at some later time? Certainly the name is English.  Our Caswell’s brought their weaving skills to Ontario, for the 1851 Canadian Census lists Andrew as a weaver, Mary Jane as a spinner, and one of the children as a carder.
     “Small farms of one to five acres were typical of Ulster, accounting for half the total in both County Armagh, in which Altnamackin is located, and in neighbouring County Monaghan. Many of the farmers supplemented their incomes by weaving, and an even larger share of the wives were spinners. Few spinners made more than tuppence a day, and not many weavers had anything like steady employment.”(3)   
     For several decades before the Caswells left Ireland, linen production was shifting to factories centered in Belfast. The outlook for small farmers and part-time weavers, such as Andrew and Mary Jane Caswell, was not good.


(1)Reaney, P.H. A Dictionary of British Surnames 1958, pp65,66
(2)Host of the World wide web homepage: http://www.vivanet.com/~caswell/wilts/homepage.htm
(3)pp. 270-273 TW Freeman, Pre-famine Ireland

Introduction to Our Caswell Family

The following posts are all part of the book that I have complied about our Caswells.  Posting the chapters in a blog seems to be the best way to distribute this information.  So on I go...



     You are part of this story if, by birth, some of your genes came from James Caswell.  You are part of this story if you married someone who was descended from James.  You are part of this story if you were adopted or taken in by one of those descendants.  For a person is the product of his biological and his social inheritance; we can escape neither.
     From a letter John wrote to a cousin in 1975 “A 24 year old cousin (second cousin once removed) of ours in Vancouver, BC has gotten me started collecting genealogical data for her”…and what a lucky connection John was for me.  He determinedly dug out information about the family.  As a retired history professor he could dig in areas I could not access.
     This book is the result of many years work by John Caswell and Judy (Todhunter) Rosmus; as well as many tireless hours put in by other relatives to ensure this history is as complete and accurate as possible.  Unfortunately, John was no longer able to continue with the research so the task of completing the book came to me.  Many thanks to all the family members who have contributed time and material to this project.
     Where material has been obtained from a source other than family records or has been verified by a primary source, i.e. vital statistics wills, etc., it is so noted.  All other material has been collected from family members.  We are very fortunate that although the Caswell children’s schooling was intermittent and a Grade 5 level at best, some of the sons, daughters and descendants were prolific writers, recording many of the details of their day to day life as they moved across Canada and the United States.
     My interest in our family background began just after my Grandmother, Delle Todhunter (nee Donnan) passed away in 1973.  She was a granddaughter of Andrew and Mary Jane Caswell.  In a discussion with my father, Stanley Caswell Todhunter, about the forms to be filled out regarding my grandmother’s death, he expressed surprise that she was born in Osler, Saskatchewan.
     Realizing how scanty was our knowledge of the past it sparked my interest to learn more about my family’s background.  My father was no help in this project.  His contribution was a story about the time he was clerking in the drugstore in Grand Forks, B.C., in the 1930’s.  A couple came into the store and asked for information about a family of “Caswells” living in the area.  They were visiting from California and were stopping in Grand Forks on their way to Saskatchewan.  My father said there were “no Caswells in Grand Forks”.  The couple said they were sure the family lived here but they did not know what their married names were.  They continued on their way to Saskatoon.  Later my father related this story to his mother, she was furious to say the least.  About the only thing she managed to say to my father was “Cap, what is your middle name?”   My father’s name was Stanley Caswell Todhunter, always called “Cap” or Caswell until his mid-20’s.  Needless to say my grandmother was not quick to forgive my father for sending her relatives away.



Sunday, 22 March 2015

Robert Wallace Caswell



Robert Caswell
(edited by Judy (Todhunter) Rosmus from Rob’s Memoirs)


Robert & Frankie

     Robert Wallace Caswell was the youngest of Andrew and Mary Jane’s brood.  He was born in Biddulph (Granton) Ontario 3 May 1860.  Robs early life we know from his notebooks.  He said that one day we played hooky from school. The next morning, to our surprise, when we were ready to go to school Mother had her bonnet on and was ready to go with us. We had no idea where she was going. She never said a word but when we got as far as Granton she kept right on and when we arrived and the school she rapped on the door, school was called to order when the teacher came out Mother explained that we had been playing hooky and arranged that at any time that were would have to stay home she would give us a note of excuse signed by mother. That ended the happy truant days.
Robert said his “real life work began” when he went to work in J.D.’s (brother James Dickson) general store at Palmerston.  Disliking indoor work Robert quit the store and turned to completing a house that AK (brother Alex) had started next to his father’s and had abandoned when he started college.  Robert was sixteen at the time and had used tools since he was small, but the largest project he had undertaken previously was to make one dining room cupboard for his mother and another for a friend of hers.
Mary Jane and Robert would have been alone in the big 2 ½ story Victorian.  Robert decided that once AK’s house was completed, the two of them might live there and the larger house leased out to provide income for her. 
A German family came to Palmerston to open a cabinet factory.  Robert applied for a job and was put to work finishing the factory’s interior, together with two apprentices.  His good work attracted the attention of the older men in the shop, and he was put to making a tool chest for himself, a bench and a platform – essential apprentice work, before he was put on regular jobs.  When the cabinet shop folded he began working for a contractor. 
Mary Jane thought Robert too small and light for carpenter work, so he bought himself a practice telegraph outfit and learned Morse code.  Shortly a Dr. Standish came to town and opened a drug store and telegraph office. Robert was hired to run the store and serve as one of two telegraph operators “store hours were from 8 am to 10 pm.  He got along famously with the doctor, but when the doctor’s wife and children put out their shoes for Robert to shine on Saturday night he did it just once, then quit.
Robert went to Toronto to perfect his telegraphy and lived with AK’s family that winter.  He went to telegraphy school and then returned to Palmerston and spent the summer there.  On AK’s advice, he took a tent with him, having bought the duck and sewed up the tent for half the price of a ready-made tent.
During the winter of 1881-82, Rob was employed by the Canadian Pacific Railroad as a relief operator.  He would go from one station to another along the CPR and relieve the regular operator for a week or more at a time.   But first he had to get to Winnipeg.
Robert travelled with AK, and his family from Palmerston to St. Paul, Minnesota, where spring floods on the Red River of the North had submerge several towns.  AK was able to leave without difficulty, but those headed to Manitoba filled the railway station, sleeping or sitting wherever they could find a little space.  Finally word spread that a train was leaving for the north.  He and another young fellow found a weak spot in the six foot fence surrounding the boarding platform.  To avoid ticket takers and the police, they went through the fence.  At an opportune moment they slipped aboard without being seen by the ticket checker.  No ticket checker went through the train at Minneapolis.  Fortunate they were to be aboard the train, for the spring weather of the last few weeks was followed by a snowstorm and the mercury fell far below zero.  Repeatedly the train was stopped, and finally it came to St. Vincent where the red River must be crossed.  A transfer boat had been brought in from Fargo, N.D. and they were among the lucky who rode across river and prairie for several miles, occasionally glimpsing farmhouses submerged to the second story.  At Emerson the two boarded the train to Winnipeg.
On arriving at Winnipeg, Robert was anxious for mail, but the post office was in St. Boniface.  A new bridge had just been swept away, so he had to cross the railroad bridge.  The return trip by flat-bottomed boat with “the river a boiling torrent” and the water within two inches of the top of the boat’s sides had little to recommend it over the bridge.
At the C.P.R. offices Robert was immediately given a job as telegrapher.  When passenger trains could move again he was sent to Poplar Point, a little short of Portage la Prairie to reopen the office there.  Promised that he could room and board with the section crew, he found a deserted station with a single board bench four feet long.  Reporting his plight, he was promised food and utensils, which did arrive the next day.  “Still no trunk and nor bedding”.  There was a farmhouse in the distance, and on the third day he set out for it.  A half hour’s brisk walk turned into an hour’s.  He was given supper, a bed and breakfast.  It turned out that her name was Caswell, and she and her husband had come directly from England and taken up a homestead.
A few days later the section crew arrived, as did the regular telegraph operator.  So did his trunk and bedding.  The other operator had a bed which he offered to let Rob use during the day.  One day was enough.  The bed and its owner were infested with lice, and the poor fellow didn’t know what was wrong or how to treat it.  The section hands had compassion for Rob, gave him medicine for the lice, instructed him to boil his clothes thoroughly, and let him share their quarters.  Rob was transferred to Meadow Lea and while there he decided to visit his brother Andrew; being that he lived two miles north of Sewel.  Rob boarded a train and reached the Sewel station about five o’clock in the evening.  There he found that Andrew lived about twenty miles out.  Two farmers were going in that direction and one had a wagon and a span of oxen.  Rob joined them, hoping for a ride, but alas, they walked beside the oxen.  The man with the oxen reached his home first, and Rob continued with the other.  Eventually they came to a creek where the bridge had been washed away, save for one log.  The other crossed and in the pitch dark, Rob followed him with the sound of the rushing waters filling his ears.
Next morning after breakfast Rob was given directions to a country store ten miles away.  Soon he was confronted by a barrier of water at least a quarter mile wide.  He had gone too far to turn back, so he waded through the water which was about a foot-deep.
On reaching the store, the proprietor told Rob that he should follow north on an old cart trail made by fur traders until he saw a trail branching to the east.  Four or five miles out he saw a house but no trail, so he kept walking until he had gone twenty miles.  There a farmer told him the house he had seen was the one he sought.
Hurrying and tired, he turned off the trail to the house he had seen.  “To my joy it was the home of my cousin James Carswell and family.  James was not home but his wife was…”  From her hand he received the first food he had had since early breakfast.
The shortest walk was to Robert Styles’ place out across two valleys, making the walk five miles instead of about fifteen.  Although light was already fading when he left the James Carswell place, the long northern twilight probably helped him.  Even then, it was dark before he reached the Style’s home.  And if Mrs. Carswell had not followed for a ways and called out when he took the wrong direction – who knows?  “I was so sore, I could hardly walk.”  He stayed there two nights.  Then Andrew harnessed up his oxen and took him to within four miles of Sewel, turning back so that he himself would not be overtaken by dark.  “During all that tramp, I had only seen four buildings.  The country was just a wide open wilderness or prairie, where a fellow could get lost, very easily.”
Rob and Andrew had agreed to join forces during the summer and do carpentry, which paid twice as much as office work.  He stated out at $4 a day and soon was raised to $6.  Just where they worked Rob did not state.  At the end of the summer Andrew returned to his farm at Neepawa, while Rob kept at work until winter ended construction.  “I went to the Scott furniture factory in Winnipeg where it was warm and comfortable for the winter.”
George Grant had been born on the farm next to the Caswells.  He had become interested in a temperance colony project which had received from the government thirty-six townships on the South Saskatchewan River in central Saskatchewan.  George Grant had been in the party that selected the land during the summer of 1882.  Grant had looked Rob up on his way west.  “…by that time I had been joined by brother John and his bride who had come up to be a Canadian farmer once more.  Brother Joseph and sister Margaret and family were also interested.”
“And by this time there were four brothers, one sister, and families and my mother in Winnipeg.  We all wanted homesteads and we suggested that he select homesteads for all.  There were two more brothers and one sister and families coming.  We asked him to select homesteads for us which he did outside the temperance colony as there was to be no homesteads within the colony, which was not true.”
In preparation to go in with the first lot of settlers in 1883, Joseph bought a pair of oxen and harness.  “And at Moose Jaw we completed our outfit.  A wagon, plow, seed what, oats and potatoes.”
“The Caswell oxen had harness bits on their mouth lines and were as handy as a team of horses.  That’s why they were so handy to help other in trouble.”
We brought sufficient groceries for the summer – a sheet iron stove with an oven and a tent that I made before leaving Ontario in 1882.  We were pretty well outfitted - we were the first to get to Moose Jaw and had to wait for some settlers that were on the way…”
The first party got little help from Grant, for he was trying to be all over attending to many things.  At Buffalo Valley the trail was shown on the sketch crossing a creek.  That sketch had been made late the previous summer when the creek was dry.  Now in the spring it was a raging torrent.  “All except the Caswell outfit pulled down to the creek before they found out that the creek was full to the top, of deep cut banks and no possible chance of getting across.  We all had to pull up the hills at least three times.
At last we had reached the border of the Promised Land – the Temperance colony.  Brother Joseph and I had to cross the Promised Land and settle as squatters north of the colony.  Had we been told the truth about the homestead lands we could have had our pick of lands close to the side of Saskatoon for our first homestead, before the truth was known we had registered as squatters twenty miles down the river on poorer land.
On May 23, 1883, Rob and Joseph parted from their friends and headed north to Clark’s Crossing where they hoped to find a boat to take them across to the western side of the river where their homestead were.  Alas, the ferry had been swept away at the breakup of the river ice, and the only boat available was Clark’s punt, a little more than a shallow box with a paddle.  Along came a surveyor with a canvas boat which could carry one wagon wheel with axel at a time.  Each wheel and axel required a trip, six in all.  Then the wagon tongue was put in the wagon bed, the bed was eased into the water and towed across; finally on ox was led behind the boat and its mate encouraged to follow with yells and stone-throwing.  Then the surveyor’s all-wood cart was brought across. Here we are at last, we crossed the River of Jordan and we are in the Promised Land and may we be ever honest and true citizens of our beloved land may God guide and direct one through lifes journey.
Quickly they plowed a piece of land on the boundary between their half-sections, brought JF Clark’s iron harrow across the river, seeded the soil, then cut a willow and dragged it over to cover the seed.  “The season was good and we had enough seed for the next year and potatoes to eat and seed.”  When the surveyor came through, Rob and Joe were allowed a half-section each, a quarter-section under Homestead, and the other under pre-emption.

Robert & Frankie Marry
        Queen Victoria’s birthday, a holiday for Canadians and May 24th, 1884 was also an important one in the Caswell annals.  At Saskatoon Robert Caswell met Miss Frankie Irvine.  Five hundred miles away, John’s first child, Albert, was born in Winnipeg.
        Joe and Rob decided to go to Saskatoon for the celebration being held there.  By the time they arrived a high wind had arisen and they could see people standing on the eastern shore watching as the French-Canadian ferryman put his sixteen foot Peterborough boat into the water.  Three other young people were also waiting to make the crossing.  Will Irvine and his sister Frankie had come out to obtain a homestead; then the rest of the Irvines would follow.  They were staying with Joseph Fletcher, with whom they had come west.  The old French Canadian picked them up and started back.  With the wind blowing upstream, the waves were so high that people on the shore lost sight of them again and again.
        The day was so bad that the sports program was postponed to Dominion Day, July 1st.  Again Rob and Joe went to Saskatoon.  That evening Rob escorted Miss Irvine to a concert held in J.P. Lakes house, which had been closed in but not yet finished inside.  They sat on plank benches to hear several people sing, another play the violin, and at least one person recite.
        During July Rob found various reasons to visit the Fletcher farm in Saskatoon.  While out on a walk late in the month Rob proposed and Miss Irvine, as he regularly referred to her in his memoir, accepted.  That evening they told her brother Will, “and he was pleased”.  When Will told Joseph Fletcher, “he was not pleased and advised him to object”.  The senior Irvines had already been told.  Rob went back to work.  When he returned the next week, “my bride to be told me what was what and we talked the matter over and neither of us was inclined to be advised by Wills friend.  We decided to put the question beyond any interference and we laid our plans at once to go to Prince Albert and get married.  That was where the nearest minister lived.”
        They took Will into their plans.  Although it was mid-afternoon, it was agreed that Rob would go back to Clark’s Crossing, pack his clothes, take a good pony, cross the river and go up the east side of Saskatoon.  Halfway there he stopped at Frank Clark’s farm, got him out of bed to borrow a driving horse and buggy.  “It was just breaking day when we started for Prince Albert.”
        The couple stopped two nights along the way, the first night at Batoche’s home.  At Prince Albert the minister – who was also the telegrapher – took the bride into his home.  Rob stayed at the hotel.  The wedding was performed on the evening of August 4th, 1884.
        “After the wedding was over I went to the telegraph office and called up the operator at Clark’s Crossing, in my home, and told him to tell my mother that I was married and that I would love her as I had in the past.  Her reply was that I could not love two.  I was her baby boy and she could not see past that.”


Children of Robert Wallace Caswell and Francis Buchanan Irvine:
-      Andrew Wallace Caswell, B: 10 Aug 1885 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, D: 08 Feb 1958 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, M: Eva Marie Moody, 08 Jan 1913.
-      Walter Buchanan Caswell, B: 1889 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, D: 25 Mar 1950 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, M: Mary McWilliams Munro, 1917 in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
-       Calhoun Caswell, B: 05 Apr 1890 in Medicine Hat, Alberta, D: 08 Dec 1948 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
-      Nora O. Caswell, B: 04 May 1893 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
-      Edna Violet Caswell, B: 04 May 1894 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
-      Minnie Florence Caswell, B: 10 Jul 1896 in Clarks Crossing, D: 26 Nov 1896 in Clarks Crossing, Saskatchewan.
-      Muriel Beatrice Caswell, B: 25 Dec 1906 in Saskatoon, Sask.

Robert 1885 – 86
        The two years following Rob’s involvement in the Rebellion were significant.  They started out with a seeming blow, when his crop was stuck by hail and rain on July 2nd but it turned out more abundant than Joe’s, which had been spared.  A month later, on August 8th, his first son, Wallace, was born in Saskatoon.  Cousin Albert said that his grandmother would have named all the grandsons Wallace, as she believed that her family was descended through her mother Ann Wallis (Margaret Ann) from the Scottish hero, William Wallace.  “Scots who hae wi’ Wallace bled, Scots wha Bruce has often led, welcome to your gory bed or to Victory!”
        About two weeks later Frankie was fit to travel, and they returned to the homestead.  Rob and Will Irvine build an additional bedroom on the cabin.  The good wheat crop was threshed using flails.  As many farmers had planted no crops due to the rebellion, the Dominion government bought up all that Rob, Joseph and John could spare.  Joseph and Rob took two loads to Prince Albert to sell.
        During the summer of 1886 the Central Saskatchewan Agricultural Fair was organized.  The Council of the Northwest Territories sitting in Regina was applied to for a grant, but the application was too late for 1886.  “At the fair of 1886 there was a good exhibit of cattle and fair exhibit of horses, vegetables, grains, and ladies work.  I exhibited a pair of light draft horses, two cabbages borrowed from my brother.”  Joe had gone to the fair a day earlier, taking their exhibits.  Rob went to pick up John and his family and then realized he had not picked the cabbages he proposed to enter.  He slipped into John’s and Patience’s cabbage patch, picked several, entered them and won first place.   (The cabbage patch is also attributed to Joseph).

        During 1886 Rob spent some time working as a carpenter building the North West Mounted Police barracks at Battleford.

1887 – 1893
        After four years at Clark’s Crossing, Robert decided to return to the trade of telegraph operator.  He obtained a job with the Canadian Pacific.  Again he was moved around some, but he was no longer the low man on the seniority list and was not moved around so freely as he had been in Manitoba during 1882. 
     “I stayed with Uncle Rob for two years”, wrote Annie Finley “while I was going to University.  What a good time they had playing rummy.  Because Aunt Frank was near sighted Uncle Rob used to try to cheat Aunt Frankie.  Did he get away with it? Never!  It was just a game with them.  A friend of mine said she never saw an old couple that had such a good time together.  Another thing, never a Sunday went by that each of the family came and visited them for an hour or two.”


The later years…
     Rob sold his brick house and lot about 1925-6 and moved to Gilroy, California.  He bought a ranch financed by Will Colt.  After Frankie died in 1927, Rob walked in and told Will that it was all his – literally walked away from it and returned to Saskatoon.
     After Aunt Frankie died, Uncle Rob was completely lost.  Then he took up woodworking and did some beautiful inlay work on tables.  He also joined a bridge club.  One day I was in Saskatoon and met Uncle Rob.  When we were talking, a lady passed us and he dashed and caught her arm to tell her their bridge club was starting again.  This part of the conversation I heard: “Mrs. Ashton, we are starting bridge again, but it is going to be run differently than last year.  I always had to start off with you but in spite of that, I won.  Yes, Mrs. Ashton, in spite of being a damn poor bridge player, you are a mighty fine woman.”

“Memories of a Caswell house” after the Caswells moved out
     In 1980 Sally Potter Clubb wrote a story on “Memories of Caswell House” which was published in the Sept 13th issue of the Saskatoon Star Phoenix.  She and he six brothers and four sisters had lived with their parents in Rob Caswell’s old house from 1923 to 1927.  All who lived in the Caswell Hill area of Saskatoon knew the Caswell house and its spacious yard.  It was located on a half-acre in the northwest corner of Rob’s homestead on what was then the corner of Avenue A (Idylwyld Drive) and 30th Street West.
     Rob had filed on the quarter-section in 1892 and obtained his patent in 1901.  The patent describes the house as 22 1¼ feet by 28 1¼ feet, with kitchen twelve by fifteen feet.  “The original log house,” said she “was enlarged and enhanced with red brick facing and a full length white wood verandah facing west.  A new front parlor boasted French doors and stained glass upper windows.  A kitchen stair case and a more ornate front hall staircase led to five upstairs bedrooms.”
     The Caswell House was a summertime place, with its large and open playground space, its study trees, and its old stone fence bounding the south and east.  A high board fence on the west separated our yard from that of the Caswell School.  A short concrete sidewalk led to 30th Street and a longer one, bordered by lofty poplars, reached Avenue A.  Among the trees to the south stood a long log gazebo, a delightful shelter wherein to read Grimm’s Fairy Tales, or serve a doll’s tea party…”
     There was also a small log barn for the family cow until one of Sally Potter’s brothers and a friend climbed to the loft to experiment with home-made cigarettes and burned the barn down.  (Courtesy of Willard “Pat” Colt and Margaret Atherton)