Memories of Early Days in BuffaloWritten by Sylvester J. Matthews in 1913, this manuscript details early life in Buffalo, New York. Buffalo in 1838 was a city of "magnificent distances." The speculative bubbles that had been blown during the previous decade had been burst as in a single night by the panic of '37. Building enterprises of every kind were at a standstill, real estate in great quantities had been thrown into chancery and much more tied up in various ways of litigation, rendering it unavailable for new enterprises that subsequently started up in the '40's, and in some instances even into the '50's. This manuscript is a series of memories written onto paper by an early resident of the bustling suburb. It can assist the genealogist by providing an excellent glimpse into the life of Buffalonians during the early to mid nineteenth century. This narrative of events, intertwined into your heritage, can create a full bodied tree, not just the roots. This manuscript contains names of some of the early residents of Buffalo, and the interesting facts about them. Buffalo in 1838 was a city of "magnificent distances." The speculative
bubbles that had been blown during the previous decade had been burst as in a
single night by the panic of '37. Building enterprises of every kind were at a
standstill, real estate in great quantities had been thrown into chancery and
much more tied up in various ways of litigation, rendering it unavailable for
new enterprises that subsequently started up in the '40's, and in some
instances even into the '50's. Table of Contents:
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Sylvester J. Matthews
The author of these reminiscences was born in Auburn, N. Y. In response to a request from the editor of this volume, for facts about himself, Mr. Mathews writes that after removal, with his father's family, to Utica in 1833, and to Ithaca in 1835, he came to Buffalo in 1837. Here he was "a little Sunday-school scholar in the Old First Presbyterian Church basement Sunday-school room, with entrance on Pearl street." "The old-time Sunday-school picnics to the old Indian Mission Church of the Senecas, four miles away, were great events in our youthful days. Later I was a pupil of Dr. Chambers' private school in the basement of the Unitarian Church, corner of Franklin and Eagle streets." He recalls his schoolmates, among them Julia Dean, the actress. He was fond of sketching, and used to make excursions with "Al" (the Rev. Albert) Bigelow "on the old Black Rock horse-ferry boat to Fort Erie for sketches of the picturesque ruins. He remembers the steamboat Caroline, and many stirring episodes of the Patriot War of 1837-8. He was for a time in the employ of Hall & Mooney, printers and lithographers, and during the period about which most of his reminiscences cluster, he lived at the corner of Court and Pearl streets. |