Samuel Tillotson, son of Joseph Tillotson and Theodosia Young was born in Farmington, Connecticut on October 4, 1758.
Samuel served as a private in Captain Ezra Whittlesey's Company, Colonel John Brown's detachment, in the Revolutionary War. Samuel entered service on Sept 7, 1777 and was discharged Sept 30, 1777. Whittlesey's Company was raised in Berkshire County, Massachusetts. Samuel later served again as a Private in Captain John Collar's Company, Colonel John Ashley's (Berkshire County) Regiment. Samuel entered service July 19, 1779, and was discharged Aug 27, 1779 after serving one month, nine days. The company marched to Connecticut under command of Lieutenant Colonel Powel.
Samuel married Sarah Partridge on March 16, 1786. Sarah was born May 15, 1769 in Tyringham, Berkshire, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Silas Partridge and Abigail Rawson.
Sarah and Samuel produced fourteen children. The first three died in infancy, but the remainder lived long enough to marry and produce children.
Samuel Tillotson was born November 10, 1786 and died July 04, 1791.
Sarah Tillotson was born July 28, 1788 and died May 4, 1792.
Daniel Tillotson was born June 25, 1790 and died June 3, 1794.
Samuel Tillotson was born March 23, 1792 and died August 30, 1869. He married Lucy Dena Jackson.
Zadock Tillotson
Daniel Tillotson
John Tillotson was born May 18, 1798 and died October 18, 1873. He married Adeline Demontank Hitchcock.
Sarah Tillotson was born March 23, 1800 and died May 25, 1831. She married Cortis Stevens on June 21, 1820.
Leonard Tillotson was born March 11, 1802 in Tyringham, Berkshire County, Massachusetts. He married Mary Cossitt Thomas on February 27, 1825 in Liverpool, Medina County, Ohio. Mary was the daughter of Seth Thomas and Susan Cossitt. Susan Cossitt was the half-sister of Orpha Cossitt, mother of Roxa Adams, mother of Jane Ann Sexton
Polly Tillotson was born May 28, 1804 and died March 20, 1886. She was married twice. She first married John Prichard. Later she married Thomas Dutcher.
Seth Tillotson was born March 29, 1806 and died March 29, 1865. He married Mary Matilda Curtis.
Meletiah Tillotson was born October 27, 1809 and died February 18, 1892. She married Lucius Warner.
Betsey Tillotson was born September 24, 1811 and died April 25, 1852. She married first Elisha Taylor. Later she married a man surnamed Allen.
Elizabeth Partridge Tillotson was born April 15, 1814 and died February 4, 1892. She married Edwin Whiting.
Solomon Harvey, James Stearns and Henry Parker were the first settlers in Brunswick, Ohio in October and November of 1815. Shortly afterwards in that same year, Samuel Tillotson brought his wife Sarah and younger children to Brunswick. Samuel built a farm on land he purchased from the State of Connecticut. (In those days the District of Ohio was considered an extension of Connecticut.) That farm remained in the Tillotson for four generations until the final owner, Grant Eugene Tillotson , sold it to the Eyssen family in 1927.
Among the first settlers were the brothers Solomon and Frederick Deming who arrived in Brunswick on March 4th, 1815. Followed that summer were John Hulet, Seymore Chapin, John Sterns, Andrew Deming and Henry Bogue with their families. By year end, they were joined by James Sterns, Solomon Harvey, Henry Parker, Samuel Tillotson, Ephraim Lindley, W.P. Stevens and of course the first surveyor, Abraham Freese. The name Brunswick is derived from a principality in Germany indicating the Germanic influence from many of the townships early settlers.
The journey to Cleveland in those early days took two and a half to three days so was seldom undertaken. Similarly, newspapers of the time indicate that when Sarah Partridge and Samuel Tillotson left their Massachusetts home with their ten children in tow, the journey took six weeks to come to Brunswick. That trip was made with two yoke of oxen, a span of horses and a cow.
Records indicate that the first couple to marry in the Township was Melinda Harvey and Henry Parker on March 16, 1816. Social life in those early pioneer days, frequently held as part of a barn or house raising, consisted of sleigh rides, house parties and dancing to fiddle music. The first elections were held on April 6, 1818 with 19 voters casting their tally. From then on, the township became more like the hometowns left behind in New England. Land in the 1800s sold for $2.50 an acre but didn't bring many buyers at that "exorbitant" price
Business enterprise in the township began along traditionally humble pioneer lines with barter the first form of business. It was the order of the day for ladies to trade goods for cotton dress material. Archibald Mills opened his General Store in 1824 and saw mills began flourishing to take advantage of the timber being felled to create the growing number of home sites. In 1838, a tannery was built to process the many skins being produced by the population of the area. Typical of the time when the horse was king, blacksmith shops sprang up all over.
If you were a resident of Brunswick around 1858, you might have looked forward to October when Brunswick held its agricultural fair. It was held for two days on the grounds of the town hall and featured a large variety of events and exhibits with more than 200 classes of entries. Prizes were in the 25 to 50 cents range. Annual July 4th celebrations were held and documented in the press of the time as were the many annual family reunions common of the era. Frequently a community reunion would be held and was referred to as "Old Settler's Days", a precursor to today's Old Fashion Days celebration (Officially started and so named by the Chamber of Commerce in 1980) each summer.
The first telephone office started in 1899 with the first toll line between Cleveland and Brunswick and in 1901 the Cleveland Southwestern Interurban came through Brunswick. It operated for 30 years bringing many goods and services to the community. In 1965, the same year the city saw the advent of city water and the opening of I-71 to the south, the community celebrated its 150th year with a gigantic sesquicentennial celebration.
As early as 1893 there was a Brunswick High School with a student body of 34 members. The first graduating class however was not until the "class of 1900" and had five proud graduates. The first dedicated high school facility was built in 1921 and is still in use as the South House of Edwards Middle School.
Notes: Spouse of Sarah PARTRIDGE. Samuel TILLOTSON served as a private in Captain Ezra Whittlesey's Company (Col. John Brown's detachment) in the Revolutionary War. He entered service on September 7th, 1777 and was discharged on September 30th, 1777.
Solomon Harvey, James Stearns and Henry Parker were the first settlers in Brunswick, Ohio in October and November of 1815. Shortly afterwards in that same year, Samuel Tillotson brought his wife Sarah and younger children to Brunswick. Samuel built a farm
In 1817 the residents of Brunswick organized a Methodist Church. Samuel and Sarah Tillotson were among its original members.
The first school house was a log cabin erected on the West line of Brunswick to accommodate families living in the neighboring Liverpool township. Sarah Tillotson (Samuel and Sarah's daughter) became the first teacher at the young age of seventeen. Sarah had 16 students in 1817.
Samuel Tillotson lived to the ripe old age of 91. He died in Brunswick on December 3, 1848. His wife Sarah had died on April 11, 1846, reaching the age of 77. They are both buried
The following memoir by Samuel's great-grandson Grant Eugene Tillotson
"Sarah Partridge was a staunch Methodist, and the first religious meetings in Brunswick, both prayer and preaching, were held at Samuel's home. Both their names are among the founders of the first church in Brunswick -- Methodist of course.
"Sally or Sarah as she became known taught the first school in Brunswick, while her mother, being quite adept with herbs, travelled for miles to alleviate the sick before the advent of a physician. Sarah, the daughter and not the mother, as one might think from the name, was the teacher.
"Samuel Tillotson (1758) came to Brunswick, Medina Co, Ohio, in the fall of 1815, bringing with him his wife Sarah Partridge, his five sons and five daughters, and one daughter-in-law, Susan Caroline Rogers, who had married Zadock in August.
"Two wagons furnished the transportation, one drawn by a yoke of oxen and the other by a span of horses. The men walked and the others either walked or rode as seemed expedient. They brought along a fresh cow that furnished milk and butter for daily use. The cow was milked morning and evening, and the unused portion put in the churn on the wagon, and the rocking and jolting of the wagon churned the milk, so a small bit of butter was found each evening at stopping time. When they went through Cleveland there were only twelve houses, and one of them was a block-house compound, or means of defense.
"They came first to the house of Timothy Doan in Columbia township. The day after arriving at Mr. Doan's, Samuel and the boys all came on into Brunswick, locating their claims, and Samuel cut the first tree to build the first house in Brunswick. Only Samuel returned to Mr. Doan's, he going and coming each day to bring food. The boys remained in the woods until the house was completed.
"On returning to Mr. Doan's the first night, Samuel found that a Mr. Harvey had arrived there with a large family, making nearly 20 people to sleep in a one-room log house. They slept heads out and heels in. Mr. Harvey's people came right on into Brunswick, and completed cutting logs for a house also. They turned in and helped Samuel "roll up" his house one day and Mr. Harvey's the next. It was a saying afterward that Samuel Tillotson built the first house but that Solomon Harvey (Sol) rolled the first wheels in Brunswick.
"When they returned to Mr. Doan's they found Zadock's wife sick with the measles, which delayed their moving in. They finally came on with the Harveys."
Women of the Western Reserve (p. 715) says this about Samuel and Sarah:
Brunswick Township is situated in the northern part of Medina County, twenty miles southwest from Cleveland. No railroad has ever invaded this peaceful hamlet. In October, 1815, the families of Samuel Tillotson and Solomon Harvey came to the unbroken wilderness of Brunswick, which up this time had been the undisputed habitation of Indians and wild beasts.
Sarah Partridge became the wife of Samuel Tillotson in 1785, at the age of sixteen. She left her home in Lee, Massachusetts, together with her husband and ten children, the latter part of August, 1815. There was a bonnie bride in the little company, for Susan C, Rogers was married to Zadoc, one of the sons, just before the family started on the long tedious journey. Susan was a sweet singer, and the life and joy of those around her.
The journey was made with two yoke of oxen, a span of horses, and large covered wagons, and occupied six weeks. A cow was tied behind one of the wagons, and after a few days was given her liberty to follow. The journey from Cleveland to Timothy Doan's, in Columbia, occupied three days, the father and sons being obliged to use their axes in many places to clear the way through the wilderness; here the family remained until their own house in Brunswick was ready to receive them. This was the first house erected in the town, and was built of logs, in the most primitive style. Mrs. Tillotson was the mother of eight sons and six daughters. She was a good nurse and the only physician in the township for two years. She was often called to neighboring towns to attend the sick; with a bag or herbs, and simple remedies, she mounted a horse, and sometimes was absent from home several days on her mission of mercy.
Polly Stearns was the wife of Solomon Harvey. To her belongs the honor of being the mother of the first white child born in Brunswick, and the child was named "George." Mrs. Sarah Partridge Tillotson was the attending physician. The Harvey family came from Massachusetts, and arrived at Timothy Doan's, in Columbia, the next day after the arrival of Samuel Tillotson's family. Their log house was rolled up the next day after the completion of Mr. Tillotson's house, by the same set of hands, and they had the distinction of moving into town and occupying their house one day before Mr. Tillotson's family came.
Measles broke out in Mr. Tillotson's family and they were delayed one day, but the next morning the sick one was wrapped up, and the family came to Brunswick, and moved into their new home.
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