Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from Corning and Vicinity
In 1787 Frederick Calkins, of Vermont, erected a log cabin on the bank of the Chemung River, within the bounds of the present city of Coming. This was the first home to be built by a white man in the Genesee Country.
In 1788 an Indian Treaty was held at Buffalo Creek, and in 1789 at the foot of Canandaigua Lake. These treaties Opened the Genesee wilderness for settlement as far west as the Genesee River.
At the close of the Indian Treaty held at Canandaigua in the Summer of 1789, Oliver Phelps, one of the principals in the purchase of the Genesee Country, deeded the townships that bear their names to Colonel Arthur Erwin, of Pennsylvania, and Colonel Eleazer Lindsley, of New Jersey.
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