The Great Horn Swoggle

Gypsy Heart

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Nov 29, 2005
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Monday, Nov. 03, 1947 It was a qu eer kind of man hunt. The posse was made up of eminent historians, led by the Archivist of the U.S., Solon J. Buck. The man they were after was an obscure carpenter from Topeka, but he was regarded by some of them as the greatest historical forger in the U.S. To track him down, they employed lapidaries, metallurgists, and ink and paper experts.

Their prey was a wispy-haired old fellow named William F. Horn, who turned up in southwest Pennsylvania fifteen years ago with a set of documents he called the Horn Papers. They were full of surprising new findings about Pennsylvania in the 17005. Soon a series of articles, based on what he said were family diaries, began to appear in the Waynesburg (Pa.) Democrat Messenger. The diaries no longer existed; but Horn explained that he had made careful copies of them.

Lost Towns. The articles became the talk of the region. They described the massacre of 12,000 Indians in the Battle of Flint Top—a battle no one had ever heard of. They showed that Greene and Washington Counties included earlier and more important cities than Pittsburgh. He had maps and descriptions of Razortown and Augusta Town, two famous "lost" towns whose sites had baffled historians.

People followed him over hills and trails on his "historical walks," listened to his authoritative reports of early battles and settlements. He became top adviser to the local historical societies. He led a WPA expedition to look for lead marker plates, buried by the French in 1751 as claim to the land, and found two, just where he said they would be. The Greene County Historical Society thereupon appropriated $20,000 and worked nine years to put the Horn diaries and papers into a three-volume set.

Among those who received copies was Princeton's Librarian Julian P. Boyd. He read them with a skeptical eye, attacked them as "fabrications" and demanded an investigation by a committee of historians. Last week, the William & Mary Quarterly reported the committee's verdict.

The Evidence. Step by step, the committee had weighed the evidence. First of all, Horn's transcript was suspiciously complete to have been copied from diaries he had described as "moth-eaten" and partly illegible. The papers used phrases unknown in the 18th Century ("frontire spirit," "race hatred"). Horn's ancestors showed themselves ignorant of the Julian calendar, which was universally used in their day. Horn's maps and court dockets bore a 19th Century watermark and were written with a metal pen and in blue-black ink, unknown until 1836. The documents had been "aged," said the committee, probably with ammonia. As for the lead marker plates, the expedition's director admitted that Horn had found them himself, when the director was away. They, too, were fakes: metallurgists said the 18th Century French could not have used that type of lead.

The committee's verdict: the papers were spurious and Horn was a fraud. "Beyond a doubt," said the Quarterly, "they will become collectors' items . . . treasured with comparable fabrications on the grand scale." Why had the papers been forged? In Topeka last week, 77-year-old William Horn said nothing. His wife told newsmen that he had suffered a stroke. As to the Horn Papers, he was "no longer interested."
 

Tubecity

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Mar 11, 2007
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Thanks Gypsy for this post, this area hits close to home for me. My fathers side settled in western Md. & far south-west Pa. as early as 1720's-1730's & out of three sons ,1 settled in present day Fayette Co., Pa., 1 in Preston Co. ,W.V.,
which borders the Pa. border there & the other stayed in western Md. There were of the German Annabaptist Faith & settled in Bruder's Thal or Brother's
Valley in Somerset Co., Pa. which was an Amish community. My mother's side
were from Greene Co., Pa. , while the first ancestor on that side was born here around the 1730's. He was an aide to Gen. Washington & was given land for his service near present day Perryopolis, Pa.. He founded a town near there called Phillipsburg which was changed to Reagantown because of another town in eastern Pa. which had the same name as the former. I have a place in the mountains in Somerset Co, about 25 minutes from Grantsville, Md. & often
think that my relatives were there before & during Braddock's & Washington's campaigns in that area in the 1750's. Sorry about the length but you find things about this area I have never seen & I've been searching for years. Thank you.
 

Tubecity

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Yes he was. I had the family history given to me by a relative, even explaining his part in the Whiskey Rebellion where his property was torched & he was given more land as compensation. A copy of his will, his letter applying for veteran's benefits & some documents from the archives. A goldmine of history just handed to me.
 

Tubecity

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I have been searching some old maps of Greene & Washington counties, but have seen nothing so far on Razortown or Augusta Town. For some reason
the name Razortown seems familiar. As far as the tale of Mr. Horn, I can't see what he had to gain in fabricating that story, and 'planting' the lead marker plates would be no simple task in that rugged country. Can't say it's true, but
isn't it the norm for educated men to dismiss what they haven't learned or what
they don't understand. This tale has me interested.
 

jeff of pa

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Tubecity said:
I have been searching some old maps of Greene & Washington counties, but have seen nothing so far on Razortown or Augusta Town. For some reason
the name Razortown seems familiar. As far as the tale of Mr. Horn, I can't see what he had to gain in fabricating that story, and 'planting' the lead marker plates would be no simple task in that rugged country. Can't say it's true, but
isn't it the norm for educated men to dismiss what they haven't learned or what
they don't understand. This tale has me interested.

I agree you see it all the time where those who Don't Believe
Jump to Conclusions and make accusations.

It has been Proven the Lead Plates Exist.
There is a post on it in here with Pics.
(Not sure about Mr. Horns though)

And There is augustaville in Northumberland.
Along with a Fort Augusta in the 1750's
No reason to believe there wasn't an Augusta Town
somewhere. along with a Razortown.
The names may have changed with the Landowner.

And some of the other Inaccuracies may have been added by the persons
telling & Retelling the above Story.
We wouldn't be Treasure Hunters if we Dismissd everything.

JEFF

P.S.
Thanks Gypsy !
 

Tubecity

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They showed that Greene and Washington Counties included earlier and more important cities than Pittsburgh.

This would be true as this area was settled before Pittsburgh, probably because
it was closer to Virginia. In fact the flatboats for the Lewis & Clark Expedition
were built above McKeesport, approx. 15 miles south of Pitts. on the Monongahela River. So Gypsy's post makes sense as towns like Wayneburg &
Brownsville in Greene & Washington had settled years earlier.
 

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Gypsy Heart

Gypsy Heart

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http://genforum.genealogy.com/whiteman/messages/682.html
.............Isaac Whiteman, son of Isaac and Eleanor (Maughaman) Whiteman, was born March 1, 1820, in Canton Township, this county, in what was then called Razortown, and very early in life commenced working on the farm...........


http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~thesays/dick/histories/mylineswearingen.htm
...........The hand loom which wove the cloth was sent to Razortown, 1779, taken to Ohio, then Kentucky, and finally placed in the Kansas Historical Museum by Mr. Howard B. Chamberland, St. George, Kansas. Mrs. Hester Kelly, Belevae, Kansas, great granddaughter of Sarah, gave a piece of Blue cloth woven on the same loom, to the Kansas Historical Society. ..................

http://72.14.205.104/search?q=cache..._02.pdf+Razortown+PA&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=8&gl=us

Razortown was on the old William Wylie farm,less than 2 miles northwest of old Washington, on the Washington and Wells-burg Road, and consisted of a black-smith shop, and several dwel-lings. There must have been a tavern among the latter, for,at the March Term, 1816, of the Court of Quarter Sessions TorWashington County, Pennsylvania, a license to sell liquors wasgranted to one Hugh Barr, of "Razertown." That town is nowanother of the few lost towns of Washington County.........

http://www.chartiers.com/crumrine/twp-canton.html
On this farm was located the old Razortown (of which but little is known), before the county of Washington was erected. Later the small parcels were purchased and again became mostly in one tract, and were known respectively as the Wylie, Kelly, and Montgomery farm. It forms now the fine and productive farm of Gen . John Hall.
 

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Gypsy Heart

Gypsy Heart

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Nov 29, 2005
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Text taken from page 98 of:
Beers, J. H. and Co., Commemorative Biographical Record of Washington County, Pennsylvania (Chicago: J. H. Beers & Co., 1893).

MRS. MARY (CLARK) WYLIE. This highly esteemed and much beloved lady is a native of Washington county, born in Hopewell township, July 30, 1811, of Scotch-Irish origin and Covenanter extraction. Her paternal ancestor, James Clark, was driven from Scotland to Ireland during religious persecution, and from the latter country he emigrated to America about the year 1750, and in the Revolutionary war he was found in the Continental army. James Clark settled upon land in Cumberland (now Franklin) county, Penn., upon which the town of Strasburg was afterward laid out and built. " Clark's Knot," or " Clark's Gap," at the mountain near there, still tell of the original owner of the land which was then called "Clark's Fancy." James Clark died near Mercersburg Penn., of which locality her grandfather, David Clark, was a native. The latter was married to Hannah Baird, of Carlisle, same State, and they became the parents of seven children, viz.: James (father of Mrs. Mary Wylie); Esther, married to Rev. Joseph Stockton, of Allegheny, now deceased; Nancy, married to David Larimer, a merchant of Steubenville Ohio; Elizabeth, married to Daniel Houston, of near Canonsburg, this county; Mary. wife of Paul Anderson, of St. Louis Mo.; David and Eliza, in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania.
James Clark, the eldest son of David and Hannah (Baird) Clark, grew to manhood on the farm in Canton township (now known as the S. K. Weirich farm), where he received a liberal education for those early days. Later he kept a store in Hopewell township, also A mill, and was engaged in various other business enterprises; he had an interest in the wagon trains that crossed the mountains for merchandise, and assisted in the building of the National pike. He married Jane Henderson. a daughter of Rev. Matthew Henderson, one of the first Associate ministers to cross the mountains, and who came to Washington county in 1780, taking charge of the Chartiers Church. He was in line of Rev. Alexander Henderson of "Solemn league and Covenant" fame, of Edinburgh. Scotland. Rev. Matthew Henderson married Miss Mary Ferris who bore him ten l children, all of whom grew to maturity and married, their names being as follows: Matthew, Ebenezer, Robert, John, Mary, Ann, Elizabeth. Jane, Joseph and Helen. After marriage Mr. and Mrs. James Clark settled on a farm in Hopewell township, where, July 10, 1821, at the age of thirty-seven years, the husband was summoned from earth. He was a member of the Associate Church. They had seven children, as follows: David, who died in Washington county, leaving a family of five children; Mary, the subject proper of this memoir; Matthew, who was a physician, and died in Washington, Penn.; James, who died in Canonsburg, Penn.; Elizabeth, married to John Murdoch, and died in Parkersburg, Va.; William, who died in Canton township, and Ebenezer, who died when a child. The widowed mother continued to remain on the old home farm with her children, until they had all left for homes of their own, and she then lived with one or other of them, the last year of her life being passed with her daughter Mary (Mrs. Wylie), at whose home she died in 1870, at the ripe old age of eighty-six years.

Mary Clark remained at the place of her birth in Hopewell township until her marriage September 2, 1829, with William Wylie, when they took up their residence on the farm in Canton township, now occupied by the David McClay heirs, whence after five years they moved to the Razortown farm (now known as the Ellenmount stock farm) in the same township, and here for forty-five years they shared life's joys and sorrows. In 1877 Mr. Wylie was called from earth at the age of nearly seventy-seven years. About a year and a half after her husband's death, Mrs. Wylie broke up housekeeping and in 1880 moved to her present home on East Maiden street, in the borough of Washington, where she resides with her widowed daughter, Mrs. Annie Thompson. She is remarkably well preserved for her years, and is in the enjoyment of good health. All her life from girlhood she has been a member of the United Presbyterian Church. She can recount many interesting anecdotes of her early life and other days, which carry the listener back to a time when Washington county was in a condition of comparative wildness. In her childhood the Indians had for the most part gone from the county, but when she was about seven years of age, on proceeding one day to the old spring in the neighborhood for water, she heard a moan, and on looking up was horrified to see a hideous Indian watching her: it is almost needless to add that she fled in no small alarm to the house. Her people went in search of the Indian, and finding him they gave him food, and sent him on his way rejoicing, for they learned from him that he was traveling eastward

Mrs. Wylie is the mother of four children: Robert, a sketch of whom appears elsewhere; Jane, married to John S. Beall, and has two children (residence' Wellsburg, W. Va.); Annie, widow of Rev. Joseph R. Thompson, and James Clark (deceased) Joseph R. Thompson was born in Mt. Pleasant township, Washington Co., Penn., in 1828. He graduated from Canonsburg Theological Seminary, became the pastor of the U. P. Church at Hickory (he was one of three brothers, all of whom were ministers in the U. P. Church), and was filling the incumbency at the time of his death in 1861. In 1859 he was married to Miss Annie Wylie, and they bad one child, named William, who died at the age of four years.
 

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