Tavern Keepers of Fayette County, Pa.

    Tavern Keepers of Fayette County, Pa.


    This page has been split up and burials moved to Cemet directory and copy of 
    Tavern Keepers will also be listed in the Pike directory.~Helen
    ----- Original Messages ----- 
    From:   Marta Burns [Marta Burns]
    To: [PAFAYETT-L@rootsweb.com]
    Sent: Saturday, May 13, 2000 2:03 PM
    Subject: [Pafayett-L] Tavern Keepers, Menallen, 1784 - 1800
    
    History of Fayette County,
     by  Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
     L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 657   
    Menallen Township, Fayette County, Penna 
    
    Early Taverns
    
    In the March term of court in 1784 John McMartin was recommended for a
    license as a tavern keeper in Menallen, but he did not at that time
    obtain it. At the December term, 1784, Reuben KEMP and Jacob HEWITT were
    licensed
    December 1785, Mathew CAMPBELLl
    June 1786, Joseph PRICE and John HEATH
    June 1790, Patrick TIERNAN and John FARQUAR
    December 1791, George KRUMAN  /? TRUMAN
    
    In addition to the list given, 
    Josiah TANNEHILL was licensed June, 1788
    George MITCHELL, March, 1789
    Zachariah DOTY, June, 1789
    Ephraim HEWITT, March, 1795
    Robert WILLIS, John AYERS and William AYERS, June, 1795
    George KINNEAR, September, 1790
    Jonathan HICKMAN, Richard WEAVER, Anthony SWAINE, John BROWN and John
    GRIER, September, 1795
    William COX, December, 1795
    Amos WILSON and Benjamin BOWMAN, September, 1796
    John JONES, Francis GRIFFITH, and Peter KINNEY, September, 1797
    James BROWN, December, 1798
    Alexander WILLIAMSON, March, 1800
    
    History of Fayette County,
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 609    
    Henry Clay township, Fayette County, Penna  
    
    Tavern Stands, Henry Clay Twp.
    
    The bridge is 1465 feet above the level of the ocean and 513 feet above
    Uniontown. Barren Hill or the crest of Laurel Hill west of O'HEGARTY’S is
    2450 feet above the ocean and 1498 feet above Uniontown. Woodcock Hill or
    Briery Mountain, a spur or hill just west of Laurel Hill on the road, is
    2500 feet above the ocean and 1548 feet above Uniontown.
    
    The first stand west of the bridge in the township was the Lenhart
    tavern stand. A man of the name of EBERT ran a tannery and had a small
    log house here, and John LENHART bought it about 1830 and built to it and
    kept it. He rented to Jacob TABB in 1839 and William BRUCE in 1840 who
    kept it. His son, Peter LENHART, kept it from 1841 to 1872, repairing and
    building to the house. It is a long two-story frame building and was
    always a wagon stand. It is now occupied by Peter LENHART’S widow.
    
    The second stand was the Flanigan or Jockey Valley stand, built by
    Andrew FLANIGAN as a tavern on the Braddock Road and when the National
    Road was made through Jockey Valley, he repaired his log house and opened
    it in 1817 as a wagon stand.  He was followed by Major PAULL and CLEMENT
    who was succeeded by Jacob PROBASCO, then John BAKER, Peter BAKER, Jacob
    RICHARDS, 1841, Charles KEMP and James GOODEN were landlords.  Morris
    MAULER from Frostburg kept and left, and followed the road to Wharton,
    renting and keeping from Frostburg, Maryland, to Monroe, Fayette County. 
    Aaron WYATT came next in 1848 as landlord. He afterwards removed to
    Uniontown and was succeeded in 1857 by John OLIVINE who was followed by
    Lewis HAMILL, now at Chalk Hill, and in 1871 by Alexander SPEAR, and
    since that it has been a private residence. It is a long two-story
    building of log, frame and stone and owned by Marshall SPURGEON.
    
    The third stand was a two story frame building a few yards west of the
    Flanigan stand, and was leased by Ephraim VANSICKLE and his son-in-law,
    David BRADLEY, in 1851 and was known as the Vansickle stand. It burned
    down in February 1852, and Vansickle & Bradley built a log house and
    weather boarded it, and were keeping it in forty days after the fire. The
    kept till 1857. It was a wagon stand.
    
    The fourth was the Conaway wagon stand. John CONAWAY left the Braddock
    Road and built a log house on the National Road near a mile west of
    Jockey Valley. It was kept by him and afterwards by his sons. The house
    is now gone. It stood close to Thurman CONAWAY's residence.
    
    The fifth stand was the Brown wagon stand, a log house kept by Thomas
    BROWN. In 1826 a man by the name of FULLER furnished the material and
    built a large stone two-story house forty five feet front and seventy
    feet deep. He kept it, and after him his son Jacob BROWN, who went west
    and died. Jacob HUMBERSON bought the property in 1857, and kept it in
    1864 and 1865 and still owns and resides in the house.
    
    The sixth stand was the Mount Augusta stand, over a mile west of the
    Brown stand. John COLLIER first kept here about one hundred and fifty
    yards east of Mount Augusta.  Daniel COLLIER, a son of John COLLIER, then
    built a log house and kept it, and in 1824 built a large brick, the Mount
    Augusta proper. McMILLEN succeeded COLLIER and then Thomas ROWNFIELD
    bought and changed it form a wagon to a stage stand. He was elected
    county commissioner and sheriff and went to Missouri.  John O'HEGARTY
    bought the property a few years ago, and the house burned down in 1872.
    It stood a few yards from O'Hegarty's present residence.
    
    The seventh stand was the GRIFFIN stand and about one and a half miles
    west of Mount Augusta, a large two story stone building was built by John
    GRIFFIN in 1824 who occupied it as a stage stand. After his death it was
    changed to a wagon stand, and kept by his widow and his son William
    GRIFFIN in 1827, after whom came Benjamin MILLER, Charles KEMP,  Isaac
    DENNY, William SPAU, and William GRIFFITH again. It is now occupied by Mrs.
    Elizabeth STONE, a daughter of John GRIFFITH.
    
    The eighth and last tavern stand in the township was the MARLOWE wagon
    stand nearly a mile west of the GRIFFIN stand. It was a large two-story
    brick house.  Benjamin MILLER, an old wagoner, built and kept it a short
    time. James MARLOWE came from Petersburg and kept it till 1856; then his
    sons Jeff  MARLOWE and Upton MARLOWE kept it a short time. Andrew MOYERS
    from Allegheny County bought the property in 1876 and resides upon it at
    the present time.
    
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 592 
    German Township, Fayette County, Penna 
    
    Tavern Keepers in German Twp. and N and S Union, Graveyards in Henry Clay
    
    Tavern keepers are always persons of importance in new settlements. The
    first individual recommended to court as a suitable person to cater to
    the wants of the traveling public was John Boltenhouse, at June sessions,
    1787. Licenses were subsequently issued as follows: 
    Philip LAWRENCE, Elijah MOORE, Jeremiah DAVIDSON, September sessions, 1796; 
    Zachariah WHEAT, June sessions, 1797; 
    William McCLELLAND, September sessions, 1798;
    David SCHROYER, September sessions, 1804;
    Aaron MAPLE, June sessions, 1805; 
    Michael KLINE, September sessions, 1805;
    Frederick STRUBLE, September sessions, 1806;
    James SANGSTON, August sessions, 1807;
    John GROVE, August session, 1810;
    Elias PARSHALL, November sessions, 1810;
    George BALSINGER, April sessions, 1812;
    Henry BALSINGER, September sessions, 1812;
    David AULD, January sessions, 1813. 
    
    William McCLELLAND kept in what is now McClellandtown for many years, as
    did Frederick STRUBLE; David SCHROYER;  Zachariah WHEAT; Aaron MAPLE;
    James SANGSTON; John GROVE in Germantown. Sangston entertained travelers
    and sold whiskey for the long period of forty years.  Messrs BALSINGERS
    owned the stand near where now stands Balsinger's schoolhouse between
    McClellandtown and Uniontown. David AULD's is now the residence of Mrs.
    Catharine HOOVER on the Uniontown and Little Whitely Creek Road south of
    RABB's Mill.
    
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 613   
    Henry Clay Township, Fayette County, Penna
    This section left here because Flanigan’s tavern is mentioned
    Burial grounds
    
    The Leonard graveyard on the river is the oldest burial ground in the
    township.  The Sloan graveyard is supposed to be next in order of age. It
    is close to Sloan's Ford and some three miles down the river from the
    Leonard graveyard. The early SLOANS are buried here, while the old
    Leonards and  Job CLARK and the FLANIGANS are buried at the LEONARD
    graveyard.
    
    Old Liberty Cemetery is now Fairview Cemetery. It is about sixty years
    old. Zion Cemetery  was laid out in 1850 and the Markleysburg cemetery
    about 1860, being formerly an old graveyard. There is also an old
    graveyard near the FLANIGAN tavern and wagon stand in Jockey Valley,
    where John CONAWAY, his wife and others are buried. 
    
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 687 
    North Union and South Union Townships, Fayette County, Penna 
    
    TAVERNS
    
    One of the first requisites in a town is accommodation for the traveling
    public; this necessity brings public houses into existence. Soon after
    the founding of Woodstock in 1791, tavern houses were opened there by
    John DeFORD, James McLUCAS, Jesse BARNES, Lewis WILLIAMS and Benjamin
    MINTON. At that time it was considered a good day's travel to drive from
    Woodstock to John SLACK's, only four miles distant, but that was prior to
    the existence of the National Road, when the old Braddock Road was too
    rough for vehicles. When the addition had been made, other tavern stands
    sprung up in rapid succession on the new Main Street.
    
    John De FORD tavern was the first in the new town. His stone building
    was erected in 1818. The persons who did the stonework were: John
    SUTTON; 
    Matthias CHIPPS, and his son David CHIPPS; the carpenter work was done by 
    Gabriel GETZENDINER;  John FARR; and Elias FREEMAN. Mr. John De FORD kept it 
    as a hotel for a number of years, and then removed to Carrollton, 
    Ohio.  Matthias FREY succeeded him in the business, and then Henry FISSHER. 
    It is now used as a residence.
    
    The German D HAIR tavern house was built in 1818 by William MORRIS. He
    sold it to Thomas BROWNFIELD, March 13, 1822, after which it was
    completed, the 
    stonework being done by Benjamin GOODIN, Robert COOPER, John SUTTON and 
    John HARVEY Sr., and the carpenter work by Gabriel
    GETZENDINER 
    and Enos WEST. After William MORRIS retired from it, Joseph NOBLE, Andrew 
    McMASTERS and German D HAIR occupied it as a tavern.
    
    The Morris tavern was built by William MORRIS in 1823 on an elevated
    site west of the town. This building was of brick. The mason work was
    done by Benjamin GOODIN and Matthias CHIPPS and the carpenter work by
    Elias FREEMAN, Gabriel GETZENDINER, and John FARR.  William MORRIS kept
    this, his second public house, for a number of years and was succeeded by
    Calvin MORRIS and Matthias FREY. May 22, 1846, it was sold to Moses
    HOPWOOD, James HOPWOOD, Gaddis HOPWOOD, and John N FREEMAN. Since that
    time the house has been occupied as a residence by the person operating
    the coal farm, which was sold with the house.
    
    The Andrew McMASTERS tavern was built in 1825.  The stonework was done
    by Abraham BEAGLE, John HARVEY and William HARVEY. The carpenters 
    were:
    James THIRLWELL, Enos WEST, Gabriel GETZENDINER and Lawrence GRIFFITH.
    The following persons occupied it as a public house: Andrew McMASTERS;
    Lott CLAWSON; Enos W CLEMENT;  Thomas ACKLIN; Matthias FREY; James
    SHAFFER; and 
    John WORTHINGTON, after which it passed into the possession
    of Benjamin 
    HAYDEN and has since been used as a residence.
    
    The CLEMENT House since known as the SHIPLEY Hotel was erected by Enoch
    Wilson CLEMENT in 1839. John HARVEY Jr. did the stone work. Mr. Clement
    kept it five years at the expiration of which time it was sold to Col
    Benjamin BROWNFIELD whose son,  Elijah BROWNFIELD, kept it as a tavern two
    years. It then went into the following hands successively: Benjamin
    BROWNFIELD Jr.; Archibald SKILES; John WORTHINGTON; John WALLACE; 
    Matthias FREY.  Aaron WYATT then bought the property and after keeping hotel 
    one year sold it in 1858 to Samuel Shipley, who sold it to his son Julius
    SHIPLEY, after which it was rented to Ezra BURKE, Redding BUNTING, and
    Lindsay MESSMORE. The property is at present in the possession of A C
    BRANT and is by him used as a dwelling house.
    
    The MILLER Hotel, a large stone building, was erected by Moses HOPWOOD
    Jr. as a residence. He disposed of it to Elisha HYATT who in a few years
    resold it to Hiram MILLER. The latter gentleman kept a public house for
    some twenty years. Since then, it has been used as a private residence by
    Mrs. M M BEESON.
    
    The FRAME Tavern building was originally intended as a dwelling house
    when erected by William ELLIS. He afterwards disposed of it to Matthias
    FREY, and that gentleman enlarged it and converted it into a tavern. He 
    was succeeded in business by James DENNISON and Thomas ACKLIN
     
    
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin Ellis, Philadelphia, 
    L H Everts and Company, 1882, p. 480 
    Bridgeport borough and township, Fayette County, Penna
    
    Public Houses
    
    The earliest tavern stand in Bridgeport was the old red house that stood
    on the corner of Water and Bridge Streets. In that house Isaac KIMBER
    opened a tavern in the year 1814. After KIMBER its landlords were Robert
    PATTERSON and others. Another early tavern was opened by John NELAN 
    about 1818 at the place where not is the residence of Burnet MASON.
    Little beyond these facts has been learned in regard to these old
    taverns.
    
    Bridgeport has never had many public houses, the greater part of the
    business of the vicinity in that line in the palmy days of the National
    Road and of Western emigration being done on the other side of the creek
    in Brownsville. The principal hotel of Bridgeport at the present time is
    the "Bar House" kept by Matthew STORY on the site where KIMBER opened the
    first tavern of the place in 1814.
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 759 
    Springfield township, Fayette County, Penna 
    
    Taverns, Springfield and Brownsville
    
    Samuel LONG was the first to open a public house in the lower part of
    the village (of Springfield). This house has been used for the
    entertainment 
    of the public almost ever since; among the keepers of the inn being:  Moses 
    COUGHENOUR; Eli GALLENTINE; Samuel KOOSER;  Martin KRING; and William H BROOKS. 
    
    At the upper end of the village J W C BROOKS kept an inn from 1871 to
    1872 which was known as the "Utah House."  J H MILLER also entertained 
    the public and lately Benton L MILLER has accommodated the traveling public,
    the BROOKS house also being continued. 
    
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 436 
    Brownsville Borough and Township, Fayette County, Penna 
    
    TAVERNS
    
    The name of the first public house in Brownsville is not known but it
    appears likely that it was kept by Thomas BROWN as there is found in the
    records of the West Augusta, Virginia, court held at Fort Dunmore in
    April, 1776, an entry dated the 16th of that month as follows: "License
    to keep an Ordinary is granted to Thomas BROWN at his house at Redstone
    Fort. Bazel BROWN on his behalf entered into bond according to law."
    Nothing further is found of the Ordinary of Thomas BROWN. 
    
    The earliest inn of Brownsville of which anything definite is known as
    to its location and landlords was the "Black Horse Tavern," a stone
    building a part of which is still standing in the more recently erected
    stone building located between the residences of N B BOWMAN and James
    SLOCUM. The date of the opening of the old tavern cannot be accurately
    fixed, but it is known that the public meeting at Redstone Old Fort July
    27, 1791, usually referred to as the first public act in the Whiskey
    Insurrection was held at the Black Horse Tavern. The last meeting of the
    insurgents was also held at the same place, August 28 and 29, 1794. 
    
    In the WESTERN TELEGRAPH, published in Washington, Penna, March 29,
    1796, is found the following advertisement, viz.:
    Amos WILSON begs leave to inform his friends and the public that he has
    purchased the house formerly occupied by Mr. Patrick TIERNAN, the sign of
    the Black Horse, on Front Street, Brownsville, well known by the name of
    Redstone Old Fort, where has opened a Tavern," etc.
    
    The tavern property together with four other lots in Brownsville,
    "belonging to 
    Charles ARMSTRONG; Elijah CLARK, boat builder; and Capt T. SHANE" were 
    sold at public auction on the 31st of December, 1796, by James LONG, auctioneer; 
    but it seems probable notwithstanding the sale,  WILSON still continued as 
    landlord of the Black Horse Tavern and was keeping it in 1799, from an account 
    of the celebration of St John's Day, June 24th in that year by Brownsville Lodge 
    No 60 of Free Masons, viz.: 
    "In the evening repaired to Brother WILSON's at the Black Horse Tavern
    and spent the evening in festivity." 
    
    Later, it was kept successively by John SHELDON, Josiah TANNEHILL,  Joseph
    NOBLE,  Mrs. Dr Lewis SWEITZER, and others. It was discontinued as a public
    house many years ago.
    
    Basil BRASHEAR was in Brownsville as early as 1795 and soon afterwards
    built the stone house now occupied by Mrs. Wesley FROST and Mrs. COULDREN.
    At that place he kept a tavern for many years. The first meeting of the
    Borough Council was held at "the council room in Basil BRASHEAR's
    tavern." This was 
    one of the most famed of the early public houses of Brownsville. It was kept 
    by BRASHEAR and was the principal hotel of the town when LaFAYETTE made 
    his visit here in 1825.
    
    John McClure HEZLOP was in Brownsville in 1797 and three years later he
    built the stone house at the head of Market Street. It was, afterwards
    kept as a tavern, by John BECKLEY. The house was continued, by his widow,
    Nancy BECKLEY, for some time after his death. In 1843 Jacob WORKMAN was
    its landlord. It is now the GIRARD House.
    
    James AULD, "Innkeeper and Shoemaker," kept a tavern at the head of
    Front Street in 1819. Afterwards James C. BECKLEY kept at the same place. 
    In 1820 public houses were kept in Brownsville by: John CONOLLY, William
    McMULLEN, and James REYNOLDS. The building on Market Street, in which the
    Central Hotel was afterwards kept was built in 1816.
    
    The SNOWDON House building was erected about 1823 by Robert CLARKE who
    lived in it until his death about 1840. It was first kept as a hotel by
    Andrew BYERS who was also a landlord at Uniontown, Connellsville and
    several other places. The house is still a hotel.
    
    The Monongahela House, located in "the Neck" was built as a private
    residence by Samuel J KREPPS in 1832. About twelve years later it was
    purchased by a McCURDY who opened it as a hotel and kept it for a time,
    but failed to make the payments on the property and was obliged to give
    it up. It was then leased to a GANZ, a VANCE, and other successively and
    was finally in 1870 taken by John B KREPPS, son of Samuel KREPPS, who
    kept it until his death in January, 1881, and it is still kept as a
    public house by his widow.
    
    The other hotels of Brownsville at the present time are the United
    States on Water Street by George W POUNDSTONE; the Snowdon House on
    Market Street by Harry SAWYER; and the Girard House at the head of Market
    Street by Jacob MARKS.
    
    History of Fayette County, 
    by Franklin ELLIS, Philadelphia, 
    L H EVERTS and Company, 1882, p. 287  
    Uniontown Borough, Early taverns 
    
    Early Taverns, Uniontown
    
    The first public house in BEESON's Town was that of John COLLINS who in
    the year 1780 purchased the village lots Nos. 40 and 41, where Commercial
    Row was afterwards erected, and built thereon a log tavern, which he kept
    until 1799. The earliest mention of this tavern that is found in any
    record or other document appears in the minutes of a "Court of Appeal"
    held by Alexander McCLEAN, sub lieutenant of the county of Westmoreland,
    "at the inn of John COLLINS in Union Town on the 8th day of May, 1782."
    Similar mention of of COLLINS tavern at later dates if sound in other
    parts of the same minute book.
    
    At the first session of the court of Fayette County in December, 1783,
    John COLLINS, Jonathan ROWLAND, Daniel CULP, Matthew CAMPBELL, and John
    HUSTON, all of Union and Thomas BROWN of Redstone Old Fort were
    recommended 
    as suitable persons to keep taverns. The place where Jonathan ROWLAND kept 
    his tavern is now known. There is no record of a later application by 
    him for a license. 
    
    Daniel CULP had purchased lot No 25, near where Dr. ROBERTS now lives, on
    which he had erected a log tavern, which he sold in July, 1784. The
    purchaser was John HUSTON who had been licensed in December 1783, but
    where the house was which he occupied prior to this purchase from CULP
    does not appear. The court records show that he was licensed as an innkeeper 
    for two or three years after the purchase.
    
    Matthew CAMPBELL bought in 1784 lot No 10 at the west end of the present
    FULTON House and erected a log tavern upon it; but in 1785 and for
    several years after that he was licensed in Menallen township.
    
    In September, 1784, the names of William PATTON and William BRINTON
    appear as inn keepers. Two indictments were borough against the latter for
    keeping a tippling house. The last indictment in 1787 seems to have
    driven him out for his name does not appear among the licensed tavern
    keepers after that time.
    
    Empson BROWNFIELD opened a tavern in 1785. He had purchased March 7,
    1780, lot 39 lying between John COLLINS' house and the old mill race, but
    had not occupied it and it does not appear that he was a resident in the
    village for his name is found as a supervisor of highways in Georges
    township in 1784. But in 1785 having asked and received a license to keep
    a public house, he opened a tavern on his lot adjoining COLLINS and
    continued to keep it until 1790.
    
    Colin CAMPBELL, who name first appears in 1784 in a deed conveying to
    him lot No 43 on Elbow Street near where the Standard office is, was
    licensed as an innkeeper in December, 1785. In 1786 he sold his property
    to Samuel SALTER for 140 pounds but continued as landlord of the house
    until 1789 when it was taken by Salter who kept it till 1810 when he
    removed to Dunbar Township and opened a public house there. Before coming
    to Uniontown in 1789 he had been for at least two years a tavern keeper
    in Wharton Township.
    
    Margaret ALLEN was licensed as a tavern keeper at the June session in
    1788. Her stand was on the east side of the creek where is now the
    residence of William SHIPLEY. The locality was for many years known as
    "Granny ALLEN's Hill." She died in 1810 at the age of ninety-one years.
    Patrick LOGAN and Jacob KNAPP were licensed in 1788. LOGAN's name does
    not appear afterwards but KNAPP was licensed in succeeding years to 1792.
    
    Dr Robert McCLURE opened a tavern in December 1792, on the west part of
    the ground now occupied by the residence of Alexander EWING. He kept the
    house until 1813 and was owner of it as late as 1819. In April of that
    year he advertised it for sale, mentioning it as "the house nearly
    opposite the courthouse which has been occupied as a tavern, and is one
    of the best stands in the town."
    
    Thomas COLLINS, son of John COLLINS the pioneer innkeeper of Uniontown,
    received a tavern license in 1794 and opened a house where the Tremont
    building now stands on the southeast corner of Main and Morgantown
    streets. This became one of the leading public houses of the town.  An
    open grass plat adjoining the house on the east was a favorite resort for
    lawyers and clients during the terms of court. South of and adjoining the
    tavern lot was the market lot on which stood the old wooden market house,
    though the date of its erection is not known.  Thomas COLLINS kept this
    tavern until 1811. In the war of 1812 he was in command of a company
    locally known as the "Madison Rowdies." When the major of the regiment to
    which it was attached was wounded, Captain COLLINS, as senior line
    officer, became major.
    
    Captain John F GRAY, the veteran conductor on the Pittsburgh and
    Connellsville 
    Railroad and grandson of Captain Thomas COLLINS, has or recently had in his 
    possession an ancient and time yellowed card printed on the ace of hearts 
    being an invitation to a young lady of Fayette County to attend a merry 
    making at Collins Hotel eighty years ago. The following is nearly a 
    facsimile of the card:
    
      Union: November 9th 1802 The company of Miss Molly MEASON is requested at a Dance on Thursday evening the 16th inst at the House of Col Thomas COLLINS in Union-Town. Thomas HADDEN, James MORRISON, William LYON, Managers The Miss Molly MEASON mentioned in the card became the wife of Daniel ROGERS of New Haven, Fayette County, Penna. She was a daughter of Col Isaac MEASON, the first proprietor of Mount Braddock, who built the mansion now occupied by William BEESON. She was a sister of General Thomas MEASON, the eminent lawyer of Uniontown, with whom the Hon John DAWSON, father of E B DAWSON and John N DAWSON, studied law. She was likewise the sister-in-law of Mrs. Mary MEASON who died quite recently in Uniontown. Thomas HADEEN, James MORRISON and William LYON, the managers mentioned in the card, were members of the Fayette County bar and the former was the grandfather of the Messrs HADDEN of Uniontown.
    More Early Taverns, Uniontown Cornelius LYNCH was licensed as an innkeeper in March 1795. He owned and carried on a brewery on the west side of Morgantown Street near Main and his tavern house was doubtless at the same place. After his death his widow kept a baker shop there for many years. Richard WEAVER, who first received license in June 1795, kept a log tavern on Elbow/Main Street at or near the present site of the McCLELLAND House. Later the property passed to William McCLELLAND who was licensed as an innkeeper in December, 1802. Alfred McCLELLAND, the son of William McCLELLAND, built the McCLELLAND House, which is still owned by the McCLELLAND family and carried on as a hotel. At the September session of 1796 there were before the court forty eight applications for tavern licenses in the county of which twelve were by parties in Uniontown among whom, besides such as have already been mentioned, were: Joseph BAKER; Anthony SWAINE; Ellis BAILEY; John SLACK; John TARR; David MORRIS; and James LANGLEY. John SLACK's tavern was on the corner of Meadow Alley and Main Street on the Judge Nathaniel EWING property. In the FAYETTE GAZETTE AND UNION ADVERTISER of August 23, 1799, he made the following announcement: TO THE PUBLIC: The subscriber respectfully informs the Public that he continues to keep a House of Entertainment at the sign of the Spread Eagle near the center of Uniontown. He flatters himself he will be able to entertain gentlemen to their satisfaction that may be pleased to favor him with their custom. John SLACK July 24, 1799 SLACK closed his business at the Spread Eagle in 1800 and in the same year received license to keep a tavern in Wharton township. He remained there till 1810 when he was again licensed for Uniontown. He was foreman of the jury in the trial of Philip ROGERS for the murder of Polly WILLIAMS. Three years later he was again established in Wharton and remained there till his death. At the September term of court in 1797 the following names appeared for the first time as receiving tavern licenses: Jacob HAGEN; John McCORMICK; Simeon HENDRICKSON; Rue ENGLAND; Matthew KNAPP and Uriah MARTIN. James GREGG received his first license in Uniontown in June, 1798. His stand was on lot 37 of the original plat, which was purchased by him February 2, 1792, being the site of the present residence of Dr J B EWING. The tavern was kept by him, until his death about 1809. In 1810 his widow, Nancy GREGG, was licensed and continued for some years to keep the house, which under her management is still recollected by some of the older citizens. Ebenezer BEBOUT, Jesse BARNES, James ALLEN, John RACKSTRAW and James MEDTART were licensed tavern keepers in Uniontown in 1798. MEDTART's stand was a log house that stood where Mrs. William WOOD now lives on Main Street. He as well as ALLEN and BEBOUT closed about 1803. Pierson SAYERS kept a public house in 1799 on Elbow Street where E B DAWSON now lives. Daniel MIRACLE and Lydia HOFFMAN also had tavern licenses in the same year. Mrs. HOFFMAN's place was in Henry's Addition on Morgantown Street south of Fayette Street. In 1801 William DOWNARD opened business in a log tavern opposite GREGG's on Main Street where now are the law offices of Judge EWING and Judge CAMPBELL. He continued there until about 1808. He afterwards kept at the "watering trough" on the side of Laurel Hill five miles east of Uniontown. James PIPER received a license in 1801 and commenced keeping tavern on the south side of Main street opposite the present residence of the Hon Daniel KAINE. There he swung the sign of "The Jolly Irishman." He was a large burly man while his wife, Isabel, was small of stature. It was her custom to sit in the bar room and spin while she chatted pleasantly with the patrons of the house. At night she would frequently ask her husband, " Weel, Jimmy, how much money have ye made the day?" His usual answer was, "None o' yer bizness, Bell." But as he was generally pretty well intoxicated at that time in the evening, she often managed to secure a share of the proceeds and lay it by "for a rainy day." James PIPER, the son of this couple, was their pride. They gave him a fair educational advantage by which he was enabled to fill with credit several county offices. Mrs. PIPER continued the tavern after her husband's death in 1819. William MERRYMAN was the keeper of a tavern near Margaret ALLEN's east of the creek. His first license, for a house at that place, was received by him in 1802. Jacob HARBAUGH, ex sheriff of the county, opened a tavern in 1811 in a log house owned by Peter HOOK which stood on the west part of the site of the late Judge Nathaniel EWING's residence. The stand was kept, by HARBAUGH, until 1813. George MANYPENNY, first licensed in August 1814, was for a time the keeper of a public house on the south side of Main street near where is now Judge CAMPBELL's office. the time of his continuance there is not known. It would be hardly practicable to make mention of all the ephemeral taverns which have existed in Uniontown during the century which has passed since John COLLINS opened the pioneer hostelry in the incipient village. It was only intended to notice a few of the most ancient ones, but enough have already been mentioned to show that more than fifty years ago the Main Street of the town had been thickly studded with public houses on both sides and from end to end.

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