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DAYTON TOWNSHIP
TUSCOLA COUNTYP.O. Box 305, |
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contentsHOME PAGEELECTED OFFICERS
CEMETERY MAINTENANCE
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Dayton Township is a small, quiet community in the central Thumb Area of Michigan, located
Mr. William Meade lived one and one half miles east of Mayville and took up his farm from the government. He was born in England in 1824. He married Martha Chapman in 1844.
He migrated to New York in1851, moved to Ohio where he lived for 2 years. He then moved to Dayton in early 1855. He cut his own road through the forest for 12 miles.
He was here to welcome Rev. C. B. Mills and others who came. William and Martha brought with them two sons; William was born in England June 22, 1848, and James,
born in Ohio, September 9, 1852.
Two of the early settlers in the township were George W. Spencer and Joseph Crawford (known as little Joe) who came in the spring of 1856 and found the Meade family
waiting to greet them.
The names of the freeholders in the township were: William Meade, G. W. Spencer, Joseph Crawford, J. P. Weaver, Daniel Lynch, M. Shay, J. Lynch, George Green,
Joseph Green, James Hiester, L. Hurd, George Bellamy, Benjamin Docker, and William Hamilton.
$250.00 was voted for roads.
The first sermon preached in the township was by Rev. Mills in May 1856, in the home of William Meade.
The first school was taught in a log cabin in the west corner of the township, and it later became the Cottage School.
The year of 1857 was known as the “year of the famine”. The entire township was almost wiped out by that infamous famine. The fields swarmed with chipmunks, mice, and other
vermin, which destroyed the crops, devoured the corn, and dug up and carried away the potatoes. So great was the destitution among the settlers that starvation would have
resulted had it not been relief sent in by the more favored localities.
Two years after the first settlers, there were practically no roads, only the north and south center road cut thru the township.
Most of the supplies were brought in from Lapeer, it being almost impossible to reach Vassar with a team and the cost of bringing in food was three times the first cost.
The township was named in honor of the candidate for the vice-presidency on the Free Soil or Republican Party ticket in1856. The following year the township was organized
and the selection of a name commemorated the fact that in the previous presidential election, which elected Buchanan, every vote in the township was cast for Fremont and Dayton.
In 1859, $1000.00 was ordered for road purposes in Dayton Township .
Daniel Lynch and his wife, Mary O’Connor brought their family of four sons and two daughters to America in 1846 from their Irish farm on the shore of Tralee Bay. One more son
was born in this country. The Lynch family inched eastward, working as they came. For a time they stopped at Astabula, Ohio, where some of the relatives remained. In 1854 the
father and older sons came to Michigan and took up land in Sections 33 and 34 of Dayton Township. The family followed the next spring.
The family of Daniel and Mary Lynch were: Michael (18J21907) who married Margot Day; Jeremiah who married Johannah; Thomas who married Marie Day; Daniel (1846-1866) who
was killed in a logging accident during his first winter of "going to camp"; John (1853-1904); Bridget who married Daniel Tubbs; and Johannah who married Thomas Tubbs.
Steward Goodell came to Michigan from New York in 1855 and purchased his farm in Dayton Township for fifty cents an acre. He married Amelia Clinesmith in 1860 and they raised
13 children.
By 1860,the Township’s population had grown
to 129, including 28 families and dwellings and 18 farms. Numerous saw mills and gristmills began
appearing throughout the Township into
the early 1900’s. Telephone service arrived in the Township around 1910 and was followed
by electricity around 1938.
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