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STARK, named in honor of General Stark, of the Revolution, was formed from Danube, March 18, 1828. It is the southeast
corner town of the County. Its surface is hilly and broken, with a mean elevation of 500 feet above the Mohawk.
The principal streams are Otsquago and Nawadaga Creeks. Otsquago Creek flows through a narrow valley, bordered
by steep banks from 150 to 200 feet high. The soil is generally a sandy loam in the valleys, and sandy and gravelly
on the hills.
Starkville, (p. v.) situated in the north-east part of the town, contains three churches, viz., Lutheran, Baptist
and Methodist; two hotels, a store, a grist mill, a saw mill, a flax mill, a cheese factory, two cooper shops,
several other mechanic shops of various kinds and about 40 dwellings.
Van Hornesville, (p. v.) in the south part of the town, on Otsquago Creek, contains a union church, two hotels,
two stores, a cotton factory, a grist mill with three runs of stones, a saw mill, a cheese box factory, a cheese
factory, a cigar factory and about 35 dwellings. The creek furnishes an excellent water-power, as it is fed by
springs and is affected but little by dry weather.
Bethel, in the west part of the town, contains a Lutheran church, a store, a cheese box factory, a saw mill, several
mechanic shops and about twenty dwellings.
Starksville Cheese Factory makes about 250,000 pounds annually; the grist mill contains three runs of stones and
grinds about 12,000 bushels, and the saw mill cuts about 200,000 feet annually.
A short distance from Bethel is a beautiful water-fall about forty feet high, upon a stream arising from a single
spring. A short distance from the falls is a mineral spring containing iron, and also a sulphur spring which never
freezes.
There were two small settlements near the southerly line of the town previous to 1775. One of them was on Otsquago
Creek and called the Otsquago Settlement, comprising families by the name of Shall, Bronner and Fetherly. The other
settlement was at the Kyle, so called, a short distance from the east line of the town of Warren. A family by the
name of Eckler were located here; but both settlements were broken up during the war, the inhabitants taking shelter
in Fort Plank. Eckler returned to his farm at the close of the war, and the premises have been transmitted from
father to son down to the third generation. Among other settlers were families by the name of Walwrath Young, Van
Horne and others.
Abraham Van Horne with his family settled here in 1791, and erected mills at the head waters of Otsquago Creek.
It is said that two runs of Esopus mill stones for a grist mill were drawn through the woods from the Mohawk River
on a wood sled by four horses. Mr. Van Home came from New Jersey in 1771, and settled in Montgomery County. He
was a member of the Tryon County Committee of Safety in June, 1775, was appointed Sheriff in 1781, and was a firm
adherent of the American cause.
The first German school was taught by ____ Garner, and the first English school by ____ Haight. As already intimated
Mr. Van Horne built the first mills, and his sons kept the first store.
The Baptist Church was organized Nov. 6, 1829, with eleven members.
The Lutheran Church was organized Dec. 9th, 1839. Both societies occupy the same house of worship.
The Methodist Church was organized in 1860 with seventy members. A part of them having since united with the Newville
society the present membership is fifty.
The population in 1865 was 1,522; the area is 18,014 acres.
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