At the time Maine gained statehood, two of the three original settlers were counted in the 1820 census, brothers Meshach and Stephen Libby, along with their families. Their father John and his wife had died previously, both in 1804.
In 1792 Meshach sold his
original settlement to another early settler, David Moulton, and bought the
home of his brother, Stephen, shown as T.C. Libby on the 1875 map of Porter
below. After having disposed of his
farm, Stephen bought several tracts of land adjacent to his original lot and
established himself on the northern slope of Libby Hill where he and his family
resided for many years. None of these
homes exist today.
The
census of 1820 recorded only two people in the Meshach Libby household: One male over 45 (Meshach, aged 70) and one
female over 45 (Meshach’s second wife, Hannah Cram Elkins). Meshach and his first wife, Deborah Ely who
died in 1795, had 6 children, 4 of whom
were born before the move to Porter (daughters Sarah, Mary, and Elsy who came
with them to Porter and a son, Meshach Jr. who came to Porterfield in 1793 but
did not settle permanently). Two more
children were added to the family after their move to Porter, daughters
Elizabeth and Eunice. Elizabeth was the
first female child of European descent born within Porter sometime between 1781
and 1786. She died in childhood and was
buried upon the border of her father’s farm. Meshach died in March 1829 and is interred in
a family plot located on what is now known as the Mason Road (the north to
south road noted by red arrow above).
Within the cemetery are markers of quarried stone with no inscriptions
for Meshach and 10 of his family members, presumably including his wives and
some of his children.
Brother Stephen was much more prolific when it came to
populating the growing Town of Porter, fathering 19 children in all, 16 of whom
grew up to marry and make their own contributions to the census. Single when he initially came to Porter and
built his cabin, Stephen returned to Pittsfield soon thereafter and married
Mary Knowles. Their first child, James,
was born in Pittsfield on June 5, 1784.
By April 1786 they had settled in Porter where their second son, Daniel,
was the first male child of European descent born in Porter. Nine more children were born to Stephen and
Mary before her death in October of 1816.
They were:
Josiah, born and died 1788;
Mary, born 1789;
Jemima, born 1791;
Stephen Jr, born 1793;
Sally, born 1795;
John, born 1797;
David, born 1799;
Aphia, born 1800; and
Olive, born 1802
In January 1817 Stephen took as his second wife Nancy
Mathews who was 25 years his junior.
This union produced a daughter, Lydia, born in 1817. Nancy died soon thereafter in January of 1818
at age 30. Two months later Stephen
married her sister, Sally, age 25.
Together they had 7 children:
A son who died in infancy;
Daniel, born 1821 and named to honor
Stephen’s earlier born son, Daniel, who died
in 1818;
Albion, born 1823;
Nancy;
William T., born 1827;
Thomas, born 1827 and died 1828; and
Gideon, born 1830.
When the 1820 census was conducted
Stephen’s family consisted of 3 males (one 10-15 years old, one 16-25 years old
and one 45+ years old) and 4 females (one less than 10, two 16-25 years old and
one 26-44 years old). No doubt the two
oldest people are Stephen and Sally and the girls are probably Lydia, Olive and
Aphia, but the identity of the two younger males are harder to determine.
In his book, Teg relates an
“eyewitness” account of Elias Gould (1815-1910) as passed down through the ages to Levi Libby Cook
(1866-1939), great great grandson of Stephen, from whom Teg got this
story.
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