Book Description
Excerpt from Hart's History and Directory of the Three Towns, Brownsville, Bridgeport, West Brownsville: Illustrated With Portraits Views; Also Abridged History of Fayette County Western Pennsylvania In this abridged history of Fayette County, of Western Pennsylvania, and of the Three Towns of Brownsville, Bridgeport and West Brownsville particularly, it has been the aim of the author and compiler, to devote more time to the writing, assembling and systematic arranging of facts and incidents of the early settlement and life, social and industrial, than to the portrayal of the present. It is around the things of the past that memory most fondly clings, and to place them upon the pages of history that old and young may pore over them, the former with fond recollections and the latter with awakened interest in the life and trials of our forefathers, is the incentive that prompted the writing of these pages. With more recent history, all are more or less familiar. The history of the world, of today, is being made and comes to us daily through the columns of newspapers and magazines; it is being graven upon marble and granite and upon the everlasting hills, in a manner that it will never be erased, but the history of the past centuries, we must gather from tradition or from musty volumes of ancient and almost forgotten lore. And, it is from these that we have gathered what we here present and we assure you that it was as much a pleasure as a task to gather much of what we have written from the trembling lips of beautiful old age, and embellish it by the aid of the photographer and illustrator. All who took part in making the earlier history of this part of Pennsylvania, have long since gone to their reward but their works live after them and will result in manifold blessings to generations yet unborn; while many of the others who came upon the scene from a half to three-quarters of a century later, are still with us bearing upon their brows the silvery crown of interesting and instructive old age, but their memory of things seen and heard is a rich storehouse from which an historian delights to draw, and it is to these as well as to the ancient chroniclers of history, that we are indebted for much that enters into this volume. Veech, Ellis, Searight, Nelson, Crumrine and other writers of the early history of Pennsylvania, have been drawn upon and we believe in most instances credited with their contributions, while the vast number of others who have generously aided us in our search for historic incidents, is such as to preclude the possibility of individual mention. Among them, however, are J. D. S. Pringle, D. M. Hart, William Graham, Thomas Benton Wilgus, (now in Morgantown), James Risbeck, James Mitchell, and a diary of Robert Rogers, kindly furnished us by Roland C. Rogers. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.