Dutchess County Historical Society Yearbook Vol 054 1969

Page 31

THE LEDGE WHERE THE BEAR JUMPED OFF Clifford M. Buck

In the 1930's while I was doing some research in the County Clerk's office at the Courthouse, William Moerke asked me if I would like to see an interesting deed. He had marked a liber and page number on the wall. The interesting part of the deed he found for me was in the description where it referred to a point "where the bear jumped off." In due course the room was painted covering up the notation on the wall. Frank Mylod remembered seeing the deed, but he too had not noted its location. I remembered that it had something to do with a man named Wing, and so I decided to look through all the Wing deeds. I finally came across the following deed: Liber 34, page 80, June 30, 1825, Jackson Wing and Hannah, John Preston and Amy, Henry Wheeler and Catherine, Mary Wing, Benjamin Wing, all of Dover, to Luke Bowdish $100.00. The description follows: In Dover, adjoins lot that Luke Bowdish purchased of Thomas Soule. Begins at a two pronged chestnut tree with stones laid thereat standing under the ledge where the bear jumped off south 79 degrees 10' west 9 chains 20 links to a walnut bush with stones around it standing a little east of a path and adjoining the land Bowdish bought of Soule; thence south along a line with Luke Bowdish deeded land to the beginning, 3 acres. I was curious to know if the ledge could be located with a meager description of a small parcel and the many ledges in the Town of Dover. Searching wills, I found Liber G, page 192, the Will of Thomas Wing of Dover made March 28, 1818 and proved March 7, 1825. He had a wife Hannah, seven children, a granddaughter Nancy Bowdish, and the children of his deceased daughter, Bethia. And from "Old Gravestones of Dutchess County" by Poucher and Reynolds, we have recorded graves in the cemetery two miles east of Webatuck of Thomas Wing, died 1823, December 10, age 82-2-7, and Hannah Wing, died 1825, June 3, age 83-3 mo. It appears that the 3 acre parcel was part of Thomas Wing's estate. Described in a deed, Liber 9:463 April 5, 1783, Andrew Morehouse and Judith of Pawling sold to Thomas Wing, blacksmith 296 acres in the Oblong. The deed is not complete enough to give an accurate map, but it does locate part of the property as crossing the north end of Allis Pond, now Lake Ellis, and the brook that empties into the pond. If the three acre parcel came from this 296 acre farm, it might be somewhere in this area that the Ledge Where the Bear Jumped Off could be found, for there was a definite landmark of Allis Pond. Next I looked up deeds for various parcels of the farm and sketched them. Deed Liber 34:86, June 30, 1825, Wing heirs to Benjamin Wing, parcel #2 mentions "East 6 chains 17 links under Bear Ledge," and deed Liber 34:98, June 20, 1825, Wing heirs to Mary Wing, parcel #3 there is a measurement "East 6 chains 17 links to a stake and stones under Bear Ledge". And several 29


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