History of Warren County
Within the tapestry of Warren County history the threads of
conflict and community are woven. The early history of this area was
often on of conflict, as Seneca, French, English and later, American
struggled for control of the land. In the nineteenth century with the
arrival of "settlers" from the new United States came the creation of
new communities. With these communities came houses, farms, schools,
businesses and industries. Many of these early features are still
visible in the landscape today.
By the sixteenth century the Seneca, members of the Iroquois Indian
Nation, controlled the area which is now Warren County. In the
eighteenth century, the most noted Seneca was the famous Cornplanter,
the son of a Dutch trader from Albany and a Seneca mother. After
fighting for the British during the Revolution, Cornplanter switched his
allegiance and became a defender of the new American government, and an
instrument in establishing treaties between with the American government
and the Iroquois Nation.
Despite the opposition of some of his contemporaries, Cornplanter
warded off Indian incursions from the West. He was rewarded for his
efforts with an outright gift by the Pennsylvania Commonwealth of
several parcels of land, one of which---the Cornplanter Grant--became
his home until his death in 1836. Until the waters of the Allegheny
Reservoir flooded all but the highest portion of the Grant, Cornplanter
heirs lived on their ancestral land.
The French, the first European Americans to deal with the Indians
of the area, had traded annually with them prior to 1749. In that year,
Celeron de Blainville led an expedition sent by the government of New
France to establish French sovereignty over the Ohio Valley which was
being threatened by increasing British incursions. Near the mouth of the
Conewango Creek, on the south bank of the Allegheny, he buried a lead
plate signifying this sovereignty.
During the ensuing years, after the French influence ended and the
Revolution established American independence, men began to recognize the
suitability of the land for permanent settlement. The fine bottomland at
the confluence of the Conewango and the Allegheny was natural location
for a town, and extensive pine forest offered a seemingly inexhaustible
supply of timber.
In 1795, the town of Warren--named for distinguished patriot,
General Joseph Warren, Killed in the battle of Bunker or Breed's
Hill--was laid out by the Surveying team lead by General William Irvine
and Andrew Ellicott. Warren's first structure (which stood until 1840)
was a log building erected by the Holland Land Company as a supply
depot. In about 1806 the first settlers began to locate in Warren, and
the town was incorporated as a borough in 1832. With few exceptions, the
earliest inhabitants of Warren were Scotch-Irish, from southeaster
Pennsylvania, and New Englanders. Successive waves of immigrants arrived
from Germany, Sweden, and Italy during the remaining years of the
century. Their descendants are numerous.
The county, 902 square miles in area, was erected out of Lycoming
and Allegheny Counties by an act of legislature in 1800. In 1805, it was
attached to Venango for judicial purposes; but in 1819, after a
sufficient increase in population, it was organized as a full-fledged
county. It is bordered on the north by New York State, on the east by
McKean County, on the west by Crawford and Erie Counties, and on the
south by Venango and Forest Counties.
Most of the land in the eastern and southern parts of the county is
broken and hilly; the northwestern section is mostly glacial territory.
Altitude ranges from 1200 to over 2000 feet above sea level. Originally,
hardwood forest covered much of the western portion, while large stands
of pine and hemlock grew in the creek alleys and southeast of the
Allegheny River. The river and its three major tributaries in Warren
county--the Conewango, Brokenstraw and Kinzua Creeks--were natural
waterways for the rafting of lumber, which was the county's main
industry for many years. Sawing and rafting of lumber continued to be a
major activity late in the 1800s.
Prior to 1830, only the keelboat provided two-way river
transportation from Pittsburgh. but beginning with the arrival of the
steamer "Allegheny" in 1830, a succession of steamboats from Pittsburgh
served as transportation until the early 1860s, just a few years after
the Sunbury and Erie Railroad was completed from Erie to Warren. By
1883, Warren had the hub of a network of railroads leading in all
directions.
As the rafting of lumber declined, and as the arable land was
cleared of its timber, farming began to flourish, particularly in the
northwest section of the county. In addition, the manufacture of
furniture and other wood products expanded; the availability of hemlock
bark led to the establishment of a large tanning operation in the
Sheffield are; and the fabrication of products from iron began its
steady climb.
Concurrent with he arrival of the railroad in Warren, oil was
discovered at Titusville. In a short time, an oil boom developed in
Warren County. It added yet another major industry, and by the early
1900s there were 13 refineries within a six-mile radius of Warren.
Sensational oil finds occurred in numerous locations, including
Tidioute, Cherry Grove, and Clarendon. Oil production and refining still
hold an important position in the county.
For many years the town of Warren has been favored with a
diversified industry; it has suffered less than many other localities in
time of depression. Those businesses in the county which have declined
have been replaced by others more modern and comprehensive, and over the
years the trend ahs been toward light industry. Although farming has
decreased in importance in the county, its status today is more stable
than in many other parts of the state.
Warren is the locale of a forward-looking public school system
which has always borne a high reputation. Many religious denominations
are represented in the county, and an excellent county library cultural
community; and it is also the center for a wide range of recreational
facilities including hunting, fishing, and boating. The headquarters of
the Warren County Historical Society and the Clinton E. wilder Museum
are both extensive repositories for memorabilia of Warren County and its
citizens.
Heart's Content and Tionesta Scenic Area are the only appreciable
stands of virgin timber remaining in Pennsylvania. With their 300
year-old trees, they are breathtaking evidence of the splendor that
greeted the settlers as they moved westward. These tracts are within the
Allegheny National Forest, a large portion of which is included in
Warren County and which provides vistas of beauty unequaled in any other
part of the state. Chapman Dam State Park, a facility near Clarendon,
offers opportunity for swimming, fishing, camping and picnicking.
The construction of the Kinzua Dam and Allegheny Reservoir, a flood
control project twelve miles above Warren, has been the impetus for a
new and far-reaching promotional program for outdoor recreation.
Campgrounds, boat-launching ramps, swimming areas and scenic overlooks
have been incorporated into the overall development of the reservoir
shoreline, which extends into New York State nearly to the town of
Salamanca.