| Notes | 
Buffalo NY Morning Express - 5/16/1881
 Benjamin Witmer, one of the first settlers In
 Western New-York, died at his residence, four
 miles northeast of Niagara Falls, on Tuesday, the
 10th inst., aged 86 years, and was buried on Thursday,
 the 12th, in the family burying-ground on the
 old homestead, where he had resided since 1842.
 The Rev. John Strickler, of Clarence, assisted by
 the Rev. Mr. Leonard, of La Salle, and the Rev.
 Mr. Snyder, a neighbor, conducted the funeral
 services, which were attended by a very large concourse
 of his relatives and acquaintances, among
 whom were many who had known him over half a
 century.
 Mr. Witmer's ancestors were of those Christians
 who are known as Mennonites, from Simon Menno,
 a Reformer, cotemporary with Luther, who in the
 Netherlands renounced the Roman Catholic Church,
 in which he was a friar, and became a leader
 among the Ana Baptists, a considerable portion of
 whom assumed his name to designate their peculiar
 sect. Religious persecution by the Romanists
 drove these Mennonite ancestors from their native
 countries in Europe, and thousands of their devoted
 compeers, in the early part of the sixteenth century,
 settled in Lancaster County, Pa., then called the
 "Garden of America," where they soon became a
 numerous, prosperous, and a happy people, mind-
 ing their own business and letting other people do
 the same, which sometimes is styled selfishness. In
 course of time the more enterprising, among whom
 were some styled " Tories " because they would not
 fight against King George in the War of
 the Revolution, sought homes in Western New-
 York and the neighboring province of Up-
 per Canada. In August, 1810, John Wit
 mer, the father of the deceased, sold out his
 home in Pennsylvania, six miles west of Lancaster
 City, and with a four-horse team brought
 his family via Harrisburgh, past the mouth of
 Lycoming Creek, over Williams's road via Block
 House and Blossburg, down the Tioga Valley to
 Painted Post, thence to Dansville, N. Y.. Batavia,
 Black Rock, and down Niagara River to Devil's
 Hole, from which Mr. Isaac Swain had cut a road
 through the woods to his farm on lots 30 and 34.
 which the father purchased of Mr. Swain, and
 made it his future home. But war's end again
 drove these inoffensive people from their wilderness
 homes, and in 1813 John Witmer, the father, and
 his brother Abraham Witmer, who had settled on
 the adjoining farm, took their helpless families to a
 safe reheat in the interior, John going to Dansville,
 N. Y., and Abraham returning to Lancaster County.
 Benjamin, however, being a lad 17 years old (he
 was born in Lancaster County, Pa., March 21.
 1795). was employed voluntarily as an artificer in
 building the fortifications at Fort Niagara, the
 religious tenets of the Mennonites forbidding their
 taking up arms, the Government, on the other
 hand never requiring them to violate their conscientious
 scruples. One day as he was coming
 from the fort, up the river to the top of the mountain
 at Lewiston, he, with his two companions,
 were espied by the men at the battery across the
 river on Queenston Heights, and were fired upon,
 the cannon ball, a six pounder, burying itself in
 the ground near by. The ball was afterwards dug
 up by Mr. Witmer and has ever since been kept as
 a kind of heir-loom in the family, the children
 often amusing themselves by rolling it over
 the chamber floor to produce artificial thunder.
 After the war was over both families returned and
 made permanent homes at the places first purchased.
 In 1817 Benjamin built a saw-mill for his father, at
 the homestead, on Gill-creek crossing of the military
 road. This mill was instrumental in preparing
 most of the lumber used for building in that vicinity
 for many years, and is still used during the wet
 season. He next went to Erie County and built a
 saw-mill for Christian Long, one mile north of
 Williamsville. He also built another for Joseph
 Getz, on Ellicott's creek, and another for Christian
 Frick at Skinnersville, now Wolf's.
 Here he made the acquaintance of Miss Anna
 Maria Heil, daughter of John HeiI, whom he married
 in 1835, and settled on his farm, where now
 the Lutheran church stands at Eggertsville. Here
 five of his children--John in 1835, Mary in 1836,
 Sabina in 1838. Barbara in 1830, and Benjamin in
 1831-were born. In 1831 he sold out and moved
 to the farm next west adjoining the old homestead,
 which is now occupied by his son Elder Martin
 Witmer, where he lived until the death of the old
 grandfather John Witmer, in 1843, when he took
 possession of the homestead. His family was increased
 by the births of Martin in 1833. Henry in
 1835, Elisabeth in 1836, Leonard in 1838, Anna in
 1839, Esther in 1841, Simon in 1843, and Elias in
 1844. These all survive him except Barbara, who
 died in 1864. His wife died in 1871, and is remembered
 as one of the most exemplary women.
 Mr. Witmer, although of a very unassuming character,
 was an active, industrious, frugal and ex
 emplary man-a kind though commanding father,
 stamping a virtuous and determined character upon
 his large family, the good influence of which has
 reached out far beyond his own family. He was
 respected by all who knew him, and he retained the
 vigor of a strong mind to the last day, dying at
 peace with all men, and, as the writer is assured
 from an Interview had on Saturday before his death,
 he died in the full assurunce of the Christian's hope
 of eternal lite.
 All his children except Leonard, Elias and Esther,
 who are living in the far West, were present at the
 funeral, and the tears of affection were soothed by
 the smiles of Heaven, shed down in ihe blossoms of
 promise of the lovely May day, and the kind greet-
 Ings of a sympathizing crowd of spectators.
 T. W.
 |