by Tom Castaldi
John Chapman, also known as Johnny
Appleseed, serves as an example of a part of the religious fervor on the
western frontier in the years before the Civil War. The legends and tales about him that grew
even in his own lifetime rivaled those of his contemporaries, Davy Crockett and
Daniel Boone. Like them, Chapman’s career
in the wilderness as a preacher and Good Samaritan quickly got caught up in the
American imagination.
Johnny Appleseed had been on the
frontier for several decades before coming to Fort Wayne, possibly as early as 1822. Already many stories were told of this gentle
man’s propagation of fruit trees in odd plots of land all over the Pennsylvania
and Ohio wilderness, his love of wildlife, and the awe in which the Indians
held him up as a powerful medicine man. He repeated the Bible verse “refresh me with
apples” declaring “with apples shall men be comforted in the wilderness of the
West.” A holy man he was, for his
principal aim was to bring “some news right fresh from heaven” as he read from
the Beatitudes to the settlers he visited in cabins in the forest telling of
the spiritual happiness he enjoyed through the teachings of the Church of New
Jerusalem.
One eyewitness described Johnny
Appleseed’s appearance when he came to Fort
Wayne as “simply clad, in truth clad like a
beggar. His refined features told of his
intelligence, even though seen through the gray stubble that covered his face
since he cut his hair and beard with scissors. Johnny was serious, his speech clean, free
from slang or profanity. He traveled on
foot – sometimes with just one shoe or two different kinds of boots.” Some descriptions have him wearing his
cooking pot for a hat, at times with other parts of hats – the crown or the
brim – on top of his tin cap. Other
biographers claim that because his mush-pot hat did not protect his eyes from
the bright sun well enough that he fashioned one made of pasteboard with a
large peak in front. Although his
eccentric appearance occasionally caused anxiety or even alarm in some people,
by and large, he was well liked for his sincere and kind ways.
Exceptionally strong for his tall
slim frame, one pioneer observed that Johnny Appleseed was able to get more
work done clearing the forests in one day than most men could finish in
two. Above all else, however, he was
appreciated for his great ability to tell stories about his church, of his many
adventures on the frontier, his narrow escapes in the wilderness, his dealings
with the Indians, and his association with the wildlife of the Midwest, from bears to wasps.
He showed a great reverence for all
life, including the lowly insects. One
story often told was that when he was being stung by a hornet that had crawled
into his shirt, he carefully removed his shirt to allow the creature to go on
its way unharmed rather than kill the stinging nuisance. On another occasion he put out his evening
camp fire to avoid the possibility of the moths being destroyed in the
flames. He was known to have purchased an
aged horse from a pioneer who was continuing to put the creature to work, in
order that the animal could spend its last days peacefully at pasture. A
settler once described him saying that he was like “good St. Francis, the
little brother of the birds and the little brother of the beasts.”
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Johnny Appleseed's monument near the Coliseum in Fort Wayne. |
Johnny Appleseed died in 1845 at the
age of 71. He had been protecting his
saplings from some cows that had broken down the fence of one of his orchards
just north of Fort Wayne. He was overcome by his exertions and
succumbed to what the people of the time called the “winter plague.” He was buried along the St.
Joseph River and the old feeder canal bed on the Archer farm, but
the actual site is not known today; a commemorative marker sits atop the hill
in present-day Johnny
Appleseed Park,
which was once the Archer family cemetery. Each year during the Fort Wayne
festival that bears his name, visitors remember the comfort John Chapman
brought to the west, for around his memorial children fondly place their gifts
of apples.
|
The flask pictured on this sign is on display at the History Center. |
Originally published in Fort Wayne Monthly
“Along the Heritage Trail with Tom Castaldi”
Apr 2009 No 53
Allen
County Historian Tom Castaldi is author of the Wabash & Erie Canal Notebook
series; hosts “On the Heritage Trail,” which is broadcast at 6:35 a.m., 8:35
a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Mondays on WBOI, 89.1 FM; and “Historia Nostra” heard on
WLYV-1450 AM and WRRO 89.9 FM. Enjoy his previously published columns on the
History Center’s blog, “Our Stories,” at history centerfw.blogspot.com.
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