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Settling the Fenwick Estate

by Frances Mary Schoolcraft


The Fenwick estate was originally settled by Mohawk Indians, I believe. Of this time I have no authentic record, and therefore do not pretend to describe it. The tract of land was changed from a forest into a manor, by virtue of a piece of sheepskin given by James Duke, of York, to James Fenwick. James Fenwick settled the estate by importing some colonists, and encouraging others already imported. It gave him a great deal of trouble, no doubt, but not half the trouble that the final settlement gave to Nicholas Ames, after James Fenwick’s last descendant died in 1805.

Nicholas Ames was a lawyer by profession, and his legal knowledge was chiefly exercised in discharging the office of trustee for the benefit of numerous widows and orphans. One of the orphans (a promising male infant of nineteen) wrested the title of a moral tale into an irreverent epithet, and called him “Old Ames and Obstacles.” The applicability of this name lay in a peculiarity of Mr. Ames, which led him almost invariably to raise objections to advancing the beneficiaries of a trust a dollar more than he was indispensably bound to let them have. This trifling inconvenience was overweighed by his strict integrity, and the loving care which he bestowed on the estates themselves; more especially as the authors of the trust, being for the most part dead, did not expect to have any dealings with him themselves. No man living could manage estates like Mr. Ames. They grew in beauty side by side; they filled more than one home with glee, when the heirs finally got them; and alas! It may be said of many of them, that their graves are scattered far and wide.

Mr. Ames had been trustee of the Fenwick estate during the nonage of Leicester Fenwick. In process of time the original manor had been much diminished, just as the family had dwindled down to this Leicester, and… Read More