The following
article displayed below, and on the following pages are excerpts
of a passage from "Old Orange County Homes" written
by Mildred Parker Seese about 50 years ago, which was discovered
by Bob Brennan.
Vinson Clark's
little community was on the stage route from Middletown to
Bloomingburg, and business was good until, after he had died,
the Erie was built through Howell and a new plank road bypassed
Clarks' hill.
In 1824 he was
one of the fifteen innkeepers licensed in the Town of Wallkill,
but his most certainly was not one of the "tippling houses,
dram shops and groceries" against which complaint was
directed for years later, when the Town Board was requested
to stop licensing those 'whose principal object is to retail
intoxicating liquors'. Vinson Clark's tavern not only had
'every accommodation for public entertainment', but it was
the central building of a group that included a general store,
smithy, cooperage and wagon and shoemaker shops. On his farm
hemp and flax were the main crops, and Mrs. Clark braided
straw for New York hat makers. On the same hillcrest was a
Baptist Church. It is there yet, but separated from the stones
in its churchyard...
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