Kleinhans / Petitjean Family
Kleinhans / Petitjean Family
Homesteads & Census Data facebook
German thaler
After Frederick Kleinhans immigrated to Wolcottsville he needed land for a farm and log cabin to raise his family. He may have rented at first but as difficult as it might've been, he'd committed his family to the unknown hardships of leaving their homeland to live in an unfamiliar foreign land.
Frederick might've arrived with some money (perhaps thalers, German silver coins) since he had to pay for their ocean passage and transit to Niagara County. It's hard to guess how much money he had left over after arriving if any. Before leaving Germany he may have needed a loan if he had no other means to pay for the trip. Frederick and August's families were likely assisted by their local Lutheran church and fellow German neighbors to some extent until they were established.
Homesteads & Census Data
Below are links to the pages of census data grouped by decades with maps showing homestead locations when available. 1950 is the last available year for US census data. The US Census Bureau waits 72 years to release census data for privacy reasons, so 1960 census data won't be available until 2032. Census data before 1850 did not list the names of family members, just the last name of the head of household making it difficult to identify a specific family.
Log Cabin Homes
Frederick and August started living in Wolcottsville in rented or self-built log cabins on farms until they had enough money to build frame houses for their families. Money would not have been easy to come by so they had to work long and hard to buy anything. Log cabins were cheap (basically free if your property had trees) and quick to build although not as desirable as a more substantial and expensive wood frame house. Below is a lot of information about log cabins.
Frame houses were often built by the homeowner with the assistance of neighbors and local semi-pro carpenters. Sawmills were constructed locally to produce the milled planks and lumber needed to build frame houses and barns.
►Log Cabins: click to show/hide
Log cabin excerpt from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"A log cabin is a small log house, especially a less finished or less architecturally sophisticated structure. Log cabins have an ancient history in Europe, and in America are often associated with first-generation home building by settlers. ... a medieval log cabin was considered movable property (a chattel house), as evidenced by the relocation of Espåby village in 1557: the buildings were simply disassembled, transported to a new location and reassembled. It was also common to replace individual logs damaged by dry rot as necessary. ... With suitable tools, a log cabin can be erected from scratch in days by a family. As no chemical reaction is involved, such as hardening of mortar, a log cabin can be erected in any weather or season."
Finger Lake Times LOOKING BACK: Log cabins were popular in frontier Yates County, NY too
by TRICIA NOEL Sep 12, 2021
Many Americans have grown up reading the “Little House on the Prairie” books, and have a sense of wistfulness about the warm and cozy log cabin of days past.
Many of us also associate log cabins with pioneers to the Western territories, who traveled there in covered wagons, much like the Ingalls family. However, by the time they set up their little house in the 1870s, log cabins were an ancient form of architecture used by different groups all over America. It may surprise some to learn that log cabins were the first and most common form of housing used by non-native settlers to Yates County. Log cabins were just as common dotting our lakeshores and gullies as they were on the prairies.
First brought to the American colonies by Scandinavian immigrants to New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania in the 17th century, the log cabin became a favorite with other immigrant groups, such as the Ulster Scots and Germans in the Middle Atlantic region. They were so popular because they were quick, easy and cheap to build. The heavily forested countryside provided easy access to logs, and if a family decided to move on, they could easily build another. Only the English, many of whom were already in frame-style or brick houses in New England and Virginia before the log cabin caught on, largely resisted this style of home.
This didn’t stop people of English descent from choosing log cabins for their new homes as they moved into frontier regions in both the North and South, however. Needing to clear huge forests, they used the logs for their homes, intending to build more permanent ones later. Log cabins dotted western New York, Appalachian hollows and the early Midwestern states.
Others coming in the same period defaulted to log cabins. Log cabins stood on what is now Main Street in Penn Yan. Several early schools, including the Lakemont School in Starkey, were also log cabins. Most were one room, with a packed dirt floor and a loft above for sleeping. Cooking, eating, socializing and work all took place in the main room, which also served as the parents’ bedroom. Some larger cabins were later divided into rooms, and some in the county broke the traditional mold. An unusual two-story log cabin, complete with rifle slits for defense, once stood near Crosby in Barrington, built in 1806 as the Carr Tavern. John Ingraham, Lettus Potter and Jacob Cartwright all built double log houses — the Ingrahams living in theirs up until 1848, decades after some elegant mansions had been built in the county. Early barns, too, were log constructions.
The norm - According to Miles A. Davis, writing as an elderly man in 1906, log cabins were the norm across Yates County. He lived in one until the age of 12, his mother had taught school in one in 1834, and he grew up surrounded by them. He remembered many from his childhood, most of which were gone by the time of his writing. He pointed out that all but three houses on Guyanoga Road had been log cabins in his youth.
It is safe to assume that many Yates County ancestors in the first part of the 19th century spent time living in these simple dwellings. Some were even built communally, in housing “bees,” where neighbors shared the work and then a meal or dance, taking turns when each needed a new cabin. Those coming into the county in the 1830s and ‘40s tended to build more modern houses right away, but those who came in the early days of settlement — and had been living in log cabins — stayed in them later than one would expect.
They were not as comfortable as they seem to us today, viewing them through the lens of nostalgia. Most were one-room structures, cramped with large families. Early ones built in places without a reliable source of stones often had wooden chimneys coated with mud or clay, a fire hazard that caused many to go alight. Dirt floors were impossible to clean; the scent of cooking and wood smoke hung in the air.
Most only had one or two windows on the first floor, so they were dark as well. Glass was prohibitively expensive in this period, so wooden shutters or oiled cloth or paper covered window openings. Otherwise, they stood open to let in air and light, but also allowed in insects. Sometime a Dutch door was utilized to keep children and animals from running in and out. Yards were workspaces and looked unkempt and messy. The walls naturally had spaces between the logs. These cracks were filled with mud mixed with shale, moss or hay, or anything that could block the cold. If this filling failed, cold winter air — and even snow! — blew directly in on the family. Despite these discomforts, the old growth wood used in those early days provided large and strong logs and very sturdy buildings.
These dwellings, while sometimes lived in longer than intended, were never meant to be permanent. By the 1840s, when the Finger Lakes region was coming out of its frontier period, even people in remote areas were influenced by new architectural trends and social conventions. Privacy became more important and rooms with specified uses were looked upon favorably. It began to seem odd to sit in your host’s bedroom on a visit. Changes had to be made. Most log cabin families simply built a new wood-frame, cobblestone, or brick house elsewhere on their property, abandoning the old log home. Sometimes it was utilized for a barn or storage. Over time, they deteriorated and disappeared to the elements. The Carr Tavern and another cabin on Route 14 near Himrod were unusual exceptions that were inhabited well into the 20th century, mostly in their original condition.
Other families chose to economize by upgrading their log cabins. They were added onto with frame additions, and the interior one-room style was divided into specific rooms, such as a dining room and separate kitchen. The lofts were often divided into multiple small bedrooms. Interior walls were plastered and papered, the floors covered in planks and carpets. Interior stairs replaced the loft ladder. Lastly, the outside was covered in frame or shingles. The log cabin, which over time had become a stigma of poverty, was hidden inside a new and more fashionable shell. It is very possible more log cabins exist in Yates County in this form than can be seen.
From days when simple and rustic cabins dotted the hills, streams and glens of Yates County, to today when large mansions line the lakes and even large, modern log cabins can be seen, the housing changes seen in our history are almost unimaginable.
Wikipedia Interior of 19th-century recreation log cabin
Rough walls and ceiling, loft above for a bedroom or storage, dirt floor, small crude fireplace, wooden handmade furniture and accessories, and some small metal and ceramic pots that may have been bartered or purchased. Small, raw, crude, and dirty, but frugal and better than a lean-to for an immigrant or pioneer family.
Geneseo, NY - The log cabin in the Village Park was erected in 1895 by the Livingston County Historical Society. It was constructed of logs brought to Geneseo from pioneer farms of the county and represents the type of dwelling used by the settlers in the Genesee country and other nearby counties. It's been modified and updated over the years (new roof, windows, electricity, etc.) Part of SUNY Geneseo College is in the background.
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Curated examples
Log cabins at Letchworth State Park in Livingston & Wyoming Counties, NY
This log cabin is about the same size as the cabin in Geneseo, NY, although it certainly has been less modernized except for the metal fencing installed to protect it and what looks like newer windows. It has a loft above the first floor so the bottom of the loft's beam and plank floor can be seen below. The ground floor has a dirt floor, a couple of windows, a door, and a fireplace. It's no more than what you see in the pictures above. The loft doesn't have windows, the fireplace vents through the loft and out the roof. The sign on the fireplace in the bottom picture says "Early Pioneer Stick and Mud Chimney". The sign on the left says "Pioneer Log Ladder". The other objects on the ground floor don't necessarily belong to the cabin: there's an old door from another cabin, and what looks like an old hand-operated wooden loom.
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Local examples
Older log cabin joined to frame house in Wolcottsville, NY (2020)
This log cabin may have been like Frederick's (except for the newer roof and window) in the 1875 NY State Census. It's likely about 150 years old. (see more log cabins below) Across the road from this house is the 5,600-acre Tonawanda Wildlife Management Area.
Log cabin in East Wilson, NY not far from Herman and Martha Brown
Easy, fast, and cheap to build, log cabins were ideal for immigrant housing. Log cabins could be disassembled, reassembled, or repurposed. Frederick's first home in 1860 on Fisk Rd. might've been a log cabin he possibly moved to Akron Rd. by 1875 (see 1860-1880 Homesteads & Census).
Log cabins just south of Wolcottsville in Newstead, Erie County
Wikipedia Replica of a 18th century log cabin
Circa WWII Sears Kit Home- Not exactly a scratch-built log cabin but in the same vein, N. James and Anna Kleinhans bought a kit home shortly after their marriage a few years after WWII. They purchased a kit home from Northern Homes in Allentown, PA similar to the Sears one below. They bought two (2) different kits and were also dealers for Northern Homes for some time. There are a number of these same kit houses scattered around Niagara County.
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