The Story of Chautauqua. Jesse Lyman Hurlbut

The Story of Chautauqua - Jesse Lyman Hurlbut


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160 Fenton Memorial 160 Baptist Headquarters and Mission House 170 Presbyterian Headquarters and Mission House 170 Methodist Headquarters 180 Disciples Headquarters 180 Unitarian Headquarters 190 Episcopal Chapel 190 Lutheran Headquarters 200 United Presbyterian Chapel 200 South Ravine 220 Muscallonge 220 Jacob Bolin Gymnasium 220 Athletic Club 230 Boys' Club Headed for Camp 230 Woman's Club House 240 Rustic Bridge 240 Post Office Building 250 Business and Administration 250 Golf Course 260 Sherwood Memorial 260 Traction Station 260 Arts and Crafts Building 270 Miller Bell Tower 270 South Gymnasium 280 A Corner of the Playground 290

      CHAPTER I

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      John Heyl Vincent—a name that spells Chautauqua to millions—said: "Chautauqua is a place, an idea, and a force." Let us first of all look at the place, from which an idea went forth with a living force into the world.

      

John H. Vincent (1876)

      The surface of Lake Chautauqua is 1350 feet above the level of the ocean; said to be the highest navigable water in the United States. This is not strictly correct, for Lake Tahoe on the boundary between Nevada and California is more than 6000 feet above sea-level. But Tahoe is navigated only by motor-boats and small steamers; while Lake Chautauqua, having a considerable town, Mayville, at its northern end, Jamestown, a flourishing city at its outlet, and its shores fringed with villages, bears upon its bosom many sizable steam-vessels.

      It is remarkable that while Lake Erie falls into the St. Lawrence and empties into the Atlantic at iceberg-mantled Labrador and Newfoundland, Lake Chautauqua only seven miles distant, and of more than seven hundred feet higher altitude, finds its resting place in the warm Gulf of Mexico. Between these two lakes is the watershed for this part of the continent. An old barn is pointed out, five miles from Lake Chautauqua, whereof it is said that the rain falling on one side of its roof runs into Lake Erie and the St. Lawrence, while the drops on the other side through a pebbly brook find their way by Lake Chautauqua into the Mississippi.

      Nobody knows, or will ever know, how this lake got its smooth-sounding Indian name. Some tell us that the word means "the place of mists"; others, "the place high up"; still others that its form, two lakes with a passage between, gave it the name, "a bag tied in the middle," or "two moccasins tied together." Mr. Obed Edson of Chautauqua County, who made a thorough search among old records and traditions, which he embodied in a series of articles in The Chautauquan in 1911-12, gives the following as a possible origin. A party of Seneca Indians were fishing in the lake and caught a large muskallonge. They laid it in their canoe, and going ashore carried the canoe over the well-known portage to Lake Erie. To their surprise, they found the big fish still alive, for it leaped from the boat into the water, and escaped. Up to that time, it is said, no muskallonge had ever been caught in that lake; but the eggs in that fish propagated their kind, until it became abundant. In the Seneca language, ga-jah means


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