POPLAR ISLAND 1877
There were only four
property owners of property on Poplar Islands in 1877 through the
1880's. They were
Captain Howeth, H. N. Sherwood, Captain D. Jones and the
Carroll estate on Cobblers
Nexk. Until the 1920's fifteen families made their home there.
Valliant's Store with the
post office was located on the smallest island. The larger island
had the school house which
also served as the church, a saw mill, graveyard, a road to
at least a half dozen
farms. Coaches Island, a separate island, also had several
families.
The poplar Island farmers
grew tomatoes, tobacco, watermelon, cantaloupe, corn and wheat.
The wheat was threshed with
a steam engine powered thresher which now is said to lie about
one eighth mile off shore
under water. They used oxen and horses to do the pulling of other
equipment. The people rode
horses or walked as there were no carriages. Neither did they
have electricity.
Former Poplar resident Ida
Richardson, now living in Tilghman, at age 87 says the church was
always almost full but no preacher lived on the island. In the same
building she
remembered going to school
to Joseph Valiant,”a right good teacher” last ever on the
island..
Sail canoes were the main
vessel to each the mainland and oyster's were a good harvest from
the “Poplar Pot”, the
natural harbor of the islands chain. Fish, especially rock fish
were
plentiful.
Nannie Howeth,87 years old,
also former resident, also lived in Tilghman, around the corner
from Ida Nannie was widow
of Harvey Howeth, died at age 88. They married 7 June 1916,
lived on Poplar for four
years until the brothers, Jim an Charles, sold the farms. This is
the
farm the burial plot was
on “ever to remain undisturbed according the deed, not accounting
for the effect of the
Chesapeake.
Poplar Island was left to
the moonshiners. In 1929 Federal Revenuers raided it, arrested
five, seized their yacht,
and smashed the thousand gallon still.
Source: Eugene Meyer's
“Maryland, Lost & Found”. 1986. Abstract December 13, 2017
by HARRISON HOWETH.
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