Wednesday, January 23, 2019

AUGUSTUS WRIGHT BEAVER DAM CHAPEL POND.

AUGUSTUS WRIGHT
A NANTICOKE GENTLEMAN

BEAVER DAM'S CHAPEL POND

Gussie Wright kept the peace between the “ little fellers “ that
build the dams which threaten to flood nearby Sussex farmers land
and those land owner and farmers of Indian River Hundred.

Gussie is an old man of Nanticoke Indian ancestry.

Old Gussie Wright knows the effects of nature and is quietly engaged
in keeping man and nature in balance between the farmers and the
beavers around Chapel Pond . Gus takes pride that the pond, after near
a century of absence, is back again with it's pine woods, a nursery for
wood ducks, is next door to ancient St. George's Chapel that has stood
by since 1794 on the site of an 1718 Anglican chapel.

Speeding by on the Robinsonville – Fairmount road one might miss
Chapel Pond for looking at the old brick chapel. The pond doesn’t
look like a pond because of the growth of swamp maples yet to be drowned
out by high water but the old mill dam and the new beaver dam can be seen
from the roadway.

With affectionate care Gus Wright has cleared underbrush but leaving
the cedars, hollies and oaks as decorations. Out of a split log he has
made a swinging footbridge over the spillway.

Chapel Pond grist mill was probably owned and operated by both the
Burton family and the Robinson family. It has been gone a century or more
after the mill dam gave way during a nor'east storm and was not repaired,
leaving the pond to become a swamp with only a trickle of water flowing
through it.

In the early 1930's the Delaware Game & Fish Commission set out a few
pair of beaver in southeastern Sussex with hope they would survive and
multiply to replace the extinct native beavers. The newcomers made
themselves at home along the heads of Guinea creek and Herring creek.


Beaver dams have been destroyed by farmers when the little engineers
have flooded adjacent lands. The Delaware Highway Department has
problems keeping drainage culverts clear of beaver built obstructions.

Several years ago, Gus Wright, who has the farm that adjoins Chapel
Pond, noticed each morning fresh cut swamp maple saplings placed
neatly into the break of the old dam. Week after week this “repairing”
took place, layer upon layer of sticks and branches and black muck were
embedded in the rising dam. The water began to rise behind the dam.
Then came the complaints and threats to tear the whole thing out. But
Gus had other ideas, he would keep both the beavers and farmer happy
by regulating the water level all by himself. He did so by removing
the beavers work, however the beaver had other ideas and brought twice
the amount to top our the dam almost every night. Gus had to go and pull
out each nights work every morning. Near by was his prof , a four foot
high pile of maples sticks which he would burn . Gussie took great pride
in maintaining the delicate balance between farmers and the beavers. He
thought a pond with beavers. Summer duck and other living wild things
was good to have around. Gus would show visitors the old dam and it's
repair, the six inch white oak trees the beavers had felled, the ruins of
the old grist mill.

Augustus Wright, age 84, a Indian River Hundred farmer at Chapel
Pond, died July 5 1963 in Beebe Hospital, Lewes, and is buried at
Indian Mission Church. He is survived by a daughter Mrs. Cornelia
Duplessis of Philadelphia. His death has made a difference to the many
people who knew him. What will happen to the little shady park, Beaver
Falls, at Chapel Pond ? Will the Sussex woods reclaim the pond, the
benches he built of 'twigs' for people to watch the beavers build their
lodge and swim about, the paths and transplanted hollies.
He was proud of his Nanticoke ancestry. On the 9th of May 1925 he
married Laura Cerney. One account has his parents as Return Wright
and Charlotte Johnson Wright, both born in 1850. His wife Laura was
born 1888 and died 1953.

Abstract: Wilmington Morning News, January28, 947, by Anthony Higgins.

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