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HISTORY
Kiantone was first settled by Joseph L. Akin, who came from Rennselaer County in
Eastern New York, in 1807. The area consisted of about 11,228 acres, or
17.5 square miles. Not long after Akin came to Kiantone, Robert Russell
also settled in the area, partnering with John Frew to build the first sawmill
on Kiantone Creek, just above the junction where the creek met the Conewango
Creek. Russell, PA, was later settled by Russell, his father, and
brothers.
Kiantone was a derivative of the Seneca work kyenthone, meaning roughly - - a
level place for growing corn. While the Seneca's received exclusive rights
to reservation lands in 1794, they did not move at once to the reservations.
When Anglo-Saxon settlers arrived in Kiantone, they found the Kyenthono Village
still inhabited by the Senecas.
Through the years, Kiantone made its name as a mill town, with settlers either
coming up the Allegany River from Pittsburgh or overland from Buffalo.
The first Kiantone town meeting was held on February 21, 1854, with Ezbai Kidder
elected Supervisor; Levand Brown elected Town Clerk; Francis Alvord Town School
Superintendent; and Stephan Norton as Tax Collector. According to a 2006
book, "Kiantone Chautauqua County's Mystical Valley",
by Deborah K. Cronin, construction and improvement of roads was a
continuous concern, and one-room school houses were built. A post office
took the new town name on April 4, 1855, and would remain the town's
only post office until it was discontinued in 1900.
For a time, Kiantone played host to one of Chautauqua County's numerous
spiritual communities - - a place called Harmonia. Harmonia had up to 30
people living in it at its peak before dying out in the 1860s.
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