THE MICHENERS

One of the greatest contributors of New Garden information to books and newspapers was Ellwood Michener, of a Michener family who came here from Bucks County following the Revolutionary War. His father, Dr. Ezra Michener, a noted physician and naturalist, was born in London Grove Township, the youngest of four children. Educated in local schools, Ezra Michener even as a youngster showed an innate fondness for plants and flowers.

At age 24, he turned from surveying for which he had been trained to the study of medicine and entered the office of Dr. D. J. Davis of Philadelphia. "I was often reminded of some country habit, some vulgar expression," he wrote, for he felt very out of place in the City, particularly when he entered the lecture room filled with five hundred students and found himself the only one dressed in the plain clothes of the Society of Friends. Shunned by classmates, he shunned them in return. Michener, as a house student at The Philadelphia Dispensary in 1816, is believed to have been the first there to use Ergot in cases of threatening abortion. (This is still used today.) After further study at the Southern Dispensary, and upon completion of anatomy studies, he returned to his father's home and local practice. There were then three doctors in the area, and competition was keen. Michener married Sarah Spencer who bore him four sons. The first died: Ellwood was second, followed by Jenner and Lea. When Dr. Chamberlain of New Garden quit his practice about 1829, Michener purchased the Chamberlain property and moved here. He had already fought a severe dysentery epidemic that left sixty dead in New Garden - half the deaths experienced in the two mile wide belt of it that ran from Kennett Square into London Grove and Franklin Townships. New Garden was hardest hit. A cholera epidemic struck in 1832 that started in Philadelphia, and was, apparently, carried here by travelers who died at Mermaid Tavern. Most who contracted this dread disease died within ten hours of its first symptoms, and local doctors were quite unable to do anything to prevent its spread.

Dr. Ezra Michener was a strong advocate of temperance, for he had earlier considered himself an intemperate man who had faced this issue, and overcome the temptation. He wrote many essays on the subject and spoke frequently at public meetings of the problems caused by over-indulgence. He publicly chastised Dr. Ross of Toughkenamon for his intemperance.

Throughout the years, Michener collected botanical and zoological specimens all over the County, and was an elderly member in the Cabinet of Science in Chester County. His election as correspondent to the Academy of Natural Sciences was an outgrowth of this membership.

His wife, Sarah, died during the Winter of 1843, and he, himself, fell very ill. During the long recovery period, Dr. Michener indexed his herbarium of more than one thousand plant species, and made many more collecting trips. A year later, he married Mary S. Walton of London Grove. His new mansion, built in 1855 on an open area of two, or three acres of lands, was planted extensively with a large variety of evergreen and deciduous trees, and shrubbery. Some of the plant material is yet evident at the home which is on Newark Rood near Hillendale.

Dr. Michener's contributions of letters, books, etc. to the religious moral, scientific, and miscellaneous literature of the day total:

Books - 15                                          Agricultural Essays - 49
Medical Reports, etc. - 23                   Daily Local News - 90
For Friends' Intelligencer and Journal, etc. - 50

At his request, a tree which he had planted - one Pawlownia Imperialis - was cut down and sawed into boards from which his coffin was made. When he died at age 92, on June 24, 1887, it was said that "he did not belong exclusively to Chester County, Pennsylvania, or America, but to the whole scientific world." His large collection of natural history, including over five hundred species of birds, animals, and reptiles, was taken to Swarthmore College in 1869 and placed in its museum. It was later lost to fire.

Dr. Michener, himself, wrote the Michener biography for Futhey and Cope's "History of Chester County." His added note may well explain why not only the Michener family, but others, too, came to New Garden:

"It is worthy of notice... that soon after the close of the Revolutionary war a very remarkable emigration took place from Bucks to Chester County. The emigrants appear to have been mostly Friends, and very largely from Buckingham Monthly Meeting to that of New Garden, as they were then constituted. If my notes are correct, during the ten years from 1784 to 1795 New Garden Monthly Meeting received certificates of membership for 270 members. Of this number, 181 were from Buckingham Monthly Meeting alone. About forty of them were Micheners.

Two suggestions have been offered for this unusual emigration, - the hope of finding a more fertile soil, and the prosperous condition of the society of which they were members within the limits of the Western Quarterly Meeting. These may have been causes; but when I remember the terrible tragedy of the Doanes, which had very recently occurred in the immediate vicinity, with the violent excitement, embittered feeling, and suspicion which prevailed, it looks more like a modern 'hegira' of the lovers of peace and quietness to escape the confusion and perhaps danger by which they were surrounded."

The Doanes were several Tory brothers who robbed extensively throughout Bucks County and surrounding areas, including the Revolutionary Treasury. They were somewhat known as Robin Hood types, and it is believed that a split in Buckingham Meeting, and genuine fear of reprisal, occurred when some members informed on them. Their behavior and physical prowess bears a great resemblance to that of "Sandy" Flash of Kennett fame.