Historic Sites

If you find errors OR have additional information about this site, please send a message to contact@waynehistorians.org.

 

Eli Clark Home

Historic Site #:12-170   (Exists)   Type: F2 Town:Sodus
Site Name:Eli Clark HomeGPS Coordinates:43.281654, -77.111505
Address:7796 Centenary Road Sodus New York north of Lake Road
Description:
Description: Home of Eli and Asenath ClarkThis small frame house stands with its gable end to the street on a road leading north to Lake Ontario. Although its windows and siding have been changed, it stands in its original location. 

🔊Audio: Tour Sound Bite
 
Eli Clark HomeNorthern part of Town of Sodus Eli Clark home is on east side of road leading north to Lake Ontario. It was about 1 mile west of Freedom Hill.
YouTube Video Let My People Go
 
Historic narrative:

Discussion: Eli Clark was born in Westhampton, Massachusetts on September 22, 1790. He married his cousin Asenath (1795-1863) and together they moved to Sodus about 1818, at the same time as neighbor and fellow Underground Railroad activist Seth Coleman. Noted as “a man of puritanic habits and thought,” Eli Clark became an active abolitionist and Underground Railroad supporter. 

As an abolitionist, Clark was chosen vice-president of the organizational meeting of the Wayne County Anti-Slavery Society, held at the Presbyterian Church in Palmyra on December 1, 1837. 

In 1843, Eli Clark was one of the 6 outspoken abolitionist members of the Liberty Party that was "read out" of the Sodus Presbyterian Church.

In 1898, neighbor L.C. Coleman cited Eli Clark as an Underground Railroad “station master,” in his description of local Underground Railroad routes and houses. “It happened that one Sunday morning Mr. Clark brought a colored family to my father’s house [Seth Coleman’s house] that Mr. Cuyler had brought there the night before. Cooper took them to Cuyler’s. That Sunday my father took them to Sodus Point, putting them on a schooner for Canada.”  In other words, this family had gone from Griffith Cooper’s house in Williamson north along what is now Route 21 to the Cuyler home in Pultneyville and then east to Eli Clark and then to Seth Coleman, who took them to Sodus Point where they left for Canada.

Eli and Asenath Clark’s son Lewis H. Clark became a teacher and superintendent of the Sodus Academy. He also became an author, writing History of Churches in the Town of Sodus and Military History of Wayne County, New York.”  Eli Clark died October 7, 1871, age 86.  Services were held in the Presbyterian Church. He was buried with Asenath in Sodus Rural Cemetery. [







References:

Uncovering the Underground Railroad, Abolitionism, and African American Life in Wayne County, New York, 1820-1880 pp 277 - 278

YouTube Video