Prior to European settlement, the
Seneca name for the area was Ga-ne-o'-weh-ga-yat or "head of the stream". The area was first settled around 1802 at Angelica village. The town of Angelica was formed in 1805 from the town of
Leicester in
Livingston County, before Allegany County was formed. Angelica is the oldest town in Allegany County. The town hall is housed in the
Old Allegany County Courthouse, listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1972.
Belvidere was also listed in 1972, and the
Moses Van Campen House was listed in 2004.. In May 1796, Church accepted a mortgage on of land, a portion of the
Phelps and Gorham Purchase in present-day
Allegany County and
Genesee County, New York, against a debt owed to him by his friend
Robert Morris. After Morris failed to pay the mortgage, Church foreclosed, and his son
Philip Schuyler Church acquired the land in May 1800. Philip traveled to take possession of the land, with his surveyor
Moses Van Campen. A planned village was laid out with the plots and design to be reminiscent of
Paris, France (a circular drive in the center, streets coming to that drive to form a star, and five churches situated around the circle). In the center of the circular drive is the village park. Philip named his planned village
Angelica, after his mother. The historian John S. Minard wrote of the town's establishment in
Allegany County and Its People (1896):"The town was formed by an act of the Legislature, passed Feb. 25, 1805, and described as "being in width twelve miles," just that of the
Morris Reserve, and in length "from south to north extending thirty-four miles from the Pennsylvania line," taking in about two-thirds of the towns of Granger and Grove. It was taken from Leicester, and when erected was a part of Genesee county. (The village had been founded three or four years before, and named by Capt. Philip Church for his mother, Angelica, the eldest daughter of Gen. Philip Schuyler.
[2]"Philip left to marry Anna Matilda Stewart, daughter of General
Walter Stewart in Philadelphia. For their
honeymoon, they traveled first by boat, then by raft as far west as Bath, New York, then on horseback to the banks of the
Genesee River. They constructed a small house, soon to be
whitewashed and known as the "white house". In 1804, they had their
mansion built (known as
"Belvidere"). It still stands on the banks of the Genesee near Angelica, New York. ==Geography==