After graduating from Yale in 1787, Wadsworth traveled north to
Montreal, Quebec, in Canada to teach for a year. While away, his father, John Wadsworth, died and left his sons a substantial inheritance, estimated to be nearly $15,000 each (over $225,000 in modern terms). James moved back to Connecticut to manage his inheritance.
The Genesee Valley Upon his return to Connecticut in the spring of 1789, James and his brother
William were summoned to the home of their father's prominent and wealthy second cousin, Colonel
Jeremiah Wadsworth of
American Revolutionary War and
Continental Congress fame, in
Hartford. Jeremiah was considered one of the wealthiest men in Connecticut at the time and was interested in investing in, and financially backing, the efforts of
Oliver Phelps and
Nathaniel Gorham, who in the previous year purchased more than of land from the
Iroquois Six Nations in
Western New York State, known as the "
Phelps and Gorham Purchase." Jeremiah adjudged James as having "ambition," "clear mind," and a "tenacious will," and so wanted James and William to be
Land Agents on his behalf and to personally move to this virgin territory to survey and improve the land while promoting its settlement as well as manage his investment. In return, James and William were offered at his cost ($0.08 per acre) and reduced price for any further purchases, as well as a fee for the sale of Jeremiah’s land. James and his brother William accepted Jeremiah’s proposal and the following spring, in May 1790, 22-year-old James, his brother William, a black woman named Jenny, Gad Wadsworth, a relative who was in charge of the chattel, and several "axe men" headed west to the Genesee Valley. After several difficult weeks of travel by rivers, streams and over land by Indian trails, they arrived on the banks of the
Genesee River at a place the
Seneca nation called
Big Tree on June 9, 1790. They claimed the land and built a log cabin in a meadow near the east bank of the Genesee River about half a mile west of the present site of "The Homestead" at
Geneseo, New York. Beyond the settlements near
Fort Niagara, they were the first Europeans to establish a permanent settlement west of
Seneca Lake. Both James and his brother William had an innate sense of honor and integrity, even to a fault, as James was involved in two separate duels. James was a theorist, planner, colonist and lover of books while William was more down-to-earth, a working farmer, militia officer and a "man with the common touch." James was the more scholarly of the two, and had a shrewd mind for business and a talented negotiator, while William was a rugged hands-on type with a natural penchant for husbandry, agriculture and public duty. After the first trees were felled and the log cabin was completed at Big Tree (later renamed
Geneseo), Wadsworth immediately began the work for which he was to excel. Starting in the spring of 1791, James traveled to
New York City to begin advertising for the sale and settlement of Genesee Valley lands. He then traveled on to
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, visiting
Massachusetts, and returned to
Connecticut, all while frequently encouraging settlement by offering incentives for prospective settlers. In February 1796, James sailed to
England to promote settlement, but the dismal economic state of affairs in England prevented any headway. So he proceeded “...to examine the state of agriculture and view the manufacturing towns.” While in Europe, James went to the
Netherlands, and met with the proprietors of the
Holland Land Company, securing a future deal with them for lands west of the Genesee, once the company had secured the Indian title to these lands. In December 1796, James returned to New York, remaining in New York City and further soliciting settlers. Late the following summer, he returned to the Genesee Valley escorting several settlers. When James returned, he found his brother, William, had built a large proper
cobblestone house for their occupancy, quite different from the first small log cabin they had lived in for over six years. On August 28, 1797, James and William were the host for the
Treaty of Big Tree. This treaty effectively extinguished the Indian title to the land west of the
Genesee River and created ten
reservations for the Seneca in New York State. By 1800, James and William had acquired , most of which was leased to tenant farmers with the option to buy. William served as
Town supervisor for 21 years, and built around them an agricultural community based on enlightened principles of soil conservation, selective stock breeding, scientific agricultural methods, aesthetic preservation and public education.
Educator Wadsworth was known as a man who cherished education and learning throughout his life. He was heavily involved in the promotion of teacher training in Geneseo and starting a primary school there, seeking out the school master, the greater part of whose wages would he paid himself. In January 1829, he wrote former clerk,
Philo Fuller, a state assemblyman, to urge the passage of legislation to establish county high schools with well-educated teachers. James wrote to him: "To improve the common schools in this state, the employment of more able instructors is indispensable." He lobbied the State's superintendents of public instruction. In 1830, James was selected to represent
Livingston County at a New York State Corresponding Committee at
Utica, New York. He pressed two issues in particular: "Are Common Schools Worth the Money Paid?" And "Whether to Establish an Institute to Train Teachers." At another meeting in January 1831, he was elected vice president of the Eighth Senatorial District to investigate the need for institutions for teacher training. On March 11, 1833, James invested $6,000 of his own capital toward what he hoped would be a start toward the funding of school libraries. James created a trust to compile, print and distribute to the trustees of each common school in New York State courses of popular lectures "adapted to the capacities of children" which could be "conveniently read in half an hour." The lectures were to be on six subjects:
On the Application of Science for the Arts,
On Agriculture and Horticulture,
On the Principles of Legislation,
On Political Economy,
On Astronomy and Chemistry, and
On the Intellectual, Moral and Religious Instruction of the Youth of this State by Means of Common Schools. He also underwrote the cost of publishing and distributing John Nicholson's ''The Farmer's Assistant'' and John O. Taylor's
The District School in 1834. In 1838, New York Governor
George W. Patterson wrote, “In regard to the origin of the School District Library System of this state, I will say to you, that the whole credit belongs to the Honorable James Wadsworth, of Geneseo..." Patterson insisted that he had just performed his "duty" to obtain a bill permanently earmarking funds for school libraries, over what he considered violent objections. Rather, "the credit of all that has been done belongs to the praise-worthy efforts of Mr. Wadsworth." Wadsworth wanted a library "open and free for the gratuitous use as well of the inhabitants of the County of Livingston" and also wanted a new public library to be located in Geneseo. He privately funded the Geneseo Atheneum in 1842, which opened with books, scientific equipment and mineral specimens, which were to be available to all. He opened this library to promote "the moral and intellectual instruction of the young and the diffusion of science and literature." His own books and specimens became the basis for it and the library/museum was later renamed the
Wadsworth Library. ==Personal life==