De Cou’s Stone House 1812-1950
The following is the inscription on the commemorative plaque at Decew House.
De Cou’s Stone House
1812-1950
This house of Capt. John Decou (The name was variously spelled by his relatives and descendants and latterly as Decew) was the headquarters of the British outpost under Lieut. James FitzGibbon to which came Laura Secord through the woods and swamps below the Niagara escarpment from Queenston on June 24, 1813 to warn of the American advance. Thus warned, the small British force along with it’s Local native allies captured, by bold stategy, at Beaverdams, the entire force with it’s commanding officer, Liet-Col. Charles G. Boerstler.
That action “The fight in the Beech Woods” was a turning point of the war. Capt. John Decou, a militia officer since 1809 had been taken prisoner after the capture of Niagara and Fort George on May 27, 1813. His wife and children lived here through the war. Their home was also a military post and supply point at various times. Capt. Decou escaped from captivity in 1814 to serve until the end of the war. He was present at Lundy’s Lane.
Born of English stock in Vermont in 1766, John Decou came to Upper Canada as a young United Empire Loyalist and became a pioneer farmer, fruit grower and industrialist. He married Catherine, daughter of Frederick Docksteter of Butler’s Ranger’s in 1796. They had eleven children. He died in 1855 at Decewsville in Haldimand, a second community of which he was the founder and which bore his name.
After the war he restored and developed this property and the area became the hamlet of Decew Town now Decew Falls. He advocated and became director of the first Welland Canal. When the route was changed leaving the mills without water power, he became an opponent of the scheme. Because of the diversion of water from his mills John Decou sold this place in 1834. The purchaser, David Griffiths, and his descendants occupied the house until 1942. It was acquired with the surrounding property by the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario for the extention of the Decew Falls Generating Station which originally had been created by the diversion to the stream of John Decou, of additional water from the third Welland Canal. In 1950 while unoccuppied, it was destroyed by fire believed to have been of incendiary orgin. It was preserved in it’s present state and this tablet erected in 1952 by the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario.
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