History & Culture · Western New York
Machias Starts With Maple Trees and Black Salts
Machias town history begins along Ischua Creek with Maine settlers, maple trees, Holland Company land, black salts, and lumber.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Machias has one of those origin stories that smells like woodsmoke if you sit with it for a minute. Major Timothy Butler and his family came from Maine in 1807 and settled along Ischua Creek.
The detail that sticks is the maple. Butler improved his land and tapped 1,400 maple trees. Other settlers arrived in 1810, buying land on credit from the Holland Company. To make money, they produced black salts from the hardwood forests, then later sold lumber for a better profit.
That is not a polished village-square story. It is a creek, a forest, maple work, debt, ash, and lumber. It explains why Machias feels tied to both Cattaraugus County’s hills and the older western New York land-company story.
A person driving through today may notice the school, the fire hall, the roads, or the low green spaces at a glance. Underneath that ordinary map is a harder beginning: Maine families, Ischua Creek, trees turned into sugar and salts, and a town that had to make money out of the woods before it could feel settled.