In 1803, when Charles Johnson and his brother Oliver left their family
in Cayuga County to move west to the Boston Valley, they brought their
pioneer spirit and strength with them to an untouched wilderness. The
valley was a serene meadow, and the hills surrounding it were perfect
for farming and raising cattle and sheep. As others came with their
families, the wilderness became tame, and the town grew as the community
built harness shops, cheese factories, sawmills, and schools. In the
years that followed, the town experienced both tragic and joyous events.
From John Love's murder in 1824, through a typhoid epidemic in 1840, the
birth of a world-famous opera singer in 1868, the construction in 1903
of the Buffalo and Susquehanna Railroad through town, the genesis of the
Boston Telephone Company in 1904, the emergence of the town's many
churches, and the building of three fire companies, Boston shaped itself
into the town it is today.