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300 - CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO.


denominations, the Friends, with John R. Nelson in charge; First Methodist Episcopal, N. D. Stafford, pastor; Methodist Protestant, Dr. A. L. Reynolds; Church of Christ and African Methodist Episcopal. These churches are all handsome edifices, and each denomination has auxiliaries that are splendidly helping in all good causes.


MUNICIPAL HISTORY.


On August 9, 1873, the corporate limits of the town were extended to meet the growing population. The incorporation of the town dates from 1850, at which time Mr. Morris was appointed as the first mayor. He served about a month and then resigned, being succeeded by Jacob Theobold. Owing to the fact that the early records of the town are missing, it has not been possible to secure a complete list of the mayors of the town, but the following list is practically complete: M. Morris, Jacob Theobold, John Bridwell, Jacob Lair, C. P. Gallaher, David Giffin (died in office, 1881), W. H. Dakin, A. M. Griffith, J. L. Johnson, C. L. Gallaher, Martin Kennedy, A. N. Dowden, Will C. Dakin, A. N. Dowden, George C. Barns and W. H. Dakin, the present incumbent. The town council is now composed of Harry Ort (president), John Butterfield, Yeazle, William Pavey, Kyle Glass and W. H. Barlow. The other town officers- are as follow : P. H. Sparks, clerk; Henry Lewellen, treasurer; B. F. Hartley, marshal; Dr. F. G. Lightner, health officer.


REESVILLE


The town of Reesville, originally known as Cross Roads, was platted by Moses Reese in the summer of 1857, the plat being recorded on July 11 of that year. The town plat originally consisted of twenty acres and "seventeen and seventy-five hundredths poles" of land, divided into twenty-five lots, lying along the railroad, with the Urbana highway running fhrough it as a cross street. The town is located in Richland township, two and a half miles west of Sabina.


A postoffice was established soon after the town was laid out, with J. E. Barr as the first postmaster. Jonathan and Henry Ruckers were the first merchants, having established a store here before the town was laid out, in 1857. Other early merchants were Samuel Reed, Baron Douglass, William Wilson and William Lyons. Christian Rhonemus started a store in 1858 and members of this family were engaged in business in the town for many years. In 1858 Robert McClellan, a tailor, established himself, /in his trade in the town, but evidently he did not stay long. No other man has ever ventured the establishment of a similar business. Alfred Bloone operated a grist-mill and Alexander Sellars a saw-mill for many years.


The town gradually grew in importance and, according to the census of 1880, was then a flourishing village of one hundred and fifty population. At that time the following enterprises were to be found : Four general stores, a drug store, two saloons, two blacksmith shops, one shoe shop, postoffice, depot, one church, and one school building. In 1915 the village interests include the following: Heirominus & Son, general merchandise; John Weller, groceries; Auber Jenkins and Charles Kingery, barbers; A. A. George and Arnold Conklin, blacksmiths; Brindle & Ewing, elevator; E. T. Severs and James Crawford, carpenters and contractors; J. A. Hatfield, paperhangers and painters; L. J. Staubus & Sons, plasterers.


The postoffice is in the store of Heironimus & Son, and about seventy families now receive their mail at this office. The village enjoys six mails daily. The Methodist Protestants have the only church, the present pastor being Rev. John Mercer. A fine school building was erected in 1912 and four teachers are now employed. Two vans haul the children in from the surrounding community. The Junior Order of United American Mechanics is the only fraternal order in the village.


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Reesville has station stops on the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern and the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley railroads.


MELVIN.


The village of Melvin is located on the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley railroad, in the extreme western part of Richland township. It has never been platted.. It came into existence after the railroad came through the township in 1883. Jacob Baker and Albert Haines opened the first store. Other merchants have been George Howard, Philip Cahill and Daniel Baker. It is essentially a shipping point for farm products, and the two elevators take care of several thousand dollars' worth of grain and live stock annually. There are now three stores in the village, operated by J. W. Channel, F. W. Shrack and E. E. Howard, respectively. J. W. Channel also owns an elevator and deals largely in grain, wire fencing and posts, coal, etc. The firm of Ewing & Custis operate the other elevator and also deal in grain, fencing materials, coal, etc.


The largest industry in the town is the Melvin Tile and Brick Company, which was incorporated in 1909 and started business the same year. The principal stockholders are J. W. Channel, F. J. Pendry, Valentine Kaufman, C. E. Custis, Albert Custis, Gertrude Channel, Alexander Wilson and G. W. Wade. The capital stock of the company is ten thousand dollars and the annual output of the factory averages five thousand dollars. F. J. Pendry is president of the company and J. W. Channel is secretary-treasurer. J. W. and Gertrude Channel own ninety-three per cent. of the stock. C. E. Custis being the next largest stockholder. Walter Channel is the general manager of the factory. Tile comprises most of the output, only a small amount of brick being manufactured. Just as this volume went to press, information is received that the Melvin brick and tile plant was completely destroyed by fire on the night of August 9, 1915. The loss was fourteen thousand dollars, with insurance of only two thousand dollars.


The postmaster is F. W. Shrack, who is also the station agent for the Pennsylvania. Henry Denica is the Baltimore & Ohio agent. The village blacksmith is James Wright, while John Ford Is the only carpenter. The population is in the neighborhood of seventy-five.


CHAPTER XXV.


UNION TOWNSHIP.


Union township is bounded on the west by Chester and Adams townships; on the north by Liberty; on the northeast by Wilson; on the east by Richland and Wayne; on the southeast by Green; on the south by Washington, and on the southwest by Vernon.


East from Wilmington to the township line, the land is level, but the southeast portion of the township is somewhat undulating. Following the source of Cowan's creek southwest from Burtonville, the land is rough and broken. Between Cowan's creek and Wilmington, the land is more level, but along Todd's fork, north and west of Wilmington, it is undulating and well-drained. For the most part, the soil of the township is a dark loam, extending to some depth, and is particularly adapted to the culture of grain and grasses. Along Cowan's and Lytle's creeks, the soil is of a mixture of dark and yellow loam and is especially good for wheat. Along Todd's fork the soil is a mixture of loam and clay, and the bottom lands, although small, are very valuable on account of fhe richness of the soil.


In its primeval state, the portion of the township east of Wilmington was covered with a dense growth of ash, hickory, elm, oak, some maple, beech and other woods. Along Cowan's and Lytle's creeks, the growth of timber was largely of walnut, poplar, ash, elm, oak, beech and sugar tree. The bottoms and hills along Todd's fork were originally covered with oak, walnut, cherry, linn, hickory, ash, sugar, hackberry and buckeye, with a dense undergrowth.


STREAMS.


Todd's fork, Dutch creek. Lytle's creek and Cowan's creek are the main watercourses of Union township, supplying a good drainage system and also good water for stock and other purposes. Lytle's creek flows in a westerly direction and is just south of Wilmington, which is situated on its branches. Cowan's creek resembles Lytle's creek very closely as to soil and timber. Dutch creek is a small stream which empties into Todd's fork in Adams township and which runs across the northwest corner of Union township in a southwesterly direction.


Todd's fork is the largest and principal water course of Union township. Its headwaters are mostly in the eastern and northeastern parts of Union township, although some are still farther north and east. In the early days the grazing along the streams was excellent on account of the thick growth of shrubbery and grasses. The bottoms were covered with spice• bushes and pea vines, the former of which the pioneers used for tea and the latter for feed for the cattle and hogs. White clover was also very abundant and proved a great aid to the pioneers as feed for their stock. Todd's fork is the only stream in the township which produces any stone, and from this stream it has been quarried for many years. The stone is of good quality and easily obtained and many of the early settlers used it for the rude chimneys on their cabins. It was later used for larger residences and outbuildings and also in the construction of roads.


In 1803 the Legislature passed an act establishing about sixteen or eighteen state roads, but only a few of them had been opened up in 1806. Up to that time, no road had been opened into Union township, but each community had Its own paths of travel, made by blazing or marking trees. One of the trails from Todd's fork to Chillicothe


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crossed that stream near Center meeting house, passed through the woods to Van Meter's and thence to the Scioto valley. The township is now a network of excellent roads and the fraveler today would little guess that they were at one time nothing but blazed trails through a dense forest.


PIONEERS.


One of the very earliest pioneers of Clinton county was Timothy Bennett, who came to the Northwest territory in 1800 and, in the middle of March, 1801, settled one and one-half miles east of where Wilmington now Stands. He was born in New Jersey, near Philadelphia, on January 27, 1765, and little is known of his early history except that he was reared on a farm. After reaching maturity, he moved to Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, where he was married, in 1789, to Elizabeth Hoblitt, the daughter of Michael Hoblitt, a native of Germany and the ancestors of the Hoblitts of Clinton and Greene counties. In the fall of 1789. Mr. Bennett, in company with his wife's father and family; went down the' Ohio river to Limestone, now Maysville, Kentucky. Although fhe Indians were exceedingly troublesome at that time, the party managed to land in safety. After exploring the country in various directions, they finally located at a point near the present town of Versailles, in Woodford county, and here Mr. Bennett lived for ten years. In the fall of 1790, Mr. Bennett joined the expedition of General Harmar, which rendezvoused at Cincinnati, then a small village, whence they marched north to old Chillicothe. Mr. Bennett was honorably discharged near this point and sent home, having become too lame to travel on account of a cancer on his leg.


In the fall of 1799, Mr. Bennett purchased about two hundred acres of land between the Little Miami and Scioto rivers. The land was represented to him to lie between the Little Miami and Caesar's creek and he thought it to be a part of the country through which he had passed with Harmar about nine years before. Mr. Bennett at once began to make arrangements to settle the new land and. with his family, started from Kentucky in the spring of 1800. His family consisted of his wife and six children, two sons and four daughters. Their only means of transportation was pack-horses and these were provided to carry Mrs. Bennett and the youngest child, Nathaniel, the bedding, wearing apparel, provisions. agricultural tools, cooking utensils and the small children who were unable to walk. The stock was driven behind the pack-horses by the larger children. Mr. Bennett carried a rifle and kept the family supplied with food during the journey.


Upon arriving in the Centerville neighborhood, he found his brother-in-law, Soboston Hoblitt, some of his old friends from New Jersey and some from Kentucky. It appeared, however, that none of these friends could guide him to his newly purchased land, and he was finally directed to a Mr. McFarland, who lived on the Little Miami and who was familiar enough with the lay of the land to serve as his guide. After having found his land, Mr. Bennett returned to the Centerville neighborhood and, in January, 1801, he came with his brother-in-law, John Hoblitt, and his four eldest children, to erect his new home. Ile then returned for Mrs. Bennett and the other children and the family took up their new abode in the wilderness.


After a most eventful and successful career as a pioneer. Mr. Bennett passed away in 1827, after having made his will in 1823. He is believed to have been twice elected to the office of county commissioner of Clinton county, but ceased to fill this position in 1815.


To Mr. and Mrs. Bennett, twelve children were born, three sons and nine daughters, Michael, Phoebe, Mary, Catharine. Sarah, Nathaniel, Amy, Margaret, Keziah, Eunice, Jemima and Timothy.


George Haworth, another prominent pioneer of Clinton county, was born in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, In 1748, the son of James Haworth, a native of Pennsylvania, and the grandson of George Haworth, who came from Lancashire, England, with William


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Penn in 1699. George Haworth, the subject of this mention, moved with his parents to near Winchester, Virginia, where they lived on a mountain range called Apple Pie ridge. Here he grew to manhood and married Susannah Dillon. They moved to North Carolina, settling on the Yadkin river near the home of Daniel Boone. Hearing Boone's fine description of Kentucky, Mr. and Mrs. Haworth joined his colony and, on September 25, 1771, left their homes and started from that state. Upon crossing the Alleghanies, the party was attacked by Indians and several of them slain. This so disheartened the remainder of the party that some of them went back about forty miles and settled on Clinch river, but Mr. Haworth and his brother returned to North Carolina, where they remained for twelve years. They then made another attempt to settle in Kentucky, but, finding the Indians still troublesome, they went south into Tennessee and built a new home in what is now Greene county in that state. The family lived here until 1803, when they moved to Ohio and settled on Todd's fork, where Mr. Haworth had purchased seventeen hundred and fifty acres of land. Mr. Haworth is said to have been the second settler in Union township and here he built a grist-mill Eight of his sons also cleared and opened up farms in this county. George Haworth continued to reside in this county until 1825, when, several of his sons having moved to Illinois, he also sold out and moved to that state, having settled at Quaker Point, near Georgetown, in Vermilion county. Mr. Haworth was a member of the society of Friends and, in the latter years of his life, a minister in this society. About 1807 or 1808, he went on horseback to Baltimore, as a representative from Miami quarterly meeting, to attend the yearly meeting.


Nathan Linton was born in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, January 17, 1778, the son of Samuel and Elizabeth (Harvey) Linton. Samuel Linton, the son of Benjamin and Jane (Cowgal) Linton, was born on December 17, 1741, in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, where he grew to manhood and learned the trade of a weaver. He was married on May 10, 1775, to Elizabeth Harvey, who was born on March 8, 1748, and to them were born six children, Samuel, Nathan, David, Jane and Elizabeth, twins, and James. Nathan Linton visited Ohio in 1801 and, upon returning to Pennsylvania, induced his father to emigrate. The mother and one son, Samuel, having died, the father and the other five children moved to Ohio in 1802, arriving in Waynesville on the last day of May. In 1803 Samuel Linton bought five hundred acres of land on Todd's fork and his two sons, Nathan and David, took charge of this land, while the father remained on the land at Waynesville. In 1805 all of the family moved to the Todd's fork farm.


Nathan Linton was married on January 31, 1806, to Rachel Smith, the daughter of Seth Smith, of Walnut creek, Highland county. The Smith family came from Greene county, Tennessee. To Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Linton were born twelve children, Elizabeth, Abi. Samuel, Seth, David, James, Mary, Nathan, Benjamin, Cyrus, Ruth and Jane.


Nathan Linton began his career as a surveyor in Clinton county in 1803 and did much of the surveying between the Miami and Scioto rivers, also directing the claimants to their lands. At the organization of the county in 1810, he was appointed county surveyor, which position he filled for twenty years, refusing to be re-appointed at the end of that time. He was much interested in fruit growing and sheep raising. Mr. Linton was a member of the Friends church, to which the family had belonged for many generations. His father was a well-educated man and a great admirer of Thomas Jefferson. After a long and useful life, Nathan Linton died at his home in Clinton county on February 11, 1858, in his eighty-first year.


Robert Eachus was born on November 23, 1763, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Robert and Mary (Griffith) Eachus, the former of whom was an inn-keeper. They were the parents of six children, of whom Robert was the fourth. Robert Eachus, Sr., died when his son, Robert, Jr., was a mere lad and the boy was reared by some relatives in the country. He learned the trade of a wagon-maker and worked at this business for many years.


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On November 20, 1788, Mr. Eachus was married in Frederick county, Virginia, to Phopbe Thornburgh and, shortly after, they moved to Martinsburg, Berkeley county, Virginia, where he opened a wagon shop. In 1794, Mr. Eachus, with a companion, started west in search of a new location, but in western Pennsylvania they found themselves in the midst of the "Whiskey Insurrection," and, thinking it unsafe to go farther, fhey returned home. In 1798 Mr. Eachus emigrated to Tennessee and settled in Washington county, where he resided for four years. In 1802 he started for Ohio, arriving at Waynesville on June 1, of that year. He lived at Waynesville but a short time and then moved to Clear creek, in Warren county. In the fall of 1804 he moved to a farm of one hundred and sixty acres, which he had purchased in the Center neighborhood. One of the terms of the purchase was that he should build a grist-mill upon the land. which he did and which proved of great benefit to the early settlers. He was elected justice of the peace in Warren county and filled this position until about 1806, when Clinton county was formed and his land was in the new county. However, he was appointed one of the justices of Chester township, Clinton county, and later, on March 28, 1810, he was appointed recorder for the county. In May, 1805, a meeting was held at the home of Mr. Eachus for the purpose of establishing a Friends church in the neighborhood. Accordingly, a house was built of unhewn logs, without floor or dust, and meetings were held there twice a week. This was probably the first house of worship in Clinton county.


Robert Eachus and wife were the parents of four children, three daughters and one son, Mary, Betsy, Julianna and David. Robert Eachus had a birthright in the Friends church, but, on account of his fighting in 'the Revolutionary War, he was expelled from the church. However, some years before his death, his membership was restored. He died on March 24, 1829.


Mahlon Haworth, the son of George Haworth, was born in Frederick county, Virginia, in 1775. He made an exploring tour of Ohio in 1800, and, being well pleased with the country, came in 1804 with his family and John and James Wright and their families. from Tennessee to southern Ohio. They stopped at Waynesville, which was then a popular stopping place for emigrants, and, in a very short time, settled on Todd's fork. They arrived late in the fall, but temporary shelters were put up to protect them from the cold until more substantial houses could be erected. Mahlon Haworth and his wife were the parents of eleven children, Rebecca, George D., Ezekiel, Susannah, Mary, Phoebe, Mahlon, John, Elijah, James and Richard. Eight of these children grew to maturity and were valuable citizens in Clinton county.


Mrs. Haworth was a devout member of the Friends church and Mr. Haworth was also possessed of a deep religious feeling. Many official positions were urged upon him, but he never accepted any. He died on March 23, 1850, at his home in Clinton county.


Nathan Hines came to Ohio from North Carolina early in the year 1804 and settled on Dutch creek, where he had purchased land from James Murray. He set to work at once to build a cabin, which was twelve feet square, and into which he moved his family. When Hur Hodgson and his family came to this locality, not having a house built, they lived for several weeks in this small cabin with the Hines family, which shows the warm hospitality of the early settlers.


Stephen Mendenhall, an Englishman, bought one hundred and forty-two acres of land from James Murray on February 4, 1812, for two hundred dollars. He had three brothers, Aaron, Mordecai and Moses.


Isaac Perkins was born on June 30, 1762, and married Phena Leonard, who was born on March 14, 1763. In November, 1802. he started from North Carolina to Ohio with his family and arrived at Waynesville on January 8, 1803, settling in Clinton county on March 4, 1804.


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Hur Hodgson was born In Guilford county, North Carolina, May 16, 1767, and came to Clinton county in 1804. He was first married to a sister of Judge Isaac Thornburgh, and later to Achsah Dillon, the daughter of Jesse Dillon. He was the father of ten children, Mary, Isaac, Jesse, Jonathan, Sohn, Elizabeth, Hannah, Ira, Nathan and Joel. He bought one hundred acres of land in 1804 from Miller & Studebaker. Francis Hester accompanied the Hodgson family to this county.


Dr. John E. Greer came to Waynesville in 1822 and remained there until 1837, when he moved to Indiana, where he died. He was married to a Miss Jeffries, sister of Job Jeffries, Sr.


Samuel Vestal was born on October 26, 1796, in Chatham county, North Carolina, the son of John Vestal, who came to the Portsmouth neighborhood in 1799. In the spring of 1803 John Vestal moved to Waynesville and soon afterward settled on Todd's fork, where he died in 1804. Samuel Vestal was married to Edith Ballard on April 3, 1825. She was brought to Ohio by her parents in 1803, when but three months old. John Vestal, the father of Samuel, made his will on July 10, 1804, and to his son he left two hundred acres of land.


Spencer Ballard was born on August 29, 1771, the son of Moorman Ballard, who was born on May 15, 1747, and died on April 27, 1821. On December 7, 1796, Spencer. Ballard was married to Rebecca Haworth, the daughter of George Haworth, and to them were born twelve children, Amos, Benajah, Lydia, Edith, Minerva, John, Olive, Jordan, Phoebe, Rebecca, Mary and one who died unnamed.


On November 4, 1804, Joseph Doan came to Clinton county from Chatham county, North Carolina, and purchased two hundred' and thirty-eight acres of land. He was born on October 23, 1759, and died on May 28, 1838. He was the father of twelve children, Thomas, John, Ruth, William, Elizabeth, Joseph, Jesse, Jonathan, Jacob, Rachel, Elisha and Mary. This family was accompanied by John Stout and his family, who purchased one hundred and sixty-five acres of land.


Jesse Hughes, Sr., a native of Berkeley county, Virginia, was one of the first associate judges of Clinton county. At an early age, he was brought to Chester county, Pennsylvania, by his parents and, in 1784, came with his uncle to Jefferson county, Kentucky, being seventeen years old at the time. He was one of the colony which made the first settlement on the present site of Louisville, which was then called Hughes Station. Jesse Hughes was a soldier and served under Gen. George Rogers Clark in 1786 against the Indians. He came to Clinton county in March, 1805, and settled two miles southeast of Wilmington. At the organization of Clinton county, in 1810, Mr. Hughes was elected one of the three associate judges and held this office for twenty-eight consecutive years. The first term of court was held in his barn. He was married, in 1790 in Kentucky, to Elizabeth Drake and to them were born nine children, David, Delilah, Jesse, Jr., Catherine, Jemima, Elizabeth, Charles DI, Mary and Morgan. After the death of his wife, Elizabeth, Judge Hughes was married again, his second wife surviving him.


Joseph Roberds, generally called "Squire Roberds," was born on Broad river, in Union district, South Carolina, February 4, 1766. He was married, at the age of twenty-two, to Anna Randall, although they were not married according to the rules of the Friends church and, for that reason, were expelled from the church. Mrs. Roberds later joined the Christian church, but Mr. Roberds never joined any other religious body. On account of slavery, Mr. Roberds left South Carolina in 1804 and came to Waynesville, Ohio, where he remained through the summer. In 1805 he settled on Lytle's creek, about three miles below the present site of Wilmington. In the following year, he purchased a small tract of land on Cowan's creek and moved to it. At the organization of Clinton county, he was appointed a justice of the peace of Richland township. He also held the offices of collector of state revenue and county tax, sheriff and county commissioner.


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In the fall of 1833, he and his wife moved to Indiana, settling near Jonesboro in Grant county. His wife died in 1850 and he, in July, 1863, in his ninety-eighth year.


Azel Walker was born in Virginia in 1774, the son of Mordecai Walker. He was married in Virginia to Hannah Jackson and to them were born ten children, William, Josiah J., Lewis M., Joseph S., Rachel, Ruth, Elijah, Abel, Betsey Ann and Samuel. The family came to Warren county in 1804 and, leaving his wife and children at Waynesville, Mr. Walker came to Clinton county and erected a cabin, moving the family here in 1805.


Henry Babb came from Frederick county, Virginia, to Ohio in 1806 and settled on two hundred and fifty acres of land which his wife had inherited from her father. He and his wife were the parents of five sons and five daughters, Peter, Thomas, Henry, Azel, Sampson, Mary, Rebecca, Rachel, Hannah and Lydia. Henry Babb was one of the first county commissioners of Clinton county and served in this office two years.


William Venard was born probably in Pennsylvania and, when a child, was taken to Kentucky by his parents. In 1802 he came with his father to Ohio and purchased fifty acres of land. He was one of the first justices of the peace of Richland township. In the War of 1812, he served in Tupper's brigade as a private and was wounded at the siege of Ft. Meigs. He died near Kokomo, Indiana.


Moses Frazier was born on August 4, 1791, in Frederick county, Virginia, and was taken by his parents to Greene county, Tennessee, in the following year. In 1806 the family moved to Clinton county and located in the Dover neighborhood. Moses Frazier was married in 1813 to Lydia Pusey, who died in 1823, leaving five small children. Mr. Frazier was married a second time, in 1825, to Elizabeth Farr, who survived him. He died at his old home on January 17, 1874, and was buried in the burying-ground at Dover.


Jacob Haines, the father of Zimri Haines, was born on February 19, 1778, in Pennsylvania. When a boy, he moved with his parents to Guilford county, North Carolina, and was married there, in 1800, to Mary Leonard. He came to Ohio in 1803, stopping for a short time in Waynesville, and in 1804 located in Union township, Clinton county. He died here on June 17, 1854.


Thomas Rich was born on July 4, 1785. in Virginia. When two years of age, he was Wren to North Carolina, where he lived until 1809. In that year, he came to Clinton county and located on Lytle's creek, west of Wilmington.


Hezekiah Hiatt was born on March 23. 1786. in Guilford county, North Carolina. He came to Union township, Clinton county, in 1808 and was married to Ann Perkins, the daughter of Isaac Perkins, in July, 1810.


John Haines came to Ohio from North Carolina in 1808 and his first residence was a cabin on the south side of Dutch creek. Job Haines had a blacksmith shop on the south and west side of the branch, and Joseph Haines had a still-house on Dutch creek. Their father was Joshua. Haines, of Pennsylvania. Jacob Haines and his brothers were first cousins of Noah Haines, an early settler of Waynesville. John Haines, who built the first mill at Waynesville. was also a cousin.


Gayer Starbuck was born on the island of Nantucket in 1777, the son of Hezekiah and Mary Starbuck. Hezekiah Starbuck was born on the island of Nantucket on April 10, 1749, and was captain of a whaling vessel for several years. In 1771 he was married and in 1785 moved with his family to Guilford county, North Carolina, where his wife died in 1806. He died in Clinton county in 1830. Gayer Starbuck learned the trade of a blacksmith in North Carolina and followed this trade for many years. In 1799 he was married to Susannah Dillon. the daughter of Jesse Dillon, Sr., and in 1807 they came to Greene county, Ohio. In 1810 they settled on the farm which remained their home the rest of their lives. They were the parents of ten children, five sons and five daughters. She died in 1861 and he in 1866.


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Latham Starbuck, a brother of Gayer, came from Tennessee to Union township, Clinton county, in 1811, with his family. He cleared land and built a cabin and later purchased fifty acres in Wilson township, which he traded for one hundred acres in Union township He lived upon this farm the remainder of his life, dying about 1871.


John McWhorter was born in Wilmington, Delaware, and came from Loudoun county, Virginia, to Ohio in 1809. In the spring of 1810 he came to Union township, Clinton county, and lived in an old school house until he could build a cabin for himself. He died on December 24, 1856.


Joseph Whinery was born on February 27, 1787, in York county, Pennsylvania, and came to Ohio about 1810. In the spring of 1813, he returned to Pennsylvania and, in October of that year, came back to Ohio with his brother, Thomas, and Robert Way, the well-known teacher. They settled in Union township on Dutch creek. He was married in 1814 to Lydia Perkins and to them were born ten children, five sons and five daughters. He moved to Indiana in 1837 and died there on April 24, 1873.


Mordecai Walker, a minister of the Friends church and the father of Azel Walker, heretofore mentioned, bought a tract of one thousand acres north of Wilmington, which he divided among his four children, Lydia, Elizabeth, Azel and William. Mordecai Walker came to Clinton county about 1811 or 1812, although some of his children came in 1805 or 1806. He died in this county about 1833.


Col. Thomas Gaddis was born on December 28, 1744, and came to Clinton county in September, 1814, after having received a deed for three hundred and twenty-five acres of land on April 21, 1810. He came to Ohio with a party, coming down the Ohio river in boats. The first winter the party lived in a cabin belonging to Henry Babb, a relative of Colonel Gaddis. Col. Thomas Gaddis served in the Revolutionary War under General Washington and took great pride in his commission and discharge, which were signed by "the father of his country." Colonel Gaddis was married to Hannah Rice, who died on February 4, 1835, in her eighty-eighth year. He died on June 10, 1834.


In 1802 James Moon and his wife emigrated from North Carolina to Ohio, she stopping temporarily in Waynesville, while he went into the wilderness to select a location. He selected land on Todd's fork, four miles north of the present site of Wilmington. Here he erected a cabin and his wife joined him in 1804. They had no children and both lived to a ripe old age, dying on the old farm.


John Leonard was born in Guilford county, North Carolina, and was married to Lydia Starbuck in 1805. Early in 1806 they started for Ohio and located in Union township, Clinton county, on Todd's fork. They were the parents of fourteen children, thirteen of whom grew to maturity. John Leonard died on December 7, 1870, at the age of eighty-eight, and his wife died on May 30, 1874, at the age of ninety-one.


George McManis came from Kentucky to Ohio in 1807 and settled about three miles southeast of the present site of Wilmington. At the organization of the county in 1810, he was appointed one of the associate judges of the county. One of his sons, John, was at one time auditor and recorder of Clinton county, and another one, George, was at one time associate judge of the county.


The first families to settle in the southeastern part of Union township were the McKenzies and the Spencers. These families came from Kentucky. Although a feud existed between the families, they assisted each other in erecting cabins and clearing, land. The Spencer family was of a rather reckless• character, but proved to be industrious and valuable citizens. James Spencer served under General Harrison in the Indian war of 1811, carrying provisions for the army.

Isaac Wilson came to Ohio from Kentucky and built his cabin on the north side of Cowan's creek. He was probably the first to settle on that side of the creek south of Wilmington. He was closely followed by John and Charles McGrew, Thomas Wright and others.


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About the time of. the War of 1812 and soon after, Nathan Stalker, Isaac Stout, Adam Reynard, Caleb, Joshua and Haines Moore located south of Lytle's creek in Union township. J. J. Lacy, John Jacks, John and Samuel Martin, emigrants from Virginia, settled along Cowan's creek and Indian run in the vicinity of Burtonsville.


TOWNSHIP ORGANIZATION.


On August 21, 1813, at a special meeting of the county commissioners of Clinton county, Union township was organized from the three original townships, Vernon, Chester and Richland. It received its name from its formation of the union of these subdivisions. Its boundary was described as follows: "Beginning at an elm in Enos Clevenger's land, marked three hacks and a blaze; thence running east three and one-half miles to a black ash marked for a corner as before, easterly corner of said township; thence north three and one-half miles to a large hickory, corner of the division line between Richland and Green townships; thence same course four and one-half miles to two elms, northerly corner to said township; thence west seven miles to a large beech, westerly corner to said township; thence south eight miles, southerly corner to said township; thence east three and one-half miles to the place of beginning. The first election ordered to be held September 10, 1813."


MILLS.


The first mill in the township, and probably the first in the county, was built on Todd's fork in 1805 by Robert Eachus. This mill has been heretofore mentioned in the short sketch of the life of Robert Eachus. About 1805 or 1806, Mahlon Haworth also built a grist-mill on Todd's fork. This mill was run by both horse and water power. George Haworth built a grist-mill on this stream in an early day, just west of the Xenia pike.


During the War of 1812, a saw- and grist-mill was erected on Lytle's creek by William Butler, one mile from the village of Wilmington. Mr. Butler later sold the mill to David Stratton, who operated it for fifteen or twenty years. The dam was destroyed by high waters and the mill abandoned, later being entirely swept away by the water.


Nathan Stalker built a grist-mill on Lytle's creek in 1815 and later sold his land and mill to Joshua Moore. Mr. Moore operated the mill for many years, when his brother, Haines Moore, purchased the enterprise. He conducted the mill for some time, but the operations ceased many years ago.


Peyton Burton, a well-known millwright, built a number of mills in Clinton county and also remodeled several. He built a steam grist-mill just south of Wilmington and, as there was no mill of this kind in this section of the county, it did an extensive business. He also built a steam grist-mill on Cowan's creek and later built one run by water power at Burtonville. The latter mill was sold to Thomas Custis and afterward was destroyed by fire.


The following are the officers of Vernon township in 1915: Trustees, R. J. Humphreys, Russell A. Sewell and W. F. Hildebrecht; clerk, G. H. Kelley; treasurer, H. W. Baugh. Population, twelve hundred and twenty-six.


CLARKSVILLE.


Clarksville is situated in the western part of Vernon township, on the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley railroad. It was laid out April 27, 1816, by William Hadley, proprietor. The surveying was done by Peyton West. The town, as originally laid out, consisted of forty-four lots, of the usual size, four poles front and eight poles back. Marrow's addition was laid out about 1840. In the year 1858, the boundaries were extended, taking in a quantity of the adjoining land, the survey being made by James Linton. The land thus taken in was divided into lots and numbered as outlots; a plat was made, with streets, etc., of the whole, but the work was irregularly done and the territory thus added cannot be considered as an addition to the town.


310 - CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO.


The lots composing the original town were dry, with gravel deposit beneath, making excellent natural drainage for cellars, but the land adjoining, almost up to the original town, was not a very inviting locality for settlers at that time. It is situated on the banks of Todd's fork, which winds around through the bottom lands, and the waters, crossing the bottoms during heavy rains, made pools and bayous, which did not give promise of ever being fit for cultivation. Then all these bottoms were covered with timber, with a heavy growth of underbrush and vines. The East fork ran on the south side of the town, but is a more rapid stream and does not leave its channel until it passes the town.


Samuel T. Louden built the first cabin and opened a hotel or tavern. Keeping tavern in early times was hardly the thing it is in the present day. It consisted in furnishing the traveler with the rough and substantial fare common to all settlers—a bed in a loft or in an addition in which to sleep, and ,last, but not least, with plenty of whiskey to keep up his spirits and to act as an antidote or preventive of malarial poison, so common in new countries. Mr. Louden sold his hotel to Joseph Wysong. John Oxley built the second house in the village in the year 1815. Ephraim Kibby moved to Clarksville in 1817. He was a tanner by trade, and was the first to engage in that business in the village. Kibby bought out the stock of William Smalley, who had a small tannery west of Clarksville. Kibby was a member of the Baptist church, was thrifty and prosperous in his business, and at the time of his death, which occurred in 1876, was well known in Clinton county. John Keenan and Joseph Thompson were among the early settlers of Clarksville.


The first saddler and harness-maker was John Hadley. Hadley made his saddletrees out of dogwood forks. He, with Eli Hale, opened the second store in the village. Afterward he dealt in the pork trade and dealt largely in cattle. His personal efforts and the general business carried on and planned by him formed a very important part in making the town the prosperous business center it was in the early times. Elisha Kirk was the first hatter. Eli Helmich and Abram Nicholson were among the first blacksmiths. Jacob Longstreth opened the first store in the village. Among the first carpenters were Samuel T. Louden, James Abbott and William Michael. Michael afterward became judge at Lebanon. The first shoemaker was Joseph Wysong. Samuel Hyde was the first cabinet-maker; his shop was an old building which was afterward used as a school house. William Slater carried on the business of cabinet-maker and later was succeeded by J. Thomas, E. Titus and Alfred Cast. John McCarty was the first cooper. The immense pork trade of Clarksville made coopering a very important business in the village, and there were several cooper shops running at the same time and all doing a good business. James Coyle was among the first coopers. William Dogget carried on a cooper business at the corner of Main and Second streets. Isaiah Wilkerson, at a later date, ran a shop near where the Baptist church stood.


John Kelley was probably the first tailor. This was also a very important business in the early times, and tailor shops have been carried on by Harrison Compton, S. H. Wilson, K. S. Kearns and others. A business which has disappeared from smaller towns was hat making. This business was carried on in Clarksville in early times, first by Richard Lackey, afterward by Mr. Black. John Dempsey was also an early hatter. He served in the Mexican War and was constable of Vernon township for many years. He was crippled by palsy and was a peculiar character.


The first wagon-maker was George Harris. Samuel French was an early stonemason. James Marrow was the first and only distiller. Joseph Wysong was the first postmaster of the village. Jacob Longstreth was the first physician.


Soon after its establishment or laying out, Clarksville was well represented in the trades. Merchants, tanners, tailors, wagon-makers, blacksmiths, carpenters, hatters, harness-makers and coopers were making the village lively and business like. But at a later day, about the year 1840-44, the town assumed its greatest importance, the pork


CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO - 311


trade at that time placing it on a flourishing basis. Among the most noted pork packers were: Hale & Cook, who had their slaughter house on the East fork, just above the bridge, on the Goshen pike; John Hadley and James Lindsay. Hogs were driven from all parts of Clinton county, as well as from Highland and Ross counties. The hogs slaughtered in those days were not the improved breeds we have now. In early times they were partly fatted on mast, and they were wild, raw-boned, with snouts so long sometimes that, as expressed by an old settler in describing them, "they could root nine feet in the ground after a poke root, and still see a man over the top." We do know that they were driven ten or twenty miles sometimes, and then had to be caught with dogs or shot at the slaughter pens. The lard from the slaughtered porkers was placed in kegs and, together with the meat just from the salt, was hauled to Cincinnati in wagons. The time taken by a teamster in making a trip was about six days. Regarding the number slaughtered, one of the older residents estimated that as high as forty to fifty thousand hogs would be slaughtered and packed in Clarksville in one season. This brought an immense trade to the town, and stores, hotels and all trades flourished.


Some of the heavy teamsters of the day were William Marrow, William McCray, Charles Urton and, later, Armstrong McCray, Milt Watson, James Villars. These teamsters would take their provisions, horse feed and bedding along, and sleep on the floor of some tavern. It was a rough life, but was relished by the men. The independence of the wild, rough life was by no means unpleasant.


Among the early school teachers in the village were Nancy Tufts, David Eachus and Carter B. Harlan, brother of the late Judge R. B. Harlan. Clarksville had two separate school houses until 1868, when it was made a special district. For a number of years the Friends or. Quakers maintained a separate school in a building of their own.


Among the physicians of this early date were Doctors Hampton, Crawford, A. T. Davis and Tribbey. Though in early times diseases, such as malaria, fevers, ague, etc., were more prevalent, it seems that the doctors of the "old school" found their work laborious and their pay scanty and uncertain and had 'to revert to other forms of occupation for sustenance. Longstreth kept a store, Tribbey was a farmer, and A. T. Davis represented the county in the Legislature.


A number of the early settlers who came to Clarksville and contributed in the building up of the town are Dr. H. W. Baugh, Dr. T. S. Garland, Dr. Z. T. Garland, Dr. E. S. Stevens, Levi Collins, John Thomas, James Starry, who was the first silversmith of Clarksville, S. C. Kelley, James Linton and James Wysong.


Clarksville was incorporated on March 1, 1837. The present officers are: C. L. Hale, mayor; Otto Gharst, clerk; Gus J. Miller, treasurer; Frank Gray, marshal; Benjamin Thompson, Frank Hoover, S. V. Barry, Thomas Gray, Thomas Snook and P. C. Camp, councilmen. The population is four hundred twenty-five.


The worst calamity which Clarksville has had to suffer was a series of fires. The first of these occurred July 9. 1902, the destruction of the opera house, Linton's store, dwelling and implement room entailing a loss of twenty-four thousand dollars. The, 'second fire occurred on October 15, 1909, destroying a dwelling, livery barn and blacksmith shop, at a loss of six thousand dollars. The third came January 12, 1911, when an implement room, dwelling and office were burned, at a loss of eight thousand dollars. On the site of the old opera house, a new one was erected, of concrete blocks, at a cost of eleven thousand dollars. After the first of these fires the council purchased a Waterhouse gasoline fire engine, at a cost of one thousand eight hundred dollars. The pavements of the town are cement and the streets are in good condition. The canning factory of Baugh, Bown & Baugh did seventy-five thousand dollars' worth of business in 1912. The first jail was constructed in 1873 and is still standing, although a new jail was erected in 1880.


312 - CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO.


BUSINESS DIRECTORY.


The business interests of Clarksville are as follow : Auto livery, C. L. Hall, A. J. Walker; banker, Farmers' National; barber, Alpheus Bogan; blacksmiths, John Fordyce, Al Smith, Leroy Ellis; canning factor, Baugh, Batten & Baugh, Linton; chiropactor, Glen C. Gray; creamery, French Brothers, Bauer & Company; drug store, C. W. Snook; dry-goods, R. C. Pafterson, E. R. Shank & Company ; feed and implements, McQuinn Brothers; flour-mill, J. W. Murrell; general stores, G. W. Stephens, L. L. White; garage and blacksmith, G. J. Miller; grocery and resfaurant, P. C. Camp; hotels, Eureka, Frank Gray, proprietor; Star, Wysong Sisters, proprietors; Mrs. Moore; implements and buggies, J. T. Gray & Brothers; liveries, Frank Gray, Thomas Smith; lumber yard, A. D. Madden Estate; newspaper, Clarksville Herald; physicians, F. A. Batten, C. W. Snook; restaurants, Kate Penquite, Nellie Norton, Roy Cleaver, R. W. Andrews; veterinaries, Burl Gray, S. J. Rigdon.


Mrs. J. P. Ford is the present postmistress and J. H. Dodd is the railroad agent. Clarksville has an excellent band of twenty pieces, of which J. H. Dodd is the director. The fox-hounds of Clarksville are noted for their cunningness in tracking the sly animals and this afford the citizens of Clarksville great pleasure and a diversion from the hard toils of the day.


There are numerous threshing outfits that work out of this village, among which are A. T. Vandervort, Suttles Brothers, Ed Villars and two company machines; one of these is managed by Albert Pyles, and the other by Frank Bevan. The chief breeders of fancy Jersey cattle in this neighborhood are E. H. Urton, Earl and Myrtle Pyle and Lon Carson. Walter Richardson is a breeder of Shorthorn cattle. George Sabin is the only apiarist in this part of the county. The Oasis fruit farm, managed by George H. Anson, furnishes small fruit to the patrons of this county.


Pansy is the only other town in this township. This little hamlet, which is located in the extreme southern part of the township, has never been platted and has never increased from a rural hamlet.


CHAPTER XXVI.


VERNON TOWNSHIP.


Vernon township is located in the central western portion of Clinton county. Ut is bounded on the north by Adams township, on the east by Washington, on the south by Marion township and on the west by Warren county. It is one of the three original townships of which Clinton county was composed at the time of its organization in 1810. At that time it included also Marion and parts of Adams. Washington, Clark, Union and Jefferson townships. Todd's fork, a tributary of the Little Miami river, Cowan's creek, East fork of Todd's fork and Sewell's run, tributaries of Todd's fork, flow through the township, coming together, or nearly so. in the western part, near the town of Clarksville.


FORMATION OF THE TOWNSHIP.


The boundaries of Vernon township, as first organized, included all the territory south of Lytle's creek and south of a line from the month of Lytle's creek to the Warren county line, and extending east to the old Warren county line in the line of Richland township. The township was organized in 1810. The records of the township from its organization to 1826 are lost or have been destroyed and only the most meager details can be gleaned from scattered sources.


The commissioners' record show order No. 7, to Elisha Cast, July 18, 1810. for the amount of fourteen dollars and a half, "for sitting as judge of election, delivering poll books and for assessing the township and making returns of the assessment." David Sewell was chosen as the first justice of the peace. On October 17, 1810, Daniel Ball received an order for three dollars and seventy-five cents for five wolf scalps six months old. These records would seem to show that the first township officials were: Elisha. Cast, John Sewell and Benjamin Smalley, trustees, and Aaron Sewell, clerk.


From the year 1826, the records as regards township officers and receipts and expenditures have been well preserved. The following is the clerk's sfatement for 1825, in full:


"Statement of receipts and expenditures of Vernon township from the 9th day of March, 1826. to the 8th day of March, 1827, inclusive:



"RECEIPTS.

 

"Received of J. Biggs as security for T. Foreman

"Received of J. Harris, Esq., fines by him collected

"Received of A. Tribbey, Esq., the amount of a note on J. Cox

"Received of same on judgment of S. Brown

"Receivcd of same on judgment on R. Stansbury


"Total  


"EXPENDITURES.


"John Villars, Supervisor, for services  

"W. Austin and E. Cast, Overseers of the Poor  

"D. Wright, Supervisor, for his services

"J. Baldwin, Supervisor, for his services  

"W. Elzey, Supervisor, for his services  

"J. H. Marshall, Constable, for serving pauper's warrant

"J. Lawrence, for services as Trustee and Supervisor  

"J. Tribbey, for services as Trustee and Supervisor  

3.55

16.97 1/2

7.68 3/4

18.46

20.87 1/2


67.54 3/4




2.81 1/4

1.50

1.12 1/2

3.00

2.6 ½

.55

3.00

3.75

314 - CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO.

"U. Biggs, Clerk,. for services

"Same for blank book for Clerk's office

"L. Elzey, Supervisor, for his services

"J. Dalby and J. Conklin, late Overseers of the Poor

"J. Garrison, late Constable,; for summoning township officer

"J. Biggs, for a room to hold township meetings in

"John Lytle. late Trustee, for services


Total

6.96 1/2

1.50

2.25

2.00

3.50

2.00

.75


$37.32 3/4"



At this time Vernon township included Adams, Clark (or the greater part of what is now Clark), Jefferson and Marion townships, also part of present Washington township, and enumerated two hundred and eighty-three householders for school purposes.


The following are the summaries of the statements between the years 1829 and 1836, inclusive:


Year

Receipts

Expenditures

1829

1831

1833

1834

1836

$ 50.71

36.57

90.921

90.873

122.879

$49.93

33.61

35.37

47.13

98.064



From the year 1836 to 1862 the records are again missing. In the later year the following were the township officials: William Carson, J. W. Warner and W. B. Smith, trustees; W. H. Gardner, clerk; J. W. Compton, assessor ; Albert Parker, treasurer, and John Dempsey, constable.


It was not until 1872 that the township began to take on anything like its present proportions. On April 1, of that year, the funds on band were, cemetery fund, $84.81; abandoned grave yard fund, $107.97; poor funds, $426.27; township funds, $324.94 ; road fund, $186.83; total, $1,130.82. The entire number of votes polled on that date was two hundred and eighty-six.


At the annual election held April 5, 1875, the question of a special tax levy for a township house was submitted to the voters of the township, with the following result : Yes, one hundred and sixty-two votes; No, one hundred and eleven votes. A special tax of two thousand dollars was levied and a neat and substantial building was erected for township purposes.


THE PIONEERS.


David Sewell was the first settler of Vernon township. He became the owner of the of Archibald Campbell's survey, No. 2250, early in the year 1798, on the East fork of Todd's fork, in what is now Clinton county, .but was then known as. Hamilton county, Northwest territory. He made arrangements to move upon it with his sons, John and Aaron, and his daughter and son-in-law, Hannah and Peter Burr. In 1798, in company with Isaac ',ruins, Mary Hendricks and some of the Cowans, the Sewell family came by way of Pittsburgh in wagons and flatboats to the present site of Columbus. From that point they went to Bedell's station in the present Warren county. It is probable that they found their land soon after. The Sewells came in wagons, cutting their way through the heavy virgin forest, and the trail they left is still known as the "Sewell trace," crossing Todd's fork near the town of Rochester and passing near where the old Nauvoo school house stood. At this time their were no nearer neighbors than Lebanon, fourteen miles away.


James McGee, in company with his brother-in-law, John McGregor, came to this township in 1803, and settled. They came from Loudoun county, Virginia. Jonathan Lawrence came in the year 1806. From North Carolina came Thomas Austin in 1809. James Harris emigrated from Loudoun county, Virginia, in 1809, and settled near the present village of


CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO - 315


Clarksville. William Hadley came in 1810, from North Carolina, and settled on what was later known as the M. P. Marshall farm. William Austin came in 1811 and settled near the Mt. Pleasant church. James Villars settled in Vernon township in 1813. Josiah Biggs, Lemuel, John and Parson Garrison, David Ferris, Samuel Stabler,, Dr. Asahel Tribbey, Ephraim Smith, James Marshall, Ezekiel Cast and Thomas Harden were all among the early settlers and pioneers of Vernon township.


SCHOOLS.


In those early days, when the country was so sparsely settled, there were no public schools, but the people supported by subscriptions and work such schools as they could afford. The first school house in this township was a log cabin built about 1812, and the teacher was Levi Garretson. The first division of the township into school districts was in August, 1826, by the trustees of the township. The districts were immense in size. Some of the early teachers were Robert Eachus, Nugent Ward, Caleb Smith, A. R. Sewell, George Athey, Noah Newland and others.


ROADS.


The first roads of the new settlements were mere trails blazed through the great forest. Then the corduroy road, or causeway of logs, was considered a great improvement The log system of roadmaking, in regions where the soil was wet and timber abundant on the spot, and only costing the cutting, was a very effective means of making the old trails passable. No doubt travel over some of those old log roads must, at times, have been more serious than amusing. The logs were usually of unequal sizes and transit over such a surface in a Wagon without springs must have been far from comfortable. The first road laid out in the township was what was known as the College township road. The Sewell settlement and Morgan Van Meter's house, at what is now known as Snow Hill, were the most important points on it. It is hard to recognize these old roads now from the field notes given, they have been changed so often. The Columbus & Cincinnati state road crossed the township from east to southwest. A road that passed by Viliar's chapel and on toward Blanchester was laid out at a very early date. The road from Lawrence's to Clarksville was laid out in 1836.


The first pike through the township was the Goshen & Wilmington turnpike. It was built of broken stone in about 1840, by a company, and was kept up as a toll pike until about 1880, when the commissioners of Clinton county bought it and improved it. About 1870 the College township road, from Cuba to Clarksville, was piked. The road-bed was made twenty feet at the top, thirty-four feet at the base, and two feet high from the bottom of side drains. The road-bed was covered with gravel twelve feet wide and sixteen and one-fourth inches deep. About the year 1876, the road from Villar's chapel, through Blanchester to the Brown county line, was piked in the same manner In 1880 the Goshen & Wilmington pike was purchased by the county commissioners and improved, making it a free pike. About the same year the road from the Goshen & Wilmington pike near Clarksville to the Warren county line, in the direction of Harveysburg, was piked.


The following are the officers of Union township in 1915: Trustees, Arthur Leonard, Robert White and C. R. Van Tress; clerk, A. W. Doan; treasurer, C. L. Haworth. Population, including Wilmington, six thousand two hundred and fifteen; outside of Wilmington, seventeen hundred and twenty-four.


The history of the towns of Union township will not require many words, as the history of Wilmington will be taken up in a separate chapter. There are three small hamlets marked on the county map. These are Deserted Camp, which has been taken up in detail in another chapter; Burtonville, which is situated on the Wilmington and Martinsville pike, and Clinton, which is a flag stop on the Midland division of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad. None of these villages was ever platted and at present they have no business or professional interests. Little Center is the location of a Friends church.


CHAPTER XXVII.


WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP.


The location of Washington township is very central, it being one of the two townships in the county that do not border on the county line. It is bounded on the north by 'Union, on the east by Green, on the south by Clark and Jefferson, and on the west by Marion and Vernon townships. Cowan's creek and Silver creek, which, with their tributaries, drain the northern and central parts of the township, and the East fork of Todd's fork, which flows through the south part of the township, are the principal streams. The township presents a plain of gently undulating land. The capacity of the soil equals that of any part of the county in productiveness.


EARLY SETTLERS.


In its session of 1802-03, the state Legislature provided for the opening of a state road leading from Chillicothe by way of Morganfown to College township in Butler county. This highway passed through Washington township and became the route by which the early settlers of this township were led to their home in the forest. Isaac Wilson, who came from Virginia and settled on the survey of Colonel Carrington in about the year 1803, was perhaps the first person to settle within the present bounds of Washington township. In 1805 came Thomas Thatcher, who located on a large tract of land in Capt. John Steele's survey No. 1458, on the banks of Silver creek. Thatcher was born in Frederick county, Virginia, in 1769. He came to this state with a four-horse team and the typical Virginia wagon, following the usual route through Pennsylvania, and encountering the delays, annoyances and vexations common to all of the early emigranfs. He died in 1867, at the ripe old age ninety-eight years.


On his arrival on Silver creek, Thatcher found Joseph Roberts, John Jack, Samuel Ruble, John Wright and Edward Powers, they having arrived a short time before. Very little is known of these men or where they came from. About the year 1807, Col. Samuel Martin, together with his son, emigrated to this township from western Pennsylvania and settled in survey No. 996. After some time, he found that the title to his land was worthless and he and his son resumed their westward journey. Tradition tells us that he was one of the leading figures in the "Whiskey Insurrection" that occurred in western Pennsylania during Washington's administration as President.


Peter Tomlin, another pioneer of what is now known as Washington township, was born in Culpeper, Virginia, in 1776. He moved to Fredericksburg, Virginia, in 1802, and from thence, in 1808, to Clinton county, Ohio, settling on Captain Steele's survey No. 1458, where he reared a family of seventeen children. He was a man of great prominence in the affairs of the township and county and served as a captain in the War of 1812. He died in 1857, at the age of eighty-one, and was buried in what is known as the Lieurance cemetery, near his old home.


In 1806, Adon Clevenger came to this township and settled at Cross Roads, or what is today known as Cuba. He was born in Frederick county, Virginia, in 1773, from whence he emigrated in 1804 to Waynesville, Warren county, Ohio. He opened and ran the first blacksmith's shop in the present town of Cuba. He plied his trade there for a couple of years, when he moved to Wilmington, and from there back to Cowan's creek, where he bought a small farm in Colonel Ridley's survey No. 2028, where he lived until his death, in 1853.


CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO - 317


Very little is known of the early life of Peter Lieurance, who came to this county in 1806 and settled on Steele's survey No. 1458. He was born in Ashe county, North Carolina, in 1759, moved from North Carolina, in about the year 1800, to east Tennessee, where he resided a few years, and then removed to Washington township, Clinton county, Ohio. He was an enthusiastic member of the Baptist church and, as there was no church in the neighborhood at this time, meetings were held at his house until 1819, when he donated a lot for a church and cemetery, upon which a log church was erected and the first permanent organization of Baptists in Washington township was effected. He continued on the farm which he had cleared until about the year 1840, when, at the age of eighty-one, he sold this farm and removed to the then new prairies of Warren county, Illinois, where he lived until 1863, dying at the remarkable age of one hundred and four years. The eldest son of Peter Lieurance was Elijah, who was born in Ashe county, North Carolina, and removed with his father to Ohio in 1806 He served in the War of 1812, returning afterwards to his home and residing in the township in 1836, when he removed to Warren county, Illinois.


David Hays, who came to Washington township in 1845, was born near the city of Wilmington, in the state of Delaware, in the year 1766. It was during the days of his boyhood and about his home that the war for American independence was waged. In 1800 he moved to Frederick county, Virginia, where he married Mary Horsman in 1805. In the same year he removed to Harrison county, Ohio, where he resided until he moved to Washington township and settled in John Steele's survey No. 1458, where he resided until his death, in 1844.


David, Asa, Elisha and James Brown were the names of four brother pioneers of Washington township, who were born in Massachusetts during the days of the Revolufionary War, at the close of which they emigrated with their father to Owen county, Kentucky, where they grew to manhood. Between the years 1807 to 1810, they all removed from Kentucky to within the present confines of Washington township. They purchased land in the surveys of Steele, Carrington and Johnson.


David Clevenger was born in Frederick county, Virginia, about the year 1785, and moved to Ohio in 1808, settling in Dix survey No. 619. Several years later he moved farther west.


Jesse Graham came to this township in 1807 and bought and cleared a tract of land in Steuben's survey.


John Mitchell came in 1807; William Johns, William Baker, William R. Moon, William Biggs and William Biggs, Jr., in 1808; Robert Athey, about the year 1813; Martin and Jacob Roop, about the year 1815; John Matson, in 1817 ; Thomas Woodmansee, 1813 ; George Byard, 1816 ; John Crouse, 1817; Oliver Whitaker, 1805 ; John Buck, 1807 ; James Wilson, about 1810; Thomas Johns, 1808; Thomas Pennington. 1813; H. M. Greeen, 1835; Jacob Mann. 1818; Joshua Lazenby, 1817 ; Henry Cowgill, about 1812. Others that should be mentioned are Daniel and Jacob Beales, Thomas and Israel Johns, Ebenezer Christopher and John Brown, William Mabury, James Haworth, Charles McGrue, John Jack, John Dale, Samuel Ruble, Thomas Ludington, George Shannon, Amos Hankins, Empson Wright and Walter Starkey.


FORMATION OF THE TOWNSHIP.


Washington township was formed by order of the commissioners of Clinton county,

at their regular session, in June, 1835, on a petition containing the following description :


"Beginning in the line of Union township, one mile west of the northwest line of

Clark township ; thence southward to Marion township, where the township line crosses

the road leading from David Wright's to Blanchester, and continuing same course one mile

into Marion township ; thence eastward to intersect the line one mile south of the north-

east corner of said township; thence across Clark township so as to include Samuel Batson ;

thence to the road leading from Cuba to Martinsville, eighty poles to the north of Robert


318 - CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO.


Green's house; thence to where the Wilmington and Hillsboro road crosses the College township road; thence with the south side of said College township road to the northeast corner of Clark township; thence westward with the line of Union and Clark townships to the beginning, containing twenty-four and one-third square miles of land."


MILLS.


James Wilson built the first mill within the present bounds of Washington township on the banks of Cowan's creek. As nearly as can be ascertained, this mill was built about the year 1810. It stood a few rods above the road leading from Wilmington to Cuba. In the parlance of the times and neighborhood, it was called a "corn-cracker." A few years later a distillery was also added and the plant was operated by Mr. Wilson as both mill and distillery until about 1826 or 1827. Thomas Thatcher built a saw-mill on the banks of Silver creek about the year 1818, which he operated for about twenty years, when it fell into decay. About the time of its discontinuance, perhaps 1840, James Carman erected a saw-mill on Cowan's creek in survey No. 2029. This mill had a corn-cracker attached and was operated for many years. The mill was sold a few years later to Abel Biggs. It became so badly damaged by freshets that Mr. Biggs rebuilt it in 1853, and operated it for six or seven years, when it was so completely damaged by high waters that it was abandoned and allowed to fall into decay. The first steam-mill in the township was built by William B. Biggs in Cuba in about the year 1852. It also had a corn-cracker attachment, and was run for several years, burning down in about 1860. In 1853 or 1854, William R. Moon and John Mann built a saw- and grist-mill about one-half mile from Cuba, on the Martinsville road, which was operated successfully for several years. It was finally removed by Mr. Moon and sons to Cuba, where it became a first-class mill in every respect.


SCHOOLS.


The first school teachers of which we have any account were E. Hamilton, James Trimble, Benjamin Hunter, James Hamilton, Thomas Wilson, Robert Grant, John McKibben, George E. Honeycutt, Azariah Brown, Henry Lazenby and Elijah Hays. Of course the only schools these men taught were subscription schools.


Among the first regular physicians of the township may be mentioned Doctors Levacy, Smith, Miller, Bennett, Prewett, Moon and Briggs.


The following are the officers of Washington township in 1915: Trustees, Barney Osborn, J. W. B. Crouse and L. M. Moon; clerk, A. M. West; treasurer, D. F. Brown. Population, one thousand and four.


CUBA.


Cuba was the first town laid out in Washington township and, perhaps, the second in the county. It was first called Paris. This village was laid out and platted by Jonas Seaman and James Archer on September 9, 1814. It was part of the James Blackwell survey No. 1,457. The original, as well as the present, number of lots was one hundred.


The first hotel was kept by Mr. Armstrong, who opened a house of entertainment here in 1805 or 1806. It was at that time known as the Cross Roads, being the point where the trace or trail from the south crossed the College township road. This road was located and opened a few years prior, by an act of the Legislature of 1802-3, authorizing the laying out of various state roads, among which was the College township road, leading from Chillicothe, by way of Morgantown, to the College township line, now in Butler county. This road soon became quite a fhoroughfare and the emigrant's wagon was constantly in sight ; hence the necessity for houses of entertainment. Armstrong entertained the traveling public for a number of years and then retired. He was succeeded by Jonas Seaman, who remained, in the hotel until the close of the War of 1812. Seaman was succeeded by J. J. Lacey, who occupied the premises for a short time and then gave way


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to Matthew Callaway, who acted as innkeeper for many years, being succeeded by Col. J. Ward Jones. This was about the year 1826.


Since that time the innkeepers of Cuba have been numerous and varied. This was a very profitable business until the opening of the railroad, causing the overland travel to give way to the more rapid transit by rail.


The Midland division of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad passes through this village, and it was through the united efforts of Cuba, coupled with those of Wilmington and Sabina, that brought this road through Clinton county. This village donated her share for the building of this road and too much praise cannot be given her. Since the opening of this line, Cuba has taken on a new aspect and is at present a very busy little town. The town has three general merchandise stores, owned by the following: H. D. Pennington, J. M. Uible and D. F. Brown. W. R. Hughes & Son keep, the blacksmith shop. The flour-mill is owned and operated by C. W. Burton. H. R. Vance is the agent for the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, and J. M. Uible is the postmaster. The population is approximately one hundred. The town is unincorporated and the limits are hard to define for estimating the population.


MORRISVILLE.


Morrisville is the second town in Washington township, both as to age and size. It was laid out and surveyed by Nathan Linton on June 16, 1840, on Isaac Morris's survey No. 1,367, and was named in honor of Mr. Morris, who owned a large tract of hand adjoining it. It is situated four miles east of Cuba, in a very fine farming district and consists of but a few lots. It has one country store, owned by Robert Green; William Hall keeps a blacksmith shop. The population at present is sixty-two.


Macedonia is the only other town in this township. It was never platted and at present is nothing more than a crossroads, with a few houses.


CHAPTER XXVIII.


WAYNE TOWNSHIP.


Prior to 1837 Wayne township had been a part of Green and Richland townships. In that year this township was formally established by an act of the county commissioners. Wayne township is situated in the southeastern part of Clinton county and is bounded on the north by Richland township, on the west by Green township, on the south by Highland county and on the east by Fayette county. It is located in one of the most fertile districts of Ohio and the early settlers found this a very desirable place to settle. This township has an elevation of about one thousand two hundred feet above the level of the sea and, although the topography is marked, it is comparatively level. It was known for a number of years as "the flats," but, by judicious drainage, it has become one of the most healthful and desirable parts of the county. It is very well watered and drained by several small streams and tributaries.


This township contains nineteen thousand eight hundred and thirty-four acres of land and at present the acreage of tillable land is very great. The soil is composed of natural drift and alluvial formation, having been covered, as it was, for centuries with a dense forest, which, through the decay of so much plant and animal life, has left the soil very rich. This has been increased through the efforts of the farmers, making its soil doubly rich. This township received its name from Gen. Anthony Wayne, who led an expedition through this township prior to 1794. In his march through this section of the state, he cut a trail which was used by the pioneers for many years.


As Wayne township was not made a separate township until 1837, many settlers, and, in fact, all of the early settlers, were located here before the township was organized. Among the first to make permanent settlements in this part were William Moore, who came to this township from Bourbon county, Kentucky, and settled about the year 1806. Among the pioneers who had settled here prior to 1810 were, John Jackson, from Tennessee; Edward Curtis, from Virginia ; Joseph Rooks, Thomas Steil, John Oxley, Moses Paris, Stephen Martin, Thomas Draper, John Allen and Jesse Boxley. From 1810 to 1820 the settlers came in great numbers from Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee.


Another rather reliable source gives the first settler as John Jackson, who has been mentioned previously. Mr. Jackson. it seems, came to this county in 1803 and settled on the Middle branch of Lee's creek, on one of the Ransdale surveys, No. 1,027. At the date of Mr. Jackson's settlement there were only about ten families within the boundaries of what is now Clinton county.


John Bowater Bales, better known to the early settlers as Borter Bales, settled on the West branch of Lee's creek. Mr. Bales built a mill where the road from New Lexington to Leesburg crosses the West branch. John Walters, uncle to John Walters, who settled on Todd's fork, and Nathaniel Pope were located near Leesburg at this time. Evan Evans and James Smith were also early settlers on Lee's creek.


Edward Curtis settled in the year 1805 on the north bank of Lee's creek. Mr. Curtis reared a large family and contributed to the early growth of the township. John Allen came in 1807, as did David Carter and Thomas Draper.


Benjamin Logan was probably the next settler in this township, and located on the East branch of Lee's creek. Mr. Logan came from Tennessee, bringing Mike Fry, the rail-splitter, with him; this, however, was not the same Mike Fry who came with Thomas Dailey and Woolards in 1819.


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Thomas Adams was one of the settlers known as a "squatter"; that is, one who enters upon land belonging to another, without any title. Mr. Adams settled on the Gallatin survey, but the date has not been definitely fixed.


John Lyon, Sr., and Richard Lyon were also among the early settlers. Others who settled about this time were, Robert Antrim and family, David Carter, Edward Curtis, Jr., William Elliott and wife, Thomas Hardwick, Joseph Grice, David Stokesbury, the Thrall-kill family, James Sinclair and family. This completes the early settlements in this township, all of which were made before the township really existed.


The following are the officers of Wayne township in 1915: Trustees, Frank Dabe, George Wilson and Joseph Winfield; clerk, Roy Grove; treasurer, David Babb. Population, one thousand and fifty-two.


CENTERVILLE.


Centerville was laid out on December 4, 1816. The proprietor of the town was Timothy Jones, who emigrated to this county from the state of Virginia. The principal street, Main, was laid off fifty-four poles long and four poles wide, and its parallel alleys are fifty-four poles long and one pole wide. Middle street is fifty-four poles long and three poles wide. The parallel alleys are the same length and one pole wide. Main street runs north forty-five degrees west, and Middle street runs at right angles to Main street. There were thirty-two lots in the original plat. These are laid out six poles in front and run back twelve poles. A stone is placed at the southeast corner of lot No. 2, and at the southwest corner of lot No. 16. Centerville is the voting precinct of Wayne township. This is the largest town in the township and, situated, as it is, in the center of a good farming community, it has an extensive trade.


When the postoffice was placed here it was given the name of Lee's Creek. Babb Brothers have a very modern and up-to-date general merchandise store. They reach the country patrons through three huckster trucks which have daily routes to different parts of the county. Oscar Jones is the postmaster and also keeps a general merchandise store. The saw and grist-mill is owned and operated by W. D. Jerrells. Fred Webb is the village blacksmith and C. I. Pidgeon is the restaurant keeper. The village is supplied by one physician, C. A. Shaeffer. The population, according to the last census, was one hundred and thirty. Centerville, although not on a railroad, is supplied with a postoffice, and receives a closed mail pouch daily from Sabina.


Centerville has a first-grade high school, which was erected at a cost of twenty thousand dollars. This town, as fhe name indicates, is located in the center of the township. While it has suffered from the lack of a railroad through it, it is still a thriving village.


Memphis is the only other town in the township. This hamlet is situated in the eastern part of the township and is merely a cluster of houses at a cross roads.


(21)


CHAPTER XXIX.


WILSON TOWNSHIP.


The first person to settle within the bounds of what is at present known as Wilson township was Amos Wilson, in honor of whom the township was named. Wilson was born in New Jersey, April 7, 1770, and moved with his parents to Kentucky in 1784, where he lived for seven years. He married Ann Mills on June 22, 1791. In 1795 he moved to .Ohio, settling in Warren county near Waynesville, where he lived for over a year. In 1796 or 1797 he purchased two hundred acres of land from Joshua Carmen, located in Taylor's survey No. 736. Tracing his way with a pocket compass, he settled by mistake on R. Eggleston's survey No. 886. He spent almost a year improving this location, before he discovered his mistake and again made a mistake, moving onto what proved later to be Lindsey's survey No. 732. He first arrived in the township in 1799. He remained at the last-mentioned place until 1802 before finding out that he was again improving another's property, and not his own. In that year, Joshua Carmen came from Kentucky to look affer the survey of land that he owned, bringing with him Mr. Wilson's brother-in-law, James Mills. On being fold that he was not on his own land, he became so discouraged at the prospect of receiving no benefit from his years of labor that he made known his intention to return to the older settlements. Mr. Carmen persuaded him to give up this idea, and, as a part compensation for his repeated failures, made him a present of fifty acres adjoining his original purchase on the west. In the year 1807 his wife died ; he was married during the same year to his second wife, Rachael James, with whom he lived until her death, in 1818. His third wife was Mary Coulter, widow of William Coulter. In 1827 he built the first brick house in this part of the country. In 1839 he became dissatisfied with his surroundings, sold his farm and moved to Delaware county, Indiana. In the same year his third wife died. In 1843 he married Eliza Dowden. Again becoming dissatisfied with his surroundings, he returned to Ohio in 1843 and bought his old home, where he remained until 1854, when he again removed to Delaware county, Indiana, where he died on October 27 of that year, in his eighty-fourth year.


PIONEERS.


In 1806 John Coulter bought land of Jacob Piatt, who owned Walker's survey No. 743, and began ifs improvement. Coulter was born in the county of Antrim, Ireland. July 18, 1777. He emigrated to America, landing in New York, where he remained for a short time, coming from thence to Cincinnati, Ohio. He leased a part of his purchase in what was later Wilson township, to Oliver Simpson for a term of three years, and came out immediately and began improvements near the place of the present faintly residence. Mr. Coulter, on June 11, 1807, married Margaret Gibson, a native of the county of Fermanagh, Ireland. In December, 1809, they moved to their new home, where they passed the remainder of their long, active and useful lives. They brought up a family of twelve children. Mr. Coulter died in 1857, aged nearly eighty years.


Another pioneer of this township was Ramoth Hankins, who came from Pennsylvania in 1809, on a prospecting tour and liked the appearance of the country so well that he bought one hundred acres of land in Walker's survey No. 743, and built a cabin on it in the same year. He returned to Pennsylvania, spent the following winter, and in the


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spring of 1810 he moved with his family, consisting of a wife and two children, to his Ohio home, reaching his destination on May 7.


Absalom and Cyrus Reed, brothers, came from Kentucky in 1810 and settled on Lindsay's survey No. 732. They were extensively engaged in stock-raising, being among the first to introduce improved breeds of cattle. John Watson, a native of Ireland, moved to this township in 1809. In 1810, William Fannon moved to the neighborhood and bought two hundred acres of land in Taylor's survey No. 736.


John Peelle, son of Reuben and Rhoda Peelle, was born in Wayne county, North Carolina, June 2, 1781. He remained with his parents until his twenty-fourth year, when he moved to Grayson county, Virginia, where he remained for one year. He then took a long trip through the then unknown "far West," traveling through Ohio and into the territory of Indiana as far as the site of the present city of Richmond. He returned to his parental home in North Carolina, but, becoming dissatisfied, again turned his face toward the west. Pausing on his way in Belmont county, Ohio, he fell victim to the wiles of the little god of love and married Lydia Bundy, according to the ceremony of the Society of Friends, of which they were both members. Soon after their marriage they moved to Fall Creek, where they lived until 1811, in which year they moved and settled near the place at present occupied by the village of Bowerville, Greene county. They remained at this place two years, moving, on March 1, 1813, to the northwest side of Call's survey No. 887, building a cabin and making other improvements. While living on Call's survey, he made his first purchase of land in Ohio, buying fifty acres in Draffin's survey No. 830. At first he had no intention of making his home on that survey, but secured the land for the purpose of making sugar from the fine grove of maples growing there. Having bought more land joining his "sugar orchard," he concluded to make that his home, which he did in 1820.


William Gallemore was born on November 5, 1776, in Guilford county, North Carolina, where he remained until his marriage, in 1801, to Mary Stanley. The young couple left North Carolina and went to Grayson county, Virginia, where they resided for about nine years. They then emigrated westward, making their home in Highland county, Ohio, for three years. Leaving Highland county, they went to Greene county, from which they moved, in 1815, to Clinton county, settling on Graffin's survey No. 830, where they passed the remainder of their lives, bringing up a family of ten children, five boys and five girls, all of whom reached maturity and married.


The other pioneers of the township, with the dates of their settlement, are: Col. Thomas Hinkson, 1807; Benjamin Bentley, about 1812: Mark and Isaac Pearson, 1815; Thomas Greer, Peter Jasper and Thomas Babb.


FORMATION OF THE TOWNSHIP


An examination of the commissioners' records discloses the following document :


"Special session, August 20, 1850. This day the commissioners met pursuant to adjournment. present : Joseph Hoskins, Azel Walker and Enos L. Lacy.


"This day a petition was presented to the commissioners of the county, praying for a new township, to be taken from the townships of Richmond, Union and Liberty, as set forth in a petition signed by a majority 'of the householders residing within the boundaries of the proposed new township, of which the following is a copy, to wit:


" To the Commissioners of Clinton County : Your petitioners, citizens of Clinton county, Ohio, respectfully present that we labor under great inconvenience on account of our very remote situation from the place of holding elections, and from the place where the other township business is transacted, in consequence of which we respectfully but most earnestly ask you to establish a township to be taken out of Union, Richland and Liberty townships, to be bounded as follows, to wit:


" 'Beginning at the Fayette and Clinfon county line, where said line crosses the


324 - CLINTON COUNTY, OHIO.


southeast line of A. Benjamin's survey No. 927, thence southwesterly with the line of said survey to the east corner of Thomas Shaw's survey No. 844; thence with the southeasterly line of said line of said survey to the east corner of William Taylor's survey No. 726; thence with the southeast line of said survey to its south and east corner of William Lindsey's survey No. 732; thence westwardly across said survey to its west corner, and east corner of Thomas Bland's survey No. 885; thence northwardly with the northeasterly line of said Bland's survey to its north corner, and the east corner of William White's survey No. 2,714, in Union township; thence northwardly and with the northeast line of said survey No. 2,714 to the west corner of Richard Call's survey No. 887, and at or near the line of Union and Liberty townships; thence in a northeasterly direction to the northeast corner of Liberty and northwest corner of Richland townships, in the Greene county line; thence eastwardly with the north line of Clinton county to the place of beginning, which limits as here prescribed contain the amount of territory required by law to constitute a township.


"We, your petitioners, now claim it as an act of justice, inasmuch as there is left in each of the townships from which the proposed new township is to be taken ample amount of territory still to constitute a constitutional township; that our petition be granted as now asked for, and which is signed by citizens and voters in the district included in the limits of the new township, July 13, 1850.


Signed by Edmund Thorp, John C. Coulter, Edwin Raleigh, Harvey H. Hankins, James W. Fannon, John M. Hinkson, Jr., William G. Brown, John Oliver, Jr., Absalom Douglas, John Coulter, H. A. Douglas, S. A. Douglas, Jeremiah Sturgeon, Franklin Jones, J. B. Degroot, Isaac Turner, Robert Jones, William Reed, Robert Sturgeon, William Rhinehart, Anthony Brown, William Jacks, Floyd Ferris, Jesse Carter, Joseph Robinson, G. H. Washington, Reuben Peelle, Mark Peelle, Benjamin Bentley, Isaac Pierson, Jonathan Mills, Amos Wilson, James R. Mills, B. R. Washington, Mills Johnson, Elbert Chance, William Story, Benjamin Barnes. Abi Oliver, Everett Oliver, Isaac Lamb, Reuben Mills, Eri Lamb, James Fannon, George Jay, E. Daugherty, S. A. Bowermaster, William Greer, John Lyon, John S. Oliver, John Cater, Andrew J. Jay, Wilson Carter, Samuel Leming, James T. Bryant, Joshua Thorp, Jesse Walker, Joseph C. Girard, I. C. Williams, H. H. Bruce, Isaac Gerard, John Sturgeon, J. A. Bragg, Robert S. Eastham, Jesse C. Everest, Miler Podell, Elihu Tichnor, I. P. Lenue, John M. Wood, William Thorp, E. A. Spencer, James Glover, William Oliver, Elisha Gallemore, James Greer, Enos Johnson, M. H. None, Mark Pierson, Harvey Jackson, Etheldred Woodward, Anderson Homey, John B. Oliver, Richard Edwards, John Cater, Jr., James Lyons, Bassele Bailey, John D. Halson, Talbot Johnson, William Peelle, William Small, Malcomb McKenzie. James T. Johnson, John Hoover, John B. Spencer, W. D. Bryant, Daniel Furnace, Isom Lamb, Joseph Lamb, William Watson, Isaac Sheim, Joshua Gallon, C. R. Spencer, John Haines, Stephen Carroll, Israel Earley, Jesse Moore, John Fannon, William Williams, John Williams, Matthias Brewer, Joseph Oliver, J. T. F. Johnson, John Mills, Malen Griffin, Ezekiel Everest. William Everest, John Umphlett, H. S. Moorman, G. K. Dawson, Moses S. Hunt, William M. Shein, Lewis Hunt, Joshua Joiner, Ozaias Goodson, William Bentley, C. W. Watson, Samuel Davidson, James Richey, Alfred Sheinn, Bennett B. Arnold, D. A. Harper, James Rooner, James Ellis, R. Clements, William Nevergall, William McPherson, Alfred Coulter, Edward Shein, Isaac Telfair, David J. Mills, Christopher Ellis, Henry Miller, William Miller, Tate Wright, Samuel Jackson, William Bloom, Aaron Bloom, John Rhinehart, Thomas Sturgeon, John C. Dowden.


"And being satisfied that thirty days' previous notice of such intended application had first been given by advertising in three public places within the boundaries of said proposed new township, the commissioners being also satisfied that it is necessary to erect a new township as prayed for by said petitioners, and as fully set forth by a plot