OHIO STATEWIDE FILES OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List *********************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. *********************************************************************** OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest Volume 99 : Issue 216 Today's Topics: #1 ACCOUNT BOOK/GABRIEL WAGNER-CARROL [AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M RE] #2 CARROLL COUNTY - PART 1 [AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M RE] #3 Shaw History-Part 1 Morrow Cty. ["JUDY P." ] ------------------------------ X-Message: #1 Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 23:18:33, -0500 From: AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M REASONER) Subject: ACCOUNT BOOK/GABRIEL WAGNER-CARROLL CO. OHIO The Cross Road of our Nation, Records & Pioneer Families April-June 1972 Vol. XIII No. II, Copyright 1972 The Ohio Genealogical Society ACCOUNT BOOK OF GABRIEL WAGNER, BLACKSMITH 1866-1878 Submitted by Mrs. Laura M. Wagner, Route three, Carrollton, Ohio 44615 Gabriel Wagner, blacksmith, was born in Union Township, Carroll County, Ohio, in 1842, the son of Henry and Susanna (Abel) Wagner. He was a Democrat, a member of St. John's Lutheran Church, and died in 1921 in Perry Township. Mr. Wagner married Barbara Heidy, the daughter of John and Nancy (Koontz/Kuntz) Heidy. Besides smithing, he was a farmer and kept bees. These men for whom he did blacksmith work were from Lee, Union, Perry, and Loudoun Townships in Carroll County. Mr. Wagner's recipe for tempering iron: One gallon fish oil or frish oil Two pounds taller (tallow) One pound beeswax. Amos, Mordicia Faucett, Henry Reigle, Jacob Amos, William Graham, Joesph Rutledge, John Albaugh, Willima Goff, Samuel Riley, John Brooks, Frank Heidy, John Sells, Peter Brooks, Francis Heidy, Thomas Sells, Anthony Brooks, Thomas Heidy, Samuel Sells, Gabriel Barnhouse, Samuel Hendrix, Eli Sells, Benjamin Benedict, Washington Hibbs, Isaac Smith, Jonas Busler, Andrew Heidy, Francis Steel, Robert Busler, Franklin Kelly, Daniel Steel, James Busler, Johnathon Kelly, Phillips Slates, James Capper, James Kelly, Richard Toot, Shull Capper, William Kail, Gabriel Tope, Hiram Crim, Jacob Mallony, Aquilla Tipton, William Crim, William Kirby, Samuel Thompson, Anthony Cogsil, Harvey Kirby, Amos Stocken, Leander Davison, William Long, Jacob Sells, John Amos, Robert Long, Samuel Tipton, Sy (Sylvester) Dunlavy, Anthony McCort, Hugh Sparks, Thomas Albaugh, Samuel McCort, Henry Wagner, John Arbaugh, Peter Kirby, Henry Wagner, Jeremiah Cogine, Joseph McCort, Thomas Williams, Samuel Catrel, John Myers, David Walters, John Baker, Nathaniel Moore, William Walters, Henry Davis, Jarit Mallony, Frederic Walters, Lewis Arbaugh, Jacob Lowmiller, John Wagner, Henry Brant, Henry Long, Francis Wagner, Alexander Capper, Thomas Kail, John Wagner, Amos Casaday, John Markley, Franklin Wagner, Hiram Dodd, Milton Myers, John Wagner, Isaac DeVore, William Riley, John, Jr. Keys, Zeff Elder, John ------------------------------ X-Message: #2 Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 23:18:29, -0500 From: AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M REASONER) Subject: CARROLL COUNTY - PART 1 HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF OHIO, By henry Howe, LL.D.. 1898 CARROLL CARROLL COUNTY was formed in the session of 1832-33 from Columbiana, Stark, Tuscarawas, Harrison and Jefferson. The population mainly originated from Pennsylvania, Virginia and Maryland, with some Germans and Scotch-Irish. The surface is somewhat hilly. Its area is 400 square miles. In 1885 the acres cultivated were 68,121; in pasture, 109,149; woodland, 40,350; lying waste, 273: produced in wheat, 81,869 bushels; corn 514,155; apples, 303,928; sheep, 141,345; coal, 216,630 tons. School census 1886, 5,513; teachers, 124. It has 63 miles of railroad. TOWNSHIPS AND CENSUS 1840 1880 Augusta 1,234 1,126 Brown 2,165 2,305 Centre 1,139 1,590 East 995 868 Fox 1,491 1,275 Harrison 1,308 1,075 Lee 1,372 933 Loudon 966 965 Monroe 1,060 1,283 Orange 1,528 1,327 Perry 1,344 1,040 Ross 1,593 1,195 Union 889 684 Washington 1,014 750 Population in 1840 was 18,108; in 1860, 15,738; 1880, 16,416, of whom 14,283 were Ohio-born. This county was named from Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, Md., the last survivor of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. He died at Baltimore, Nov. 14, 1833, aged ninety-six years. He was born Sept. 20, 1737; was of Irish descent, a Catholic, and highly educated in France and in London, thus passing his time from the age of eight years to that of twenty-eight, when he returned to Maryland a fine scholar and a polished gentleman. When informed by Gen. H. A. Stidger, of this county, on a visit to Baltimore, that Ohio had named a county in his honor he was extremely pleased; this was about six months before his decease. The Sandy and Beaver Canal extends from the Ohio river through Columbiana, Carroll, Stark, and Tuscarawas counties. It was begun in 1835 and it was navigable to some extent until 1850, when it was abandoned. The aggregate loss to the stockholders was nearly two millions of dollars. Its principal use was a feeder for mills. It is said that only one boat ever made the entire passage through it. This was by the contractors who built it, and because it was conditional upon their receiving their pay for its completion. The following items upon the history of Carrollton and Carroll county are derived mainly from a series of articles, "Annals of Carroll County," written for the Carroll Free Press by Peter M. Herold. Centerville, now Carrollton, was laid out by Peter Bohart, Oct. 4, 1815; Hon. Isaac Atkinson gave much of the land for the site. Bohart was a Pennsylvania German and came here about 1810. About the same time came Richard Baxter, Richard Elson, Isaac Dwyer and some others. At that time the line between Stark and Columbiana counties ran just west of the village. Here Mr. Dwyer built what he called upon the sign The Rising Sun Tavern, When the (Quaker) Commissioners of Columbiana county refused to grant him license to sells strong drinks he removed his bar into the room on the Stark county side of the line and handed down the bottles and mixed toddies with impunity. Peter Bohart gave the land for the Carrollton cemetery and is buried in it, where also is buried Joseph Bushong, a soldier of the Revolutionary war, and several soldiers of the Mexican war. On the farm of Nathaniel L. Shaw, in Washington township, is a prehistoric graveyard containing the remains of a people that were buried in earthenware coffins, two or three of which were unearthed a few years ago when digging a cellar. Thomas L. Patton, the first child born in Carrollton, was an officer in the Union army in the Rebellion, and is now living here, as is also John Beatty, the first sheriff of Carroll county. He was born Oct. 4, 1804. Among his recollections is attending a Whig meeting at Massillon, July 4, 1838, where Gen. Harrison made an address. On the platform were the "Poe Brothers," Adam and Andrew, the Indian fighters, whose noted fight is related under the head of Columbiana county. They were then very old and imbecile. Gen. B.F. Potts, originally colonel Thirty-second Ohio volunteer infantry, was born in Fox township. He was, when a member of the Ohio Senate, offered by Grant the governorship of Montana. He refused to accept it at the time, though he did so later, and his refusal was because the adoption by Ohio of the fifteenth amendment of the constitution depended upon his vote, which would be lost if he vacated his seat. In that daring railroad raid in Georgia of a band of Ohio men from Gen. Mitchell's army was Wm. Campbell, a native of Fox township, and he was one of those executed. His mother's maiden name was Jane Morgan, and she was a cousin of Gen. John Morgan, of the rebel army. When Morgan was on his raid through Ohio he passed through Carroll county, and in Fox township he took dinner with Mrs. Allison, whose maiden name was Keziah Morgan. She was the sister of Mrs. Campbell, and therefore also a cousin of Morgan. While eating his dinner the family genealogy was traced back to Kentucky. Ere he left, the old lady gave him a clean shirt, of which John was sadly in need, and he went on his way rejoicing, with a good dinner inside and a clean shirt out. Several of Morgan's men who were wounded were obliged to remain behind at Mrs. Allison's, and were consequently soon taken prisoners by the union soldiers. Mrs. Campbell is still living, but since the execution of her son she cannot talk upon that subject without its effects showing upon her mind; she imagines she has a mortgage upon the government. She is twice a widow; her first husband was a soldier in the Mexican war. Her last husband's name was Shipley, and her present residence is near Caldwell, Noble county. CARROLLTON IN 1846. -Carrollton, the county-seat is 125 miles east-northeast from Columbus. It was originally called Centretown, but on the organization of the county changed to its present name. It has a public square in the centre -shown in the engraving -on which stand the county buildings. It contains 1 Presbyterian, 1 Lutheran, 1 Methodist Episcopal and 1 Associate Reformed church, 6 mercantile stores, 2 printing offices, and 800 inhabitants. -Old Edition. Carrollton, the county-seat, is on the C. & C.R.R., eighty-seven miles southeasterly from Cleveland. County officers, 1888: Probate Judges, James Holden, and Junius C. Ferrall; Clerk of Court, Harvey B. Gregg; Sheriff, John Campbell; Prosecuting Attorney, Irving H. Blythe; Auditor, Luther M. Barrick; Treasurer, John B. Van Fossen; Recorder, Will. J. Baxter; Surveyor, Richard H. Lee; Coroner, Harvey D. Dunlap; Commissioners, James Murray, Wm. Davis, James H. Rhinehart. NEWSPAPERS: Chronicle, Democratic, J. V. Lawler & Bro., publishers; Free Press, Republican, John H. Tripp, publisher, Peter M. Herold, local editor; Republican, Republican, S.T. Cameron & Co., publishers. Churches: 1 Methodist Episcopal, 1 Presbyterian, 1 Lutheran, 1 Reformed and 1 United Presbyterian. Banks: Cummings & Couch; Stockton Bros., V. Stockton, cashier. Population in 1880, 1,136. School census 1886, 417. A.M. Fishell, superintendent. In October, 1887, "no saloon in the town and no prisoners in the county jail." The engraving shows the new court-house and other buildings on the public square. This was finished in 1886, costing with jail in the rear about $150,000. It is built mainly of Navarre sandstone, with some from Berea. It is just to the left of the old court-house shown in the old view. The old court-house was sold on the 11th of June for $196 and the bell for $138. Daniel McCook, father of one of the famous families of "Fighting McCooks," was the first clerk of court of Carroll county after its formation, in the winter of 1832-33. He resided in the large, white house shown on the corner, to the right of the old court-house, at the time the view was drawn; and it was the birthplace of several of his family. It is now partly occupied by Geo. J. Butler as a dry-goods store. ------------------------------ X-Message: #3 Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 23:38:36 -0400 From: "JUDY P." Subject: Shaw History-Part 1 Morrow Cty. HISTORY OF THE SHAWS Our parents were married bout the year 1875 and lived in Ohio the first few years. They bought and paid for 40 acres of land but when they tried to buy some more land they found none for sale or else at a price they could not pay. So Father begain looking toward the West, as a very popular slogan at that time was "go West young man go West" and Illinois at that time was a very big and thinly settled land and lots of land was for sale. So Father came West in about the year of 1878 or 79 and bought up a tract of land 120 acres just North of the Coder farm, land now owned by the Frank Baker heirs and the Paddicks. Father brought some lumber and house materials, also his horses and wagon shipped through by freight and started building a new home, which he completed in time to get his household furnishings and wife here from Morrow County, Ohio before the real winter set in. In December the 16 of 1880 their first son was born and they named his Welcome a. Shaw who is now ling in Lawrenceville, Illinois. called the Yates place. I think he got the place where we children In 1882 their first daughter was born on May 4, they named her Jennie May, and then in 1884 another daughter was born on January 30. They named her Estella Maude. Then in about 1887 a son was born which they named was Will messenger who was a school teacher and they hired him to teach the school that first winter, the school was called Concord and was located in a field East of Ivyl Albert's farm and North of the old school house that I remember. Well, Uncle Will only stayed to teach that winter term. He said they could give the State of Illinois back to the Indians as he wouldn't stay there if they gave it to him, and we can't imagine things as they were then and Ohio was one of the more advanced states both in schools and highways. Ohio had what they called the pike roads on their main roads, I guess that was what we call gravel roads, but Illinois in our section of the state had at that early period next to no roads and in the fall and winter months great sections of the road was what we called corduroy. It was simply small poles about like the early telephone poles laid side by side to cover mud holes so the wagons could get through and wagons were about the only means of getting anywhere. Some years later the young men bought carts with two wheels no top and shafts for one horse, that was before my time as I grew up in the horse and buggy age and a few of the families bought the surreys with fringe on top. I remember Mr. Johnny Bowen who lived across the road from us had a surrey like that and he would hitch the work team to the surrey and take the family to Sunday school and church -------------------------------- End of OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest V99 Issue #216 *******************************************