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Athens County, Ohio
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BIOGRAPHIES

Source:
History
of
Athens County, Ohio
And Incidentally of the Ohio Land Company
and the First Settlement of the State at Marietta
with personal and biographical sketches of the early
settlers, narratives of pioneer adventures, etc.
By Charles M. Walker
"Forsam et hćc olim meminisse juvabit." - Virgil.
Publ. Cincinnati:
Robert Clarke & Co.
1869.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M
N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

< BACK TO 1869 BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX >

  ALEXANDER CALDWELL was born in Ireland in 1791, came to the United States in 1804 and to Carthage township in 1816, where he settled as a farmer and still lives.  He served one term as justice of the peace and several years as township trustee.  His descendants are numerous and respectable.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 456
 

DR. EBEN G. CARPENTER was born at Alstead, New Hampshire, in 1808. His father was a physician, and, of eight brothers, five studied medicine. Dr. C. graduated at the Berkshire Medical college at Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 1831, practiced in New Hampshire a year or so, came to Ohio in 1833 and settled at Chester, Meigs county (then the county seat). In 1836 he came to Athens, where he has lived ever since, engaging very actively in the practice of his profession. Dr. C. has been notably successful as an operative surgeon.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 302

  CAPTAIN PARKER CARPENTER, a native of Killingly, Connecticut, came to this township in 1817, and settled on a new farm a little north of the present village of New England.  He served in the war of 1812, before leaving Connecticut.  A few years before his death he removed to Athens township and settled on a fine farm about two miles from Athens, where he died Nov. 6, 1852, aged seventy-three years.  He was an excellent citizen.  Some of this descendants still live in the county, and are highly respected.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 449
  ELIPHALET CASE came from Rome township, with his family, in 1808, and brought into cultivation the fine farm on which Professor Miller now lives.  Case married a daughter of Job Ruter, and was an influential citizen during the early days of the county.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 507
  JOHN M. CHASE.     In the year 1817 John M. Chase, a native of Danville, Maine, moved to the county, and settled as a farmer in Alexander township, where he resided till his death in 1860.  Of his family two sons and four daughters are now living in this and the adjoining county of Meigs.
     Gardiner F. Chase, his son, born in Danville, Maine, in 1811, came to Alexander in 1817, and now lives on the farm ion which his father settled in that year.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 360
  SAMUEL CLARK settled here about 1820.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 524
  LEWIS COLUMBIA, born in France in 1770, came to Ames township in 1815 and settled on the creek above the Owens settlement, whence, after a few years, he moved on to Walker's branch and settled on the farm now owned by Mahlon Kasler.  He has erected a rude tannery, the first established in this part of the country, which served a good purpose to a limited extent in tanning the skins of wild animals, with which the region then abounded.  He died in 1825.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 433
  ASAHEL COOLEY, SEN.  The first white settler within the limits of what is now Carthage township was Asahel Cooley, Sen.  He came from near Springfield, Massachusetts, to Belpre in 1797, moved to what is now Athens county in 1799, traversing a dense wilderness between the Muskingum and the Hockhocking, and settled within the present limits of Carthage.  With the aid of his grown up sons he had soon cleared a piece of land and prepared a home which was known long afterward for its good cheer and genuine hospitality.  Esquire Cooley was a man of well-informed mind, active business habits and gentlemanly manners.  He was for many hears justice of the peace and county commissioner and held other offices of trust in the very early history of the county.  His oldest son, Simeon Cooley, built the Coolville mills in 1815, and, in connection with them, what was then considered a large distillery.  He laid out near his mills and now neat and thriving village of Coolville which, with a slight abbreviation, bears his name.  The youngest and only surviving son of Esquire Cooley, Heman Cooley, is a respectable farmer living near Coolville in Troy township, and is now seventy-three years of age.
     The near year after Ashael Cooley came, his brother-in-law, Mr. Abram Frost, and settled in Carthage with a large family.  Many of his descendants have removed to western sates.   One of his sons, Heman Frost, settled as a farmer in Rome township, where he was highly respected, and, during his long residence there of about forty years, ranked as one of her best citizens.  He died June 5, 1868, aged seventy-eight years.  His last illness was caused by a severe fall from a scaffold in his barn.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 453
  ROBERT H. COTTON settled here in 1836.  He was a native of Virginia and a model farmer.  He settled on the farm where the village of Marshfield now stands, and sold that land to the railroad company.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 539
  NEIL COURTNEY was an Englishman by birth, and was, for a time, in the British navy during the revolutionary war. Near the close of the war, while the vessel on which he was serving lay off Long Island, he deserted the service into which he had been impressed, swam half a mile to shore, and assumed allegiance to the new government. He came to Athens county in 1806, and settled one mile north of Athens, on what was afterward known as the "Courtney farm." The following entries appear in the old records of the county commissioners:
     "April 8, 1809. The petitions of William Dorr and Neil Courtney, praying for an alteration in the road leading from the Horse mill to the mouth of Sunday creek, and from Athens to Coe's mill, read the first time. Petition granted. Jehiel Gregory, Samuel Moore, and Robert Linzee appointed viewers, to meet at Neil Courtney's on Monday, the 12th instant, at 9 o'clock A. M."
     "December 6, 1810. The commissioners agreed, on condition that Neil Courtney produce to them satisfactory proof that he has worked, or expended on the alteration in the road leading from the Horse mill, near Esquire Bingham's, to the mouth of Sunday creek, the sum of five dollars, that then said road shall be established. Proof filed in office of commissioners, February—, 1811."
     Mr. Courtney died January 22, 1826, in his sixty-eighth year. Numerous descendants of his are living in this county.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page
  ROSWELL CULVER and JOEL SPENSER settled, with their families, in Rome about 1801.  They were brothers-in-law of Judge Hatch, having married sisters.  The "widow Comfort Crippen," another of Judge Hatch's sisters, settled in 1804 on the river, about a mile and a half below the South of Federal creek.  She brought with her six sons and three daughters.  One of the sons was Amos Crippen, long a leading citizen of the county, and the memory of one of the daughters, who was married to A. G. Brown, of Athens, is still fondly cherished by her relatives and friends.  Of this large family, brought into Rome in 1804, only one now survives, viz:  Mrs. Orinda Branch, of Middleport, Meigs county.  One of the sisters, the late Mrs. Olive Currier, relict of Judge Ebenezer Currier, died at her residence in Athens, Jan. 7, 1868, aged eighty-two years.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 506
  EBENEZER CURRIER, born at Hempstead, Rockingham county, New Hampshire, Dec. 15, 1772, came to Ohio in 1804, and to the town of Athens in 1806, where he lived nearly fifty years. He was one of the pioneer merchants of Athens. In 1811, having to transport a small supply of goods from Baltimore, he hired Archelaus Stewart to fetch them. The latter made the trip to and from Baltimore, all the way in a light wagon, and delivered the goods safely in Athens, after a journey of about two months. During Mr. Currier's long residence here he filled several town and township offices, was justice of the peace, county commissioner, and county treasurer; was four times a member of the state legislature as senator and representative, and for about twenty-one years was associate judge of the court of common pleas. For more than forty years he engaged here in mercantile pursuits, in which he was quite successful, amassing a considerable fortune. Judge Currier died March 2, 1851. Many of his descendants live in the county.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 288

Ephraim Cutler
EPHRAIM CUTLER, known in the early history of Athens county as Judge Cutler, was the oldest son of Dr. Manasseh Cutler, and was born at Edgartown, Duke's county, Massachusetts, April 12th, 1767.  His did not receive a collegiate education, but, being an industrious reader, he acquired during youth considerable mental culture, and a large store of useful knowledge.  From the age of three years he lived with his grandparents, at Killingly, Connecticut, both of whom he was wont to mention in after life with great respect and affection.  His grandfather was a pure and pious man, and an ardent patriot.  In a sketch written long afterward, Judge Cutler says:
     "I will remember that the express with the news of the battle of Lexington, which was the commencement of the revolutionary struggle, came directly to my grandfather's house in the night after the battle.  He was in bed, and I slept with him.  He arose immediately and fired his gun three times, which was, doubtless, the agreed signal, as it was universally expected that there would be an attack from the British.  Before sunrise he, with fifteen others, had started for the battlefield.  Before leaving he gave a particular charge to his housekeeper to provide carefully for the wants of any soldier who might call during his absence."
     In 1787 Mr. Cutler married Miss Leah Atwood, of Killingly, a lady whose great worth and excellence of character were for many years well known in Athens county.  After his marriage he engaged for a few years in mercantile pursuits at Killingly.  In 1795 he accepted the agency of the Ohio Company, in which he had been a shareholder from the beginning, and, on the 15th of June in that year, set out with his wife and four children for the company's purchase in the northwestern territory.  The journey was made in the usual way of that time - in wagons across the mountains to the headwaters of the Ohio, and thence down the river in a small flat boat.  While descending the river they lost two of their children, Hezekiah, the youngest, and Mary, the eldest, whose remains were buried in the forrest on the banks of the beautiful river.  They arrived at Marietta, September 18, 1795, having been more than three months on the way, and thirty-one days on the river.  At Marietta Mr. Cutler lay sick for several weeks in the block house.  As soon as he was able they proceeded to the garrison at Waterford, where they remained till the spring of 1799.  The circumstances of his removal to and settlement in Ames, in 1799, are narrated elsewhere.  Mr. and Mrs. Cutler brought with them to their new home four children - Nancy and Charles, born in New England, and Mary and Daniel, born in Waterford.  All of these, except Charles, are still living.  Nancy, now Mrs. Carter, lives in Franklin county, Ohio.  Mary, Mrs. Gulliver Dean, lives in Ames township, near the old Cutler homestead.  Daniel lives in Kansas and is an intelligent and prosperous farmer.
     For the next few years Mr. Cutler devoted himself with great energy to developing the interests of the Ohio Company, and of the Amesville settlement in particular, taking a leading part in all the social, political and educational movements of the day.  During the first year of his residence in the territory he had been commissioned by Governor St. Clair captain of the militia, justice of the peace, judge of the court of quarter sessions and of the court of common pleas.  He was appointed by the territorial legislature, at its first session, one of the seven commissioners to lease the school and ministerial lands in each township of the Ohio Company's purchase.  In September, 1801, while living in Ames, Judge Cutler was elected to represent Washington county in the territorial legislature.  At this legislature, which sat at Chillicothe, the question of the formation of a state government came up, and Judge Cutler and his colleague, William R. Putnam, were the only two who voted against the measure.  In doing this they represented the wishes of their constitution.  In this convention, and in the framing of the first constitution of Ohio, he exercised a large influence.  Article III, establishing the judicial system of the state, was almost wholly shaped and drafted by him.  But the greatest service rendered by Judge Cutler in this convention was his determined opposition to the introduction of slavery into the state of Ohio; for, strange as it may seem, a strong effort was made to fasten this system on the state, notwithstanding the positive language and the solemn compact of the ordinance of 1787.  There were delegates in the convention who, representing the sentiments of settlers from slaveholding states, claimed that the ordinance was in the nature of a contract, and was not binding till its terms had been accepted by the new state; and, consequently, that if she chose to reject any portion of the proposed terms, it was competent for her to do so, while adopting her fundamental law and becoming a state.  We have not space to describe the contest in detail.  A determined effort was made by the party referred to to plant slavery on the soil of Ohio, and the great name and influence of Thomas Jefferson were used to further the attempt.1Judge Cutler stood in the breach, and with all his power and great persistency battled against this movement.  His friends rallied around him; he was finally successful, and to Ephraim Cutler more than to any other man posterity is indebted for shutting and barring the doors against the introduction into Ohio of the monstrous system of African slavery.
     Mr. Cutler also took a leading part in framing and securing the passage of secs. 3, 25, and 26 of article VIII of the constitution, relating to religion and education.
     In December, 1806, Judge Cutler removed from Athens to Washington county, settling on the Ohio river about six miles below Marietta.  Here his first wife died in 1807.  In 1808 he married Sarah Parker, a native of Newburyport, Massachusetts.  Four of the children by this marriage are still living, the only son, William P. Cutler, being esteemed among the first men in the state.2.
     In 1818 Judge Cutler again appeared in public life as a member of the Ohio legislature from Washington county.  We regret that we can not exhibit in detail his noble services at this period of his life; we can only state the results.  He succeeded in changing the land tax system from a direct tax to an ad valorem basis.  Prior to 1824 the whole burden of state taxes was laid on the lands as a direct tax, levied by the acre and without reference to value.  Consequently thinly populated counties like Athens and Washington actually paid more into the treasury than wealthy and populous counties like Hamilton and Butler.  The system was grossly unequal and oppressive.  Judge Cutler's clear vision enabled him to perceive this, and he labored long and successfully to change it, so that taxes should be assessed on the whole property of the people according to value.
     His other great achievement at this time was the establishment of an excellent common school system.  The first public allusion to education in Ohio is found in an oration by Solomon Drown, delivered at Marietta, April 7th, 1789.  The first memorial on behalf of the general interest of public schools read in the Ohio legislature was offered in 1816, by the Rev. Samuel P. Robbins, of Marietta, but prior to 1820 there was no organized sentiment in the state on the subject of common schools, and no general legislation.  In 1821 the legislature passed an act for the regulation and support of common schools, but it did not provide any adequate revenue for their maintenance, and was by no means an efficient system.  The common school question was an issue in the elections of 1824.  Several ardent advocates of a thorough system were elected, among them Judge Cutler, as senator from Washington county.  We do not aver that he alone deserves the credit for the success of the measure in the legislature of 1824-5, but he was the acknowledged leader of the friends oaf common schools, and his experience in public affairs and as a legislator rendered his services of the greatest value.  On the 5th of February, 1825, an excellent school bill, providing a thorough system and liberal support therefor by taxation, was passed by the legislature.  When the vote in the senate was taken, Judge Cutler and Mr. Nathan Guilford (senator from Cincinnati, who was an ardent and able friend of the cause, and who drafted the bill) were standing side by side.  When the result was announced a majority for the bill of twenty-two votes, Judge Cutler turned to Mr. Guilford, and, with great solemnity and earnestness, said:  "Now Lord, lettest thou they servant depart in peace, according to thy word, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation."
     The latter years of Judge Cutler's life were spent quietly at his place in Washington county, amid the enjoyments of home and the affectionate attention of relatives and friends.  He died July 8th, 1853.
Source:  History of Athens County, Ohio - By Charles M. Walker, Publ. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co., 1869 - Page 387

NOTES:

1. It was then a theory of Jefferson's that the extension of slavery diluted and weakened it.  He desired, or at least professed to desire, its extinction.
2. He was born near Marietta, July 12, 1813; was a member of the Ohio legislature from 1844 to 1846, officiating as speaker of the house during his last term; was a member of the constitutional convention of 1850; afterwards was for some years president of the Marietta & Cincinnati Railroad Company; was elected in 1860 a representative to the 37th congress, and has been for a few years past again officially connected with the above mentioned railroad.
 

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