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OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS


A Part of Genealogy Express
 

Welcome to
Belmont County, Ohio
History & Genealogy

Source:
HISTORY OF
BELMONT COUNTY, OHIO
AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS
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EDITED AND COMPILED BY
HON. A. T. McKELVEY
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PUBLISHED BY BIOGRAPHICAL PUBLISHING COMPANY,
GEORGE RICHMOND, PRESIDENT     C. R. ARNOLD, TREASURER
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
1903

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CHAPTER XVII.
WARREN TOWNSHIP
 

The First Settlers - The First Mills - The First Child - Wild Game - The Society of Friends - The First Churches and Schools - Organization of the Township - Tobacco and Berry Culture - The Population and Township Officers - The City of Barnesville - A Sketch of the Founder - Municipal Officers - The Post Office - The Manufactories - The Bank - Dr. Carolus Judkins - Hon. John Davenport - The Churches - The Schools - Secret Societies - Robert Hilles Post, G. A. R. - The Press - The Cemeteries - The Belmont County Children's Home - The Board of Charities.


     Seven years before the organization of Warren township, emigrants began to enter into the territory from Pennsylvania and Maryland, and large caravans of Quakers arrived from the Southern States.
     The country was almost an unbroken wilderness, and the labors and hardships and dangers to which these early emigrants were subjected are scarcely understood by their descendants today.

THE FIRST SETTLERS.

     Among the first settlers are mentioned the names of George Shannon, father of Governor Shannon, John Dougherty, John Grier, who emigrated from Maryland in 1800, and built their rude cabins on section 9 and 12.
     The year following, Robert Plummer, the first Quaker to settle in the township, built his humble cabin of poles on section 10, not far distant from the settlers above mentioned.  Mr. Plummer was a devoted Friend, and set apart land at the very outset for the establishment of a Friend's Meeting House and graveyard.  Indeed until 1806 the pioneers of Warren township were largely Quakers from the States above mentioned.
     The winter of 1802-03 was remarkable for the intensity of the cold, causing the pioneers the utmost distress.  It was during a violent snow storm in January that Governor Shannon's father, who had gone off upon a hunting expedition to supply the family with game, was buried in a snow drift and perished before his body was recovered.
     In 1804 Henry Grier located west of Barnesville, near the line, and John Kennon, father of Judge William Kennon, Sr., camped upon a tract adjoining Alexander Campbell's, who had settled on the land just over the line in Guernsey County.

THE FIRST MILLS.

 

THE FIRST CHILD.

     The first child born in Warren township was Wilson Shannon, afterward Governor of Ohio, and worthy of him in after years, to boast of having spent his childhood days in digging and drying ginseng wherewith to aid in the support of his widowed mother.

WILD GAME.

 

THE SOCIETY OF FRIENDS.

 

THE FIRST CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS.

 

ORGANIZATION OF THE TOWNSHIP.

 

TOBACCO AND BERRY CULTURE.

 

THE POPULATION AND TOWNSHIP OFFICERS.

 

TOWNSHIP OFFICERS.

     The present township trustees are Smiley Bernard, Otho Duval and John Howard; township clerk, S. B. Piper; township treasurer, F. L. Harrison township justices, - Joseph W. Chappell, James A. White and W. F. Outland.

THE CITY OF BARNESVILLE.

 

THE SKETCH OF THE FOUNDER.

     James Barnes, the founder of Barnesville, was a notable man.  Like the majority of the early settlers, Mr. Barnes was a member of the Society of Friends, who emigrated from the South in 1803, locating at St. Clairsville.
     In 1812 he removed to Barnesville, where he had prevously entered large tracts of land, then entirely in forest.  In 1806 he associated himself with Rev. James Rounds in the tanning business, and in 1808 he laid out the town, reserving one block on Chestnut street, fronting on Main and Church streets, for his family.
     Mr. Barnes was active and enterprising in advancing the business interests of the community, and was personally engaged in clearing lands, planting orchards, cultivating farms, buying and clarifying ginseng, shipping as high as 3,000 pounds of the root in a single year.
     In 1814 he organized companies for building flour mills, woolen mills, and sawmills, and in 1823-26 he engaged in the tobacco trade very extensively and built an immeense packing house on the site of the old Presbyterian Church. 
     While Mr. Barnes was engaged in multifarious pursuits, he was never nervous or confused, but always calm and deliberate.
     In personal appearance he was tall and portly, and always attired in the simple garb of the Quaker.
     He was generous to a fault, and ever helpful to the poor.  While in the pursuit of the tobacco business, he sustained heavy losses, from 182838, from which he never recovered.
     In an effort to regain his lost fortunes, his overtaxed body and brain collapsed, and he dropped dead in the mountains of Pennsylvania, while returning to his home.

MUNICIPAL OFFICERS.

 

THE POST OFFICE.

 

THE MANUFACTURERS.

 

[PHOTO OF BARNESVILLE CITY HALL]

THE BANKS.

 

DR. CAROLUS JUDKINS.

 

DR. JOHN DAVENPORT.

 

THE CHURCHES.

 

THE SCHOOLS.

 

SECRET SOCIETIES.

 

[PHOTO OF BARNESVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOL]

 

ROBERT HILLES POST, G. A. R.

 

THE PRESS.

 

THE CEMETERIES.

     There are two cemetery associations in Barnesville.  The first that we shall mention is the Green Mountain Cemetery Association which was formed May 5, 1858, with Colson Davenport, Adam Bentz, Stephen Wilson, John H. Morrow and H. T. Barnes as its trustees.  This cemetery has always been known as "Knob Field" because of its high elevation.  It occupies eight acres of land and contains 168 lots.
     The South Cemetery was organized Mar. 4, 1858, and was originally known as the Barnesville Cemetery Association.  The grounds were purchased May 8, 1858, and contained 10 acres and were dedicated to cemetery purposes the same year by Rev. James Henderson.  The first officers were as follows: Trustees, William A. Talbot, R. Happer, David McCartney, William Barnes, John Bradfield; treasurer, B. Davenport; secretary, J. W. Warfield; superintendent, J. S. Evans.  The number of lots sold is 220.  The present officers are: Dr. J. A. Judkins, president; John S. Howard, secretary; John W. Bradfield, treasurer; Robert Evans and H. R. Brown.

THE BELMONT COUNTY CHILDREN'S HOME.

 

THE BOARD OF CHARITIES.

 

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