JACKSON was one of the earliest 
									settled townships of Hancock County, and the 
									fifth erected and organized.  On the 
									7th of December, 1829, certain residents of 
									Amanda and Delaware Townships petitioned the 
									board of commissioners to erect Township 1 
									south, Range 1, into a new political 
									subdivision to be named Jackson, which 
									request was accordingly granted.  The 
									name was chosen in honor of Gen. Andrew 
									Jackson, elected the previous year to 
									the Presidency, who had many warm admirers 
									in this part of the county.  No change 
									occurred in its territory till March 5, 
									1845, when the commissioners ordered the 
									eastern tier of sections, from 1 to 36 
									inclusive, to be attached to Amanda.  
									Since that time Jackson has contained thirty 
									sections, or an area of 19,200 acres.  
									It is bounded on the north by Findlay and 
									Marion Townships, on the east by Amanda, on 
									the south by Delaware and Madison, and on 
									the west by Eagle.  In 1840 its 
									population was 631; 1850 830; 1860, 1,272; 
									1870, 1,209, and 1880, 1,338, or more than 
									44 inhabitants to the square mile. 
     The Blanchard river enters the southeast corner of the 
									township on Section 35, thence passes 
									northeastward into Amanda, and meandering up 
									the western side of that subdivision, 
									crosses back into Jackson near its northeast 
									corner. It thus assists in draining the 
									eastern side of this township.  Lye 
									Creek rises in Madison Township, enters 
									Jackson on Section 32, and, winding in a 
									general northeast direction, strikes the 
									northern line of Section 3; thence turns to 
									the northwest, and passing onward empties 
									into the Blanchard a short distance east of 
									Findlay.  A small run flows into Lye 
									Creek from the southeast, affording good 
									surface drainage between that stream and the 
									Blanchard.  The western part of Jackson 
									drains mainly into Eagle Creek, which flows 
									northward along the eastern side of Eagle 
									Township.  Good water is readily found 
									in every part of this subdivision.  The 
									timber in Jackson is generally the same as 
									found in other portions of the county, 
									differing only as to the amount of each 
									particular kind.  Along the streams the 
									soil is a vegetable loam, mixed with 
									alluvial deposits; while away from the water 
									courses it is a clay and sandy loam soil, 
									with a gravel mixture in some places.  
									Taking it as a whole, the soil of Jackson 
									will compare favorably with the surrounding 
									townships. 
      First Settlers - 
									 On the 21st of November, 
									1823, Peter George, the "pioneer land 
									hunter," entered the east half of the 
									northeast quarter of Section 35, which was 
									the first entry made in the township.  
									He, however, became a settler of Amanda. 
									William J. Greer entered the east 
									half of the southeast quarter of the same 
									section, adjoining George's entry on 
									the south,Page 418 -  
									Dec. 10, 1823, but he 
									subsequently settled in Delaware Township.  
									The next entry was made by Mordecai 
									Hammond May 30, 1827.  He took up 
									the west half of the northeast quarter and 
									the west half of the southeast quarter of 
									Section 35, upon which he located the 
									following autumn, and was therefore the 
									first settler of Jackson Township.  
									Mr. Hammond was born in Maryland Apr. 
									27, 1791, removed to York County, Penn., and 
									there married Zilla Gilbert, a native 
									of that State, and in 1826 located in 
									Pickaway County, Ohio.  In the fall of 
									1827, with his brother-in-law, Aquilla 
									Gilbert, he left Pickaway County and 
									took up his abode on the east bank of the 
									Blanchard, in Section 35.  IN April, 
									1828, he took part in the first county 
									election of Hancock, and in October, 1829, 
									was elected county commissioner, and served 
									one term.  In 1842 Mr. Hammond 
									was appointed associate judge, which 
									position he filled seven years.  Nine 
									children were born to him, of whom six 
									survive, and four reside in this county. 
									Judge Hammond died on the old 
									homestead in Section 35, Feb. 25, 1855, his 
									widow surviving him nearly twenty-two years, 
									dying Feb. 4, 1877, in the eightieth year of 
									her age.  Throughout his residence in 
									this township, Judge Hammond was 
									regarded as an upright, worthy man, and one 
									of the leading citizens of his adopted 
									county. 
									     
									 
									ALPHEUS RALSTON is 
									believed to have been the next to locate in 
									this subdivision.  In September, 1829, 
									he entered the southwest quarter of Section 
									7, upon which he settled permanently in 
									October, 1830, where he has ever since 
									resided.  His is a native of Rockingham 
									County, Va., born in June, 1801, whence he 
									removed with the parents to Wood County of 
									that State.  In 1826 he came to 
									Pickaway County, Ohio, where he soon 
									afterward married Miss Elizabeth 
									Williamson sister of Mrs. Thomas 
									Thompson, whose husband was the first 
									settler of Amanda Township.  After a 
									residence of some four years in Pickaway 
									County, Mr. Ralston with his wife and 
									two children, removed to the farm, upon 
									which he has spent fifty-five years of his 
									life.  His cabin was at that time in 
									the heart of a wilderness; a rude wagon 
									track led through the forest to Findlay, and 
									his nearest neighbors were about three miles 
									more distant.  His first wife dying he 
									married her sister, Julia A. Williamson, 
									who yet survives.  Eight children were 
									born to him, four of whom are living. 
									Mr. Ralston is now the oldest 
									surviving pioneer of Jackson Township. 
									     In 1831 HENRY 
									and JACOB COOPER, 
									with their mother and one sister, came from 
									Fairfield County, Ohio, and built a cabin in 
									Section 14.  Henry was but 
									fourteen years old, when his father died and 
									the care of the family largely devolved upon 
									him.  As an illustration of some of the 
									hardships undergone  by the pioneers, 
									the following was often related by Mr. 
									Cooper during his life-time.  Soon 
									after settling in the county, he started one 
									morning on a trip to Findlay, with 
									William Ebright and son, Philip.  
									The ground was covered with snow, and the 
									journey was made in a sled.  They had 
									to cut out a road with their axes as they 
									went along, and by hard work were thus 
									enabled to reach the cabin of Michael 
									Myers in Section 28, Marion Township, 
									about dark.  Here they spent the night 
									sleeping on the clay floor of Myers' 
									cabin, and the next morning resumed their 
									journey to Findlay, where they arrived 
									before noon, the whole distance traveled 
									with only about seven miles.  Henry 
									Cooper married a sister of Nutter 
									Powell, and both died on the old 
									homestead.  Jacob removed to 
									Indiana. 
									     The 
									 
									WILLIAMSONS came 
									to the township in 1831, from Pickaway 
									County,  
									Page 419 -  
									Ohio.  Aaron settled in 
									Section 6, where both he and his wife, 
									Margaret, resided till death.  Five 
									of their children are residents of the 
									county.  Levi and his mother 
									located in Section 18, immediately south of
									Mr. Ralston, his brother-in-law, but 
									subsequently removed across the road into 
									Eagle Township.  The mother died here, 
									and in 1857 he sold out and went to Iowa. 
									     During the 
									succeeding four years Jackson Township 
									received several families, viz.: the 
									Tisdalls, Hemrys, Petermans, Joys, Biblers, 
									Newells and Bears.  Mrs. Tisdall, 
									with her sons, James and Lucian, 
									settled in Section 18 in 1832-33, but in a 
									few years removed from the county.  
									Henry Hemry, with his wife, Sarah, 
									and eight children, some of whom were full 
									grown, settled in Section 3 in the spring of 
									1834.  He was a native of Virginia, and 
									removed to Carroll County, Ohio, where he 
									married and lived until his coming to 
									Hancock.  He accumulated a large amount 
									of land in this country, though he died 
									about five years after settling on Lye 
									Creek.  Six of his children are 
									residents of Hancock County.  John 
									and Mary A. Peterman came from Holmes 
									County, Ohio, in1834, and built their cabin 
									in the southwest quarter of Section 8, where 
									he died in 1862.  Three of his sons 
									live in this township.  Abraham Hoy 
									settled in Section21, but died in Findlay. 
									Abraham and Elizabeth Bibler 
									came here from Fairfield County, Ohio, in 
									1835, their son, David, having 
									preceded them the previous year.  They 
									settled in Section 17, where the parents 
									died.  Two of the sons, John and 
									David, are leading citizens of Jackson.  
									William Newell, a son -in-law of 
									Abraham Bibler, came the same time, and 
									also settled in Section 17.  The family 
									removed to Putnam County, Ohio, some years 
									ago.  William was an elder 
									brother of Joseph and James Newell, 
									who came later.  Samuel Bear, of 
									York County, Penn., located east of the 
									Biblers, and both he and his wife died 
									upon the farm, which they settled.  
									Mrs. John C. Hayes, of Jackson, is one 
									of their children.  Other settlers of 
									this period were Rufus Bennett in 
									Section 10, in 1834; Simeon Butler in 
									the same section, in 1835; and the 
									Maphets in Section during the latter 
									year, all of whom are well remembered. 
									     In the spring of 
									1836,  LEVI 
									and 
									ELI SAMPSON, native of Baltimore 
									County, Md., came from Richland County, 
									Ohio, and settled in Sections 22 and 23, 
									respectively, erecting their cabins across 
									the road from each other.  In 1851 
									Levi was appointed associate judge, 
									which position he held until the spring of 
									1852, when, under the operation of the new 
									constitution, the office was abolished. 
									Judge Sampson possessed a very 
									limited education, but he had a great deal 
									of strong common sense and practical 
									experience.  He was a genial, whole 
									souled man, familiarly called "Sunny" 
									Sampson, synonymous with that warm 
									friendly good-nature, which he always 
									exhibited.  At the time of his death, 
									Mar. 13, 1879, Judge Sampson was 
									regarded as one of the wealthy farmers of 
									the county.  Eli resided on his 
									farm till 1876, when he removed to Mt. 
									Blanchard, where he is at present living. 
									     
									 
									JAMES NEWELL, with 
									his mother, Barbara, and three 
									sisters, Sarah, Elizabeth and 
									Salome, settled in the township in 1835.  
									The parents removed from Shenandoah County, 
									Va., to Fairfield County, Ohio, when the 
									sons were quite small, where both grew to 
									manhood.  Joseph and his wife 
									came to the township a short times after 
									James and the rest of the family, 
									William having also settled here in 
									1835.  James and Joseph located 
									on adjoining farms in Section 8.  The
									Newells were among the first 
									Methodists of this part of the county, and 
									were prominent in organizing the Methodist 
									Episcopal Church of their neighborhood, the 
									first building being erected on  
									Page 420 -  
									land donated 
									by Joseph for that purpose.  The 
									mother died here and James and family 
									left the county prior to the late war. 
									Joseph married Barbara, a 
									daughter of Abraham Bibler, raised a 
									family of seven children and still lives on 
									a part of the old homestead. 
									     In 1836 and 
									1837, James Shelden, Jacob F. Houck, 
									William Harris and John Orwick 
									settled in the township.  Mr. 
									Shelden, his wife, Mary, and 
									seven children came here from Belmont 
									county, Ohio, in the fall of 1836 and built 
									their cabin in the south part of Section 23.  
									The parents, who were Pennsylvanians, died 
									on the old farm, but some of their children 
									are residents of the county.  Jacob 
									F. and Eva Houck, natives of Baltimore 
									County, Md., settled in Section 27.  In 
									1853 he laid out North Liberty, which is 
									better known as Houcktown.  William 
									and Nancy Harris came from Columbiana 
									County, Ohio, about 1836, and both spent 
									their lives in this township.  Several 
									of their descendants reside in Delaware 
									Township, where his son, Jacob, died 
									in 1880.  John and Margaret 
									Orwick and family, natives of 
									Pennsylvania, came to Hancock County in the 
									fall of 1835, and in 1837 located southwest 
									of the site of Houcktown.  Mrs. 
									Orwick died in 1840, and he afterward 
									married a Mrs. Franklin, and died in 
									this township.  Two sons, Jacob and 
									George, and two daughters, Mrs. David 
									Bibler and Mrs. John Russell, are 
									residents of Jackson.  Some other 
									settlers, doubtless, came in during the ten 
									years from 1827 to 1837, among whom were 
									John Treese, Benjamin Wiseman, John, Henry
									and Sylvester Bell, Reuben Fabun, 
									Hathaway R., Warner and Thomas Marlow; 
									but our list embraces those best remembered 
									by the few living pioneers left to tell the 
									tale of early settlements made in the forest 
									of what is now Jackson Township. 
									     
									 Going to 
									Mill -  
									The territory now embraced in 
									Jackson Township has never possessed a 
									grist-mill, and the settlers had to go to 
									Wolford's mill in Delaware Township, 
									Campbell's (now Carlin's) mill at 
									Findlay, Bishop's mill in Eagle 
									Township, or Misamore's mill in 
									Amanda, to get their grinding done; while 
									some patronized mills located outside the 
									county.  Prior to 1845 Misamore's 
									mill was in this township, but in that year 
									the eastern tier of sections was attached to
									Amanda, and thus Jackson lost 
									the mill.  Aquilla Gilbert says:  
									"The first hand-mill in the southern part of 
									the county was owned by Godfrey Wolford, 
									of Delaware Township, and Judge Hammond 
									(with whom I resided throughout the winter 
									of 1828-29), and I used to go to Wolford's 
									three times a week to grind corn meal - the 
									only sort of grain we then possessed."  
									The present generation can scarcely realize 
									the great boon a neighborhood mill was fifty 
									years ago.  In fact, a settler who came 
									in and erected a grist-mill was looked upon 
									as a benefactor.  But those days of 
									privation have long since passed away never 
									to return, and good mills and good flour are 
									plentiful. 
									     
									 Justices 
									-  
									Aquilla Gilbert, the first 
									justice of Jackson, was thrown into Amanda 
									Township in 1845, and a sketch of him will 
									be found at page 359.  His successors 
									have been George Hemry, Joseph 
									Twining, Arthur Russell, Charles O. Mann, 
									John Teems, Andrew W. Houck, D. W. Engle, 
									Joseph S. Struble, James Waltermire, Henry 
									Bowers, Thomas Waltermire, Eli J. Shelden, 
									Israel Sampson, John C. Hayes and  
									Henry Bowers. 
									     
									 Schools 
									- In the fall of 1832, a few settlers 
									living along the Blanchard in Jackson and 
									Amanda Townships, erected a log schoolhouse 
									in Section 13, on the east bank of the 
									Blanchard , then in Jackson Township, and 
									employed  
									Page 421 -  
									Aquilla Gilbert to teach 
									throughout the winter of 1832-33.  "I 
									was paid," says Mr. Gilbert, "by a 
									voluntary quarterly subscription at $1.50 
									per scholar, and I boarded at home.  
									The children came from both Jackson and 
									Amanda, as the country was very sparsely 
									settled."  In 1834-35 a school was 
									taught by Nancy Burns at the house of
									Alpheus Ralston, which was the first 
									in the township west of the Blanchard.  
									The Ralstons, Petermans, Crums and 
									Williamsons attended here.  A log 
									schoolhouse was built on Mr. Ralston's 
									farm in the fall of 1835-36, and a school 
									was afterward taught here by Miss Julia 
									Parker.  Their second teacher was
									Miss Jane Wilson, and the children of 
									the surrounding settlers patronized this 
									pioneer institution.  Such was the 
									beginning of education in the township, 
									which now contains nine good schoolhouses, 
									wherein the children of both rich and poor 
									may received a fair English education. 
									     
									 Churches. 
									-  In 1835-36 a class of the Methodist 
									Episcopal Church was organized in the 
									northwest corner of the township, the 
									Newells being the prime movers in this 
									good work.  For a few years the society 
									met at private houses and the old log 
									schoolhouse, and then erected a building in 
									the southwest corner of Joseph Newell's 
									farm.  This was the first church 
									building in the township, and served the 
									congregation for many years, when it was 
									succeeded by the present structure, half a 
									mile north of the old site.  With the 
									passing years the Methodist Protestant, 
									United Brethren and Baptist denominations 
									organized classes, each of which have a 
									church in Jackson Township.  That of 
									the United Brethren stands in Section 14, 
									the Baptist in Section 20 and the Methodist 
									Protestant in Section 23.  During the 
									political excitement of the war, the 
									Methodists became divided, and to harmonize 
									then two elements the Christian Union Church 
									was afterward organized, and a building 
									erected in Section 30, near the west line of 
									the township.  The Methodist Episcopal 
									denomination has two church buildings in 
									Jackson Township, and is quite strong in 
									numbers.   
									     
									 Towns and 
									Postoffices - Martins Town was laid 
									out by Martin Hollabaugh, Sept. 30, 
									1836, in the southwest quarter of Section 
									31, extending across the range line into the 
									southeast quarter of Section 36, Eagle 
									Township, where Mr. Hollabaugh lived.  
									Nothing ever came of this first attempt at 
									town building, and the recorded plat is all 
									that remains to show that such place was 
									ever contemplated.  Early in 1838 a 
									postoffice called Martins Town was 
									established at the house of Hathaway R. 
									Warner in Section 31, on the 
									Bellefontaine road.  Mr. Warner 
									was postmaster till 1846, when the office 
									was removed to Arlington. 
     Apr. 20, 1853, Jacob F. Houck laid out fifteen 
									lots in the northwest corner of Section 27, 
									which he recorded as North Liberty.  
									Two additions have since been made to the 
									plat.  About three years after the town 
									was laid out a postoffice named Houcktown 
									was established here, with Robert 
									Davidson as postmaster, and the village 
									thus began to be called Houcktown, by which 
									it is most familiarly known.  Mr. 
									Davidson's successors have been as 
									follows:  J. R. Babcock, John Garst, 
									Israel Sampson, Eli Gorsuch, John Ebaugh, 
									David Beagle and H. L. Hatcher.  
									Though located in the center of a rich 
									agricultural district, North Liberty has 
									never made much progress.  Its business 
									interests consist of one general store, a 
									grocery store, a saw and shingle-mill, a 
									wagon factory, a blacksmith shop, a shoe 
									shop and one physician.  There are also 
									a schoolhouse and a church within its 
									limits.  The official census of 1880 
									gave the village a population of 112, and 
									there has been since no perceptible 
									increase. 
									Page 422 -  
									     
									 Clements 
									postoffice, established at the house of 
									Amos Crum in Eagle Township in 1845, was 
									upon Mr. Crum's death attended to by 
									his widow.  John Crossly and 
									Noah Sherrick, both of Jackson Township, 
									were the next postmasters, and in 1858 
									John Swank of Eagle Township got the 
									office.  In 1862 he removed across the 
									Bellefontaine road into Jackson, and held 
									the office till 1866, when it was abolished.  
									Another office named "Swank," was 
									established at Mr. Swank's store in 
									1882, but was discontinued in December, 
									1884, as most of the farmers in that 
									vicinity preferred to go to Findlay for 
									their mail. 
									      
									 Ewing's 
									Corners was another postoffice that once 
									existed in this township.  It was 
									established in 1863, at the house of 
									Jesse Ewing, in Section 15, northeast of 
									Houcktown.  Mr. Ewing died in 
									the fall of 1872, and was succeed by S. 
									S. Huffman who held the office until it 
									was abolished.  Though such free 
									offices as those mentioned were for the time 
									an accommodation to the neighborhoods in 
									which they existed, yet their absence is now 
									little felt, and their discontinuance not 
									much regretted. 
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