ENOCH TOWNSHIP is first mentioned on the records of
Monroe County in 1822, and was doubtless organized in that year.
It embraced original township 6, of range 8, or portions of the
present townships of Enoch, Stock and Jefferson. In 1822 the
county levy for Enoch and Union together was $28. In 1823 the
amount of the tax duplicate of Enoch was $17.30. Samuel
Powell was the lister, and was allowed $2 for his services.
In 1824 the total tax for the township was $19.40; Elisha Enochs,
collector. In 1833 the tax was $42.53 on real estate and
$35.39 on personal property; total, $77.92. Valuation for the same
year; real estate $3,781; personal property, $3,146; total, $6,927.
The following names of property holders in Enoch
Township, in 1833, appear upon the Monroe County tax duplicate for
that year:*
David Cunningham, section 31, 98 acres, value
$111; same, 1 mill, $80; William Craig, section 27, 80 acres,
$91; Stephen Harris, section 8, 80 acres, $100;
Francis Headley, section 8, 80 acres, $100; George Harris,
section 18, 97 acres, $106; Francis Hupp; section 28, 97
acres, $100; same, section 35 (in Jefferson), 159 acres, $182; same,
section 27, 60 acres, $68; Philip Hupp, section 27, 50 acres,
$57; Samuel Powell, section 7, 95 acres, $119; Isaac
Powell, section 18, 96 acres, $120; James Powell, section
18, 96 acres, 120; James Rowland, section 31, 29 acres, $55;
Robinson Sanford, section 31, 29 acres, $55; David Taylor,
section 27, 51 acres, $57.
The following were owners of personal property in Enoch
Township - in its entire territory - in 1883, in addition to those
already named: **
John Armstrong, Obed Ackley, Samuel Craig, Jeffries
Cunningham, Washington Cunningham, Ebenezer Cunningham, Elisha
Enochs, Henry Enochs, Widow Enochs, Widow Grandon, Philip Gates,
Enoch Grandon, Hiram Hupp, Alexander Hupp, Henry Hupp, Daniel Hupp,
Morgan Harris, John McMillen, William McBride, John McBride, George
McClure, James Rowladn, James McClure, Mary Rufus, Alexander
Sweeney, George Sweeney, Barton Wells, William Young, Richard
Warfield.
Enoch Township was named for Elisha Enochs, who was
one of its most prominent citizens. He located on section 1,
below Carlisle, and was one of the first settlers on the East Fork.
He held the office of justice many years. He was also
treasurer, and afterward commissioner of Monroe County.
On the 1st of May, 1851, the county commissioners
established the boundaries of Enoch Township as follows:
"Commencing at the southwest corner of section 31 in
township 6 and range 8; thence east along said township line to the
southeast corner of section 33 in said township and range; thence
north along the section line to the southwest corner of section 217
in said township and range; thence east along the section line
to the southeast corner of said section 27; thence north along the
section line to the northeast corner of section 10 in said township
and range; thence west to the northwest corner of said section 10;
thence north to the northeast corner of section 4 in said township
and range; thence west along the township line to the northwest
corner of said township number 6 and range 8; thence south along
said township line to the place of beginning; containing twenty-two
sections."
The first justice of the peace in Enoch Township, after
the formation, of Noble County, was Alfred Ogle, who
qualified April 15, 1851.
June 6, 1855, on petition of Jonathan
Echelberry and twenty seven others, the county commissioners
ordered that section 31, 32 and 33 be struck from Center Township
and attached Enoch. September 3, 1855, on petition of
Abraham M. Bryan and others, the northern half of section 31,
township 7, range 8, was attached to Center.
The township contains a great number of never-failing
springs of pure water. There is an abundance of coal of good
quality but so far none has been mined except for local supply.
A seven-foot vein has been worked for years on the Hohman
farm.
The townships derives its name from the Enochs
family, who were pioneer settlers on the East Fork of Duck Creek,
near Carlisle. While the township retained its original
boundaries, Elisha Enochs was one of its foremost citizens.
The Harrises were among the early settlers in
the western part of the township, where their descendants still
live. Morgan, Stephan and George Harris, a
pioneer of Olive Township. George Harris was
considered a good hunter in his day. He lived on the farm now
owned by his son Sampson. Morgan lived on the
farm now owned by Alfred Harris. Stephen Harris, still
living in West Virginia, at the age of eighty-nine, settled on the
August Dimerling
farm. George Harris had a camp on Middle Creek prior to
1812. He left it and went into the war against Great Britain.
A stream which ran past his camp is still known as "George's Run."
George Harris was a very skillful
hunter. He was able to imitate the noise made by a deer with
such accuracy as to deceive the animals themselves. He would
secrete himself and repeat the call until the deer had approached
within easy shooting distance, then his rifle would speak with fatal
results. On one occasion he had been away from home, and on
his return was informed by his wife Betsy that a bear had
killed one of his hogs. She knew where the carcass of the hog
lay, and George promised to get up early in the morning to
hunt for the bear. Knowing the habits of the animal, he felt
sure the bear would return for a breakfast of pork. Betsy,
equally as interested in the destruction of the bear, routed her
husband out long before daybreak, and they proceeded together to the
spot where the dead hog lay. The bear was there, too, and as
he stood up erect at the sound of approaching footsteps, Harris
shot, and wounded him fatally.
Samuel James and
Isaac Powell were brothers, who settled early in the western
part of the township. Samuel was a prominent man, and
held the office of justice of the peace early. He sold his
farm to Robert Lowe, who in return sold to William
Manifold. Samuel Powell died in Wisconsin. He was a
preacher in the United Brethren church. The wife of Samuel
Powell was Hannah, daughter of Elijah Harris, Sr.
Her sister Ann was the wife of Isaac Powell.
Philip Hupp, another early
resident, went west, and is still living. Daniel Hupp
lived on the creek. He was a brother of George Hupp, an
early settler of Jefferson Township, and a brother-in-law of
Francis Hupp.
Ephraim had a brother Manasseh, who
delighted in playing practical jokes. By some means he became
possessed of the rattle of a rattlesnake, and once when
out in the huckleberry bushes, produced it and began shaking it in
order to have some fun with "Eph". The latter, hearing
the noise, asked what it was, to which Manasseh replied,
"___, Eph, here's a rattler!" Manasseh afterward
related the incident in his own inimitable way, and declared that
"Eph" jumped as high as the tops of the bushes around them.
William Craig and
Francis Hupp were among the earliest settlers on the "little
creek" - Middle Creek. Francis Hupp was rough but
honest. He was a leading Methodist. He gained a large
amount of property, and was highly respected. His son
Ephraim was something of a character. On one occasion he
went to Zanesville to enter a tract of land, and was asked where it
lay. "Lays jest up alongside of dad's big meder." "But
what range and township is it in?" "I don['t know what
township it's in, but it is the ___ best range you ever saw; ridge
weeds and pea vines up to your waist!" or words to that effect.
David Cunningham was a pioneer on the
place where Captain Moseley now lives. He had one of
the early horse-mills of the county,, which was in operation several
years. His sons, Washington and Jefferson,
occupied the farm after him. Both are now dead.
Robinson Sanford
was a New England Yankee, a shrewd intelligent man. His son
Dwight was justice of the peace3 several eyars, and one of the
early probate judges of the county.
James
Rowland, a prominent, early settler in the southwest corner
of the township. He was an earnest Democrat and always alive
on political subjects.
The early elections of Enoch Township
were held on the creek known as Otterslide, on the Rice farm.
The Rices were pioneers, who came here from Marion Township
- William Rice and his sons William, Harrison and
George.
Lebbeus Fordyce was one of
the prominent early settlers of this township. He came
from the Waynesburg, Pa., where he was born in 1797, and where he
passed his youth and early manhood, where he also studied law and
surveying; he became a practical surveyor and came to what is now
Beaver Township about 1815; he surveyed the village of Batesville
and in 1838 removed to Enoch Township, where he purchased a large
tract of land near the present village of Fulda, which he afterward
sold to German settlers. He became one of the prominent and
influential citizens of that region. Jabez Belford,
afterward a prominent lawyer and his son-in-law, lived with him for
many years, and with him became the study of the law. Mr.
Fordyce lived in Enoch until his decease, which occurred in
1860. He had a family of ten children, only four of whom,
Clarissa (Belford), Abigail (Rathbone), Mary (Deurth and
Lebbeus, are now living.
John Smith was an early settler in the northern
part of the township. James Lincicum is an old resident
in the same locality.
Morgan Harris
built a grist mill on Middle Creek, on the farm now owned by
Chris Rice, as early as 1836. It was a small affair, but
nevertheless very useful.
John Wickham was a prominent,
early settler in the northern part of the township. He removed
to Iowa with his family. He had an early horse mill.
John Cunningham, in the southern part
of the township, had an early distillery, which was well patronized.
HE left he country and was never again heard from.
Charles W. Moseley,
a native of Tennessee, was reared in Winchester, Va. He came
to Summerfield, Ohio, about 1825, and erected the first cabin here.
He was a bricklayer and plasterer. He settled in Enoch
Township in 1840. HE was the father of Captain William L. Moseley,
of this township. HE was a good man, but somewhat excitable.
He was a firm Methodist, and was the leader of the first class
formed in Summerville. Wesley Neptune
says he once found Mr. Moseley praying for grace to keep from
whipping one of his neighbors, who was a pronounced secessionist.
James Moore, a shoemaker, who
came fro New York City, was the first settler on the place now owned
by Moses Armstrong, in the western part of the
township. James Armstrong, father of
Moses, came from Belmont County, and purchased the place of
Moore in 1841.
The German settlement began in 1837, and has steadily
progressed ever since, until now the native-born Americans,
descendants of the early settlers are comparatively few in the
township. The German settlement began in the vicinity of
Fulda. It was since spread over nearly all of Enoch Township,
and over portions of the neighboring townships of Stock, Elk and
Jefferson.
Valentine Weaver, or "Felty"
Weaver, as he was called, was the first German to secure
title to a piece of land in Enoch Township. He was a
Protestant from Bavaria, but all the other early comers were
Catholics. They came principally from the German state
Kurhessen (Hesse-Cassel). Few came directly from
Germany, but most of them had been in the country a few years,
working at various occupations in different cities, so that they had
become somewhat acquainted with the English language and also with
American customs. The tax list of 1833, elsewhere given, will
show that at that date of territory now comprised in Enoch Township
had very few settlers. Those few had been here, some of them
for twenty years, but their improvements were so small and so far
apart that the township was practically a wilderness. Its
surface is rough and very hilly, and though the soil is good, the
country was not of the nature to attract the native pioneers, and
thus the scarcity of settlers is accounted for. But when the
pioneer Germans came and found and cheap and abundant, to be
procured either at first hand at government price, or very cheaply
when purchased from those who then owned it, a new epoch began in
the history of Enoch Township. The first settlers wrote to
their friends scattered here and there in Germany and America, and
advised them to come. And soon there was a thrifty settlement
of industrious, frugal and prosperous people. Soon they had
religious services and schools, and their prosperity has been steady
and constant ever since. The township is now among the most
populous in the county, and most of the citizens are property owners
and have good comfortable homes. In fifty years, the German
settlers have accomplished more than the same number of native
Americans would have accomplished in a century. All the
pioneers of this race were poor at the start, and came here with
barely enough money to enter forty or eighty acres of land.
But they were all diligent workers, and thoroughly versed in the art
of economy. They lived upon cornbread and the simplest food,
and were unceasing in their efforts to improve the condition of
their property. Many of them were unaccustomed to farm work,
and to all, the work of farming new land was a new experience.
But all made a living, and many acquired large estates. Buying
piece after piece of land, and paying for it in small installments;
assigning every member of the family, boy or girl, work suited to
their age, making every cent count, almost every German prospered in
spite of disadvantages and obstacles which would have been
insurmountable to a less courageous people.
Jno. Hohman
and Leonard Schoeppner came to America from Hesse in 1835.
Mathias Schockling, a French Alsatian, came to this country
earlier. In the year 1837 these three, with "Felty" Weaver
made a settlement in Enoch Township, all bringing their families in
that year except Schoeppner. Weaver located on
section 4, Schockling on the same section, Hohman on
section 9, and Schoeppner on section 8. John
Schoeppner came from Wheeling to the farm on which his son
Leonard lives in 1837, and built a house, to which he removed
his family in the following year. In the second year he met
with a serious misfortune, getting his leg broken. His
children were Eve (Snyder) and Leonard. He died
in 1875 in his eighty-seventh year. In 1839 Valentine
Sailing and John Warner came from Philadelphia and
settled in the southern part of the township, near Middleburg.
In 1840, also from Philadelphia, came August Dimerling, Francis Ebert and Michael Blake.
Other early German settlers, without regard to date, some of them as
early as those already mentioned, were two by the name of
John
Hill, John Gharst, who died in 1885, aged eighty-five years,
John Yaeger, John Michael, Adam Shafer, Michael Shott,
John Arnold, Joseph Miller, Henry Huffman, Nicholas Kohlman,
Ferdinand Hupp, Henry Hupp, Philip Snyder, Conrad Craft, Joseph
Crum, and others elsewhere mentioned.
From 1840 to 1850 immigration was largest.
Probably sixty or seventy families located in the township and
vicinity during that period. Some became discouraged and left
after a few years of struggling in the wilderness. But by far
the greater number stuck to their work with true German
perseverance, and by hard work made themselves good homes. The
early settlers found game quite abundant, and it formed no
unimportant part in the scant list of household supplies. As
soon as they had been here long enough to learn the process, or in
three or four years after their coming, most of the Germans engaged
in raising tobacco, deadening the trees and burning off the leaves,
then plowing the ground if it could be plowed, and if not, digging
it over with a hoe. The virgin soil thus treated yielded good
crops. The tobacco industry is still an important one to the
farmers of the township. For their tobacco market, in early
years, they went to New Lexington, Colorado, Summerfield and
Middleburg. Of late Fulda has become an important tobacco
packing village. Nearly every farmer had a patch of flax,
which was worked by hand into linen and linsey-woolsey goods for
family use. At first there was a great scarcity of horses, and
those who were so fortunate as to own them "changed work" with their
neighbors who had no teams. Oxen were also used to some extent
in farm work. There was also a scarcity of wagons, which were
indeed well nigh useless in a country without roads. It was a
frequent sight to see a farmer going to mill carrying a grist upon
his shoulders. But in an incredibly short time the Germans
equipped themselves with every requisite for successful farming,
made roads, built school-houses and a church, and attained such
prosperity as only persevering industry, rigid economy and
well-directed efforts can win. The leading idea of the Germans
who came here was to make a home and enjoy the blessings of liberty.
They bravely endured toil and hardship, inspired by the thought that
their sons and daughters would grow up in a country where the people
make their own laws and are not subject to burdensome taxes to keep
up a large standing army and add to the wealth of petty princes and
rulers.
John Hohman, called Doctor
Hohman, came to the township with his family in 1837, removing
from Wheeling. He had some knowledge of medicine, and
practiced for several years in the German settlement. His
sons, Joseph Magnus and John S., then single men, came
to the township with him. Another son, Maurice, came in
1845. Dr. Hohman induced many Germans to come by
writing to them of the advantages of the country. His son,
John S., became a very prominent business man. Joseph
Hohman is still a resident of the township, and one of the few
remaining early settlers.
Adam Brahler was born in Germany
in 1810, and came to this country in 1837, and settled near
Wheeling, W. Va. In 1845 he came to Fulda, where he follwed
farming and his trade, that of a carpenter. He owned eighty
acres of land, a part of which now belongs to his son, John.
He was a devout Catholic. He died in 1873, his wife in 1871.
John, son of Adam, was born in 1837, in Wheeling, W.
Va. He married, in 1859, Miss Elizabeth,
daughter of Joseph and Mary Shaub.
They have had twelve children. He has filled all
the offices in the gift of his fellow townsmen. For twelve
years he has been a magistrate, and for twelve years he has been
post master. He is a worthy member of the Catholic church.
The first German school in the township was taught in a
log schoolhouse, which stood near Rupel's. Maurice
Hohman and John Grass were the first German teachers.
English was also taught in the neighborhood. Joseph Cleary
was an early teacher in the English schools.
Newburg was once a place of some pretensions,
supporting a store, a tavern, a blacksmith shop and other
industries. Now it consists of about half a dozen houses, and
has no stores, and no business except John S. Parker's wagon
shop. The building of the railroad removed the business to
Dexter City.
The first store in Newburg was started about 1847, by
Eber Brooks and John Brown, the former furnishing the
capital and the latter having charge of the business. For ten
years or more Brown (now living in Sharon Township) did
considerable business, dealing in general merchandise, and buying
and shipping tobacco to Baltimore. Later, James Thompson
carried on the mercantile business. A. J. Ogle
commenced in 1860, and continued six years. George A. Smith
was the last merchant at Newburg.
South Olive postoffice (Truman Ransom.
postmaster) was removed to Newburg in 1862, and remained there until
removed to the present location after the completion of the Duck
Creek Railroad.
John S. Parker keep hotel several
years. For ten or twelve years he was engaged in the
manufacture of wind-mills here.
Daniel Sanford and son,
Robinson, came from Maine, and settled near Dexter City about
1817. Robinson Sanford was a well-known old settler and
an honest, honorable man. He was a leading member of the
Baptist church. He died in 1876. His children were
William, Phear (1st), Dwight F., Gabriel, Salome,
Phear (2nd) and Mary. Dwight F. Sanford was for
many years a justice of the peace. In 1854 he was elected
probate judge and held that office at the time of his death in 1856.
He was born in Maine in 1813. He married Lucretia A. Ogle
and was the father of thirteen children.
Dwight L. Sanford was born in
this township in 1837. He took part in the pursuit of Morgan
in Ohio. In 1860 he married Martha A., daughter of
Matthew Scott, of this county. Children: Stephen
A., G. B. McClellan, Ida B. (deceased), Lafayette, Susan (Mosler),
Winfield, Edward, Wayne, Samuel J. and Frank. Mr.
Sanford resides upon the old homestead. He has held
various township offices.
James Hesson came from
Belmont county quite early, and settled on the place now occupied by
Solomon Hesson. The latter was born in 1828 in Belmont
County, and has resided on his present location ever since the
family came to the county. James Hesson was the father
of eleven children, all still living: Eliza A. (Hupp), John,
Elizabeth (Hupp), James (Moseley), Matilda (Clark), Sarah
(Sullivan), Nancy (Heiddleston), Lucinda (Archer), George, Francis
and James.
Cephas Lindsey,
son of Samuel Lindsey, was born on the place which he now
occupies in 1843. His father came to Ohio from Bedford County,
Pa., in 1810, when but four years of age, his parents locating in
Belmont county.
Samuel Lindsey was a farmer and
died in this township in 1880. He and his wife (nee
Margaret Hart), were the parents of seven children, three of
whom are living: James, Cephas and Elizabeth
(Moore). Samuel Lindsey served as postmaster about
thirty-two years. His father, James, was a
Revolutionary soldier.
Cephas Lindsey
married Jane Moore in 1869. Children: Martha A.,
Margaret and Effie B. He owns and occupies
the old homestead, a good farm. His brother James was
in the Forty-second Ohio Volunteer Infantry for three years and in
many severe engagements.
Rufus Merry settled on the place
now occupied by his son, Ambrose, about 1818. His
father, Ambrose, came to the county about the same time.
They came from new York State. Rufus Merry was the
father of nine children, several of whom are yet living. He
was member of the Christian church. He died in 1877.
Leonard Schoeppner came to
this township at the age of sixteen years. He took the
old homestead of his father at the age of twenty-three, and has
added to it until he now has 260 acres of well-improved land.
He was married in 1845 to Elizabeth, daughter of Peter
Miller, and is the father of twelve children. He is
among the oldest German residents of the township.
August Dimerling, Sr., a
native of Germany, came to this township from Philadelphia about
1839. His sons, John and August, are prominent
farmers of the township.
John D. Hill, a
native of Germany, came to this county in 1840, and began
clearing and improving land. He first bought a piece of land
about a mile and a half from the present farm of his son, John
D., afterward selling it and making several subsequent
purchases. He died in 1881, at the age of seventy years.
His widow is still living. Their children were John (deceased),
Catherine, Leonard, Barbara (deceased), Eva and John B.
John B. Hill was born in
1850, on the farm where he now resides. In 1872 he married
Mary F. Rausch. They have eight children: Rosa,
Aloysius, Joseph, Eva, Gertrude (deceased), George, Peter
and Ottillia. Mr. Hill has a well-improved farm of
nearly 200 acres and the best barn in the township. He raises
fine sheep. He has served as justice of the peace for six
years. He is a supporter of the Catholic church, and he and
his father contributed liberally toward building the new church at
Fulda. He was the chief petitioner for the graded road from
Fulda to Caldwell, and is prominent in every worthy enterprise.
Leoanrd Hill,
son of John D. Hill, was born in Enoch Township in 1842.
In 166 he married Mary Michel. Children: John
A., Elizabeth, Henry, Leo (deceased), Andrew, Leo, Annie,
George (deceased), Caroline and Louie. Mr. Hill
bought eighty acres where he now lives in 1864, and has since added
ninety-three acres, besides making extensive improvements in
buildings, etc. He made a specialty of raising hogs and graded
shorthorn cattle. He is a supporter of the Catholic church.
Anthony Kress,
who died in 1883, came from Germany in 1838, and about two years
later removed to this township, beginning with forty acres of land.
He was the father of eight children, six of whom are
living.
Michael Shott came to Monroe
county when twelve years of age, and resided there until 1845, when
he settled in this township on the farm now occupied by his son
John. He is one of the prominent German farmers. In
1868 he removed to his present home, formerly the old Francis
Hupp farm.
G. C. Ehlerman, of Fulda, is one
of the most enterprising business men of Noble County. He came
from Germany in 1866, at the age of nineteen, and settled in
Miltonsburg, Monroe County, where he clerked in a store, having
previously served an apprenticeship at that business in his native
land. In 1868 he came to Fulda and entered the employ of
John S. Hohman He afterward bought the latter's stock of
goods (Mr. Hohman having failed for a large amount) and has
since done a large and successful business. He also purchased
Mr. Hohman's tobacco warehouse and began dealing extensively
in tobacco. The warehouse and its contents were destroyed by
fire in May, 1886, involving a loss of $10,000. Mr.
Ehlerman has since erected a new building, the best of the kind
in eastern Ohio. He has also a large and commodious store, an
elegant residence and seventy-five acres of land. He packs
from 200 to 300 hogsheads of tobacco per year and deals extensively
in wool, handling about 80,000 pounds annually. Mr.
Ehlerman is a Catholic. He is at present serving as
township trustee. He was married in 1873 to Mary E.,
daughter of John S. Hohman, and has six children: Mary,
Julia, Frederick, Cecilia, Christian and Ernest.
David Harper, father of
Abraham Harper, came from Pennsylvania and settled in Guernsey
County about 1820. In 1833 he removed to Stock Township, and
about 1852 to the vicinity of Dexter City, where he died in 1875.
His children were Rhoda (deceased), John J., Elizabeth
(deceased), Isaac N., Abraham, George W., William B. (a
member of the Seventy-seventh Ohio Volunteer Infantry, killed at the
battle of Saline), Michael (a soldier in the same regiment),
and Mary A. A father was a school-teacher for many
years.
Abraham Harper was
born in Stock Township in 1837. In 1857 he married Amanda,
daughter of Obed Ackley, an early settler. Children:
Columbus M., Mary E. (Matheny). Mr. Harper has
served in various township offices and is at present a justice of
the peace. The family belong to the Christian church.
Joseph Smith and
family, from Chester County, Pa., settled on Olive Green Creek in
1824, and about 1833 removed to Noble Township, where he died in
1860 at the age of eighty-three. Mr. Smith was the
father of four children: Thomas G., John, Joseph and
Margaret. He was a preacher of the Baptist denomination.
His son John, now a resident of Enoch Township, came to Ohio
with his parents. In 1837 he married Mary J. Cain,
daughter of William Cain. Children: Elizabeth
C., Landon R., Van Buren and Joseph L. Mr. Smith is
a prominent farmer, having two hundred acres of land, which he
purchased and improved himself. His children all reside in
this county. He has served as township trustee. His
maternal grandfather, Thomas Green, was a soldier in the
Revolutionary War.
John Boyd, son of
Thomas Boyd, was born in Belmont County in 1819. His
father, a native of Pennsylvania, came to Ohio when a boy, married
Agnes Miley in Belmont County, and in 1822 settled near the
present town of Sharon. His children were Mary (Archibald),
Rebecca (Roberts), Margaret, Nancy (Parrish), Ann (Parrish), John,
Miley and Robert -- of whom Ann, John and
Robert are now living.
John Boyd settled on his present
farm in 1841, beginning with seventy-eight acres, and adding to it
until at one time he owned 930 acres, part of which he has since
given to his sons. Mr. Boyd was married in 1841 to
Margaret Shepard, daughter of George Shepard, of this
county. Their children are Thomas, George, Robert
(deceased), Sarah E. (deceased), Lafayette, Theodore
and John N. Mr. Boyd follows farming and the raising of
fine stock. The family are members of the United Presbyterian
church.
William McBride was born in
Pennsylvania, and came to Harrison County about 1816. In 1833
he removed to Enoch Township, and entered two hundred acres of land
where his son Martin now resides; he lied upon his farm until
his decease in 1871. By his first marriage there were four
children: John, Mary A. (dead), Samuel and Martin.
Martin was born in Carlisle, in 1832. He married in 1856
Miss Jane Swainey. They had two children, Abigail
and Uriah. The former died in her eighteenth year; the
latter married Miss Alice Davidson. Mr. McBride
enlisted December 25, 1861, in the Twentieth Regiment, Ohio
Volunteer Infantry. He was engaged in the following battles:
Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Fort Gibson, Vicksburg, Atlanta, Ga.,
Corinth, and many of the minor engagements. At Atlanta he was
hit by rebel bullets eighteen times. He was on detached
service as a sharpshooter, being one of the best marksmen in the
regiment. He served his term and was honorably discharged.
He is a representative of one of the oldest families in the county,
and is an honorable and useful citizen.
FULDA
The survey of
the village of Fulda was made by Charles Burlingame, June
5, 1861. The original plat contains six acres and
ninety--three square rods. The village is called after a
town in Germany of the same name. The land on which the
first lots were laid off was owned by John Brahler.
John S. Hohman sold several lots about the same time.
After additions have since been made. The land on which
the town stands was entered by Isaac Morris and afterward
owned by Frederick Spencer, his son-in-law.
The first store was started before the town was laid
out, about 1855, by Heiddlesheimer & Hohman (H. W.
Heiddlesheimer and John S. Hohman). The
business was afterward continued by J. S. Hohman*** alone
until 1876, when he failed with liabilities of $146,000, causing
heavy losses to many. He dealt largely in tobacco and live
stock. He dealt largely in tobacco and live stock.
During the war his mercantile business alone amounted to $50,000
a year. He removed to the West and is now in Kansas.
G. C. Ehlerman began business in Fulda, in 1867,
for J. S. Hohman. In 1876 he bought Hohman's
stock at assignee's sale, and has since done a large business
for a country merchant. He is also extensively engaged in
packing and shipping tobacco.
After the village was laid out Francis Fischer
bought a lot and erected the first house. He carried on
the saloon business, which his widow still follows, and was also
engaged in brewing for several years in a small way.
John S. Hohman was the first postmaster.
The office was not established until several years after the
village was projected. The first blacksmith was John
Noll, who still resides in the place. The first
shoemaker was John Diegmiller.
Fulda is situated upon one of the
highest elevations in the county. The location is pleasant
and healthful. From the town of a fine view can be had of
some of the most attractive natural scenery in Ohio.
In business interests of the place in 1886 were as
follows:
G. C. Ehlerman and J. B. Arnold general
store.
John Noll and
John Brahler, Jr.,
blacksmiths.
Peter Johnson, wagon-maker.
Mrs. Besold, hotel
James T. Brown, physician.
Fulda contains the best church in the county. It
is in a special school district and has a large frame
schoolhouse, built in 1884 at a cost of $1,200. The school
is in two departments. Both English and German were
taught.
CHURCHES.
The churches of Enoch
Township, aside from the Catholic church at Fulda, are a Methodist
Episcopal church, in the northern part of the township; a United
Brethren church in the western part, and a Christian church in the
northwestern part. Of these the Methodist Episcopal church is
the oldest, the present church edifice being the third that has been
erected since the formation of a class.
The United Brethren church was erected about 1850.
It is one of the few log churches still left standing in Ohio.
The Powells and the Harrises were among the early
members. Preaching was had in the neighborhood over fifty
years ago, at the house of 'Squire Powell. The
Christian church was organized more recently.
REV. DAMIAN JOSEPH KLUBER.
The history of St. Mary's
church and the life of Father Kluber are so inseparably
connected that neither is complete without the other. To the
upbuilding of this society he gave a life of passionate earnestness
and self-sacrificing effort. His devotion to its interests and
teh spiritual and temporal welfare of his people has been rarely
excelled. Like his Master, his life was spent in doing good.
His abnegation and entire disregard of his personal welfare were the
primary cause of his early death. He was born December 20,
1837, at Fulda, Hesse-Cassel, Germany. His father was an
intelligent gentleman of the middle class, who died when Damian
Joseph was a small boy. In his youth he evidenced a
studious disposition, which was fostered by his mother. He
entered the seminary at his native place, where he obtained a
thorough classical education. In 1857 he came to America, and,
having decided to make the ministry a life's vocation, entered "Mt.
St. Mary's of the West," at Cincinnati, Ohio, where he was ordained
in June of 1860, by Most. Rev. J. B. Purcell, archbishop of
that diocese. In July of the same year he was given the Fulda
church, with the adjoining missions in Monroe, Washington and Noble
Counties. All his visits to the different points of his
parishes were made in the saddle, and it can be said of him, as of
the early missionaries, that the saddle was his chair and his bed."
Continuous riding in the saddle over rough roads caused hernia,
which was the primary cause of his decease. In 1865 he
was relieved of the missions in Monroe County, and in 1871 of the
missions at Harriettsville and Fox's settlement. There still
remained, however, a great deal of horseback riding for him to do;
his disease grew worse, and attended with more danger. On day
in February, 1883, he started for Caldwell; the roads were in a
terrible condition; his business he thought to be imperative, as he
had collected a fund for the relief of poor people in Europe (whose
country had been devastated by floods) which he desired to remit at
once. He arrived in Caldwell, but was there attacked with
strangulation, from which he died 'February 20, 1883, in the
forty-sixth year of his age.
He was visited during his illness by Rt. Rev. Bishop
Watterson, who, despite the condition of the roads and the
inclemency of the weather, attended the funeral and witnessed the
grief of his spiritual children, to whom he had been a father and
teacher. His pastorate embraced a period of twenty-three
years, in which time he built the present church edifice and a
parochial residence and school, and brought the congregation to its
present permanence and prosperity. A beautiful monument,
erected by his congregation, marks his resting -place.
Although dead, he still lies in the hearts of those he was
associated with. He is remembered by all who knew him as a
Christian gentleman, whose great kindness of heart and the
all-absorbing love he possessed for the work he was called to do cut
short his earthly existence in the prime of life.
St. Mary's Catholic
Church. - "The Congregation of the Immaculate Conception of
St. Mary" was organized about 1840. Some seven years previous
to this time (1833) a part of German immigrants from Wheeling, W.
Va., had settled in the vicinity of Fulda, upon government lands.
This little band formed the nucleus for what has since become one of
the most prosperous Catholic societies in this section of the State.
For several years they were denied all religious advantages, but
about 1840 a clergyman made his appearance among them, occasionally
holding divine services in neighboring log cabins and log barns.
Nine years after, Rev. J. Kramer, of Miltonsburg, visited
them. For seven years he made semi-monthly visits.
During this time he began the erection of a small church building,
which was dedicated by Rt. Rev. J. B. Purcell, of Cincinnati,
Ohio, in 1853. In 1858 Rev. J. B. Brummer was
appointed; he was the first resident pastor; he remained until 1860,
when he was succeeded by Rev. D. J. Kluber, who ministered to
the spiritual wants of the congregation for over twenty-three years.
To him the society is largely indebted for its present size and
permanence.
In 1863 a school building was erected, and three years
later a pastoral residence. The latter was quite pretentious
for that time, and cost $2,500.
By this time the first church structure had become
entirely inadequate for the wants of the congregation, so
arrangements were made for the building of a new one. It is
rather an imposing structure, of brick, 60 x 120 feet, and cost
$19,498. The corner-stone was laid May 31, 1874, by the
reverend pastor, by permission of the ordinary. The new church
was finished in 1875, and dedicated in August of that year by Rt.
Rev. S. H. Rosecrans, who at the time was bishop of the diocese
of Columbus, Ohio, and who preached the dedicatory sermon.
The following reverend gentlemen honored the pastor
with their presence: Very Rev. J. B. Hemsteger, V. S.,
Revs. Shelhamer, Fladung, Schleicher, Buss and Ryan.
In 1884 Rev. Ed. L. Fladung was called to the pastorate, and,
seeing the necessity of extensive improvements, began at once the
building of a new residence. The brick and stone of the old
church were used, and the old parsonage taken as a residence for the
teacher. The church was overhauled - new ceiling, altar, etc.
The entire cost, including the building of pastoral residence, the
new altar, repairs on the church and other improvements, was about
$4,700. The church is the finest structure of the kind in the
county. Interest attaches to the names of the original members
of this congregation. Some of the more prominent ones were
John Schoeppner, Sr., John Adam Schafer, Philip Schneider, Adam
Brahler, Melchior Black and others.
The succession of pastors has been Revs. J. Cramer,
J. A. Brummer, D. , J. Kluber, J. G. Luttig and E. L. Fladung.
The present membership is 125 families, or about 700 souls.
The parochial school ahs about 125 pupils. Owing to the very
able administration of Father Fladung, both church and school
are in a very flourishing condition.
JOHN B. HILL - John D. Hill,
the father of the subject of this notice, was born in Mittlebach,
Hessen, Germany, in 1810. In 1834 he came to this country in
company with John Schoeppner, and together they settled in
Wheeling, W. Va. In 1838 Mr. Hill came to Noble County
and entered forty acres of land in Enoch Township, returning to
Virginia, where he worked one year to obtain money with which to
enter another forty. Afterward he sold his purchases and
bought eighty acres, upon which he resided for many years. He
died in April of 1880, aged seventy years. He married Miss
Ottillia, daughter of JohnSchoeppner, who was his fellow
passenger from Germany and one of the first German settlers of Enoch
Township. He had a family of seven children: John,
Catharina, Anna B., Leonard, Barbara, Eva and John B.
The latter was born in 1850 and married, in 1872, Miss Mary F.
Raush, and has a family of eight children: Rosa, Aloysius,
Joseph, Eva, Catherine, George, Peter and Ottillia.
He is one of the leading German farmers of the county, owning the
old homestead, to which he has added seventy-five acres, making a
fine farm of 237 acres, under good improvement and with good
buildings. For some time he has made sheep growing a
specialty. like his father, he is a Democrat in politics and a
Catholic in religion. Both have been generous supporters of
church enterprises, and aided in the erection of St. Mary's church.
John B. has for six years been a justice of the
peace. He is a prosperous farmer and an esteemed citizen.
-------------------------
* We have here given the names of only those whose land lay within
the present limits of the township. Those belonging elsewhere
are given in the histories of the township in which the lands are
now included. - ED
** Many of the persons named among the owners of personal property
were residents within the present limits of Stock Township.
*** In 1857 Hohman also started a store at Rosedale, now
called Rice's Mill, which was run for a few years.
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