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OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS


A Part of Genealogy Express
 

Welcome to
Preble County, Ohio
History & Genealogy

Source:
History of Preble County, Ohio
Published by: H. Z. Williams & Bro, Publishers
1881

Somers Township
Pg. 298



 

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     Somers township was one of the original townships of the county, and as established under the jurisdiction of Montgomery county, included the whole of what is now in Monroe, Washington, Gasper and the present township of Somers—in other words the whole of the second range.  This township, consisting of four townships of the original survey, was named Somers, after Commodore Somers, of the United States navy.  Of the elections held while Somers and the whole territory of Preble was included in Montgomery county, we have no record, but we are able to present the reader with the list of officers elected in 1808, at the first election held after the organization of Preble.  It will be seen that most of them were from the vicinity of Eaton, which village was then in Somers.  The list was as follows: Daniel Heaton, clerk; Isaac Enoch, John Mills and Abraham Heaton, trustees; John Spacht and James Black, constables; James Brannon, Dennis Pottenger, John Goldsmith and Henry Johnson, supervisors of the highways; William Bruce, treasurer; Moses Dooley and John Ward, overseers of the poor; Joseph C. Hawkins, lister; William Sellers, appraiser; George Harlan and Samuel Holliday, fence viewers.
     Somers township was reduced in size May 7, 1809, when the county commissioners established Washington, but not to its present dimensions.  Washington township extended south two miles farther than at present, and Somers was left with its northern boundary two miles north of the present line.  We have no information in regard to early elections in Somers after the reduction in size by the creation of Washington.  On June 5, 1815, Somers territory was diminished to its present extent by the enlargement of Washington, and a few years later the establishment of Gasper made the boundary a permanent one.  As now constituted, Somers is township No. 6, in range eleven, and like all of the townships in the county, except Washington and Gasper, contains thirty-six square miles of territory, or twenty-three thousand and forty acres of land.

PHYSICAL FEATURES.

     The township contains a variety of soil, and is well adapted to the production of nearly all classes of crops
which can be raised in this latitude.  This part of the county presented in its primeval state a very alluring appearance, and it is not strange that the Butler county settlers and the pioneers from the Miamis and from Kentucky should have penetrated the valley of Seven Mile so early as they did, not that the country should become in a short time the home of so many of them.  In nearly all parts of the country, history tells us, and observation shows us, that the pioneers, who were certainly a preeminently practical class of men, had some regard for picturesque and beautiful aspects, as well as richness of soil.  We find as a rule that the first settlements were made in localities which had some charm for the eye, and which revealed the largest of nature in subtle beauty of form, as well as in elements of material advantage.  Somers presents as varied attractions of scenery as any township in the county. Its surface is an agreeable medium between the flat monotony of the northern part of the county and the roughly broken lands which appear in Gratis township. The valley of Seven Mile, which at Eaton is a shallow basin, becomes in Somers a marked and striking feature in the topography of the country.  Extending through the township from north to south it divides it into very nearly equal portions.  At either side the table lands sweep away to the boundaries of the township, preserving a surface which approximates the level, though it is often slightly undulating, and there is a gradual rise, almost inappreciable to the eye, from the top of the hills bordering the valley to and beyond the township lines on the east and west.  The surface is

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further diversified by Paint creek (which probably derived its name from the Indians), a stream which rises in Gasper township, and flowing southeast through the northwest quarter of Somers, empties into Seven Mile creek a half mile below Camden.  A drive of less than a mile westward from this village, reveals upon Paint creek a very singular formation, known locally as the “Devil’s Backbone.”  At this place, which is in the southwest quarter of section number nine, the stream makes a sharp curve, flowing around a long, high, narrow spear, projecting promontory-like from the table land.  From the roadway which winds down the hill from the neck of this peculiar ridge, the creek can be seen only a few rods distant, at either hand.  It flows upon the north side close to the base of the “backbone,” which it has evidently cut its way into considerably, and then turning at an acute angle around the spur, the greater part of the current flows away from the promontory and under the high bank upon the other side.  Thus one side of the “Devil’s Backbone” shows a precipitous rocky wall, washed by the stream, while the other is a steep incline.  The greater part of the spur around which the stream flows is the blue limestone which abounds in this part of the county and shows frequent exposures.  In early years the beautiful little bottom on the north side of the road was covered with a dense growth of maples, which made an impenetrable shade very gratifying to the picnic parties made up of youths and maidens now grandfathers and grandmothers.  Among them this locality obtained the not very alluring name of  “the shades of death.” The maples are all cut away now, and one of the chief attractions of the place is gone, but the vicinity of the “Devil’s Backbone” retains elements of picturesque loveliness, of which the hand of man cannot rob it, and will never cease to be a favorite resort for the admirers of nature and the student of science.  Many glimpses of beauty are afforded in the little glen which leads away from the “backbone” to the westward, and the narrow gorge, with its perpendicular, and, sometimes, overhanging walls of rock, surmounted by towering trees, in the dense shade of which the dashing stream of Paint creek runs rippling away to join Seven Mile.  There are a number of small streams or “runs” which flow into Seven Mile, but most of them are dry during a large portion of the year, and serve simply as conduits for the water from the hills during seasons of heavy rain fall.  Beasley’s branch, so named from an early settler, and Rush run, are the principal of these minor water ways.

SETTLEMENT.

     Somers township was settled in the opening years of the century, and filled up very fast when the beginning had been made.  There were many among the pioneers who did not long remain in the township, and many others resided in it for years, but have no representatives there now.  A third class, and quite a large one, is composed of settlers who lived long lives in the township, died there, and left large families, some members of which, in many cases, hold the original homesteads, the lands on which their fathers and grandfathers built their first log cabins.  Of these several classes we give all of the important information attainable, and more as a matter of course, concerning the last mentioned than of the first or second.

          The Hendricks family were settlers upon the site of Camden in 1803, but left in the spring of 1806 to locate at Eaton; and hence, but little need here be said of that distinguished pioneer, David E. Hendricks. (An elaborate biography of his life is given elsewhere in this volume).  We may mention, however, in this connection, that he had located at Middletown in 1795, and his removal to the site of Camden, then an unbroken forest, was only a pushing forward into the wilderness, which was to be repeated three years later.  When he sold his farm it was to a man by the name of Andrew Tharp, who, it is said, was influenced to purchase it by a remarkable dream, in which the appearance of the locality was so strongly and accurately pictured before him that on seeing the farm he immediately recognized it as that of which he had had a sleeping vision.

          The Pottengers arrived in the township in 1803, and to-day the family has, in all probability, a larger representation in the locality than that of any other of the pioneers.  John, Robert and Dennis Pottenger, brothers, came from Kentucky, to which State they had emigrated from Maryland.  The first two located in section ten, and Dennis, in section two.  John Pottenger’s first wife was Jane Gilkey, and his second, Catharine Railsback, of Culpeper county, Virginia.  The descendants of John Pottenger were ten in number, the first three born in Kentucky.  Thomas, the eldest, married Eliza, daughter of Daniel Robbins, who was a settler in the neighborhood.  William married Jane Ward, who is now living in Camden . John married Nancy Barrett Dennis, the first born of the family in Ohio, was first married to a Hall, and afterwards to a Fort.  All four of the above mentioned are deceased.  Anna, the oldest daughter, married David BarnettNancy (deceased), married Joseph NellinorCynthia married Alfred Bell, and is living in the township.  James was twice married, his first wife being Martha Low, and his second, Isabella Eshelman.  Reuben married Susan Findley, and Wilson, who is in Camden, Ellen ReedJohn Pottenger, the father, died in 1838, at the age of seventy-four years.
          Robert Pottenger married, in Kentucky, Fanny Gee.  They reared a large family, viz.: Dennis, Samuel, Anna, Eunice, Harvey, Willett and Sanford—all removed to Indiana in 1825.
          Dennis Pottenger married his first wife, Sarah Gray, in Kentucky, and after her death married Elizabeth Lowden, of Butler county.  The children of Dennis Pottenger were William, Hetty Ann (Thralls), now in Florida, Dennis R., Louis and John. Hetty Ann and John are the only ones living, and the latter is in Kansas.  Dennis R. married, in 1847, Susan, daughter of Bazael Brown, of Wilson county, Kentucky.  He died in 1879, and his widow resides in Camden.

          Thomas and James Newton were settlers in 1803, or the following year, on the farm where the widow of Thomas Murray now lives.  They were from Pennsylvania.

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          The Irwins, William and Abram, brothers, came in from Kentucky at an early day, the former settling where James Taylor afterward lived, in section two.

          Matthew McClung, from Maryland, settled at an early day at what is now Bartlett’s station, and raised. a large family.  McClung engaged in milling.  He built a frame house in 1814, where David Barnett’s house now stands, which was a remarkably good one for the time, and the especial wonder and admiration of the neighborhood.

          Elisha Carter, a man who was generally regarded as one of the most intellectual of the pioneers, came from Kentucky and located on the northwest quarter of section ten.  Mary Wilson is the only one of the family remaining in the township.

          James Ryan settled near “Fostertown,” and the Bogues, three brothers, Quakers, located west of Camden during
the early year of the settlement, but removed in 1829.

          James More, who may be regarded as the founder of Camden, settled upon its site (section nine) about 1804 or 1805, and brought up a large family, none of whom, however, are now in the township.  James More died in Camden in 1833.

          In 1805 also came Isaac Sutton, another of the proprietors of Camden, and settled on the southwest quarter of section ten.  In 1826 or 1827 he moved to Sugar creek, Montgomery county, Indiana, and with him went all of his family.

          John Laman, sr., was born in North Carolina, from which State he came on foot to Ohio, and in 1805 he settled in section thirty-four of Somers township.  His wife, Elizabeth Jones, died in 1877.  They have had nine children—Phineas (deceased), Lydia (deceased), Keziah, wife of John Brown, of Gratis; Rebecca; Henry married Miss Cook; Elizabeth, wife of James Hartley; John; Martha, wife of William Taylor; Joseph, married Susan Frazee; John Laman, jr., married Mary Macy, of Somers township—they have three children.  Mr. Laman owns a farm of two hundred and eight acres near Somersville.  Joseph Laman married Susan Frazee, by whom he has had four children, viz.: John Henry, George Alpheus, Matie Elizabeth, and Sarah Ida.  He owns one hundred and sixty acres of land at the home place, and has bought an additional eighty acres, making two hundred and forty in all.

          John Wright was born in Ireland in 1788, and emigrated to this country at an early day, and came from South Carolina to Preble county about 1806, and settled in section thirty-one of Somers township, where he died in 1854.  He was a soldier in the War of 1812, and was a Covenanter.  He did not vote for many years because of conscientious scruples.  His wife, Margaret Cook, was
born in Virginia, and came to Ohio in a very early day.  They had five children, four sons and one daughter.  Three are yet living, viz.: John, William, and Eliza (Jeffers).  John married, in 1850, Martha Johnson, and has had eight children.  He resides in Israel township
and has been several times elected trustee of this township.  William married Mary E. Ramsey, daughter of John and Isaac Ramsey, and has a 'family of five children. His farm of one hundred and eighty-one acres is one of the best in the county, and has been in possession
of the family for seventy-five years. James Wright, deceased, left one child, who lives with the family of William Wright.

          Robert Runyon and his wife, Elizabeth (Barnes), came to the township in 1806, and two years later removed to the Robert Harris farm, near Sugar valley.

          Thomas Murray, was born in Cornwall parish, county of Donegal, Ireland, in 1779.  In 1806 he emigrated to Philadelphia.  The same year he came to Preble county, Ohio, and settled in section twenty-eight, Somers township.  His wife, Martha Lewellen, was born 1788.  Her parents, John and Catharine, emigrated from Kentucky in 1806 and settled in this township, where they resided twenty-seven years.  They then moved to Dixon township.  Thomas Murray died in Somers in 1859.  He had ten children, five now living: John resides in Somers, Thomas in Butler county, Ohio; Phillip at Morning Sun, Israel township; William in Somers, and Sarah A., wife of Daniel Peters, in Camden.

          John Lewellen and his wife, Kate DeVall, originally from Virginia, came to Somers township in 1809 from Kentucky, and settled on Paint creek on the farm now owned by Mrs. Julia Burson.  They reared a family of ten children, of whom three are living, and Mrs. Murray, is the only one in Preble county.

          Phillip Lewellen removed to this township from Kentucky about the year 1810.  He was born in Bullet county, Kentucky, in 1795, and died in Dixon township, this county, in 1877.  His wife (Anna Runyon) was born in 1793 and died in 1874.  They had a family of thirteen children, the following of whom are at this writing living: Julia (widow of Jonathan Burson), Martha (wife of Stephen McWhinney), Bafford, John, Sarah (wife of James Skinner), Dennis, Jane (wife of Daniel Ockerman), James Harvey, Isaac and JehuNancy, Wilson and Catharine are deceased.  Wilson died In the service during the late civil war.  James H. was born in 1830, and married Frances M. Gavin, who was born two years subsequently.
     About the same time that Lewellen came into the county, Richard Newport made his settlement.  Elisha Hancock came a little later, and after a few years removed to Richmond, Indiana, where his widow still resides.

          At later dates than those we have mentioned came many other settlers, among them George Hornaday and Allen Harbard, Quakers, who located on Paint creek; Thomas Lincoln, who settled near Camden and soon afterwards moved away; John Ledwell, also a resident of the immediate vicinity of Camden, and a son-in-law of More; John Vandever and his brother, Noah, and the Davises, Giles and George, who were from North Carolina.  They both located on section twelve, and each David Davis, son of Giles, was a very hard working, industrious man and became a large landholder in the northeast part of the township.

          John K. Steele, a native of South Carolina, settled in Somers township in 1810, and died in 1831.  He served six months in the War of 1812.  His wife, Margaret

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Wilson, was born in Ireland and died about 1856.  Eight children were born to them, three of whom are deceased.  Mary, Margaret, James, Samuel and John are living.  The home farm, located in section seventeen, is in charge of John and Samuel, who have it in a good state of cultivation and well improved.

          Richard Stephen and his wife Letty (Bailey) arrived in the township some time during the War of 1812, and the husband was drafted and obliged to leave his wife and children unprotected in their cabin home in the woods.  They located southwest from the site of Camden, and one mile from the township line.  The Stephens were from Bedford county, Pennsylvania, and were married there.  They had two children when they came to Somers, viz: Rebecca (Hays) now in Dublin, Indiana, and Mary (Peters) a resident of the township.  There were born after their settlement five children, four of whom are living, viz: Levi, in Iowa; Isaiah, in Illinois; John R. in Eaton, and B. B. on the old homestead in Somers; Morton is deceased.  John R. Stephens is clerk of Washington township and justice of the peace, and has been county auditor and treasurer. Richard Stephens, the pioneer, died at his home in 1841.

          William S. Douglas traces his ancestry to Scotland, whence his great-grandfather emigrated many years ago.  His father, Joseph Douglas, was born in Pennsylvania, and in 1814, when fifteen years of age, emigrated to Ohio.  He was very decided in his political views, and would only use “free labor” goods.  His wife, Mary Steele, was the daughter of William Steele, of Kentucky. Of the six children of Joseph and Mary Douglas, four are living.  William S. is unmarried and lives on the home farm in Somers township.  He has been a member of the board of education for six years, has been road commissioner, etc.
          James H. Douglas, the fifth child of William and Eliza Douglas, of Israel township, was born in 1843, and married Mary J. Dewitt, daughter of William Dewitt, of Butler county.  They have had two children - George Elmer and James Roland HarveyMr. Douglas has a fine farm in Somers township, where he resides.

          Samuel Fowler and his wife Rachel (Inman) came from New Jersey in 1815, and located on section twenty-four, where they lived all of their lives.  Samuel Fowler was born in 1786, and died in 1843, his wife surviving him a number of years.  They were the parents of ten children, eight of whom grew to maturity.  Benjamin I. was five years of age when brought to Ohio, and is still living, and has been since 1862 a resident of Camden; Samuel and Catharine are deceased; Rachel (Hollowell) resides in Indiana; Sarah (Ivin) is deceased; Vashti (Huffman) in Butler county; Matilda (Shaeffer) in the same locality, and Franklin, deceased.  Benjamin I. Fowler married for his first wife Jane Tietsort, by whom he has had four sons, all now living, viz:  George W., John T., Francis Marion and James M. His second wife was Catharine Hanger.  There was one son by this marriage—Scott E.

          George Hanger, father of Mrs. Benjamin Fowler, came to Preble county at a very early day—about 1808.  He married Miss Susan Loop, by whom he had four children, Mrs. Fowler being the second child.  For his second wife he married Mary Swakenguest, who survives him; she is the mother of five children.  Mr. Hanger died on his farm about 1860.

          Charles Beall was one of the pioneers of Somers, having come into the township with his parents, Thomas and Fanny Beall, in 18r6.  They emigrated-from Maryland.  There were four children, all now deceased.  Charles Beall was born in 1794.  His wife was Sarah Orme, who was born in 1796, and died in r864, in Israel township, at the residence of her son, Francis.  They had five sons and four daughters.  Five are living as follows: Ezra, in Somers; Frances A., in Israel; William C., in Gasper; Mary Ann, widow of William Brown, in Lewisburgh, Harrison township; and Rev. Alfred Beall, minister of the Methodist Episcopal church at Springborough, Ohio.

          Mrs. Cynthiana Beall, daughter of John Pottenger, married Alfred Beall.  He came from Maryland with his uncle, Thomas Beall, in or about the year 1825.  Their children are: Ellen (deceased), William, Susan, wife of Finley Hoffman; Anna, wife of Charlie Kelly; Reuben, who married Miss Llewelyn; and James, not married.

          William Bennett, grandfather of John H. and David Bennett, was one of the early settlers of this township.  He was born in Virginia about 1766, and came to Ohio from Kentucky.  He died in Somers township in the year 1835.  He was a soldier in the War of 1812.  John Bennett, son of William, came to Somers in 1818, and located on section twelve, where he lived all of his life.  He was born in 1786, and died in 1866.  His wife was Elizabeth Hopper, the daughter of Kentucky pioneers.  She passed away in 1871, at the ripe age of eighty-eight years.  The following are the names of their descend ants of the first generation: James Madison, Julia Ann (Frum), Alfred and William, all deceased; John H., a resident of Camden for the past three years; Jane (Loop), in Gratis township; Nancy (Loop), deceased; Sarah (Randolph), in Gratis township; Nimrod, deceased; and David.

          David Bennett is the youngest child of John Bennett.  He was born in Somers township, in 1825.  He married Martha J. Woods, who was born in Butler county, Ohio, in 1831.  She is the daughter of William L. and Mary McKee Woods, who lived in Preble county.  To Mr. and Mrs. David Bennett have been born two children: William L. married Amanda E. Raikes, and Oscar M. lives at home.  Mr. Bennett owns ninety acres of land in section fourteen, where he resides.

          John Reeve, sr., was a native of Gloucester county, New Jersey, and in 1816 came to Ohio, stopping for about two years in Warren county, and afterwards removing to Somers township, where he died about 1870.  His wife was Susan Van Skiver.

          John Reeve, jr., is the seventh of twelve children.  He married Margaret Brown, the daughter of Robert H. Brown.  Her folks came to Preble county about fifty years ago.  To Mr. and Mrs. Reeve have been born two

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children:  Lurton F. and Porter B.  Mr. Reeve's farm consists of one hundred and fourteen acres, located on the Camden and Fair Haven pike.

     Michael Dillman

     John and Mary Mills

     Peter Sheafer

     Zachariah Thornberry

     James Taylor

     Frederick Shaffer

     David Kennedy

     Benjamin P. Kennedy

     There are more than one hundred descendants of the David Kennedy living.

     David Kennedy

     John H. Ross

     David S. Marshall's ancestors

     Azel Pierce

     Augustus Pierce

 

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     James Bennett

     Jonathan and Jane Hewitt

     Louis Loop

     Daniel Lamm

     Daniel M. Westfall

     Adam Rahn

     William Owens

     William Swan, sr.,

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     Samuel Young

     James B. Duffield's

     William Stubbs

     Christian Eby, sr.,

     Christian Eby,

     John C. Eby,

     Franklin F. Raikes

     Jacob Sterzenbach

     William Douglass

     Fredinand Grupe was born in Wurtemberg, Germany, in 1814.  He moved to Ohio from Pennsylvania in 1851, and settled in Somers township.  His wife was Elizabeth Spice.

     Louis E. Grupe

 

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     David Semple

     Lewis Parker

     James White's

     Moses Whitson

     L. W. Whitson

     M. T. Whitson

     Thomas Lloyd

     Thomas C. Lloyd

 

 

CHURCHES IN SOMERS TOWNSHIP AND VILLAGE OF CAMDEN.

 

MACEDONIA CHAPEL (METHODIST EPISCOPAL)

 

LOW'S CHAPEL (UNITED BRETHREN.)

 

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Rev. A. K. Albright.  The church membership is thirty-nine.
     There are three churches in Camden, the Presbyterian, Methodist Episcopal, and Universalist.  The first and second are old churches, and unfortunately we are unable to give any extended history of either of them, an extended and thorough search for facts revealing very little beside the discovery that the records of both have not been kept.

THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.

 

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.

 

THE UNIVERSALIST CHURCH.

 

THE VILLAGE OF CAMDEN.

is situated about two miles from the north line of the township and railway between the eastern and western boundaries, upon the western side of Seven Mile.  It is tastefully laid out and presents a neat and attractive appearance.  The streets are broad, cleanly and well shaded, and the residences which flank them are general ly thrifty, comfortable, home-like looking places.  Few

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CAMDEN STATION.

     The agents of the Hamilton, Eaton & Richmond railroad at Camden, have been William Pottenger, N. W. Carroll, V. D. Rees, Abram B. King, and the present incumbent, Henry H. Payne.  These five men have together served about twenty-eight years.  The telegraph office was established in 1862, and during the eighteen years that have elapsed since then, four different operators have had charge of it, viz: E. C. Phillips, J. C. Winters, E. C. King, and the present operator, W. J. King, who has been there since 1873.

PERSONAL MENTION.

     Stephen Payne became a resident of Camden about the time that the village was laid out, and his family is still represented in the town and township.  He was from New Jersey and a very early settler in Butler county, where he married Sarah Potter  On coming to Camden he went into the business of tavern keeping, which he followed for many years.  He removed from Camden about 1840, and died in Piqua in 1844.  Three sons of Stephen Payne became residents of Camden and vicinity, viz.:  Moses P., Daniel, and Jonathan  The first named was born in Butler county, and moved to Camden from Miami county, and after a number of years (about 1858) moved to Illinois, where he died in 1863.  He married Mary Ann RobinsonHenry H. Payne, the station agent at Camden, is a son of theirs.  Daniel Payne born in Butler county, in 1817, came to Camden in 1839, and died there in 1878.  During the long term of years that he resided in the village he was one of the most valuable citizens it had.  His liberality and
public spiritedness secured for the town a great many improvements, and it is very commonly remarked that Daniel Payne did more for Camden than any man who ever resided there.  He was a very active, energetic man, and was engaged in many industries, being a tailor, a clock merchant, a teamster (in the ante-railroad days), a hotel keeper, contractor, etc.  He was at one time extensively engaged in buying horses, and driving across the country to the seaboard cities, and was one of the first who engaged in the business.  Daniel Payne was married in 1841, to Mrs. Elizabeth Young, daughter of John and Dorothy Cummings, who is still living in Camden.

     Mrs. Allie Button


 

 

 

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     Jonathan H. Payne

     Howard Young

     Arka Place

     In 1829 Eleanor widow of Robert Jones,

     Isaac Mitchell

     Robert H. Brown

     John Brennan

     There is in Camden a descendant of Job Hall,

     The Fornshells

     Clinton Chadwick

 

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     Nathaniel Wilbur Carroll

     William J. Lounsbury

     J. H. Bohn

     Joshua Howard

     Jacob Collett

     Joseph D. Danner,

     W. A. Danner

     Stephen Bertsch

 

RESIDENTS IN 1834.

     The following names are given by Mr. Clinton Chadwick as those of the heads of families in Camden in 1834, when he came to the village to live, viz:

Mutchel, Samuel
Hackett, James B.
Huffman, Daniel
Richards, Ward
Ingersoll, Stephen
Harris, Robert
Webb, Jacob
White, Robert
Chadwick, Clinton
Hughey, ____
Jones, Susan
Johnson, Alexander
Brown, Robert H.
Woodward, Joseph
Potter, Howell
Barnett, Ezekiel
Mitchell, Robert
Zimmerman, Eli
More, Harrison
Fornshell, Benjamin
Brown, ____
Hopkins, Jared V.
Brown, David
Button, George
Davis, Ei
Nelson, Moses
McMechem, William
Walter, C. C.
Ridenour, Jacob
Brennan, John
Mitchell, Isaac
Runkel, John
Place, Ira K.
Terrill, Damarius
Barnett, David,
Robinson, John,
Bruce, C. C.,
Elliott, Nathaniel,
Bennett, Thornton,
Irwin, Robert,
Williams, M. C.,
Ingersoll, Owen,
Johnson, John H.,
Mitchell, ____
Lee, Alfred,
Jones, George,
Dunham, Lurdum.

MILLS AND MANUFACTURING INTERESTS OF THE VILLAGE

     The first mill which was within convenient distance of the early settlers of Somers township was a “corn cracker” on Seven Mile, in Gasper township, owned by Gasper Potterf, and located where Henry Early and M. S. Wear now live.  It was built before 1806, and, probably, as early as 1804.
     The first mill built in the township of Somers was

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MERCANTILE MATTERS.

 

[Page 311]

 

 

 

BUSINESS HOUSES IN 1880.

     The following is a classified list or directory of the business houses of Camden in the fall of 1880:

     Dry Goods - M. Earhart, Benjamin Myers, Charles Morlatt.
     Groceries - Robert Williams, sr., John Fowler, James Kenworthy, A. L. Borradaille, Henry Neff, William R. Patterson, Henry Coons.
     Hardware - John Coons, M. Earhart.
     Drugs - J. H. Bohn.
     Boots and Shoes- Theodore Johnson, David Morris, P. A. Dearth.
     Harness Makers - George W. Will, Joseph E. Smith, P. A. Dearth.
    
Tinners - B. M. Fornshell, J. E. McCord.
     Furniture Dealers - Mrs. James A. Mitchell, Lucien Koons.
     Meat Markets - W. A. Danner, William Brower, Oscar Pocock.
    
Millinery - Mrs. Olivia Brown and Miss Lina Harris.
     Livery - Will S. Fornshell, George Fowler & Brother, Joshua Howard.
     Bakeries, etc. - James Kenworthy, Henry Neff, Henry Coons.
     Hotel - Arlington House - J. P. & Will S. Fornshell.
     Wagon Makers - J. B. Watt, Stephen Bertsch, Hezekiah Gift.
     Blacksmiths - John R. McGriff, McShane & Brown, Alfred McGriff.
     Agricultural Implements - F. I. Randall.

TAVERNS.

 

 

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PHYSICIANS.

     In the earliest years of the settlement Dr. Walter Buell, of Eaton, was most frequently engaged when there was need of a physician, and in fact, it was very seldom that any other was seen in the township, though occasionally one would be called from Butler county.  Dr. Buellhad a very good practice in Somers township for many years, and continued to receive considerable patronage even after Camden had resident physicians.

     A Dr. Day was in Somers township very early, and a Dr. Mount later, but neither remained long, or became prominent.

     Dr. Ira A. Parker

     Dr. McWilliams

     Dr. Lurton Dunham

     Dr. Carroll

     Cr. Crews and Dr. Mendenhall

     Previous to this time Dr. Robert Hamsher now in practice, had located in Camden.  He was born in Chester county, Pennsylvania, Sept. 30, 2822, and came to Ohio in 1847, locating in Sommerville, Butler county.  He began reading medicine soon after, with Dr. R. P. Carnahan, of Darrtown.  He got a diploma from the Physio-Medical College of Cincinnati in 1852, and immediately afterward began practice in Camden, and has not since been absent from the town sufficiently to interrupt his practice, except for a short period, when he attended the Jefferson Medical College of Cincinnati, from which he took a diploma in 1870.  He was married in 1847, to Hetty Ann Dubois, of Franklin county, Indiana.

     Dr. William Gilmore

     Dr. Zebulon Brown

     Dr. J. S. Ferguson

     Dr. O. E. Francis

 

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Enterprise and Camden, he attended the Kentucky School of Medicine at Louisville, from which he graduated June 28, 1878.  He was married in 187310 Lillian Woodsides.

HISTORY OF THE CAMDEN SCHOOLS.*

 

 

 

 

 

 

POST OFFICE AND POSTMASTER.

     Newcomb post office was established May 26, 1824, and as the records at the post office department, at Washington show, its name was changed to Camden, Sept. 9, 1835.  Ira K. Place was the first post master, and remained in office a long term of years - until 1836.  The receipts of the office, for the first quarter year after it was established, amounted to precisely three dollars and seventy-five cents.  After the expiration of Mr. Place’s term, Boyce Eidson was appointed post master, and after him came J. H. Bohn, with Charles C. Walker as deputy.  Charles C. Walker afterwards was appointed to the office, and the following gentlemen occupied the position from the expiration of his term down to that of the present incumbent, viz: Amos W. Yoast, John H. Campbell, C. M. Roher, Lurton D. Jones, C. M. Roher.  The last named gentleman held it, until his death, in 1878, when Mrs. Olivia Brown received the appointment. She is the present incumbent.

INCORPORATION.

     Camden (or rather Newcomb, for so it was then called), was incorporated, by special act of the legislature, in 1832.  The first corporation officers elected were:  Ira K. Place, mayor; Philip Rizer, recorder (or clerk); and James Allred, Samuel Cornwell, George Burton, Eli Demoss, and Joseph Mitchell, trustees (or councilmen).  At the first meeting of these municipal managers, William Rizer was appointed treasurer, and Jonathan H. Potter, marshall.  In 1833 the same mayor was in office, and the councilmen were: J. P.Achey, Samuel Mitchell, J. P. HendricksPhillip Rizer, and C. C. Bruce. Stephen Ingersoll was chosen clerk, and William McMahon, treasurer.
     The successors of mayors from 1832 down to 1880, shows the following names: 1832, Ira K. Place; 1834, Phillip Rizer; 1836, Ira K. Place; 1838, Gassett V. Hopkins; 1840, John Marsh; 1841, Charles C. Walker; 1843, R. M. Mitchell; 1845, Samuel Mitchell; 1847, Charles Guild; 1848, Ira K. Place; 1850, Dan Payne; 1851, Charles Guild; 1852, James F. Francis; 1853, Amos W. Yoast; 1855, John McCresty; 1856, Amos W. Yoast; 1858, Charles C. Walker; 1859, J. M. Sheafer; 1864, C. M. Roher; 1866, J. M. Sheafer; 1866 (six months), A. M. McAdow; 1867, C. M. Roher; 1869, I. E. Craig; 1872, W. B. Marsh; 1874, Jas. L. Thomas (present incumbent).

MASONIC.

     Camden Lodge, No. 159, was organized May 18, 1848, with the following constituent members: Jonathan Crowley, Andrew Weist, Andrew Coffman, Charles C. Bruce, Jacob S. Showaster, Perry Hestle, John C. Campbell, Ebenezer P. Justin, John Brower, Daniel B. Corry, Harrison Perham, Isaac G. Eson, Samuel D. Clayton, and Adam C. Dean.

INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS.

     Western Star Lodge, No. 109, of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, was instituted June 8, 1848, its charter having been issued April 21st.  Its original members were: A. W. Yoast, John C. Thomas, Samuel

---------------
*
Supplied by Professor O. T. Corson.

[Page 314]
Hippard, Samuel M. Yoast, James A. Mitchell, Francis J. Pierce, James N. Boner, Samuel D. Clayton, and Samuel Collins.  The fraternity now has a very comfortable, and well furnished lodge room, and the lodge numbers about seventy-five members.
     Camden Encampment, No. 177, was instituted July 14th, 1874, with the following charter members: David B. Holmes, Jas. W. Pottenger, H. 1.. Robbins, Samuel W. Pottenger, Benjamin F. Williams, Joseph Sacks, and David Patton.  The organization now has about forty members.
     Somers Lodge, Daughter of Rebecca, No. 125, was instituted July 27th, 1880, with the following members:  O. P. Brown, S. W. Pottenger, R. T. Acton, F. M. Fowler, D. S. Bostwick, J. B. Watt, J. G. McShane, Frank Randall, J. A. Loop, A. H. Klopp, Wm. A. Snyder, John T. Fowler, Jas. H. Robinson, Wm. R. Patterson, W. A. Danner, John R. McGrifl', J. S. Ferguson, H. S. Robbins, Elizabeth S. Payne, Maggie E. Pottenger, Mary A. Earhart, Lida R. Brown, Elizabeth McGriff, D. Lewellen.

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INDEXED.


 

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