USA > Ohio > Licking County > Centennial history of Licking County, Ohio > Part 2
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SETTLERS OF THE YEAR ISOO.
In the year 1800, Benjamin Green, and Richard Pitzer settled on the Shawnee Run, two miles below the junction of the North and South Forks, having come from Alleghany County, Maryland. In
13
LICKING COUNTY, OHIO.
the same year Captain Samuel Elliott, from the same County, settled half a mile above them. And in the same year Isaac Stadden, an emigrant from Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, settled half a mile above Captain Elliott. His brother John, an unmarried brother, accompanied him. He remained unmarried, however, only until the Christmas of this year. And it was during this year also, that John Van Buskirk left Brooke County, Virginia, and settled upon a thirty- one hundred acre tract of land he had purchased, situated in the Valley of the South Fork, (now in Union Township, ) some eight miles or more above the mouth of the South Fork. He served as a spy many years, between the Ohio and Tuscarawas rivers, for the protection of the frontier settlers, and in that capacity was eminently useful. He was frequently attached to expeditions commanded by Captains Samuel Brady and John McCulloch, those eminent protec- tors of the pioneer settlers between the Alleghanies and the Ohio river. His death occurred December 31, IS40. Isaac Stadden was the first civil officer elected within the limits of our County. At an election held in January IS02, at the cabin of Captain Hughes, he was chosen a Justice of the Peace of Licking Township, then Fairfield County, and Elias Hughes was elected Captain of Militia at the same time and place. John Stadden became the first Sheriff of Lieking County in ISOS and served as such, and as Collector of taxes until ISIo. Captain Elliott was elected Coroner of the County of Licking in 1808 and served as such for a score of years or more. He had been a soldier in the Revolutionary war. His death took place in May, 1831, in his eightieth year. Benjamin Green lived until 1835, dying at the age of seventy-six years.
Isaac Stadden, late in October, 1800, left his cabin one day, to go to Cherry Valley, to shoot deer. He came home in the evening, greatly excited, having discovered the Old Fort, of which he had not heard before. Next morning he and Mrs. Stadden, visited this interesting relic of the Mound-builders, and riding all around it on the top of the embankment, where it was practicable, they took a good look at this great curiosity, and so far as is known he was the first white man, and she the first white woman that ever looked upon this ancient work of a prehistoric people.
Another incident of this year. In November, or early in Decem- ber ISoo, Isaac Stadden was deer hunting near this spot, in the direction of Ramp or Auter Creek. There, towards evening around a camp-fire, in the dense forest he met John Jones, Phineas Ford, Frederick Ford, Benoni Benjamin and a Mr Denner. Jones and the
14
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CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF
Fords were married to the sisters of Benjamin. Jones was of Welsh ancestors, born in New Jersey, but had lived in the neighborhood of Stadden, in Pennsylvania, where they had been schoolmates. Neither knew that the other was in the Northwest Territory. They had not seen each other for many years, and knew nothing of each others intervening history or whereabouts. The romantic interest of such a meeting, under such circumstances, by Stadden and Jones, cannot be readily described-it must be imagined rather. Jones with his associates, were exploring, with a view to an early settlement, and they did settle in a few months, Jones in the Raccoon Valley, and his associates in the Ramp Creek Valley. The entire company accepted Mr. Stadden's invitation to visit him at his cabin, and did so, soon, and it was represented to the writer, sixty years after, by Mrs. Stadden, that said visit and its incidents, were among the most interesting and enjoyable events of her long Pioneer life.
THE SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS OF ISOI.
The year IS01 brought with it quite a number of settlers. John Larabee ascended the Licking river in a canoe to the mouth of the Bowling Green Run, where he landed, and near that point on the South side of the Licking, he occupied a hollow sycamore tree, while he cleared some land, and raised a few acres of corn. He served throughout the whole Revolutionary war, and probably also in the Indian wars afterwards. Mr. Larabe died February 6th, 1846, aged four score and six years. James Maxwell came up the Licking with Mr. Larabee, John Weedman and a Mr. Carpenter. Maxwell was
the first school teacher, and made that his life-long profession. was also our first constable, having been elected to said office, Janu- ary 1, 1802, at the same time and place of the election of Captain Hughes, and Isaac Stadden, Esq. Samuel Parr this year settled on the Licking bottoms just below the junction of the North and South Forks. James Macauly and James Danner located themselves near the mouth of Ramp Creek, where the first named built a " tub-mill" or " corn-cracker," the first water power concern within the present limits of our County. Phillip Barrick settled near the "Licking Narrows." John Jones built his cabin in the Raccoon Valley, five miles from the mouth of Raccoon Creek, and Phineas and Frederick Ford and Benoni Benjamin theirs in the Ramp or Auter Creek Valley, some miles from the mouth of Ramp or Auter Creek. Phillip Sutton, Job Rathbone, and John and George Gillespie settled in the Hog Run Valley. In September of this year, John Edwards came
He
15
LICKING COUNTY, OHIO.
to the South Fork Valley, from Brooke County, Virginia. He was distinguished as a hunter and an expert with the rifle, having been engaged as a spy for some years on the frontiers of Virginia, as well as the Northwest Territory. In coming he blazed the trees and killed the game for their subsistence, while others cut out the road where necessary, and still others followed with the wagon which contained his family and household effects.
TILE SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS OF ISO2.
The year 1802 brought us many immigrants. Alexander Holmes and James Hendricks came from Brooke County, Virginia, and settled in the South Fork Valley near the residence of their brother- in-law, John Van Buskirk. Theophilus Rees, David Lewis, David Thomas, James Johnson and Simon James came this year, most of them settling on the Welsh Hills. Jacob Nelson settled in the Lick- ing Valley, and not long thereafter built a mill, a mile or more below the junction of the North and South Forks. Newark was laid out this year by General W. C. Schenck; and Abraham Miller, John Warden and Henry Claybaugh came from the South Branch of the Potomac, and settled in its immediate vicinity. Michael Thorn, Frederick Myer, and Henry Neff located at or near the Little Bow- ling Green, on the Southern borders of the County, during this year. They were from the Monongahela country, in West Virginia. Adam Hatfield, James Black, Richard Parr, Samuel Elliott, Henry Clay- baugh, Samuel Parr, and Samuel Elliott, Jr., built and occupied cabins in Newark this year, except the younger Elliott, who probably had a tenant in his. The senior Elliott built the first hewed log house with shingled roof. Black kept a tavern on the lot now occupied by the Park House. Beall Babbs, James Jeffries and Mrs. Catharine Pegg, settled in or near Newark during this year. Jonathan Benja- min, father-in-law of John Jones and the Ford brothers, located on Ramp or Auter Creek, in the Spring of 1802. He had passed through the French and Indian wars, and through the Revolutionary war also, and had been a frontiersman from his youth up. Mr. Benjamin died in 1841, at the great age of ONE HUNDRED AND THREE YEARS! Patrick Cunningham, Abraham Johnson, Abraham Wright, James Petticord, Edward Nash, Carlton, Benedict, Aquilla, and two John Belts settled about and in Newark, except Cunningham, who first lived neighbor to John Jones, having built the second cabin within the present limits of Granville Township. He was from
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CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF
Tyrone County, province of Ulster, Ireland; the others were from Washington County, Pennsylvania. A considerable colony from Brooke County, Virginia, also settled in the South Fork Valley.
SUBSEQUENT SETTLERS AND SETTLEMENTS UNTIL 1809.
After the year 1802, the influx of new settlers increased from time to time, and new settlements were made from year to year ..
In 1803, John Evans settled in the North Fork Valley, seven miles North of Newark, and in the Spring of the same year Evan Payne and Jacob Wilson located in the same valley about a mile above the mouth of the North Fork. They, as well as Evans were Virginians. John Simpson, Robert Church, William Schamahorn, Richard Jewell, Edward Crouch, William and John Moore, Thomas Seymour and William O'Banon settled within the present limits of Madison Township, during this year also.
In 1804 Thomas Cramer, Simon James, and Peter Cramer settled on the Welsh Hills. Evan Humphrey, and Chiswold May settled near the " Big Spring," now in Newton Township. Daniel Thomp- son, Samuel Enyart and Matthias and Hathaway Denman located in the present Township of Hanover. Moses Meeks, William Harris, Charles Howard and John and Adam Myers located about the "Little Bowling Green." Maurice Newman settled in Newark. John and Jacob Myers, Daniel Smith and James Taylor came to the South Fork Valley; and Henry Smith, John Channel, and Thomas Deweese located in what is now Madison Township.
In 1805 settlements were made on the upper waters of the South Fork, now in Lima Township, David Herron being the first settler. In the same year, (or early in 1806,) a Mr. Hatfield settled within the present limits of Harrison Township; and George Ernst, John Feasel and John and Jacob Swisher formed a settlement near the source of Swamp Run, now in Franklin Township. In November of this year, ( 1805.) the Granville Colony arrived and established themselves at and around the village of Granville. General John Spencer also settled in the Spring of this year, in the North Fork Valley, five miles north of Newark. When he settled at the " Big Spring," he found in the vicinity a man named Evan Humphrey, quite an eccentric character, who served his country in the Revo- lutionary war, and who was also of the " forlorn hope," at the storm- ing of Stony Point, in 1779 by General Wayne. Rev. Joseph Thrap settled within the present Township of Hanover; and
17
LICKING COUNTY, OHIO.
Elisha and John Farmer settled a few miles west of Newark during this year.
In 1806, the upper valley of Raccoon Creek, now Monroe Township, was settled by George W. Evans, and soon thereafter by Charles and George Green. Henry Drake also located in the upper valley of the South Fork, now Harrison Township, during this year. Chester and Elisha Wells and John Hollister settled near the mouth of the Rocky Fork. Samuel Hand, James Holmes and David Benja- min settled in the South Fork Valley. Evan Pugh and Archibald Wilson settled North of Newark in North Fork Valley. The upper Valley of the North Fork, now Burlington Township, was settled by James Dunlap, Nathan Conard and others. William Hull and Isaac Farmer located this year in the vicinity of the Flint Ridge.
In 1807 John Cook Herron built and occupied a cabin in the Raccoon Valley, now St. Albans Township. Granville Township, Fairfield County was organized this year. It embraced the Western half of the present County of Licking, except, I believe, the Refugee lands, Licking Township, embracing the eastern half, with the same exception.
In ISOS, Joseph Conard settled in the North Fork Valley, near the present village of Utica. He came from Loudon County, Vir- ginia, and was the first settler within the present Township of Wash- ington. In this year, ( ISOS, ) the County of Licking was organized with the following persons as its first Judicial and County Officers:
PRESIDENT JUDGE OF COMMON PLEAS COURT-William Wilson.
ASSOCIATE JUDGES-Alexander Holmes, Timothy Rose, James Taylor.
CLERK OF COURT-Samuel Bancroft.
SHERIFF-John Stadden.
TREASURER-Elias Gilman.
COMMISSIONERS-Archibald Wilson, Elisha Wells, Israel Wells. COLLECTOR OF TAXES-John Stadden. COMMISSIONERS' CLERK-Elias Gilman.
ASSESSOR OF LICKING TOWNSHIP-Archibald Wilson, Jr.
ASSESSOR OF GRANVILLE TOWNSHIP-Jeremiah R. Munson.
The 'first Court was held at the house of Levi Hays, four miles West of Newark and two miles cast of Granville. There not being room in the house, the Grand Jury held its inquest under a trec. During the year a board of Commissioners consisting of James Dun- lap, Isaac Cook and James Armstrong, selected Newark as the per- manent County Seat.
IS
CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF
OUR FIRST JUDGES AND CLERK IN ISOS.
WILLIAM WILSON was a New Englander, educated at Dart- mouth College, and had settled at Chillicothe as an Attorney at Law. He presided at the first Court held in Licking County in ISos, and remained on the Bench until 1823, when he was elected to Con- gress, and served four years and until his death in IS27.
ALEXANDER HOLMES came from Brooke County, Virginia, in ISO2. He was a gentleman of considerable natural ability-of gen. eral intelligence and extensive information-and was of the better educated class of our Pioneers. Judge Holmes sat upon the Bench as an Associate Judge from ISOS to 1812, and again from IS23 to IS28.
JAMES TAYLOR Was born in Pennsylvania, in 1753, and after his marriage in 17So, he moved to Western Virginia. In 1782 he was in the Williamson expedition against the Moravian Indians on the Tuscarawas, and had the honor of voting, with seventeen others, against the murder of their Indian captives, but without avail. Judge Taylor served as Associate Judge only from ISOS to 1809. He had served his country during the Revolutionary war, and was a man of character and intelligence. His death took place in 1844, at the advanced age of ninety-one years!
TIMOTHY ROSE was one of the original Granville Colony of 1805, not one of whom now survives. He was an Associate Judge from 1808 to 1813, when he died. Judge Rose was a high-toned, in - tellectual and intelligent gentleman, and a man of high character, of sound judgment, and undoubted patriotism. He served in the Revolutionary war, and distinguished himself as an officer, at the storming of a British redoubt, at the surrender of Cornwallis, at Yorktown in 1781.
SAMUEL BANCROFT Was the first Clerk of our Court in ISos. He was of the original Granville Colony, arriving in the Spring of ISO6. Ile was a soldier in the war of 1812, served as a Magistrate many years, and was an Associate Judge from 1824 to 1845. As a citizen and a public officer, he was held in high esteem. He was born in Massachusetts, in 1778, and died in 1870, at the age of ninety- two years.
NEW SETTLEMENTS FROM ISO9 TO IS21, INCLUSIVE.
In ISog, Henry Iles settled within the present limits of Benning-
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LICKING COUNTY, OHIO.
ton Township. In ISIo, the Wakatomika Valley was first settled by Samuel Hickerson, followed next year by James Thrap. Daniel Poppleton rendered a similar service within the present limits of Hartford Township, in the year 1812. Joseph and Peter Headly started a settlement on the head waters of the South Fork, (now in Jersey Township, ) in 1815. Etna Township too, was settled in 1815, if not a little carlier, by John Williams, the Housers and others. Isaac Essex settled there in IS16. In the year ISIS David Bright located in the Northeastern part of this County, and was the first settler of Fallsbury Township, while in 1821, Rena Knight built a cabin and opened a clearing near the head of Brushy Fork, at a point now in Liberty Township. Thus one locality after another became settled, and finally fully occupied in every section of our County.
THE PIONEER PREACHERS AND CHURCH ORGANIZATIONS.
In 1802, a Presbyterian minister named McDonald came along and preached two sermons to the settlers in the Licking Valley. In IS03, Rev. John Wright also a Presbyterian preacher, delivered two sermons in Newark. Thomas Marquis, another Presbyterian Minis- ter, gave the people of Raccoon Valley a sermon or two during this year. During the Autumn of this year, Rev Asa Shinn, of the Methodist Church commenced preaching, as an itinerant minister, at Benjamin Green's in the Hog Run settlement, and before his year closed he there organized a society or Church, and that was the original or Pioneer church organization in our County. He prob- ably sometimes preached in Newark also; certainly his successors on the circuit, Revs. James Quinn and John Meeks, did, and also formed a small Church organization as early as 1805, which was the second in our County. The Congregational Church of Granville, organized before the Granville Colony left New England, was the third religious society of Licking County, and the Methodist Society, organized in ISO6 or a little later, near the Bowling Green, was probably the fourth. A Methodist Society near the eastern borders of this County, organized about the same time, and often ministered unto by the Rev. Joseph Thrap, was most likely the next in order, and the fifth in number. The Welsh Hills Baptist Church was organized September 4th, ISOS, and was the sixth and next in order. In the Autumn of the same year the First Presbyterian Church of Newark was organized, and was the seventh in order, in the County. although there may have been a Methodist Church organized
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CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF
earlier in the South Fork Valley. The only other of the early-time Churches I mention is the Hog Run or Friendship Baptist Church which was organized February 20th, ISHI, and has had a good degree of prosperity until now.
The Revs. Joseph Williams and James Axley were itinerating Methodist Ministers in 1805. Rev Peter Cartwright preached to the Methodist Societies in 1806, as did also Rev. John Emmett. Rev. James Scott, a Presbyterian Minister, also preached in Newark during this year. Rev James Hoge, of the same denomination visited and preached to the people of Granville during the year, as did also Rev. Samuel P. Robbins of the Congregational Church, and Rev. David Jones, of the Baptist Church. In 1807, Revs. Joseph Hayes and James King were the regular itinerant Ministers, who ministered regularly to the Methodist Churches hereabouts. Sometimes, too Revs. Jesse Stoneman and Robert Manly ministered to them, as did also Rev. Levi Shinn. In ISOS Revs. Ralph Lotspeitch and Isaac
Quinn were the regular Methodist preachers. Elder James Sutton and Mr. Steadman appeared as Baptist ministers. Rev. Timothy Harris a Congregational Minister took charge of the Church in
Granville this year and continued his ministrations until I822. His ordination there was conducted by Revs. Lyman Potter, Stephen Lindley, Jacob Lindley, John Wright and James Scott. In 1809 Revs. Benjamin Lakin, and John Johnson were the Methodist itiner- ants. Revs. Thomas Powell and John W. Patterson, (Baptists, ) commenced their ministerial services in Licking County. In ISIO the latter took charge of the Welsh Hills Church, and in the next year of the Hog Run Church also. Rev. James B. Finley was the Methodist itinerant of the year ISIO.
THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF THE TOWNSHIPS OF LICKING COUNTY- THE DATE OF THEIR ORGANIZATION-AND WHEN SETTLED.
TOWNSHIPS WHEN ORGANIZED.
WHEN SETTLED.
I. Licking ISO1 in Fairfield County ISOI.
66 ISO1.
2. Granville. ISO7
3. Hanover. I SOS 1801.
4. Bowling Green I SOS . 1 802.
5. Union I SOS 1800.
6. Newton
1809 ISO3.
7. Newark ISIO
ISOI.
S. Madison 1812 1798.
9. Monroe IS12
1 806.
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LICKING COUNTY, OHIO.
IO. Washington ISI2 I SOS.
II. Franklin ISI2 IS05.
12. St. Albans 1813. I SO7.
13. Hopewell ISI4
I SO6.
14. Bennington IS15
I So9.
15. Harrison ISI6
I SO6.
16. Burlington ISI7 I SO6.
17.
Mary Ann ISI7.
ISO9.
18. Mckean ISIS
I 806.
19. Hartford ISI9
IS12.
20. Perry IS19
ISIO.
21. Jersey
IS20
1815.
22. Eden IS22
1813.
23. Fallsbury IS26 ISIS.
24. Liberty . IS27 IS21.
25. Lima IS27
ISO5.
26. Etna 1833 IS15.
CITY AND VILLAGE POPULATION.
Population of the City of Newark, and of the Towns and Villages of Licking County, according to the Census of 1870, given in the order of their numbers.
Newark
6698.
Granville.
1109.
Hebron. .
478.
Pataskala, (first called Conine.)
Jackson 462.
438.
Utica, (first called Wilmington, ).
384.
Brownsville 384.
Hanover 322.
Alexandria
3º3.
Kirkersville.
295
Etna, (first called Carthage, ) . 258.
Johnstown
241.
Hartford. 229.
Homer, (first called Burlington, )
226.
Columbia, (sometimes called Columbia Center, ) . 205. St. Louisville. 166.
Chatham, (first called Harrisburg; ) 156.
Gratiot, (Licking County's portion, ) 154.
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CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF
Elizabethtown
II3.
Jersey .
IOI.
Linnville 100.
Fredonia .
99.
Vanattasburg
7c.
Appleton
56.
Luray
55.
Total 13,102 N. B .- Amsterdam, Toboso, Wagram, New Way, Fallsburg, Boston, Moscow, Sylvania, Summit Station, Union Station and per- haps other villages were not separately enumerated, but were in- cluded in the total population.
LICKING COUNTY TOWNS-WHEN LAID OUT AND BY WHOM. (Given in Chronological order.)
TOWNS. WHEN LAID OUT. AND BY WHOM,
Newark . ISO2. . W. C. Schenck, J. N. Cummings and J. Burnet.
Granville IS06. . Licking Land Company.
Johnstown IS13. . Henry Bigelow.
Utica
1814. . Major William Robertson.
Homer IS16. . John Chonner.
Hartford IS24. . Ezekiel Wells and Elijah Durfey.
Hebron IS27. . John W. Smith.
Jackson 1829. . Thomas Harris.
Fredonia IS29. . Spencer Arnold, David Wood, Jr., and S. Shaw.
Gratiot. IS29. . Adam Smith.
Brownsville . . 1829. . Adam Brown.
Linnville. . IS29. . Samuel Parr.
Chatham. . 1829. . John Waggoner.
Elizabethtown1829. . Leroy, Beverly, Abner and Minerva Lemert.
Lockport. 1830. . James Holmes and C. W. Scarle.
Moscow
1830. . Daniel Green and William Green.
Alexandria .
1830. . Alexander Devilbliss.
Wagram.
1831 . . (first called Cumberland ) Jeremiah Armstrong.
Appleton 1832. . Titus Knox and Carey Mead.
Etna 1832. . Lyman Turrill. [Pearson.
Jersey 1832. . L. Headley, W. Condit, E. Beecher and A. D.
Kirkersville. . 1832. . William C. Kirker.
Luray 1832. . Adam Sanc and Richard Porter.
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LICKING COUNTY, OHIO.
AAmsterdam . . 1834. . George Barnes.
Sylvania. . . . . 1838. Jesse and Abraham Gosnell.
St. Louisville . 1840. John Evans.
Columbia . . 1850. . John Reese, Stephen Childs and Mark Richey.
Pataskala
IS51. . Richard Conine.
Hanover 1852. . J. H. Hollister.
Toboso 1852. . William Stanbery.
Fairfield, Licking, New Winchester, Belfast, Exeter, Livings- ton, and Mount Hope are virtually extinct villages of Licking County.
WHEN
TOWNSHIPS NUMBER OF INHABITANTS NAMES OF FIRST SETTLERS IN EACH. SEUTLED,
LICKING COUNTY.
IN 1870.
Bennington. . . . 907. . Henry Iles. 1 809.
Bowling Green 1042. . Michael Thorn, F. Myer and H. Neff. . . 1802.
Burlington
1061. . James Dunlap, C. Vanousdal and others. 1806.
Eden
782. . W. Shannon, J. Oldaker and E. Brown . .. 1813.
Etna
1224. . J. Williams, J. Crouch, Nelsons & Housers 1815.
Fallsbury 865. . David Bright. 1818.
Franklin 847 . . George Ernst, the Switzers and J. Feasel. 1805.
2127. John Jones, and Patrick Cunningham.
.. 1801
Granville
Hanover
1165. . Philip Barrick
ISOI.
Harrison
1242 . Henry Drake.
1806.
Hartford
1017. . Daniel Poppleton
1812.
Hopewell
1009. . W. Hull, I. Farmer, S. Pollock and others. 1806.
Jersey.
1253. . Joseph and Peter Headly and L. Martin . 1815.
Liberty
837 . . Rena Knight and others.
1821.
Licking 1288. . P. Sutton, J. Rathbone & J. & G. Gillespie . 1801.
Lima
1642. .- Hatfield, David and John Herron .
I 805.
Madison 959. . Elias Hughes and John Ratliff 1798.
Mary Ann 804. .-- Bush, a Virginian 1 809.
McKean
990. . John Price.
1 806.
Monroe
III9. . Geo. W. Evans, Chas. and Geo. Green
1 806.
Newark
.7617. . Samuel Parr and others
1801.
Newton 1283. . John Evans 1803.
Perry
897. . Samuel Hickerson and James Thrap
1810.
St. Albans 1110. John Cook Herron. 1 807.
Union .
1 855. . John Van Buskirk, the Ford's and others. 1800.
Washington . . . 1252. . Joseph Conard, John Lee and others ... .1808.
36,196
24
CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF
OUR CONGRESSMEN.
In order to make this as complete a history of Licking County as I can within reasonable limits, I propose to present, in tabular form, the names of the persons, with the titles of their offices and time of service in the various State and County Offices, so far as our County was identified with them, beginning with the members of Congress who have represented districts of which Licking County formed a part.
Jeremiah Morrow served from 1803 to 1813
James Kilbourn
1813 “ 1817
Philemon Beccher 66
1817 “ 1821
Joseph Vance 66
1821 " 1823
William Wilson 66
1823 “ 1827
William Stanbery
. 6
1827 " 1833
Robert Mitchell 66
1833 " 1835
Elias Howell
1835 - 1837
Alexander Harper 66
1837 “ 1839
Jonathan Taylor 66
יר
1839 - 1841
Joshua Mathiot 6.
1841 " 1843
Heman A. Moore
..
1843 “ 1844
Alfred P. Stone .6
66
1844 " 1845
Columbus Delano
..
1845 “ 1847
Daniel Duncan
1847 “ 1849
Charles Sweetser ..
1849 “ 1853
Edson B. Olds .. 66
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