USA > Ohio > Preble County > History of Preble County Ohio: Her People, Industries and Institutions > Part 22
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1808 they organized a church, which they named Hopewell, in honor of their South Carolina church home.
Early in the century, homeseekers from New Jersey, belonging to the Society of Friends, settled in the northeast corner of the township, where they built their house of worship. They called their society Westfield, in honor of their New Jersey church, which bore the same name.
No one but a Scotchman, born and bred, and versed in Scottish church history, can tell the difference between some of the churches holding the Pres- byterian faith; but to the members of the various bodies the differences are vital. So those settlers holding the views of the Reformed Presbyterians, or Covenanters, were organized into a church known as the Beech Woods, or Morning Sun, church. Their building was located east of Morning Sun.
SCHISM AMONG COVENANTERS.
In 1834 the Covenanter denomination was divided into two parts, known as the Old School and New School. The Morning Sun congregation, with their pastor, the Rev. Garvin McMillan, sided with the New School. But there were those among their number who refused to think with the ma- jority and claimed possession of the house of worship on the grounds that they were the church. The majority they regarded as backsliders. Que Sabbath morning the conservative party entered the church to hold a service of their own. The doors in the balustrade which surrounded the high, old- fashioned pulpit were closed and Elder Ramsey took his station beside the pulpit and was about to begin the service when the Rev. Mr. McMillan en- tered the church. Mr. McMillan was not long in reaching the pulpit, where he nimbly swung himself over the balustrade and was in possession. But the day was not yet won. In scathing tones, Mr. Ramsey exclaimed, "He that entereth not in by the door, but climbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber." But by this time Mr. McMillan had opened the pulpit Bible, and such was their reverence for the Word that the belligerents quietly retired to the school house across the way and left the progressives in posses- sion of the house of worship. Most of the families of the Old school party subsequently found for themselves new homes in other places among people who worshipped as they did. But one member retired in high dudgeon to his farm. Not wanting to be buried by the side of his backsliding neighbors, he built for himself a burial vault and carved his own tombstone. On this stone he recorded at length his religious views. But, unfortunately, the
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stone fell and by the accident his leg was broken, from which injury he died soon afterward. His body was laid to rest in the vault of his own building. But he had not reckoned with the ravages of time, and the vault finally crumbled to dust. His remains were removed to Cedarville, Ohio, and the tombstone was ground up by the stone crusher to make road.
The Beech Woods congregation united with the United Presbyterian de- nomination in 1870, and in 1876, together with one hundred members from Hopewell, built a church in the village of Morning Sun. The site of the old church building is marked only by the graves by which it had been sur- rounded.
Meanwhile the Hopewell church was rapidly growing. It was minis- tered to by the Rev. Alexander Porter, D. D., himself a South Carolinan. Their first house of worship, a log building, was found to be too small before it was completed and thirty feet were added to the end. In 1827 the present brick church was erected. Although it is the largest building in the township, and has the greatest seating capacity, it was soon found to be too small.
For twenty-six years, winter and summer, through storm and through sunshine, every Sabbath day the people on the outskirts of the settlement found their way to the Hopewell meeting house, with never a thought of hardship nor a wish for change.
But the church building was too small and it was clear that something must be done. The Christian Intelligencer for September, 1834, had this no- tice: "The First Presbytery of Ohio will meet on the call of the moderator, at Hopewell meeting house, Preble county, Ohio, the first day of October, to organize a new congregation to be composed of a portion of the members of Hopewell congregation and to grant them the moderation of a call if thought expedient." The congregational records of the time state that the. Presby- tery set off about fifty families by the name and title of Fair Haven congre- gation, and adds that the heads of four of these families were elders. This new congregation built their house of worship in Fair Haven, then a town of two years of age. In 1837 a church of the same denomination was organ- ized at Oxford, Butler county, and the people in its direction moved their membership to it, thus again reducing Hopewell's number. There was an- other flitting in 1849, when the church at College Corner was organized. This congregation's first building was on the Indiana side of the state line, but a few years since a new building was erected on the Ohio side and they are now numbered with the Israel township churches.
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FUSION OF THE TWO CHURCHES.
In 1858 the Associate Reformed Presbyterian denomination formed a union with the Associate Presbyterian, under the name and title of the United Presbyterian Church of North America; thus these Israel township churches became known as United Presbyterians. As has been stated, in the year 1876 the Hopewell congregation lost one hundred more of its members to the new organization at Morning Sun. This last flitting left the mother church must reduced in strength and circumscribed in territory, but still the congregation maintains the regular services, ministered to by one of its own sons. In 1908 Hopewell church celebrated its one hundredth anniversary, on which occasion she had the pleasure of being greeted by personal representa- tives from her mother church in South Carolina and from her four daugh- ters at home. At this time there were also letters of greeting from various "Hopewells" situated in the Western states, which were namesakes of hers, for the pioneering spirit which resulted in the settlement of Israel township also caused many of its people to seek new homes as the great West opened up to immigration.
There were those among the pioneers who established their homesteads far from the church and each Lord's Day traveled four or five, or even six, miles to the meeting house. The Hamilton and Richmond turnpike, which was built some time in the forties, was a thing for the future to develop, and the roads of that time were far from ideal. Carriages were an unheard-of luxury, but there was always an old horse or two which were ready to carry the father and mother, and perhaps the babies, while the younger people thought it no hardship to walk. The man who invented barbed-wire fences had not yet been born, and there was nothing to prevent the worshippers from taking a bee line to the meeting house, except those obstacles which nature herself laid in the way. Between the God of Nature and the God of Revela- tion there exists no chasm, save only to the sin-blinded eyes of His creatures, and that walk through the beech woods must have been fitting preparation for His worship. As these little companies made their way to the rude man-made meeting house, through the aisles of the great cathedral of the Master Builder, the arches of which were vocal with the worship of the wood folk, it is a marvel that some "mute, inglorious Milton" among them did not break his silence and burst into song. But there is no record that any of them ever did. Indeed, if one had been so bold, he would no doubt have been promptly snubbed into silence by those groups of practical people, who
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were less concerned with the glorious things of nature than in keeping their Sabbath clothes from coming to grief. The go-to-meeting shoes were kept from harm by being worn over the shoulders of their owner, tied together by the strings. There was always some convenient log near the meeting house where the women could sit while they put them on. The same log found a shelter for the'stout shoes which had been worn over the rough path, and there they remained during the two long sermons at the meeting house. The bad boy of the period seems not to have been alive to the opportunity of those waiting shoes. When the sun began to cast long shadows on the east side of the beech trees, the shoes were always found ready to do duty on the homeward walk.
THE KNIGHT AND THE LADY.
An old lady of sainted memory, who had great fund of anecdote, used to entertain her young folks with stories of quilting parties, husking bees, apple parings and other functions whereby the forefathers cunningly com- bined business with pleasure. There was one harrowing tale among them, in which a promising romance was stamped quite out of existence by a pair of those homely shoes, lurking so guilelessly under the lea of the log. An apple paring was in progress just across the woods from her father's home, and Dame Rumor reported that a stranger knight would grace it by his pres- ence.
The occasion called for careful dressing, but even such an event could not cause our prudent heroine to grow reckless. The general utility shoes were worn as usual and left at the edge of the wood, where the dainty toilet was completed by a smart little pair of slippers whose "light fantastic toe" betrayed a forbidden acquaintance with the Virginia reel and the "miller boy who lived in the mill."
The knight was there. It was the old story over again. "He came, he saw, he conquered"-and was conquered. All went well until he asked for the privilege of "seeing her safe home." What was she to do? She could not well refuse his escort, but if she walked home in those slippers there. was her mother to be reckoned with, and to stop for her shoes, in such company, was not to be thought of. Reversing the decision of Hamlet. she chose to avoid the present ills and to let the future take care of itself. The walk was not a success. She was so distraught with anxiety as to the fate of her slip- pers and so filled with forebodings as to her own fate, that he ceased to be charmed; while, on her part, she wished him anywhere but by her side.
In relating the story she always assured her friends that that was the
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last she ever saw of him. Nevertheless, the story had its sequel. As the morning light revealed no trace of the footpath on her slippers, all might yet be well. There was a young brother, afterwards supreme judge of Ohio, who was willing to go for the shoes, and was not above taking a bribe as the price of his silence. But the guilty secret was long held over her head and became the "open sesame" to all the desires of the young tyrant heart.
But apple parings and kindred vanities occurred on week days, and the Sabbath presented no such embarrasing situations.
In addition to these churches which were transplanted with the first settlers, Israel township has also a Methodist Episcopal church, which is lo- cated in Fair Haven. The history of this church begins as does that of many other churches of that denomination. A few Methodist families hav- ing moved into Fair Haven and vicinity, the circuit preachers began visiting them early in the forties. Later an organization was effected, and in 1849 a house of worship was erected. The early growth of this church was spas- modic. At one time the field was abandoned and again reorganized. It was not until the year 1873 that the Fair Haven and Sugar Valley churches were off from the Camden circuit and became separate charges. Since that time the growth of the church has been steady and it is now a strong body doing a splendid work in the community.
SCHOOLS.
Next in importance to its churches are the schools of the township. The beginning of the education of the youths of Israel township was simultaneous with the township's settlement. What the fathers knew they taught to their children. The chief text books were the Bible and the Westminster Confes- sion of Faith, popularly known as the "Shorter Catechism," with a copy of "Baxter's Call to the Unconverted" as a bit of lighter reading.
The people of that day thought more in grooves, it may be, than the people of today, and their knowledge was not so broad as at the present time, but certainly it reached deeper down, and as a character builder has not been surpassed.
As the people of the settlement became able, they employed teachers for their children, paying them by subscription so much per child. The teacher eked out his slender salary by "boarding around." The early teachers were mostly chosen from among the home boys, many of whom were preparing themselves for college. These teachers were, some of them, disciples of the Pete Jones "school of philosophy"-"No lickin', no larnin', sez I."
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But others had unique methods of their own for coaxing the younger ideas to shoot. One who held school in the session house of the church at Fair Haven had small tickets upon which the word "superior" was printed, which he used as bait to induce the children to put forth their best efforts to earn the coveted prize. The unambitious and the dullard who failed to reach a certain mark received like tickets bearing the word "infer- ior." The scheme worked well, too well in fact. The supply of "superiors" soon became exhausted and there was not inducement for further exertion on the part of the scholars until the resourceful teacher hit upon the plan of making two "inferiors" equal a "superior." The children, always ready to value quantity above quality, eagerly agreed to the new arrangement, and soon astonished their parents by proudly exhibiting quantities of the ques- tionable trophies.
In the year 1825 the state of Ohio provided for the education of its youth by taxation, at which time Israel township was divided into eight school districts. In addition to these district schools, there were a number of private schools where more advanced branches, especially the classics, were taught. These efforts after higher education crystallized into the Morning Sun Academy, established about the year 1850 by a stock company. In the year 1891 the township inaugurated the present high school. This high school has a three-year course. It has two buildings, one at Fair Haven and one at Morning Sun, and employs three teachers, one at each school and one who divides his time between the two.
VILLAGES.
The villages of the township, which are scarcely more than "wide places in the pike," are two in number, Fair Haven, in the north, and Morning Sun, in the center of the township. The town of College Corner, which is located in the extreme northwest corner of Oxford township, Butler county, and which takes its name from its location (Oxford township belonging to Miami University), has wandered across the state line into Indiana and has also crossed the county line into Israel township. But it must be reckoned with the Butler county towns; Israel township can not properly claim it.
"DIED A'BORNIN'."
On April 13, 1833, one year after the birth of Fair Haven, and on the same day that Morning Sun was called into being, the plat for the town of (16)
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Claysburgh was recorded. Fair Haven, which was located in the same sec- tion and was one year old, had received a "boom" in its new tavern, and proved the more popular site for a village. So Claysburgh never grew any larger. "There was neither hammer, nor ax, nor any tool of iron, heard in the town while it was in building," for it had the distinction of living and dying without ever having had a house in it. The town was destroyed, neither by fire nor by flood, but, a few strokes of the pen and Claysburgh ceased to exist, for the present owner of the land, tired of paying town taxes on a part of his farms, had Claysburgh wiped off the map.
COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY.
In the early days of these villages, merchants, weavers, saddlers, cabinet makers, brick makers, tinners and blacksmiths all plied their trades to supply the necessities of the citizens. Farm produce was carried to the Cincinnati market in Conestoga wagons, drawn by from four to ten horses, proudly bear- ing their large fur collars and arches of bells. Live stock was driven to market. The log tavern at Fair Haven furnished entertainment for the driv- ers. Later this log tavern was replaced by "Bunker Hill," the large, three- story, brick building now owned by Miss Laura Harves.
Many a tale of wonderland was related by men who had been to Cincin- nati, and boys looked upon that trip as the goal of their ambitions. Women did not expect to attain to such dizzy heights. They were quite content to purchase their bonnets and gowns from the village milliners and storekeepers. The left-over supply of last season's hats, minus the trimmings, were put on the market as boys' hats. That the brims were narrow at the sides, stuck up in the back and flared out in the front, was not considered a reasonable objection to their sale. Merchants were honest and never misrepresented their goods.
At one store, last week's eggs were still held at ten cents per dozen because they had been bought at nine, but this week's supply could be pur- chased for eight cents because they had cost but seven. It is related of one of the storekeepers that he carefully explained to a prospective buyer, who was examining a set of furs, that the tails with which the set was trimmed were not "real teals, for no animal livin' ever had more than one teal." But he was also careful to protect his own rights. The little maid who had tim- idly asked for a pint of molasses was quite frightened by the stern rebuke: "If molasses is sixty cents a gallon no man on earth could tell how much a
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pint would come to. Why can't you take a half gallon, sis? What's the use of being so contrary?"
There was a pork-packing establishment at Fair Haven which did a large business in the forties, using barrels of home manufacture. With the com- ing of the railroads and good roads, making transportation easy, rural manu- factories could not compete with the output from large factories, and the business of the villages became limited to the merchants and the blacksmiths. There is also a saw-mill at Morning Sun and one at Fair Haven. And there is a cider-mill at the latter place, which does a large business in years when fruit is plentiful.
Israel township's contributions to commerce are wholly farm products, grain, live stock and poultry, but its people have ideals other than the mere accumulation of property. To raise corn to feed hogs to sell; to buy more land to raise more corn to feed more hogs to sell; to buy more land and so on to the end of life, is not with them "the chief end of man." By the men and the women who have made their life's work felt in the world, and who have called Israel township home, must the township ever be known.
THE WAR SPIRIT.
When war between the North and the South was declared and President Lincoln had issued his call for volunteers, there was instant and generous response by Israel township's boys. The sons of men who had fled from the hated institution of slavery were ready to help the President strike the shackles from the bondmen of the South. Many of the boys followed the Union's flag through the five years of war, and many gave their lives for the cause. On a beautiful mound in the cemetery at Fair Haven stands a monu- ment erected to the memory of the township boys whose bodies fill nameless graves in the Southland. There are eighteen names engraved upon it.
SONS WHO HAVE RISEN TO DISTINCTION.
Among Israel township's sons, she numbers more than forty who have given themselves to the gospel ministry. And they are not wanting in doc- tors, lawyers, educators and journalists. In all these professions there have been men who have risen to distinction. A very few have entered politics, but from among these the township has been represented in Congress and in the gubernatorial chair of one of the Western territories and the governorship of the home state. Added to these. there is a great army of people in private
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life who, by their sterling qualities, have made their impress upon their home communities. Near the close of his fifty years' pastorate, an Israel township pastor was much cheered on being told that he was doing a grand work out on the Pacific coast. In many other parts of our country are men and women who can point to Israel township as their spiritual birthplace. Indeed, it may be said of her, as of the ancient city of Zion: "Jehovah will count when he writeth up the peoples. This one was born thine."
EARLY SETTLERS.
Many of the early settlers were from the South, especially the Carolinas, who, like the Quakers of Gratis township, objected so seriously to slavery that they moved out. Before the Civil War, the village and vicinity of Morn- ing Sun was one of the well-known stations of the "underground railroad," from which none was ever returned.
Joseph Kingery is claimed to be the first settler. In 1803 he settled in section 32. Samuel and James Houston came a little later in 1803 and built cabins near College Corner. William Ramsay came in 1805 and started a home in section 23. In 1805 Abraham Miller settled in section 34. These all came from Virginia.
Peter Ridenour, in 1806, settled in section 33, and next year built the first mill and the first distillery. He came from Maryland and left a family of sixteen children. In 1805, Joseph Caldwell, from North Carolina, settled where Fair Haven now stands. Judge Caldwell, of Cincinnati, is one of his descendants. In 1806, William McCreary, from South Carolina, settled in section 36. In the same year Ebenezer Elliott, from the same state, settled in section 26.
In 1806, the widow, Martha Faris, with her four children, from South Carolina, settled on the farm of William McCreary, and the next year David Faris, from the same state, settled on section 25. David McDill, from South Carolina, settled on section 26 in 1806.
Caleb Pegg, in 1805, settled near Fair Haven. In 1807 came James Royce, James Brown and Richard Slow, all from the Carolinas. Hugh Mc- Quiston settled in section 24 in 1808. George R. Brown in 1809, John Bishop in 1810, and Thomas McDill and William McGaw in 1811.
Just after the War of 1812, William Van Skiver, Samuel Bell, Samuel Hamilton, James Marshall, Robert Gilmore, Joseph Steele, William Gilmore, Jonathan Paxton and William Brown, William Hays, James Graham and
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others moved into the township, and nearly, if not quite, all left large families, these names being among the most common in the township.
The first child born in the township is said to have been Hugh Elliott, in 1808. The first death was that of a little daughter of John Ramsay, in 1807.
It has been handed down as a tradition that for several years after the first settlement of the township, the wild turkeys and squirrels were so plen- tiful that every spring the farmers had to stand guard over their newly plant- ed corn for two or three weeks to keep them from destroying it. Also, it is reported that just before the War of 1812 the farmers of the township suf- fered from a plague of mice, that overran everything for a year or two and then disappeared as mysteriously as they came. In 1858, a South Carolina planter named Sloan, desiring to free his slaves before he died, came to Morn- ing Sun, bought some land east of the town and placed the freedmen on the land, with the title thereto. He returned home and died shortly afterward, thus escaping the terrors of the Civil War, both for himself and his freedmen. A number of the freedmen yet live in the township.
The towns of Fair Haven and Morning Sun are not incorporated. College Corner is an incorporated village. Oxford township, Butler county, is a college township, owned by Miami University. The first settlement at the village was in the northwest corner of that township, hence the name. But the village spread west across the state line into Indiana, and that is now much the larger village.
On the Ohio side it spread north across the county line into Preble county, and a few years ago they incorporated the village on the Ohio side; it has about four hundred population, about equally divided between Butler and Preble counties. W. R. Stewart is mayor. In 1893 the population be- came so great that the people of the two states got together and decided that they ought to have a graded school, if it could be arranged. There is a country road running north from the village on the state line. They had the surveyor mark the line, and just at the north edge of the village they erected a fine two-story, eight-room, brick school house, with a wide hall through it, north and south, exactly straddling the state line, four rooms on each side. The school has since been run by the joint board, each side paying its proper proportion, and they have succeeded in maintaining a most excellent school.
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