Jackson Township

Clermont County, Ohio
Home
Township News
Township Calendar
Township Maintenance
Public Notice
Township Board of Trustees
Zoning Department
Fire Department
Community Center
Township Cemeteries
Marathon Park
Places of Interest
Township History
Cincinnati and Columbus T
Contact Us
Establishment

Jackson Township’s history begins in 1783 when the Peace of Paris ended the Revolutionary War, the independence of the American Colonies was recognized and all of the areas between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River were granted by England to the emerging new nation of the United States.

The future Jackson Township sat in an area that would eventually become known as the Northwest Territory. The governing body of the new United States, the Continental Congress, established guidelines for a new government in the Territory in 1787. On October 5, 1787, the Congress appointed a Territorial Governor, Revolutionary War hero General Arthur St. Clair, to govern the area until any major subdivision of the Territory reached a population of 60,000. Upon reaching that milestone a region could then become a state and be admitted into the United Sates.

On December 9, 1800, General St. Clair established Clermont County. Clermont was the eighth of ten counties forming the southeastern section of the Territory.

All of Clermont County was in the Virginia Military District, which was an area of over four million acres of land reserved by Virginia and used as payment for veterans of the Revolutionary War. This area was bordered by the Ohio River in the south, the Little Miami River in the west, and the Scioto River in the east and the north. Virginia issued bounty land grants in this District until Ohio became a state in 1803.

Clermont was originally an arrangement of five townships: Miami Township, Washington Township (named after George Washington who actually owned land in Clermont), Williamsburg Township, and Lewis Township (now a part of neighboring Brown County).

Jackson Township was formed in June of 1834 from parts of Stonelick, Wayne and Williamsburg townships. The new township, the thirteenth established in the county, was named in honor of then current president of the United States, Andrew Jackson.

The Grassy Run Skirmish

In April of 1792, a small band of Shawnee Indians, led by the then unknown (to white settlers) Tecumseh, stole about fifteen horses from the Maysville, Kentucky area and crossed the Ohio River into the Ohio territory.

Simon Kenton, a well-known scout and Indian fighter, gathered up about thirty-six men and pursued the Indians, in spite of orders for no hostilities. His band of men was not exactly thrilled to be chasing after the unknown Indians and during the night twelve of the men sneaked away from camp and returned to Kentucky.

The next day, the remaining men ambushed a lone Indian riding a black horse. He was shot from the horse and set upon by the small band of frontiersmen. As they stood over him, he told the white men that his death would be avenged by Tecumseh, a name the men had never heard before.

It was a rainy day and the storm had driven the Indians into their shelters. The frontiersmen waited until after midnight and attacked the encampment, firing at random into the Indians’ tents.

Tecumseh came rushing out of his tent and, realizing by the sound of the gun fire that he was being attacked by a small number, called for his men to attack. The Indians quickly got the upper hand over the small band of whites, scattering the pioneers in disorganization and fear for their lives.

This particular confrontation would be the largest and last battle between the settlers and the Shawnee in Clermont County and would set the stage for the Shawnee tribe to eventually be driven out of the Southwestern corner of the Ohio territory.

The last Native Americans in the county, The Wyandot tribe, established a village and lived on the site of the skirmish until 1811.

Settlement and Early History

The first settlers of the area were Robert Dicky and William Hunter. Dicky, originally from Pennsylvania, was a renowned Indian fighter. He was wounded in the shoulder while fighting the Shawnee in an expedition against Old Chillicothe in 1779. Afterwards, he went to Louisville, Kentucky and joined up with a group of volunteers for an expedition against the Indians in 1791. In November of 1798, Dicky arrived in Williamsburg and by December of that year had purchased 300 acres of land, in the future Jackson Township, from William Lytle. Mr. Dicky never married and passed away in 1840 at the age of 85.

William Hunter and his wife arrived in Williamsburg by way of traveling the Ohio River in late November of 1798, a few weeks after Dicky. Mr. Hunter was a native of Ireland and immigrated to America in 1782, settling in Chambersberg, Pennsylvania. He eventually settled on a farm in the future township in February, 1799. Mr. Hunter died on July 22, 1834 at the age of 73.

The next settler in the area was a native of Germany and a Revolutionary war soldier, Christopher Hartman. In 1776 Hartman married Mary Hutchinson of Mercer County, New Jersey. In 1795 the Hartmans immigrated to Lexington, Kentucky and lived there until November, 1801, when he moved to Williamsburg, Ohio. In December of that year, he purchased 500 acres of land in the future Jackson Township from William Lytle. In 1802 the Hartman’s built a log cabin on the land and moved in. This would also become the first hotel in the township. Mr. Hartman was known to be one of the best millwrights in Southern Ohio. His wife died in August of 1839 at the age of 84 years and Mr. Hartman passed away March 16, 1833 at the age of 83 years.

In 1806 more settlers started flowing into the township area: Ichabod Willis from Lexington, Kentucky; Samual Cox from West Virginia; Andrew Dicky, who left in 1812 but eventually moved back; Hughey Dicky, a Revolutionary War soldier who fought in several major battles; Ezckiel Hutchinson from Mercer County, New Jersey; Robert Hutchinson in 1808 with his wife, Elizabeth. The Hutchinson family immigrated to America in 1627, first settling in Massachusetts Bay and were members of the Puritans; William Smith and his family from Monmouth County, New Jersey moved into the area in 1809 and lived on a farm with his wife, Lucretia and their thirteen children.

By 1837, tax records showed a total of 115 residences, 17,644 acres of land and property valued at $53,995.

The first apple orchard in the township was on Ezekiel Hutchinson’s farm. It was established in 1807 with trees brought from New Jersey. Also several saw and grist mills were operated on various township creeks and the East Fork River from around 1812 until later in the 1800’s.

Villages

Blowville – Blowville was a very small hamlet of just a few houses situated on the crossroads of Jackson Pike and State Route 133. That section of State Route 133 was known as the Williamsburg and Hartman Road at the time of Blowville. There was a store located on one of the four corners in 1872, but was vacated by 1874. A blacksmith shop was established in 1870 on Jackson Pike near the intersection of the two roads. Today, this intersection consists of three private homes and a farm field.

Brownsville, today known as Laredo, was laid out in April of 1834 by Bernard Conn on the “Newtonsville and Brownsville free turnpike”, now called State Route 131. At one time this village had a hotel, a general store, two blacksmith shops and a turning lath shop. A post office was established there in 1876. It was thought, at one time, that Brownsville would become a sizeable town with considerable population and many businesses.

Marathon, once called Cynthiana, is located on U S Route 50 at the Eastern most boundary of that highway’s journey through the township where it passes into Brown County . When the village was established in 1838 by John Fergusion and John Eckelberger, the roadway was known as the Milford and Chillicothe turnpike. At one time or another Marathon was home to several businesses including several general stores and dry goods shops, blacksmith shops, a drug store, a hotel, a wagon shop, a shoe shop, a harness maker, a tailor shop, a post office, and several other various shops of different occupations. A Cooperage was built in1845 by Joseph Varney and in 1866 Edward and William McQuillan established a steam grist mill in Marathon.

The first physician in Marathon was a Dr. Hollingsworth who hung his shingle in 1837. He was succeeded by a Dr. Collins in 1848 and a bevy of other physicians sat up practice in Marathon in the succeeding years.

The Marathon Post Office was established in 1852. The first postmaster was Dr. H.P. Collins.
             Marathon in the early 1900's, near the turn of the century.  This was taken at the intersection of modern
             day U.S. Route 50 (looking straight into the photo) and U.S. Route 286 (road turning to the right).

Monterey

Established on the Milford and Chillicothe turnpike (today’s U S Route 50) in January of 1849 by Henry South. The small village originally consisted of 22 lots laid out in the triangle formed by modern day U S Route 50 in the South, Monterey Road to the West and Locust Street to the East.

The first house was built in Monterey in 1833 by John McFarland and the next house was not built until 1839 by Henry South who also opened the first general store in the same year.

Monterey was the home to several thriving businesses, including blacksmith shops, wagon shops, a cooperage, and hotel (just east of the town) known as “Dickey’s Tavern.”

A post office was established in Monterey in 1852 with the first postmaster being Leonard Beck.

Also, see The Cincinnati and Columbus Traction Line