http://www.northbendohio.org/TheVillageofNorthBendHistory.html
In 1786, Major Benjamin Stites of New Jersey was in Kentucky, when he followed some Indians across the Ohio River hoping to reclaim his horses that had been stolen. Although he did not get his horses back, he got a chance to explore the land between the two Miami rivers. The Little Miami on the East and the Great Miami on the West. It was and still is a great countryside. Just the right amount of hills without being mountainous but enough level land to farm and enough woods to have plenty of wood for building and fuel.
When he returned to New Jersey, he reported his love of this particular land to Judge John Cleves Symmes, a Congressman from the Trenton area. In 1787, Symmes and 23 other New Jerseyans petitioned to get a land grant over which they would be Proprietors, like those of the Ohio Purchase. ( And Proprietors like the rulers of the English Proprietors of East and West Jersey).
What caught my attention was that the three other Proprietors listed on this page were:
General Johnathan Dayton http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Dayton |
The city of Dayton is part of Symmes purchase and was named after Johnathan Dayton.
Elias Boudinot http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elias_Boudinot |
He was a very religiously tolerant man and opposed slavery. He founded the American Bible Society in 1816.
(He appears as a person of importance in the article I did about women losing the vote they had in early NJ. "Petticoat Electors" - www.gardenstatelegacy.com/ -) *** This is not the Elias Boudinot who was involved in the Cherokee Removal.
Rev. Dr. John Witherspoon http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Witherspoon |
Three more of the Proprietors - Matthias Denman, Colonel Robert Patterson, and John Filson
A lengthy and intersting account of Symmes Purchase and the survey problems and land distribution is in "History of Coshocton County, Ohio: its past and present, 1740-1881,
By Albert Adams Graham, Graham, A.A., & Co., Newark, Ohio, on page 93-94 - You can find it on Google Books.
So what I found so interesting is that all the Land Speculators were New Jersey men. Many of them active politicians of the time. A question to ponder, Were they taking advantage of their political positions to enrich themselves? Makes you think that perhaps politics never changes that much.
Also, It seems that the survey was not exactly accurate and Symmes may have knowingly or unknowingly sold land that was not his and even sold the same land more then one time. Interesting isn't it.
My Family and Symmes Township, Hamilton County, Ohio will have to wait for another day. :-)
3 comments:
Hey Sue, I just read the past few days, Fun stuff. Yesterday's Blog on Symmes was close to town here in Maineville; we are Hamilton Twp in Warren co. Our property is a corner of a Ertel revolutionary war land grant with Hatt-Swank Rd cutting through the property and separating our little corner of the world from the rest in the early 1830s. Dayton is where my husband and I were born and raised. I grew up in two house in Huber Heights and both were just under a mile east from the Great Miami River. Our house here on Hatt-Swank is just over a mile east of the Little Miami. We love standing in a good current and watching minnows swim around our ankles, and the family has two canoes. Well, best get back to work. ' Froze some green beans, now it is time to peel some tomatoes, I hear the water boiling. My husband Bobby's Ghost Peppers arrived special delivery today so this batch will go to chili and salsas. Last week a made his Great Aunt Bertie's Tomato soup
Sayward, you will enjoy today's post. It tells you among other things that I grew up around Loveland and did not come to New Jersey until 1983. Enjoy the new post! The house on the hill I mention is on Rt48 going north out of Loveland. It is one of only 3 houses that were in Loveland and Warren County. I don't know if that is still true or not.
I was born In Dayton,O. and Have lived in Huber Heights,O since 1977, and My present home here since 1989, The home is about 1 mile east of the Great Miami river, My front yard includes 352 feet of the old Miami and Erie canal bed, I also own a 5 acre tract south of Powell Rd, That includes Miami and Erie canal Lock 19 south, Its in pretty good shape considering it was built in 1833. This is Land between the Miami's. Gregg M.
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