Showing posts with label Mark Township. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Township. Show all posts

Friday, December 2, 2022

Richard Knight - Long Time Farmer, Ohio, Resident


 A native of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, Richard Knight came to Farmer, Ohio, early and settled in for at least fifty years.  He was a farmer, but he also served as postmaster one year, sold insurance, sat on the board of a bank and the county infirmary, and contributed to the draining of the swampland in the area.  

He was a family man, married to his wife, the former Harriet Firestone for their lifetimes. Three daughters blessed their marriage: Eliza Jane, Eleanor (Foot), and Eugenia May (Haymaker). 

His obituary detailed his life and accomplishments, and appeared in the Hicksville Tribune on June 3, 1909, p. 1.


"KNIGHT

Richard Knight was born in Pennsylvania, Jan. 26, 1816, and died at Farmer, Ohio, May 28, 1909, aged 93 years, 5 months and 9 days.  The funeral was held at Farmer on Sunday, May 30th at 10:00 a.m.

In childhood, he removed with his parents to Wayne County, Ohio, and in 1839 was there married to Harriet Firestone.  For 70 years this couple lived together, Mrs. Knight passing away on March 28, just two months  prior to the death of her husband.

In early manhood, Mr. Knight united with the Baptist church and maintained his church relations as long as a society of that denomination was maintained in his community.

Mr. Knight was a member of Fountain City Lodge F & A.M. at Bryan and that lodge had charge of the funeral.  At the time of his death, he was the oldest member of that lodge.

Mr. Knight removed to Defiance County in 1850 to farm in Section 8 of Farmer Township, removing some years later to Farmer Center, where he resided the rest of his life.  Two children survive: Mrs. Ella F. Foot of Farmer and Mrs. K. V. Haymaker of Defiance.

Very few men are vouchsafed such length of years as was given to Richard Knight, and it is also true that very few men accomplish as much of good to the community in which they lived as he did.  In the early pioneer days when he settled in this country, life was a strenuous affair and in the work of reclaiming the land from the wilderness and developing its resources, he bore a man's part.

For many years, he was engaged in the lumber business, conducting saw mills in various points in the western part of the county.  He was also a carpenter and builder, and much of his work in that line is still in use.

It may not be generally known that the first official surveys of this county designated a large portion of Mark Township as 'Irreclaimable Swamp Land.'  When the first efforts were made to drain 'The Marsh,' as it was called, Richard Knight was one of the contractors who did the work of constructing the first of the big ditches through that land, where today are located some of the finest farms of the county.

Deceased was one of the organizers of the Farmer Township Mutual Protection Association which has become a very popular company among the farmers of this county, and is probably carrying more farm risks than any three companies doing business in the county.  He was for many years the president of this company.

He was also for many years a director of the Farmers' Banking Company of Bryan, which has since been reorganized as The Farmers National Bank.

In politics, he was a democrat of the old school, and for many years was one of the wheel horses of the party.  He was never an office seeker, though he was elected as a director of the first Board of Infirmary Directors, that being the only office which he ever held.  For more than forty years he attended every Democratic Convention in this county and enjoyed a very wide acquaintance among the workers of the party, to which he gave allegiance.  

It is men like Richard Knight that makes our country truly great, and he will long be remembered as an upright man, a good citizen, and a true and faithful friend."






Wednesday, December 13, 2017

W. P. A. Cemetery Survey - St. John's Lutheran Church Cemetery, Mark Township

In this series, some of the general surveys of Defiance County cemeteries will be shared, transcribed as written on the original W.P.A. reports, with a few punctuation and/or spelling changes for readability.  The surveys were probably done around 1936.

For more up to date information on the cemeteries, check out this chart on our website:
 http://defiancecountygenealogy.org/cemeteries.html)


St. John Lutheran Church Cemetery
Mark Township

1. Name of cemetery: Mark Township Lutheran Graveyard of the St. John's Lutheran Church

2. Location, how reached:

Two miles northwest of Sherwood, Ohio, one mile north of Route #18 on the first gravel road, west of U.S. #127 in Mark Township and on the township line road.  It sets just back of the church and school located there.

3. Name and address of caretaker:
Members of the St. John's Lutheran Church, for information, see John Behnfeldt

St. John Lutheran Cemetery at www.findagrave.com
4. General description, size, appearance, etc.:

Modern German graveyard, fenced in with wire with an iron gate, cedar trees surrounding the plot, but no trees in the yard itself.  Contains about an acre of land, only a small part of it is now used.

5. Name and date of first burial recorded: Caroline Behnfeldt, 1901

Carolina Behnfeldt at www.findagrave.com
6. Important persons buried there:

Behnfeldts, Eichoffs, Wittes, and Millers, important only in their German community as thrifty farmers.

John and Elizabeth Eickhoff at www.findagrave.com

7. Markers of unusual appearance:

The markers are all new and modern.  The only thing that this cemetery is not like others is that, it was planned in the beginning to start at the southwest end and bury people along in a row as they died.  There were supposed to be no lots.  This worked for awhile, but people wished to be buried beside their relatives and this practice was discontinued.  There are around twenty fine markers here; none are unusual.

8. Unusual epitaphs: 

None unusual for a German graveyard; most of the inscriptions are in the German language.

9. Is cemetery used for new burials?  It is still used today.

C. Callawader and C. Gish, Reporters
Consultant: A. J. McFeeters, caretaker of the Sherwood Cemetery, supplied the above information.    

     
(The Works Progress Administration was formed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in reaction to the Great Depression as a means of employing Americans and stimulating the economy.  Established in 1935, one of the projects of the W.P.A. was to conduct Historical Records Surveys, one of which included finding information on cemeteries and the graves of veterans.  The W.P.A. was disbanded in 1943, but the historical information provided on these surveys continue to be of interest and are, thankfully, preserved.)

Monday, January 23, 2017

The Old Mark Center School, Mark Township, 1910

Many people do not realize that the little town of Mark Center that we know today was not always in that place.  The "old" Mark Center was located at the intersection of State Route 18 and Farmer-Mark Road in Sections 15,16,21 and 22 of Mark Township.  That was considered to be the geographic center of the township.  
The school house was a two story frame building that sat where now a propane gas station is.  The bottom floor was used for the elementary and the second floor for the high school.  The school did not stand alone - around it were a blacksmith shop, a grocery, a saloon, and other shops and houses.  This school was in use until 1922, when it was replaced by the brick building which was once known as the Mark Center School until it was sold.  The old school building then became a home/grocery store/ gas station until it burned around 1970.  It was the last building standing in OLD Mark Center.


Names on the back of the photo were numbered, but do not seem to label the faces in the photo.

Harold Walker, Teacher, 1910

1. Pauline Routsong
2. Marguerite Wagner
3. Lois Perry
4. Cleo Gessinger
5. Doris Courtnay
6. Maxine Routsong
7. Mildred Swaysgood
8. Opal Rohn
9. Blanche Slough
10. Carmine (?) Wheeler

11. Emma Perry
12. Asa Ensign
13. Laota Haver
14. Wanda Ensign
15. Anna Margaret Hertie
16. Audra Gilliam
17. Naoma Lovejoy
18. Gladys Perry
19. Jennie Geissinger
20. Gladys Cumming (?)

21. Blanchie Smith
22. John Arend
23. Norla (?) Arend
Numbers 23 - 28 Names on the corner were torn off/ missing
29. Harry Slough
30. Harry Haver

31. Philip Hertel
32. Clearance McCavit
33. Raymond Breininger
34. Harold Slough
35. Guy (?) Harador
36. Ford Locy
37. Charlie Arend
38. Francis Heckman
39. Bernard Arend
40. John Gillian
41. Ruth Lovejoy

Friday, December 9, 2016

West Point School, Mark Township - 1908

District #2
Mark Township

P. S. Engle, Teacher

The slate told us it was the West Point School, District 2,  Mr. Engle, Teacher.
No identification was available for students.  Can you help?

Monday, October 17, 2016

Old Mark Center School, Mark Township - Two Photos


This photo is undated, but names are written on the back.

Leorah Dreher, Teacher

1. Tilla Breininger
2. Paul Dix
3. Roy Byers
4. Clarence Kissabeth
5. Charley Arend
6. Pauline Routsong
7. Ruth Lovejoy (last row, right side of woman holding child)
8. Goldie Breininger and Catherine
9. Cleo Gessinger
10. Don Dalrymple

11. Gladys Cunningham
12. Blanch Slough
13. Lois Perry
14. Ford Locy
15. Harold Slough
16. Bernard Arend
17. Guy Harader
18. Earl Hopper
19. Emma Perry
20. Marguerite Wagner

21. Doris Courtney
22. Opal Rohn
23. Maxine Routsong
24. Naoma Lovejoy
25. Carmine (?) Wheeler
26. Jessie Kissabeth
27. Mildred Swaysgood (?)
28. Clara Breininger
29. Ella Rohn
30. Johnny Grind (?)

31. E...   Larry
32. Harry Haver
33. Olin Snyder
34. Victor Leech
35. Waldo Keets
36. Blanchie Smith
37. Clarance McCavit
38. Philip Hertel
39. Billy Rohn
40. Jimmie Gessinger

41. Gladys Perry
42. "little Rohn boy"
43. Helen Lang
44. Rholie Kissabeth
45. Cora Dix
46. Raymond Breininger
47. Dale McCavit

The only student identified on this photo was Hildred Ruth Lovejoy, first row, 3rd from left
If you can identify anyone, please comment!

Monday, September 19, 2016

Friday, August 5, 2016

The Johns School, Mark Township, 1911-1912

The Johns School was located in Section 12 of Mark Township, at the intersection of Buckskin and Openlander Roads.  This photo, which gives such wonderful detail of the inside of the school room, was printed in the Hicksville News-Tribune on November 29, 1989. 

Thursday, June 23, 2016

W.P.A. Cemetery Survey - Spindler Cemetery, Mark Township

In this series, some of the general surveys of Defiance County cemeteries will be shared, transcribed as written on the original W.P.A. reports, with a few punctuation and/or spelling changes for readability.  The surveys were probably done around 1936.

For more up to date information on the cemeteries, check out this chart on our website:
 http://defiancecountygenealogy.org/cemeteries.html)

Spindler Cemetery

1. Name of Cemetery:  The Spindler Cemetery, Mark Township

2. Location, how reached:

In Section 30, Mark Township, one and one half miles south and two miles west of Mark Center, Ohio, and one mile north of the Paulding County Line.  Reached from Mark Center, Ohio, on gravel road leading south of town to second crossroad and turning to the right for two miles more, then left for another quarter mile.

3. Name and address of caretaker:

Mark Township Trustees, for information, see B. F. Spindler, who lives nearby and whose address is R.R. #3, Mark Center, Ohio.

Spindler Cemetery on www.findagrave.com
4. General description, size, appearance, denomination, fencing, etc.:

A very picturesque, rural cemetery, setting in a grove of natural pine trees and beside a little country church.  It is surrounded with an iron ornamental fence and has an iron gate.  It is now undenominational, although at one time, it belonged to the Old Jericho M.E. Church.  It is sometimes called the Jericho Graveyard.  It contains about two acres.

5. Name and date of first burial recorded:

The first burial was that of old James Hobbs, an Englishman born in Cornwall, England, in 1777 and died was buried here in 1854.  Other graves also run back into the fifties.  There is one whole row of pure white slabs, all dates being in the fifties and sixties.

James Hobbs on www.findagrave.com - a replacement stone
Isaac Critchfield on www.findagrave.com

6. Names of important persons buried there, for what noted:

James Hobbs, mentioned above, is probably the most noted person buried here.  He was an old sailor from Cornwall, England who settled here around 1840.

7. Markers of unusual appearance:

Various descriptions from white slabs to stately, heavy granite ones.

8. Unusual epitaphs:  None

9. Is cemetery still used for new burials?
    Yes.




C. Cadwallader and C. Gish, Reporters
Consultants:
H. Rhodes, Mark Center, Confectionary store on state route #18
Mrs. E. Diehl, R.R. #3, Mark Center, Ohio

(The Works Progress Administration was formed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in reaction to the Great Depression as a means of employing Americans and stimulating the economy.  Established in 1935, one of the projects of the W.P.A. was to conduct Historical Records Surveys, one of which included finding information on cemeteries and the graves of veterans.  The W.P.A. was disbanded in 1943, but the historical information provided on these surveys continue to be of interest and are, thankfully, preserved.)

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Spindler School, Mark Township - 1919 - 1922

The Spindler School, District #9, was located on Jericho Road, near the intersection with Breininger Road, in Section 30 of Mark Township.

The class photos that follow were from clippings from the Hicksville News-Tribune. 




Saturday, January 9, 2016

The Dickey School, Mark Township

The Dickey School was located at the corner of State Route 18 and Openlander Road in Section 24 of Mark Township.  It was known as District #6.

No class photos or souvenirs have been found from this school, just this one poor photo of the school itself which is undated.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Spindler School, Mark Township, 1913 - 1916

From a newspaper clipping, unidentified paper and undated


Charles B. Core, Teacher

 1914
Spindler School, District 9, 1914 - Henry Gecowets, Teacher


1915

Henry Gecowets, Teacher


1916

Friday, December 11, 2015

Spindler School - Last One-Room School Standing in Mark Township

The Spindler School, District #9, in Mark Township is the last one room school still standing in Mark Township on the north side of Jericho Road between Rosedale and Breininger Roads.  Now used as a farm building by the Zeedyk family, the building once had a bell tower and a different front entrance where a garage type door now exists.  This building replaced a log school which was across the road.

The photo is from The Countyline newspaper, March 1, 1978

The building is also the last remnant of what once was the little village of Nebo, a town never platted or really organized.  Nebo (Nebo Corners) once had two churches, the school, and a couple of mills.   George W. Spealman chose the site on the north fork of Gordon Creek to settle and build his home, a store and post office; it would have faced the future site of the school.  He based the name, Nebo, on a Biblical verse from Deuteronomy: "That same day the Lord said to Moses, 'Go to Mount Nebo in the Abarim Mountains, in the land of Moab, across from Jericho.'"
According to the book, Ghost Towns of Northwest Ohio (Helwig and Nagel, 1976, available in the Defiance Public Library), about 1910, everything closed down and only a few old houses remained.  

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Shady Corners School, Mark Township

The Shady Corners School was located at the corner of Williams Center-Cecil Road and Fountain Street, in the southeast corner of Section 22, Mark Township.  This was an extra school in the township, formed because of the large number of students who lived in the immediate area.  

The school burned in 1911 when a threshing machine stopped in front of the school with engine problems.  As the driver revved his engine, sparks flew out of the top of the machine and landed on the roof of the school, starting a fire.  That year, the children finished school in someone's chicken coop because only a short period of the school year was left.  (Interview with G. Donson, 2000.  Her mother attended this school.)

                   Photo of the rebuilt school after the fire


Defiance Daily News - Tuesday, March 7, 1911

"DESTROYED BY FIRE
Was School House Near Mark Center.

Children Escaped in Safety But Buildings and Contents Were Completely Destroyed.

Sparks from a passing engine set fire to the country school house at Shady Corners, one mile south and one mile east of Mark Center Monday afternoon.

The building and contents were completely destroyed.  The insurance on the building amounted to $500 and on the contents, $150.  At a special meeting of the board of education of the special district held Monday evening, it was decided to rebuild at once.

School had just been resumed for the afternoon when the teacher noticed fire breaking through the ceiling.  The room was quickly vacated, and no sooner had the children made their exit than the entire structure burst into flames.  It was found impossible to save any of the contents.  The building, which was a frame structure, was burned to the foundation."