Showing posts with label Samuel Rohn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Samuel Rohn. Show all posts

Monday, July 10, 2017

W. P. A. Cemetery Survey - Old Rohn Cemetery, Richland 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)


 Old Rohn Cemetery

1. Name of cemetery:  Old Rohn Cemetery in Richland Township

2. Location; how reached:

Located on U. S. #24, four and one half miles east of Defiance, Ohio along the old Miami and Erie Canal and Maumee River, one mile east of Independence State Dam and directly across the highway from the last shelter houses in this park.  However, the graveyard, itself, sets back 40 rods or more from this highway to gain access to it.  One turns in the lane or driveway of Mr. A. F. Trubey, who owns this land.  These people, Mr. and Mrs. Trubey, welcome visitors very gladly.

3. Name and address of caretaker:  Mr. A. F. Trubey, R.F.D. #4, Defiance, Ohio
4. General description, size, appearance, etc.:

This old, historic graveyard, which dates back to the first part of the nineteenth century, covers a plot of ground on a high bluff, in fact, on the Glacier Moraine Hill.  It is fenced in with wire, is kept in good condition by Mr. Trubey, who gets no pay for doing it.  

It has about a dozen good markers of granite and sand stone and as many more of not so good stones.  The most conspicuous marker is the one at the entrance gate that is in memory of Samuel Rohn, who died in 1884.  His happens to be the latest gravestone in the plot.

The plot contains today around a quarter acre, but in former times, before some of the graves were moved to the Independence graveyard two miles up the river, it was more than twice as large.  This graveyard was undenominational and was almost a family plot, very near all the people and settlers in that part of this township being related.

5. Name and date of first burial recorded: 

There is a flat stone in this graveyard that bears the date 1818.  The name is Mary Landis, beloved wife of Aberham Landis.  Now whether this grave was made here at the time of this woman's death or the marker put down in memorial to her years later, it is not known.
Mary Landis at www.findagrave.com


Also Indian, Jake Conky-pot's (Konkapot) grave marker is an old one.  No one knows when he died, but not as early as 1818, we are sure, because grandfathers of persons I interviewed had seen and talked to Indian Jake and Jake was over a hundred years old when he died, supposedly, in the house on this farm, and buried on the high hill back of it.  

Outside of Indian Jake, the oldest man lying here was William Rohn, father of Samuel Rohn, who was born in 1773 in New York State and died on this farm in 1855. 

6. Names of important people buried here:

William Rohn, 1773 - 1855, pioneer settler.
Samuel Rohn, 1812 - 1844, son of William and founder of the Rohn homestead and richest man in Richland township, owning at one time almost two sections of land.  The man about who Thos. A. Boyd wrote the fiction story called 'Samuel Drummond.'
Indian Jake Conky-pot, Old Indian Medicine Man, Christian and friend of white men.

7. Markers of unusual appearance:

The marker of Indian Jake is, of course, original, being a brown colored pointed stone, a little more than a foot high, and set in concrete recently.  The stone is old and worm eaten.  Another old Indian marker is also in this graveyard, but no one knows whose grave it marks.
And Samuel Rohn's tombstone is indeed very fine and stately to be setting out here.  Mr. Trubey tells me that before he got the farm, all these stones were tipped over and some broken.  We can see where he has patched up a lot of them.

8. Unusual epitaphs:

Nothing on the stones of anything original or unusual.  The Rohns were good, everyday Methodists, so the markers that have an lettering at all are verses from songs and the Bible.

9. Is cemetery used for new burials?

This graveyard has not been used since 1884, Samuel Rohn being the last to be buried here.  A Lot of the graves were moved along about this time to the graveyard on Independence Hill, two miles west of here.

C. Cadwallader and Chas. Gish, Reporters
Consultants: Most of this data obtained from Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Trubey, R.F.D. #4, Defiance, Ohio, and who live in the old house on this farm.
Mr. Al. Young, caretaker of the graveyard at Independence.

Bibliography: "Samuel Drummond"  fiction book by Thos. A. Boyd

(A photo of Jake Conky-pot's grave was attached to this original report, but was not with the copy used here.)

(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.)

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Early Female Physicians in Defiance County - Dr. Adelia Rohn

Around the turn of the century, and even earlier, Defiance was blessed with at least five dedicated female physicians: Dr. Kate Hoover, Dr. Nettie Belau, Dr. Adelia Rohn, Dr. Ella White, and Dr. Bell Slocum.

* Dr. Adelia Rohn (Delia, Dr. D. A. Rohn) 

Dr. Rohn was truly a product of Defiance, Ohio, growing up in Richland Township with her parents, Samuel and Charity Rohn.  As early as the 1850 census, Adelia, at 3, lived with her parents (spelled Rhon) on the census) and her siblings: Margaret, 11 - Delena, 5 - Orisa, 1 - Samuel, 0.  Living with them were also Mary Porter, 18, and William Rohn, 79.

By 1870, at the age of 23, she was still with her parents on their farm.  But in the 1880 census, she boarded with the Joseph Ralston family on Nichols Street in Defiance.  It is thought that her first office was at Wayne and Court Streets in 1879.  In the 1880 census, she described her occupation as "Doctress."  Someone else may have reported to the enumerator as Delia's age is given as 28.  In 1881, the newspapers reported that Dr. Rohn went to New York to do post graduate work; she returned in June of that year.

Quite a scandal brewed in Delia Rohn's life in 1889 and 1890.  The Defiance Democrat reported on August 1, 1889:










 And so, it did go to court - a jury trial.  This was Dr. Rohn's reputation on the line and she was going to defend herself.  Dr. Rohn was, until this disruption, a valued member of the community, serving in numerous organizations and on many committees.  She could not afford to have herself besmirched by gossip.

Finally on May 8, 1890 - nine months after the first reporting - the jury was selected and the matter took much of a week to be decided.
Defiance Democrat, May 8, 1890
On May 15, 1890, the Defiance Democrat reported the verdict.  For Dr. Rohn, it was a matter of preserving her reputation and the trust of her patients.



 From the 1900 census until 1930, Dr. Rohn resided at 415 Third Street, renting a home by herself.  She continued to serve as a physician while into her seventies.  By 1930, she had moved in with her nephew, Rollin Woodward, 70, and his wife, Ida, and his sister, Gertrude. (Dr. Rohn's ages were not always correct in the censuses.)

Dr. Delia A. Rohn died in Richland Township, the place of her birth, on August 17, 1930 at the age of 84.  Her obituary appeared in the Crescent News on August 18, 1930: 




 Her tombstone could not be located.