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PETER HAMMOND was born in York county, Pennsylvania, in 1794, and settled in Carthage township as a farmer in 1845.  His oldest son, John Hammond, is now a justice of the peace.  Three of his sons served in the Union army.
Page 458
ELIJAH HATCH (Judge Hatch) migrated from the eastern part of the state of New York to the northwestern territory, and settled in Rome township in the year 1800.  In 1801 he went back and removed his father, Elijah Hatch, Sen., and his mother, with their family, to this township - the former being seventy-two, and the latter seventy-one years old at that time.  They came in wagons to the Youghiogheny, in Pennsylvania, where, in connection with others, they procured a flat boat, twenty-five feet long by twelve feet wide, which they loaded with seven horses, one wagon, one carriage, a quantity of hardware and farming utensils, and fifteen persons - men, women and children.  Thus they proceeded down the Youghiogheny, Monongahela, and Ohio rivers, to the Ohio Company's purchase.  Judge Hatch was the first man who ever drove a team, with a wagon, through the woods, from the mouth of little Hocking to the big Hockhocking.  He struck the latter stream two and a half miles below the mouth of Federal creek, about half a mile below where the present ridge road now joins the Hocking road.
     Judge Hatch possessed talents above mediocrity, a sound judgment in public affairs, and was an active and influential man in the early settlement of the county.  He was appointed judge of the court of common pleas by Governor Tiffin, in 1805, and was afterward appointed or elected several times to that position.  He served nine terms in the state legislature, being first elected in 1804, and was appointed by that body one of the first board of trustees of the Ohio university, which position he held for the remainder of his life.  He was a man of affable and courteous demeanor, possessing a large fund of anecdote and social qualities, that made him always a welcome guest at pioneer gatherings.  He died Jan. 19, 1849, aged eighty-one years.
Page 505
CONRAD HAWK was born in Chester county, Pennsylvania. While a young man he removed to Harrison county, Virginia, where he married Miss Nancy Read in 1805, and whence he moved to Athens county in 1810. He settled as a farmer in Athens township, where he died, October 1, 1841. Mr. Hawk's family, formerly well and favorably known in this community, are now scattered. William, the oldest son, died in 1864, while commanding a steamer in General Banks' expedition up the Red river. John lives in Texas; James and Columbus in Clarke county, Ohio, and Geo. W. in Mt. Vernon, Ohio. One of the daughters, now Mrs. Dr. Huxford, lives in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and the other, Mrs. Durbin, in Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
JOHN HENRY, a native of Ireland, settled in Bern township in 1817, being then fifty-three years old.  He bought a section of land here and opened up the farm where his son Charles Henry now lives.  On this farm he lived till his death in February, 1854.  Mr. Henry was twice married.  By his first wife he had four sons and five daughters, and by his second four sons and six daughters.  He live to see eight sons and ten daughters married and comfortably settled, and left behind him at his death eighteen children, fifty-six grandchildren and a number of great grandchildren.  He was a member of the Presbyterian church and a leading and influential citizen during the active years of his life.  Several of his descendants have intermarried with the family of Abel Glazier and are well known throughout the county.
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WILLIAM HENRY was born in Newport, eight miles above Marietta, Oct. 18, 1804, and came to Athens county with his father's family when sixteen years of age.  He married a daughter of Captain Parker Carpenter, and ultimately settled in Canaan township on the farm formerly owned by Colonel William Stewart, on the Hockhocking, about eight miles below Athens.  Mr. Henry is an excellent citizen and highly respected.
Page 450
MOSES HEWITT was the first white settler within the present limits of Waterloo.  He settled in this township with his family about 1806, and there was not at that time another family within many miles of him.  The second family was Abram Fee's, who settled on the place now owned by Mr. Warren Foster, son of Mr. Hull Foster, of Athens.  The third family was that of Ezekiel Robinett, Sen., and the fourth that of Colonel William Lowry.  Col. Lowry was born Nov. 15, 1779, in Berkeley county, Virginia, and was taken when an infant with his father's family to Green county, Virginia.  He says: "That country was then a dense wilderness, infested with Indians.  The settlers had to fight every summer for four years after my father moved there.  At one time, my father's was the frontier house but one, and the inmates of that one were all killed by the Indians except one boy twelve years old, who made his escape.  When I was eighteen years old (1797) my father removed to the northwestern territory and settled in what is now Athens county and near the town of Athens.  We came down the Ohio river to the mouth of Hockhocking, in flat-boats, and up the Hockhocking in canoes.  At that time we had to bring our breadstuff from the Ohio river, the nearest mill being a floating one at Vienna, eight miles above the mouth of Kanawha river, on the Virginia shore.  The second year after we came here, we pounded our corn on a hominy-block, took the finer part for bread and made the coarse into hominy.  For meat we depended on the woods and our rifles, and always had plenty of bear, deer, and turkey meat.  The first mill that I remember was built by Capt. John Hewitt, on Margaret's creek, within a mile of the mouth.  It went into operation in the year 1801.  I came to Waterloo, from Athens, in February, 1820.  This region was all a wilderness then, there being only three families besides mine in the township.  Joseph Brookson started the first grist and saw mill in Waterloo, where Newton Hewitt's saw mill now stands.  There were a great many bears and deer here at that time, and wolves and panthers were also pretty numerous and very annoying."  Col. Lowry is still living in Waterloo, in his seventy-ninth year.
     Prominent among the citizens of Waterloo, are Mr. Jesse Jones, a native of Virginia, who settled on Little Raccoon at an early day; Mr. Hugh Boden, a native of Ireland, who settled here in 1839, and now lives in Marshfield; Mr. James Mayhugh, a native of Maryland, who settled here as a farmer in 1836, and now engaged in business in Marshfield, all of whom have reared respectable families, and are highly esteemed.
HIBBARD FAMILY.   A large family of Hibbards, originally from Vermont, came to Athens county at an early day.  Elisha and John in 1816, Alanson and Elias and their sister Pamela (afterwards Mrs. Sabinus Rice), in 1817, and Dr. James S. Hibbard in 1823.  The Rev. Ebenezer Hibbard, eldest brother of this family, who was pastor of a church in Vermont forty years, came to Alexander township in 1831, and settled at Hebbardsville, giving his name, slightly altered, to the village.  He preached in this neighborhood some time, and then removed to Amesville and preached there till his death in 1835.
JOSHUA HOSKINSON was born in Maryland in 1791, and settled with his father's family in Canaan township in 1810.  Deer, bears, and wolves were quite plenty in this region at that time.  In his younger days Mr. Hoskinson was fond of hunting, though he says "Peter Mansfield and William Burch were the best; they caught and killed more wolves than any men we had."  Mr. Hoskinson volunteered in the war of 1812, and entered the service under Captain Jehiel Gregory of Athens.  He says:

     "We went into winter quarters on the head waters of the Scioto, about the time that the British and Indians took possession of the French settlement on the Maumee river.  General Tappan called for volunteers from his brigade to go on an expedition against the British on the Maumee, and I volunteered.  There were about seven hundred officers and men.  We took five days' rations and started, I think, on the 7th of November, 1812.  On the 13th, we came to the rapids of the Maumee.  That night our scouts reported that the river was rising.  Captain Gregory led the battalion forward, and with great difficulty we waded the river.  But we went no further no met the enemy.  The failure of our provisions was, I suppose, the reason of our hasty return.  On our march back to camp we were three days without anything to eat except spice-bush and slippery-elm bark.  When we were about a day and a half's march from camp, and nearly starved, we were met by pack horses with flour."

     Mr. Hoskinson was county commissioner twelve years, justice of the peace six years, and has held other local offices.
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