| ROME was
formed from a portion of the township of Troy in 1811.
The first entry on the subject, in the records of the county
commissioners, is as follows: "Thursday,
April 4, 1811. - Ordered by the commissioners, That so
much of the township of Troy as is contained in the original
surveyed townships, numbered 5 and 6, in the 11th range, and
6 in the 12th range, be erected into a new township by the
name of Rome.
"Ordered by the commissioners, That their
clerk notify the inhabitants of the township of Rome to meet
at the house of Amos Crippen, in said township, on
Saturday the 20th instant, for the purpose of electing
township officers."
But no election was held under this order, and,
on 4th of June ensuing, the commissioners.
"Ordered, That the boundaries of the township of
Rome be as follows, to wit: beginning at the southwest
corner of township No. 6 in the 12th range, thence east on
the township line until it intersects the river Hockhocking,
thence up said river until it intersects the range line
between the 11th and 12th ranges, thence on said range line
(being the line between the counties of Athens and
Washington) to the south boundary of Ames township, thence
west on said township line to the township of Athens, thence
south to the place of beginning, and that the remainder of
the township of Rome be and is hereby attached to the
township of Troy. [This refers to the previous order
of April 4th.]
"Ordered by the commissioners, That their clerk
notify, by advertisement, the inhabitants of the township of
Rome to meet at the house of Daniel Stewart, on
Saturday, the 15th instant, for the purpose of electing
township officers."
The only change that has since been made in these
boundaries, was by an act of the legislature, passed
February 10, 1814, which detached sections 31 and 32,
township 6, range 11, from Washington county, and added them
to Rome, thus taking in the strip east of the Hockhocking,
and causing the offset at the south east corner of the
township.
The population of Rome in 1820 was 497; in 1830 it was
522; in 1840 it was 852; in 1850 it was 1,309; in 1860 it
was 1581.
The Methodist church was planted in this township at a
very early day. Daniel and Archelaus Stewart
were the first to move in the matter of forming a society
here. They settled here in 1802. About two years
later Daniel Stewart rode twenty miles to meet the
Rev. Jacob Young, who was then on the Marietta circuit.
and engaged him to visit Rome township. Mr. Young
came according to promise. In his autobiography,
published a few years since, in narrating the events of
1855, Mr. Young speaks of Daniel Stewart:
"Under whose hospitable roof I have spent many a
happy night, and from whose hand I had received many a
dollar, when I stood in great need of money. I first
lodged with this good man in 1804, preached and organized a
church in his house. He was then in the vigor of
manhood and was one of most active and enterprising men in
Ohio."
William Pilcher, Job Ruter, Eliphalet Case, Elijah
Rowell, and their wives, were among the earliest members
of the society thus formed by "Father Young."
The Methodists now have three neat and substantial church
buildings in the township, where services are held
regularly. One of the first ministers who preached in
the township, was the Rev. Cyrus Paulk, jr., who
preached in1803, and, thereafter, regularly for many years.
He was a "Calvinist Baptist." There is one Baptist and
one United Brethren church in Rome.
The first school house in the township, a log structure
sixteen feet square, was built in 1804 on the east bank of
Federal creek, about two hundred yards below the bridge and
near the mouth of the creek. Abraham Richards
was the first teacher, and Mrs. Polly Driggs, a
daughter of Ebenezer Barrows, was the next. The
school was supported by subscription, and was the center of
a school district about five miles in diameter. There
are now eleven school houses in the township, each with
ample accommodations for forty scholars.
The "Miller seminary," owned and managed by the
Rev. Amos Miller, is pleasantly located on his farm,
about one mile east of Savannah, near the Hockhocking river,
and three miles from the Marietta & Cincinnati railroad.
When first established, in 1841, Prof. Miller
used a large room in his dwelling house as a school room.
AS the school increased a separate building on his farm was
made use of, and, in 1859, Prof. Miller erected a
handsome and convenient two story building, in which the
school has since been kept. Neat cottages have been
built close at hand, for the use of pupils who desire to
board themselves.
The seminary will accommodate one hundred pupils.
Some hundreds of youth of both sexes have been taught here,
and the institution is a credit to the founder and to the
county. Professor Miller has taught in Athens
county at intervals, and most of the time for the last
forty-two years.
At Savannah is located the "Savannah academy."
This school, the management and success of which have been
highly creditable to all concerned, as founded in the spring
of 1867 through the efforts of some public spirited citizens
of the township. Frederic Finsterwald, Peter
Boyles, Vincent Caldwell, Harvey Pierce, and John
Caldwell were elected the first board of trustees of the
academy and have been its steady patrons are supporters.
They employed Mr. George W. Boyce as principal
teacher, and the school has been well patronized from the
beginning. More than one hundred and forty scholars,
in the aggregate, attended during the first year. The
active interest in education thus manifested, and the
liberal support accorded to this enterprise by the leading
citizens of the neighborhood, are worthy of the highest
commendation.
There is also a good school at Big Run, founded in 1866
through the voluntary contributions of the citizens. A
neat and convenient school building has been erected, and
the school is useful and prosperous. It is under the
management at present of Miss Elizabeth Monahan.
MORE HISTORY TO COME........ sooner if someone wants
to contact me to finish this .... ~
Sharon Wick
~
Township Trustees.
Successive Justices of the Peace.
Personal and Biographical. (See
Biographical Sketches)
Captain Hopson
Beebe
Eliphalet Case
Roswell Culver
and Joel Spenser
David Dailey
William S. Doan
Peter
Grosvenor
Thomas
Grosvenor
Elijah Hatch
(Judge Hatch)
Leonard Jewett
Timothy Jones
Amos Miller
Elmer Rowell
Alexander Stedman
Daniel Stewart
Daniel B.
Stewart
Thomas Welch
Joseph Wickham
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