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HISTORY
Records scarcely exist of the early settlers of the Township because
they came out here to make homes for themselves in the wilderness
and were too busy doing their labor that they had little time to
record their history.
This Township was originally known as Township 3, Range 18 of the
United States Military Lands. On September 18, 1816, the county
commissioners granted a petition to set off the original survey
as a separate township. The Township was to be called the classic
name of Virgil, but this was too much for the simple minded folk
of those days and a petition was presented to the commissioners
to change the name to Orange.
The first settler, Joab Norton, came to Orange Township in 1807.
He was influenced in coming here by his wife who wanted to be near
her father, John Goodrich, who purposed coming to Worthington where
many of his farmer friends in Berlin, Connecticut had already settled.
They reached here in November, having been on the road since September,
Norton was a tanner and currier by trade. When he retired, he was
attracted by new business prospects in the new town of Delaware.
He purchased a house on the hillside where the Edwards Gymnasium
of Ohio Wesleyan University now stands.
In 1808, Eliphalet Ludington came from Connecticut and purchased
land adjoining Nortons. Others who came that year were William and
Joseph Higgins with their families, and their mother who brought
the younger members of her family. In 1810 Eliphalet died leaving
an infant boy. This was the first birth and death in the settlement.
Other early settlers who came into the township prior to the War
of 1812, were families of Nahum King, Louis Eaton, James McCumber,
the Arnolds, Stewarts, and John Gardner.
Soon after the War, Lee Hurlburt settled on the west bank of Alum
Creek. Hurlburt had gone to the War of 1812 as a substitute for
his father who had come to the township with him, bringing his family
of twenty-three children.
The first settler on Alum Creek was probably Samuel Ferson who
came from Pennsylvania and settled here about 1819. The beautiful
area by the Alum Creek Reservoir is interesting because it was settled
early. Its homes and people have had exceptionally long lines and
extended families.
In 1824, David Patterson, Cyrus Chambers, Thomas McCloud and Nelson
Skeels settled on the west bank of the creek. The Samuel Pattersons
purchased a farm for $2.06 per acre on the east side of the creek
and built here. Other family members also built on the land. They
were originally built of hand-built bricks they made themselves.
Sams house was used in the chain of "underground railway
stations" during the Civil War. Many notable families later
chose to live here.
HISTORIC BUILDINGS & SITES
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The historic Gooding
House, located on Columbus Pike directly across from Orangepoint
Drive.
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THE MILL (Then
& Now)
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The pictures above
show the Mill in 1988.
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The area as it appears now, an open field which was recently
re-zoned for retail.
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Country Mercantile
Building (Then & Now)
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The above pictures
show the Country Mercantile building as it appeared in 1988.
The Lewis Center Post Office was located inside the mercantile
building, until the present Lewis Center Post Office was built.
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This is the current Country
Mercantile building.
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