Difference between revisions of "Monroe Township"

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[[File:1875 Atlas Monroe township.jpeg|thumb|alt= Map of Monroe Township from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.|Map of Monroe Township from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.]]Monroe Township is sited along the western edge of Licking County along the border with Delaware County to the West. [[Hartford Township]] lies to its north, [[Liberty Township]] to the east, and [[Jersey Township]] to the south.   
 
[[File:1875 Atlas Monroe township.jpeg|thumb|alt= Map of Monroe Township from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.|Map of Monroe Township from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.]]Monroe Township is sited along the western edge of Licking County along the border with Delaware County to the West. [[Hartford Township]] lies to its north, [[Liberty Township]] to the east, and [[Jersey Township]] to the south.   
  
The township contains the municipality of Johnstown, which was elevated from the status of village to city in the 2020 census. The geography of the Monroe Township resembles its neighbors – slightly rolling hills with a few small runs.  Raccoon Creek is among the Forest gave way to pastureland and farming with European settlement <ref> Hill, N., ''History of Licking County'', (1881), 518 </ref> Unlike many parts of the county, Monroe Township has little evidence of Native American Moundbuilders. There was, however, an established presence of Wyandot at the time of European settlement.  A sizable Native American settlement once stood a mile north of  present-day Johnstown along Raccoon Creek.  This Wyandot town, called "Racoon Town," disappeared after the purchase of the land by settlers Charles and George Green in 1807, but a Native American presence remained in the area until the War of 1812.  <ref> Hill, N., ''History of Licking County'', (1881), 518 </ref>  
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The township contains the municipality of Johnstown, which was elevated from the status of village to city in the 2020 census. The geography of the Monroe Township resembles its neighbors – slightly rolling hills with a few small runs.  Raccoon Creek is among the Forest gave way to pastureland and farming with European settlement <ref> Hill, N., ''History of Licking County'', (1881), 518 </ref>  
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==Native American Presence==
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Unlike many parts of the county, Monroe Township has little evidence of Native American Moundbuilders. There was, however, an established presence of Wyandot at the time of European settlement.  A sizable Native American settlement once stood a mile north of  present-day Johnstown along Raccoon Creek.  This Wyandot town, called "Racoon Town," disappeared after the purchase of the land by settlers Charles and George Green in 1807, but a Native American presence remained in the area until the War of 1812.  <ref> Hill, N., ''History of Licking County'', (1881), 518 </ref>  
  
 
==European Settlement==  
 
==European Settlement==  

Revision as of 08:29, 28 June 2022

 Map of Monroe Township from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.
Map of Monroe Township from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.
Monroe Township is sited along the western edge of Licking County along the border with Delaware County to the West. Hartford Township lies to its north, Liberty Township to the east, and Jersey Township to the south.

The township contains the municipality of Johnstown, which was elevated from the status of village to city in the 2020 census. The geography of the Monroe Township resembles its neighbors – slightly rolling hills with a few small runs. Raccoon Creek is among the Forest gave way to pastureland and farming with European settlement [1]

Native American Presence

Unlike many parts of the county, Monroe Township has little evidence of Native American Moundbuilders. There was, however, an established presence of Wyandot at the time of European settlement. A sizable Native American settlement once stood a mile north of present-day Johnstown along Raccoon Creek. This Wyandot town, called "Racoon Town," disappeared after the purchase of the land by settlers Charles and George Green in 1807, but a Native American presence remained in the area until the War of 1812. [2]

European Settlement

George Evans and his family were the first European settlers to arrive in the area in 1806. They were followed by Charles and George Green in 1807 with their purchase of property around "Racoon Town." The Greens and their descendants had large families and left a demographic mark upon the township; in 1881, the wife of George Green, Diana, still lived in the township at the age of ninety-two and was a matriarch over a large family of 17 children and one-hundred grandchildren. [3] Population growth spurred by the Greens and other settlers led to the formation of Monroe Township in 1812. At the time it was founded, Monroe encompassed what was to become Liberty, Bennington, and Hartford Townships. The last subdivision- Liberty Township in 1827- left Monroe in its current state.
 Detail of Johnstown, OH from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.
Detail of Johnstown, OH from 1875 Atlas of Licking County.

Johnstown

The village of Johnstown was founded in 1813 by Dr. Oliver Bigelow [4] Bigelow, a transplant from New York, had purchased four thousand acres in the township in 1810. He donated the property for the towns streets, square, and cemetery, where he himself would be buried at this death in 1817. The primary village industry in its first decades was tanning, leading to modest population growth of about two-hundred resident by 1830. The village changed little in the mid-nineteenth century until the arrival of rail lines in the 1880s. After that it experienced modest growth into the early 20th century, yet retained its village status and small-town aesthetic.[5]


The Ashbrook Family

Among the most prominent citizens of Johnstown and Monroe Township were the Ashbrook Family. William A. Ashbrook Sr. Was born in Licking County in 1824 and lived as a farmer, dedicating his time to serve in local positions and offices. One of his children, William A. Ashbrook Jr. was born in Johnstown in 1867. In his late teens, William Jr. had inherited the village's fledgling newspaper, the Johnstown Independent, in 1884 after its purchase by Burton Ashbrook, his brother. After his brother's death, William ran the paper himself as a journalist and editor. His business interests extended to investments in banking in 1889 and later insurance. He became the village's postmaster in 1893 and embarked upon a political career with the Democratic Party in the 1890s. [6] In 1904, William A. Ashbrook was elected to the Ohio State House of Representatives, and then elected to the United States Congress to serve in Washington D.C. Ashbrook served from 1907-1920. Suffering defeat in the 1920 election, Ashbrook would return to life in Johnstown before mounting a successful bid to retake his congressional seat in 1935, which he held until his death in 1940. [7] William's son, John M. Ashbrook, followed in his father's footsteps as the publisher of the Johnstown Independent and an U.S. Congressman, serving as a Republican for the 17th Ohio congressional District from 1961 until his premature death in 1982. [8]


Recent Growth

Monroe Township and Johnstown, like many communities in the Western half of Licking County, experienced substantial growth after 2000 with the expansion of and growth of Columbus and Franklin County municipalities. New subdivisions and commercial growth in the 21st century led to the transition of Johnstown's municipal status of village to a city of over 5,000 inhabitants in the 2020 census. [9] The changes and growth will continue for the area with the announcement in 2022 of the Intel microchip factory construction in neighboring Jersey Township.


For more information see also:

https://johnstownohio.org/history

http://monroetownship.org/


J.G.

References

  1. Hill, N., History of Licking County, (1881), 518
  2. Hill, N., History of Licking County, (1881), 518
  3. Hill, N., History of Licking County, (1881), 518
  4. Brister, E., Centennial History, (1909), 249
  5. "A Brief History of Johnstown, Ohio," Johnstown Sesquicentennial, (1963), 15
  6. Memorial Record of Licking County, Ohio, (1894), 196.
  7. "A Brief History of Johnstown, Ohio," Johnstown Sesquicentennial, (1963), 15
  8. "Ashbrook Death Triggers Wave of Shock, Mourning," Newark Advocate, Apr. 26, 1982, 1
  9. https://johnstownohio.org/history