Warren County Local
History by Dallas Bogan |
Contributor: |
Dallas Bogan on 22 July 2004 |
Source: |
Dallas Bogan, Warren County, Ohio and Beyond (Bowie Maryland:Heritage Press, 1979) page 19 |
Return to Index to see a list of other articles by Dallas Bogan |
Warren County was once a part of the huge County of Hamilton. Deerfield, being
a large township of Hamilton County, comprised all of the present county of
Warren except 44 sections about Franklin. This area also included a portion
of Clinton County. In 1799 residents of Deerfield Township asked the Territorial
Legislature for a division of the County of Hamilton and asked that Deerfield
be made the seat of justice of the new county.
On April 22, 1801, a meeting of the leading citizens of the township of Deerfield
was held at the town of Deerfield (South Lebanon), which embraced the idea of
a new county. This meeting was held with the territorial Governor, Arthur
St. Clair, for the sole purpose of making Deerfield the county seat.
The committee was comprised of the leading citizens of the township. They were:
Rev. William Wood, Robert
Benham, Jeremiah
Morrow, Nathan Kelley, Ignatius
Brown, Ephriam Kibbey and John T. Hall.
After the formation of the County, March 24, 1803, the first State Legislature
of Ohio contested Deerfield contested for the new position of county seat by
Lebanon, Waynesville and Franklin. Deerfield, with its earlier establishment
as a town, and Lebanon with a more centralized location, and with its designation
as the temporary place of holding courts, encountered a struggle for two years
for this prestigious vacancy.
The final decision was concreted by a special act of the Legislature February
11, 1805. At the time of the passage of this act, William C. Schenck
and John Bigger represented the County in the House of Representatives
by Matthias Corwin and Peter Burr, and in
the Senate.
The House of Representatives was nearly equally divided on the passage of this
act, and a motion to reject the bill was lost by the casting vote of the Speaker.
Lebanon had won by a very narrow margin. Deerfield's last hope of becoming a
county seat had been lost.
In March 1879, the County Commissioners submitted the proposal of building
a new courthouse, with the approval of the electors. The Commissioners issued
a public notice to this account, and within one week Morrow held a public meeting
in which a proposal was discussed toward the building of a new courthouse in
Morrow. Morrow's argument was that a new tax should not be established for the
purpose of building a new courthouse; that those concerned should furnish the
money and eliminate tax monies.
A written form read: "The friends of Morrow tender to the people of Warren
County, the proposition to furnish the grounds and build the new courthouse
by private donations free to the taxpayers, and we fully recognize the right
of any and all other towns in Warren County to make similar propositions, leaving
it to the people to say where their convenience and best interests require to
its location."
At the April election, the electors defeated the tax. The tax proposal was again
voted on in the October election of 1879, and again was rejected. After the
second defeat, the citizens of Morrow circulated a petition authorizing a vote
on the question of the removal of the seat of justice at Lebanon. The petition
stated the advantages of the county seat being located in Morrow, one of which
comprised the juncture of two railroads.
A statement was issued saying: "Lebanon being off the railroad can afford
neither markets nor manufacturing facilities and has failed to develop the ordinary
advantages of a county town."
The citizens of Lebanon at first took the Morrow proposal in stride, however,
after several months, the issue became a bitter struggle. With Lebanon's tax
hopes proven nil for the building of a new courthouse, the community requested
the County Commissioners repair the existing building.
The argument for the citizenry of Lebanon stated in effect that Lebanon was
on February 11, 1805, commissioned by the General Assembly of Ohio to be permanently
established as the County seat. The Morrow petition and the Lebanon rejection
were presented to the Legislature. Months of this quarreling had virtually brought
the entire County into the battle.
Signatures of the Morrow petition numbered 2,148, those who rejected the petition,
3,750. With the vote in, the Morrow petition was brought before the Senate.
This committee, upon hearing arguments from both perspectives, on February 12,
1880, agreed unanimously against the bill. The contest for the removal of Lebanon
as a county seat was over.
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This page created 22 July 2004 and last updated
28 September, 2008
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