Showing posts with label wayne township. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wayne township. Show all posts

Thursday, December 21, 2017

A Warren County Puzzle

Perched on a hillside northeast of Waynesville, in Warren County, is a curious brick farmhouse. It's obviously an ancient structure (by Ohio's standards), with its flush chimneys and rake boards, and it fronts an early thoroughfare connecting Waynesville and cities farther north. Like a few other homes in the vicinity, it makes stupendous use of its sloping site; the basement is at once a first floor, a quirk which allowed the builder to attach a two-story gallery to what seems, from one angle, a single-story structure.

My lone, woefully inadequate photo of the building.

Alas, someone, at some time (perhaps in the finest decade for tasteful design — the 1970s), thought it wise to seal half the window and door openings, then reface the entire building, including its porch's columns (!), with stones of varied size and shape. The result looks, to my jaundiced eye, like the architectural equivalent of type-I neurofibromatosis (or some other tumor-inducing disease). Thankfully, staff from the Ohio Historical Society photographed the house in 1969 or 1970, well before the remodeling. At the time, the building retained its original six-over-nine windows.

Image, 1969 or 1970, from the "Southwest Ohio Survey" collection; held by the Ohio Historical Society.

Obviously, the house is early and noteworthy, but researching its history proved more difficult than I anticipated. The earliest digitized map of Warren County land ownership, published in 1856, lists "J. Parkhill" as owner of the 204-acre tract where this home stands. As is so often the case, Parkhill seemingly left no literary footprint — he receives no mention in county histories, and grave records are equally scanty. (The closest match in Find A Grave's database is James Parkhill (d. 1896), interred in Deerfield Township's Rose Hill Cemetery.) The 1850 census, though, records a Joseph Parkhill, born about 1815 in Ohio, as a resident of Wayne Township. Parkhill had a large family, and he provided room and board for at least three non-family-members — evidence, perhaps, that local tradition has correctly identified the building as an inn or tavern.

Some time between 1856 and 1874, Parkhill's property passed to Israel Hopkins Harris (1823–1897), a Waynesville banker and member of a locally prominent family. If the postcard pictured below is any indication, Harris's name — and not Parkhill's — became attached to the house, no doubt because of the Harris family's considerable cachet.

Postcard, undated, from the collection of Donald and Jean Hutslar.

Assuming the building did function as a "wayside inn," it did so during Parkhill's occupancy (or earlier), and not Harris's. But Parkhill was reasonably young in 1850, and it's unlikely that he commissioned or built the structure. (Given that Waynesville itself was platted in 1796, and that Warren County comprises one of Ohio's wealthiest, earliest-settled regions, a construction date in the 1810s or 1820s seems perfectly believable.) But, alack, tracing Warren County property ownership beyond Franklin Pierce's presidency requires (a) good literary sources or (b) a trip to the county courthouse, so, for now, the Parkhill–Harris residence's ultimate identity will remain a mystery.

A slightly later (?) photo gives an even finer glimpse of the house's two-story porch, its twin entrances, and its most distinctive feature — a semicircular stone staircase, which partly provides ground-level access to the gallery's upper story.

Image, undated, from the collection of Donald and Jean Hutslar.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

The French and the Overhanging Plate

As I mention in a previous post, the overhanging plate (perhaps my favorite architectural enigma) is a distinctive feature of log homes in Loramie Township, Shelby County, and Wayne Township, Darke County. Two towns — Versailles and Russia — anchor this settlement. Both communities were populated largely by French immigrants, who arrived in the 1830s, 1840s, and 1850s. (A few, apparently, fought in the Napoleonic Wars; hence the name Russia.) Hoping to learn about their use of the overhanging plate, I spent a bit of time researching the genealogy of these Frenchmen.

Thiebaud (1803–1863) and Nicholas Didier (1807–1881), prominent residents of Loramie Township, emigrated from Étueffont, France, to Shelby County in 1840 and 1851, respectively. Pierre Pepiot (1734–1839) lived in Neuvier until 1835, when he relocated to the United States and joined the French settlement near Russia, Ohio. Louis Peltier (1823–1876) left Évette-Salbert before 1848. The LeMoine and Gasson families, who settled in Darke County, hailed from Combres-sous-les-Côtes and Hennemont. The Russia-Versailles settlement's inhabitants, it seems, originated in extreme northeastern France, and reached Ohio via New Orleans and the Mississippi River. Where, then, did they learn to build log houses? No (or few) such buildings exist in AlsaceFranche-Comté, and Lorraine, whence they migrated. And New Orleans is hardly a bastion of log architecture. (1)

I suspect (but, alas, cannot prove) that the French immigrants tarried in Louisville, Cincinnati, or other sizable Ohio River cities before traveling to Shelby and Darke counties. The overhanging plate is particularly common in Kentucky, Indiana, and southwestern Ohio. If the French received an education in log construction from residents of these regions, they may well have assimilated knowledge of the overhanging plate!

1) Most of the "log" buildings the French encountered along the Mississippi River were, no doubt, of the poteaux-en-terre and poteaux-sur-sol varieties. Neither is, so far as I know, replicated in Ohio.