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.

2 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for this post. The Louis Peltier you mentioned is my great great uncle. He and his twin Jean Baptiste Peltier moved there together in Feb. 1848, but Jean eventually moved to Michigan. Where did you get your information - if I could find the same resources I might be able to learn more.

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    1. It's been a while, but I imagine I perused county histories and census records.

      This 1883 history of Shelby County might be a good place to start:

      https://books.google.com/books?id=6M8xAQAAMAAJ&vq=peltier&pg=PA5#v=onepage&q&f=false

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