HOCKING COUNTY HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY AND MUSEUM

HOCKING COUNTY HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY AND MUSEUM We are open Saturdays and Sundays from 1 - 4., and by a pre-set appointment by calling 740 385-6026. We bring you the Best of Hocking County's Past!

Admission to our museum and parking are free. The museum is handicapped accessible. Our museum is staffed with friendly, knowledgeable volunteers on Friday and Saturday afternoons (1-4 pm) to help you in your research and/or tour. Private and group/bus tours are welcome and encouraged. Please contact us to set up your private tour. You'll be glad you did! Within our museum you can go back in histo

ry. Visit the 1881 SCHEMPP HOUSE, and learn how people actually lived in that period with each room bursting with exhibits. The Historical Center has a TIMELINE covering 100 years of history, a one-room schoolhouse, military displays, indian artifacts and much more. The CARRIAGE HOUSE features farm implements and period tools. You may also visit the HENRY LUTZ 1898 STEAM CAR GARAGE and learn the history of the steam car. A PIONEER CONESTOGA WAGON and OLDE PRINTSHOP can be seen on site, along with a RAILROAD TELEGRAPH OFFICE, complete with Hocking Valley Railroad memorabilia. We also have a room available for GENEALOGICAL RESEARCH. Included are the histories of many local families and notables, old yearbooks, books by local authors and much, much more. We also have books available for purchase covering many diverse subjects. A complete will soon be available on our page.

Huge Yard Sale/Flea Market.Most items sold by donations. This is how we keep our bills paid and our doors open.
06/02/2026

Huge Yard Sale/Flea Market.
Most items sold by donations. This is how we keep our bills paid and our doors open.

Historical Society’s Annual Flea Market/Yard Sale
64 N. Culver St. Logan, Ohio
Saturday, June 6, 2026, 9 – 3.
Rain Date, 1 week later.

Our annual yard sale is one of the Historical Society’s largest fundraisers. As a 100% nonprofit organization, we rely on events like this to help keep our doors open and cover operating expenses.

This year also includes pieces of antique furniture that need loving care.
Most items are available for a cash donation, while some are priced.
This year’s sale features an especially unique variety of items, from well-used mannequins, toys, tools, to household goods and much more! Come and be surprised.
We are still accepting donations and clean leftover yard sale items. All of our leftover items will be donated to another non-profit organization for their fund raising efforts.

For questions, contact Nyla at 740 603-1876

Ward Township Can Trace Beginnings to Coal Mines       Most of the communities in Ward Twp. can trace their beginnings t...
06/02/2026

Ward Township Can Trace Beginnings to Coal Mines
Most of the communities in Ward Twp. can trace their beginnings to the coal mines which were abundant in the county’s early days.
According to the “History of Hocking Valley, 1883”: Road is the most eastern township in Hocking County. The soil, except in the valley, is generally thin, and the land very rough, the whole of it belonging to the mining district. The land, being mainly owned by mining companies, is cultivated on a small scale. The mineral deposits of the township, however, are of great value and during 1883 were rapidly developed. At least 90% of the land of this township was underlaid with the great layer of coal ten feet thick and of the most superior quality, besides other coal beds higher up in the hills three or four feet thick. Iron was also taken from the hills, and lime and fireclay were found in great quantities.
Ward Township is six miles square, with an acreage of 23,040 acres. It is bounded north by Perry County, east by Athens County, and on the west by Green Township.
A small part of Buchtel lies in Ward Township. The town is on what was known as the Dew farm, most of which was in Ward Township, covering some 500 acres of rich tableland at the intersection of two streams – Monday Creek and Snow Fork.
According to the “History of the Hocking Valley, 1883,” it was recorded that when the whole country between Muskingum and the Hocking was an unbroken wilderness, and before any permanent settlement had been made in the valley, a company of brave, adventurous pioneers started from Marietta to blaze a road through to the Pickaway Plains. To avoid swamps and marshes, they went across the hills. Their route for weeks was uninterrupted except by the unusual adventures common to pioneer explorers.
One Saturday evening, a mild and beautiful Indian summer day, they stopped and agreed to rest over Sunday in the valley of the stream to which, on this account, they gave the name of Sunday Creek.
The next day’s travel brought them to the site of present town of Buchtel and in the evening they camped on the banks of the stream, which, marking the day’s journey, they named Monday Creek.
That very same night, a furious snowstorm, such as was seldom experienced in the region, swept down from the hills, rendering further progress impossible. In vain they attempted the steep hills, but the narrow valley, studded densely with huge sycamores and almost shut in by overhanging hills, was closed against them by the deep billowy drifts.
Further advance was impossible, and they decided to return. The storm lasted a week and the silvery stream winding through the valley, disclosing minerals more precious than diamonds, along whose dreary banks the pioneers waded in drifting snow they called Snow Fork.
Ward Township was organized in 1836. At an election of township officers, R. Devoll, John Myers, and Samuel Stacey were named trustees.
Carbon Hill in Ward Twp. Was laid out in 1873 by Thomas Ewing and Isom Finley.
Orbiston had about 500 inhabitants, and Murray City at that time had about 300 inhabitants.
Murray City was named for a man of the same name who owned the land on which the community is situated. The plat of the town was recorded Feb. 20, 1873, and the first sale of lots took place Feb. 19, 1873. Sand Run was laid out in 1880 by U.H. Summers.
Ward Township, A Holocaust (1878)
Shortly as the history of this township is in material facts, a calamity has checkered its career which will be long remembered with horror by its people. In the prosperous little village of Carbon Hill lived John Lunsford with his wife and family of seven children, his business being the care of a store which he kept in a part of his dwelling. On the night of Feb. 27, 1878, all the usual precautions having been taken to set the store and house in safe order, the family retired to their beds, but a short-lived rest was enjoyed, it was interrupted soon by moments of anguish.
At about eleven o’clock the immediate neighbors were awakened by the cries of Mrs. Lunsford, who being driven from her burning house by suffocation could only implore her friends to save, if possible, the lives of her children. Notwithstanding, every effort was made to do so, it was all in vain, for the hungry flames were rapidly finishing their work. Mrs. Lunsford, with an infant in her arms was the only members of the family to escape.
The father, on awakening, the fire already burning furiously, had rushed up the stairs to where the six doomed children were sleeping; but before he could return the roof fell in and all hopes of escape were over. On the following morning the charred remains of the father and six children, ranging from nineteen to eight years of age, were taken from the ruins and after an inquest, were carefully and sadly laid away by their friends in their final rest. The origin of the fire is not known but is supposed to have come from a defective stove in the store.

Part 2 Memories of Washington Twp. Written by Julia Anne Mauk in 1922.  She was born 1840This was printed in the Logan D...
06/01/2026

Part 2 Memories of Washington Twp. Written by Julia Anne Mauk in 1922. She was born 1840
This was printed in the Logan Daily News in 1976.
William Large was the first undertaker in that community. He made the coffins to order as needed; of the best cherry or walnut lumber he had. There were no showy caskets, or fine hearses to bear them to the tomb, but the departed ones all received a respectable burial. They received kindly remembrances and flowers while living, when they could appreciate them, rather than having them heaped upon their coffins and spread upon their newly made mounds in the graveyard.
Aaron Hainesworth Jr., gave the lot for the cemetery, joining the church lot. His child was the first one buried there, and his wife the next. A few years later, Aaron Hainesworth St., was laid away there in September of 1849, at the age of 76 years. His works do follow him. He sowed the good seed from which others gathered a rich harvest. In th4e year 1855, his wife, at eh age of 76 was laid by his side.
On a beautiful Thanksgiving Day in the year 1888, William Large, after a long and useful life of 99 years and nine months, was laid to rest in the Fairview Cemetery, beside his estimable wife, who proceeded him 30 years earlier.
The young people were always cheerful and glad. They seemed to get the thrill of joy from living so near to nature, with its great beauty and mystery. They helped to clear the fields, cultivate the crops, and gather in the harvest. By honest labor, they were casting their mite into the foundation on which our nation is built. They had their seasons of recreation, and good social times at each other’s homes. They had spelling schools where they met to spell and signing schools where they learned to sing. There were community dances, but church members and the refined class of people never attended them.
In our home, the long winter evenings mostly found us all home having a pleasant time together with books, slates, pencils, copy books, and goose quill pens, working out the problems of things about us and planning for improvements. Sometimes Father would play the fife, soft and low, and Mother would keep time with the buzz of her little spinning wheel. When bedtime came, Father would read a portion of Scriptures or lead in the singing some good inspiring hymn, and he or Mother would offer up a prayer of thanksgiving for past blessings and a petition for future protection and guidance.
All the people, old and young, were then learning the gospel of labor, thrift, and self-reliance, but were lacking, and needing , Christ’s Gospel of the golden rule, the only thing which will lift men and women up to their best selves and make a community, a state, or a nation a safe and desirable place in which to live.
Aaron Hainesworth Sr., then living in the community, and filled with a Christian and missionary spirit, went to my parents and asked if he could hold a religious meeting at their home, to which they willingly consented, although they were not Christians or members of any church, and had very little house room. So, he held meetings and quite a number attended them. He sang and prayed and read the Scriptures and exhorted them to follow their teachings.
As the people took quite an interest in the good word, he sent for a preacher to come and help him. One by the name of Brock came and preached for them and organized a class of six members: Aaron Hainesworth Sr., and his wife; James Reed and wife, and George Mauk and wife. This constituted them members of Perry Circuit, Scioto Conference, of the United Brethren Church, and they were entitled to the services of the circuit preacher.
The first one who came was Rev. McCabe. The people then took time to quit their work for a few hours and attend the meetings. Occasionally, they would hold the meetings in the schoolhouse when school was not in session. Our house was the regular meeting place for about 12 years, six of those years in the cabin. Then Father bought more land and built a larger house of hewed logs, so then we had more room for ourselves and the meeting folks too. About that time, Barney Eidson moved into the community and united with the church. They were willing workers and had the preaching at their house part of the time.
The church people had been talking for quite a while about building a meeting house, and the time had come when something more must be done. So, they met at our house and organized a board of Trustees and planned for building. Mr. Hainesworth gave the church lot, the landowners gave the time, and Mr. William Large, who was running a sawmill at Cedar Falls sawed and finished the lumber. Mr. Stuckey made the shingles for the roof.
They chopped down some of those beautiful and majestic popular trees, sawed them into lags for the house. Then they scored and hewed them and dragged them to the place of building. They set a day when they all met and raised the house. The men did the building, and the women prepared the dinner on a rustic table in the woods nearby.
The church was named “Fairview” on account of its location upon a pretty table land.
Before the church was ready for services, one night some drunken hunters set the woods on fire nearby and the men and women had to go out and fight fire all night to keep the church from being all burned up. A great forest fire at night is a fearfully grand sight.
In the spring of 1852, the church was near enough finished to hold meetings in it. The chinks in the wall were not closed, but the weather was warm, and they could get along very well. We were happy. Rev. Conklin and Rev. Perkins were the preachers then.
In June there was a great spiritual revival and gathering, and Sunday School started up. There was good attendance at all the services. Some walked, some rode on horseback, and some came in their farm wagons. In winter they went in sleds and sleighs. In that age, there were from four to six weeks of good sleighing snow nearly every year. When there was snow and the nights were dark, the people lit themselves on their way with pine torches. It was a pretty sight to see dozens of them bobbing along in the darkness across fields, along footpaths through the woods and along the roads.
In summertime a little song wren went in through the chinks of the wall at church and built a nest for herself up under the rafters, and one day when we met for worship, she came out and sat on the cross beam and sang the sweetest song I ever heard in a church. She sang solo first, then joined in with the congregational singing.
Some of the first preachers whom I remember were Rev. Ambrose, Rev. Conklin, Rev. Perkins, Rev. Walters, Rev. Thornton, Rev. Price, Rev. McDaniel, Rev. Brundage, Rev. John Deaver, Rev. Abe Shessler, Rev. Romig, and Rev. Barges.
Our home was the weary traveler’s stopping and resting place. They stopped quite often and were always welcome. They came with good cheer, whether sunshine or rain, and left with a “God bless you till we meet again.” The cornpone and biscuits which mother baked by the fire, and the bread and pies baked in the Dutch oven built in the yard, along with the good butter and milk, eggs, fruit, and vegetables, was a meal good and wholesome enough to set before a king.
When the Civil War broke out, so many of the best men and boys went to the rescue. It was very discouraging for those at home. We still had regular preaching, and a few optimists kept the fire lighted on the prayer meeting altar.
When the war was over and the men and boys returned home, the people took new courage. But so many never came home, and some came in their caskets. They died for their country, true, loyal, and brave, that all might be free, and none be made slave.
Rev. Noah Lohr came to us fresh from war, as full of zeal for the salvation of our country. We had some great revivals and gatherings in the church, so that our congregation outgrew the little log house. Then it was torn away, and a new frame house was built in its place. It was dedicated in the spring of 1868 by Bishop David Edwards.
This is a map from 2002 it shows the Church and Cemetery in Section 32.

Part 1 Memories of Washington Twp. Written by Julia Anne Mauk in 1922        Found in 1976 LDN     Julia Anne Mauk was b...
05/31/2026

Part 1 Memories of Washington Twp.
Written by Julia Anne Mauk in 1922
Found in 1976 LDN
Julia Anne Mauk was born April 9, 1840, one of two daughters and five sons born to George and Mary Mauk. She died at the age of 90 on June 23, 1930, in Logan, and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery. She was a staunch member of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union for many years. She compiled this account in 1922.
When my parents, George, and Mary Mauk, were young, they ran a whiskey distillery for a few years in Morgan County. They said they were making lots of easy money and might have become rich buy sticking to the business, but they had learned the evilness of the business and said, “We will quit and go into the wilderness, and build a home on an honorable foundation.”
Therefore, in the spring of 1838, they, with four small children, moved from Morgan County to Hocking County. They bought 40 acres of land from Uncle Sam, one mile east of Cedar Falls. They built a cabin home and a stable for their horses and cows, right in the heart of the great forest. When they came, there were no roads, not even a footpath leading to their home. From Logan, they had to search out the way and cut their roadway as they drove across the hills and valleys.
Our house was built on the south side of a hill, near the top, with a good view of surrounding hills. There were no dwellings near, or none in sight. It was built of round logs, and it was 18 feet square. It had one window, one door, a puncheon floor, and an open fireplace in one side, which was built outside to give more space inside.
The chimney was topped out with sticks and mud, with a log pole running through, and a chain attached to it with a hook on the lower end to hang pots and kettles on, in which to boil and cook things. This was the only room for all household use, except the attic, where the boys slept. They ascended and descended upon a ladder.
From the boys’ sleeping attic there grew honorable and useful citizens. Samuel was a blacksmith, a carpenter, and a farmer, a natural genius, and who lost a foot in the Battle of Chickamauga. John, the second son, was a doctor. Washington was a druggist, and William the preacher. Anthony taught school for many years at Mt. Pleasant, and with whom it is thought that Julia made her home on Spring Street later in life. Three of them were soldiers in the Civil War.
Besides Julia, (who wrote this information) there was Sarah, who was the first wife of John Price.
Each household had to keep the home fires burning all the time. They did not have matches for easy lighting of fires. If it happened to go out, they took some pine slivers, flax tow, or punk, a flint, and a piece of steel, and struck a fire from a spark. It was not quickly done as with a match, but more interesting.
There were no fenced-in pasture fields in those days. The owners of stock marked their cattle, sheep, and hogs, and turned them into the free-for-all woods pasture. Each owner had his mark recorded at the county seat. Father’s mark was a swallow fork in the left ear. Some of the poor animals had both ears pretty much cut away by the mark of their owners. They put a bell on the best leader of the sheep, and that kept the flock together. They put a loud-sounding bell on the cow, so if she did not come home at evening time, they could find er easier. In the fall, the hogs fattened themselves on acorns, ready for butchering.
The early settlers mostly lived quite a distance apart but were closely untied by the bond of a common brotherhood and sisterhood, and the spirit of helpfulness. As soon as possible they untied together and built a little log schoolhouse, where they sent their children to get book learning, so that they might grow up to be more intelligent and useful citizens.
There was a community doctor, a German, by the name of Flaxbeard. He was a good surgeon and a rather good doctor. There was also a community lady doctor, Mrs. Katie Hass, who looked after women and babies when they needed help. Henry Bainter was the “tooth doctor.” He pulled teeth by the canthook method—a crude tool that gripped the tooth and pried it out, often causing serious injury—yet he could remove it, root and all, free of charge.

A picture of a type of canthook and a1876 photo of Washington Township, with the location of the old one-room schools. George Mauk had a residence in the bottom left corner of the map. Section 31.

I had a request on Carbon Hill.  Here it is!Carbon Hill is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place (CD...
05/29/2026

I had a request on Carbon Hill. Here it is!
Carbon Hill is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place (CDP) in central Ward Township, Hocking County, Ohio, United States. It's situated in the southeastern part of Ohio, within Hocking County.
History:
• Established in 1873: Carbon Hill was laid out in 1873.
• Name Origin: The name directly reflects the area's significant history of coal mining. "Carbon" refers to coal, which was extensively mined in the vicinity.
• Post Office Since 1879: A post office has been serving Carbon Hill since 1879, with the ZIP code 43111.
• Part of Coal Boom: Carbon Hill was one of the numerous coal towns that sprang up in southeastern Ohio during the Hocking Valley Coal Boom (roughly 1870-1925). This period saw a rapid increase in coal mining operations to access the region's rich natural resources.
• Influence of Railroads: The expansion of railroads into the region, starting in the late 1860s and early 1870s, was crucial for the growth of coal mining towns like Carbon Hill, as it provided a means to transport the extracted coal to markets.
• Labor Movement: Like other coal mining areas in the Hocking Valley, Carbon Hill was likely involved in the early American labor movement, as miners organized to address issues such as working conditions, wages, and housing.
Present Day:
• Unincorporated Community: Carbon Hill does not have its own municipal government and operates as part of Ward Township and Hocking County.
• Census-Designated Place (CDP): As a CDP, the U.S. Census Bureau collects statistical data for the community.
• Population: The population of the CDP was 178 according to the 2020 census. Recent estimates from 2023 suggest a population of 148, with a significant median age of 74.2 years. There are projections showing a further decline in population in the coming years.
• Demographics: The racial makeup of Carbon Hill is predominantly White (Non-Hispanic), making up around 96% of the population. Other groups include a small percentage of individuals identifying as Two or More Races (Non-Hispanic).
• Economy: As of 2023, the median household income in Carbon Hill was $61,625. The main employment sectors include manufacturing, construction, and administrative support services.
• Location: Carbon Hill is in central Ward Township, Hocking County, Ohio. Its coordinates are approximately 39°30′00″N 82°14′31″W.
Significance:
Carbon Hill stands as a reminder of the once-thriving coal mining industry in southeastern Ohio. Like other "Little Cities of Black Diamonds" in the region, its history is deeply intertwined with the extraction of coal and the lives of the people who worked in the mines. While the coal industry has largely declined in the area, these communities retain their historical character and serve as a testament to a significant period in Ohio's industrial past.


CARBON HILL SCHOOL
The Logan Daily News Wednesday Sept. 18, 1946
MONDAY PUPILS ENTER CLASSES AT CARBON HILL
Sit down “Strike” Ended; Parents Plan to Continue Fight
A 12 day “SITDOWN STRIKE” of 30 pupils at the Monday-Longstreth school apparently was ended today – but not forgotten.
Gerald Devol, superintendent of the Carbon Hill School said that “nearly all” of the striking students had begun to attend classes at Carbon Hill.
The students struck September 3 in protest against closing of the Monday-Longstreth school by Ward Board of Education.
As a result, they attended the closed school for 12 days, sitting in a teacherless classroom until dismissal time, then going home.
Return of the children to school today followed a meeting of citizens from the Monday district who had protested the closing of the school as an ‘inconvenience.’
The citizens had invited the Ward Board to attend the session, but members failed to appear, they said.
Spokesmen for the citizens indicated that they intend to continue their fight to re-open the Monday School.
” We agreed to send the children to Carbon Hill because we felt that it was an injustice to the children to keep them out of school any longer,” one said.
They asserted that they again plan to petition Governor Frank Lausche and the State Department of Education to re-open the school.
Approximately 40 residents of the community attended the meeting which was held Monday night at the Carbon Hill School building. Mr. Devol said that the pupils from the “strike area” were being transported by bus to the Carbon Hill school. Monday residents had protested sending the children to Carbon Hill because it involved two miles extra travel daily.
Residents have employed a Logan attorney to assist in their fight to re-open the school.

Logan Daily News Saturday May 16, 1953 (condensed version)
COMMENCEMENT SET FRIDAY FOR 14 AT CARBON HILL SCHOOL
Slated to receive their diplomas are Phyllis Blake, Violet Chutes, Shirley Clark, Donna Devol, Betty Morgan, Lois Smart, Dixie Winigman, Bob Crippen, Dick Devol, John Lax, Darl Lehman, Darrel Lehman, John Sanborn and Benny Spencer.
Miss Smart is president of the class and first honor student. Miss Chutes won second scholastic honors. Other officers are John Sanborn, vice president and Miss Morgan, secretary-treasurer.

Logan Daily News of Saturday May 12, 1956 (condensed version)
CARBON HILL SCHOOL SENIOR ACTIVITIES START TUESDAY NIGHT
The annual Senior Class Night exercises on Tuesday May 15, at 8 p.m. opens the senior activities at Carbon Hill School.
Diplomas presented by James Frey, Hocking County superintendent of schools, will be received by the following: Shelby Blake, Eilene Carson, Phyllis Cozad, Ted Dane, Bill Elliott, Rodney Galentin, Charlene Hopstetter, Keith Kinneer, Dale Martin, Gene Martin, Nick Sanborn, Mack Wicks and Kenneth Williams.
First honor student is Shelby Blake, and second honor student is Phyllis Cozad.
The class officers are president, Charlene Hopsteter; vice president, Eilene Carson; secretary, Phyllis Cozad; and treasurer, Shelby Blake.

(THE CLOSING OF CARBON HILL WAS ARGUED FOR YEARS.)
Logan Daily News of April 8, 1959, noted in part:
The East Hocking District school board noted “It would cost as much to operate the school as it would be to send the Carbon Hill pupils to another school on a tuition basis.”
“It was stated that the cost of operating Carbon Hill High School was high because there were 4½ teachers for only 52 pupils.

BUCHTEL TO ENROLL CARBON HILL AREA PUPILS WEDNESDAY
Logan Daily News August 25, 1959
Carbon Hill High School students will register at Buchtel Hich School at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Gerald Devol, Carbon Hill Executive head, announced today.
He said busses will leave the Carbon Hill school at 8:30 a.m. A few more than 40 students from Carbon Hill area are expected to register at Buchtel.
The East Hocking School Board assigned the students to Buchtel High School after the State Board of Education revoked the Carbon Hill charter.

Logan Daily News of September 20, 1962
CARBON HILL SCHOOL TO BE SOLD AT AUCTION
The former Carbon Hill school will be one of three buildings to be auctioned off by York school officials Saturday.
A public auction will be held in from of the Carbon Hill building at 10 a.m. Then school officials will continue to Doanville and Connett for similar auctions.
The Carbon Hill School was constructed in 1939, had been appraised at $10,000. School officials reserve the right to reject any or all bids. However, no industry has been forthcoming, and vandals have broken out many windows and caused other minor damage in the building so officials have decided to offer it for sale.
Carbon Hill area pupils now attend York schools at Buchtel. Ward Twp. became part of the York district in the fall of 1960.
Carbon Hill School first building 1909 – 1925. Second building photo from 1938 - early 60s.

Historical Society’s MAY 2026 PUBLIC MEETING     The Hocking County Public Meeting will be held on May 28 at 7 p.m. at 6...
05/28/2026

Historical Society’s MAY 2026 PUBLIC MEETING
The Hocking County Public Meeting will be held on May 28 at 7 p.m. at 64 N. Culver Street in Logan. The guest speaker for the event will be Mike Phillips, whose family has deep roots in the area.
Mike Phillips has a long family history in Hocking County. His great-grandfather, Thomas C. Vancuren (1892–1970), served as a county commissioner, and his grandfather, Murray S. Phillips (1916–1944), was killed in action in France during World War II.
Mike is a member of the Hocking County Historical Society and supports local school tours by guiding students through the 1881 Carriage House and helping wherever needed.
In his spare time, Mike is involved in many community activities and has received several recognitions:
• Volunteer security for LifeWise School
• Hunter Safety Instructor
• NRA-certified pistol instructor since 2004
• Eagle Scout
• Troop Master for Troop 4120 at Hocking Hills Church for Trail Life
• Recipient of the Trail Life Freedom Award
He may also be recognized around the community as Santa Claus, Bigfoot, and even the Easter Bunny—especially at events for children.
Mike will lead a tour of the carriage house and its many displays, offering visitors a chance to learn more about daily life in the area’s early history.

Featured exhibits include:
• Murray City’s coal mining display
• Early farming equipment
• Early home-building tools
• A blacksmith shop
• An oil rig
• A milk bottler
• And much more
The meeting begins at 7 p.m., and everyone is welcome. This program is suitable for all ages.

Historical Society’s Annual Flea Market/Yard Sale64 N. Culver St. Logan, OhioSaturday, June 6, 2026, 9 – 3.Rain Date, 1 ...
05/28/2026

Historical Society’s Annual Flea Market/Yard Sale
64 N. Culver St. Logan, Ohio
Saturday, June 6, 2026, 9 – 3.
Rain Date, 1 week later.

Our annual yard sale is one of the Historical Society’s largest fundraisers. As a 100% nonprofit organization, we rely on events like this to help keep our doors open and cover operating expenses.

This year also includes pieces of antique furniture that need loving care.
Most items are available for a cash donation, while some are priced.
This year’s sale features an especially unique variety of items, from well-used mannequins, toys, tools, to household goods and much more! Come and be surprised.
We are still accepting donations and clean leftover yard sale items. All of our leftover items will be donated to another non-profit organization for their fund raising efforts.

For questions, contact Nyla at 740 603-1876

GORE HISTORY AS SEEN BY 2 SEVENTH GRADERS Two stories were submitted to the local paper by School Superintendent Samuel ...
05/28/2026

GORE HISTORY AS SEEN BY 2 SEVENTH GRADERS
Two stories were submitted to the local paper by School Superintendent Samuel H. Dillion. 1943
Written by seventh grade student Rosemary Summers of the Gore school. Published in LDN on March 2, 1943
Gore got its name from Gore Furnace. There were many furnaces in Gore at that time. Native ore was mined from the hills here and hauled to the furnace by ox and horse teams. Baird’s Furnace hauled its iron to Gore to ship it by train. The furnaces got their names from the one who struck the match to light the furnace.
On many July Fourths they had to call policemen from far away towns, because there were so many fights. Gore was then noted as “The Blood Town,” When people left Gore to travel, they would stop at inns to get rooms, but as soon as they would say they were from Gore, they wouldn’t even let them stay all night.
When the conductor on the train called out “Gore” everyone on the train would put the windows down and duck down behind the seats.
Gore has always been very patriotic. On Memorial Day they always decorate the graves in memory of the dead.
Gore had its own band over f***y years ago. Robert Tucker was the band leader. They played in the surrounding towns.
There used to be five saloons, a barbershop, a shoe shop, four grocery stores and many other businesses in Gore.
But today Gore is only a quiet little town with one grocery store and a post office.

Written by seventh grade student Lou Ann Campbell the Gore school. Published in LDN on March 2, 1943
Gore is a small village located on a strip of land, about two miles wide, and six miles long, taken from Perry County. This strip is called Galls-Fore Township and extends from the Perry County line on the north to Green Township on the south. Gore is ten miles east of Logan, the county seat of Hocking County.
The first school and post office were in what is now called Old Gore.
At first the north side of the road was called Hamlinville and the south side was called Burgessville.
The present school was built about the 1890s but had been remodeled from time to time. At one time Gore had an iron furnace and good supplies of coal. The oil and gas fields were opened about 1908 or 1909. Sawmills and farming were also important industries.
When Gore was first settled, wild game, such as bears and deer, were plentiful.
Gore has a population of about 150. Coal mining, oil fields and farming are their main methods of earning a living.
Some of Gore’s early settlers were the Terrels, Dickens, Burgesses, Nutters, and Tuckers.
The most important improvements to the area are roads and electricity.
Photos are of Gore Oil Fields and Gore Furnace.

Address

64 N Culver Street
Logan, OH
43138

Opening Hours

Saturday 1pm - 4pm
Sunday 1pm - 4pm

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