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[Photo: Melrose (Ohio). 1890
circa. Center for Archival Collections, Bowling Green State University
(OH). Ohio Memory Project.]
Statistics (from 1882)
The population of the county in 1830 was 161; in 1840, 1,034; in 1850,
1,766; in 1860, 4,945; in 1870, 8,544; in 1880, 13,489. Number of
acres of arable or plow land as returned in 1880, 47,199. Number of acres
meadow or pasture land, 7,230. Number of acres timber land, 205,970. Total
number of acres in county, 260,399.
Click on the following
links to read more history:
Geographic Position
Introductory History
Early Settlers
Formation
Soil and Timber
Canals and Railroads
Manufacturing
Offices
County Officers
War Record
Press
Source: History of Paulding
County by Prof. Everett A. Budd as printed in the Historical
Hand-Atlas: History of Northwestern Ohio and History of Paulding
County, Ohio. H. H. Hardesty & Co., Publishers: Chicago and
Toledo. 1882.
Other Helpful Links
Ohio
Historical Society
Paulding
County
Genealogy Society
Ohio Memory
Scrapbook
Paulding
County
Carnegie Library
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Formation,
Organization and Extent
The Indians of Northwestern Ohio,
having ceded their lands to the United States, the Legislature of that
State, by an act of February 12, 1820, proceeded to divided the newly
acquired territory into counties, of which Paulding county is one, and
dates its formation from the above-mentioned year. The county was
named in honor of John Paulding, a native of Peekskill, New York, and one
of the captors of the brave but unfortunate Andrew.
The base line from which the surveys of the
public lands were made was established in May, 1819, by Sylvanus Bourne.
The township lines were established in 1820, by Alexander Holmes, Samuel
Holmes and others; and in 1821-22 the townships were subdivided into
sections by James W. Riley and his assistants.
The county of Williams was organized February 2, 1824, and Paulding county
was attached to it for judicial purposes, until its own organization in
1839. On March the 4th, 1815, by an act of the Ohio Legislature, the
county of Defiance was formed. Its territory was composed of eight
townships taken from Williams county, three from Henry, and a half
township from Paulding. The formation of this new county reduced
Paulding to its present shape, which, were it not for this half township
taken from its northeastern corner, would be a rectangle, extending east
and west, twenty-four miles in length, and eighteen in width. Its present
boundaries embrace ten full townships, six miles square, and Emerald
township, containing thirty-tow sections, and Auglaize township, containing
twenty-two; in all an area of 416 square miles.
First Court and County Seats
Following the organization of the
county, the first Associate Judges, Nathan Eaton, Gilman C. Mudgett and
John Hudson, met in the Fall of 1839, and appointed H.N. Curtis Clerk, pro
tem, and Andrew J. Smith, Sheriff. The first court was held in the
Spring of 1840, at the village of new Rochester, with Hon. Emery D. Potter
as the Presiding Judge. The writer has no means of giving a synopsis
of the business transacted at that court, as the records have not been preserved.
The village was situated on the south bank of the Maumee, about a mile
north of the present village of Cecil. It was at that time the most
flourishing place int he county, containing about thirty or forty
families, three hotels, three store-room, two blacksmith shops, two tailor
shops, and was passed by daily stages that ran on a route from Toledo to
Fort Wayne. But now its buildings have rotted away, its once busy streets
have become deserted, and the cereals area grown upon its sunny slopes;
naught but an old moldering schoolhouse remains to mark the location of
Paulding county's first place of transacting county business.
From New Rochester the county seat was established at Charloe, and the
court and county business removed to that place in the year of 1841.
The village was laid out by Benjamin F. Hollister, and was pleasantly
located on the left bank of the Big Auglaize. A neat, commodious brick
court house was erected, with county offices below and court room
above. It is yet standing, but in a dilapidated and decaying
condition.
Some of the early settlers of Charloe were John W. Ayres, G.H. Philips,
John H. Taylor, A.H. Palmer, and the Hankins and Kingery families. Its
site was that of an old Indian town, where Oquanoxa, an Indian chief,
lived with about six hundred Indians (a portion of the Ottawa tribe),
before they were removed beyond the Mississippi. Charloe's location
is a beautiful one, its scenery is picturesque and grand, and at one time
it was a busy and enterprising village, but, like New Rochester, when
shorn of its county-seat honors, the star if its destiny went down, and
decay was imprinted upon its bosom; many of its first buildings have
crumbled to dues and only a few families remain to tell the story of its
former greatness.
Paulding, the third and present county-seat of the county, was laid out by
George March, August 10, 1850; Ezra J. Smith, surveyor. It is
located on the left bank of Flat Rock, or Crooked Creek, one and a half
miles north of the geographical center of the county. By a special
act of legislature the county-seat was located there in 1851, and the
county business was removed from Charloe in the Spring of that same
year. The site was selected in consequence of its central
position. At first it was in the midst of a heavy forest and almost
without roads or communication with the "outer world."
Many of its first county officers lived in log cabins Its courthouse
was a hastily constructed two story frame and was burned down January 2,
1868. It was supplanted soon after with a neat one-story frame in
which the courts are still held.
The jail was constructed of hewn logs, and was used until 1876, when a
large substantial brick one was erected. The county offices are in a
brick building erected for that purpose.
Paulding has a population of 800, and is fast taking rank as a
manufacturing town; if no withering blights fall upon it as upon the other
county-seats its future will be full of hope, bright and promising, even
as it is at the present writing.
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