History of Seneca County, Ohio . ; milch cows. 740; dogs, 164; sheep killed bydogs, 24: domestic animals died from disease, 25 hogs. 49 sheep, 8 cattle and3 horses. CONCLUSION. So much has been wiitten in the general history relating to men and eventsconnected with this division of the county, nothing remains for this chaptersave a plain, matter-of-fact statement of its settlement and organization, of its[)ioneers and material progress. The professional men. the politicians, thesoldiers of Venice have all been withdiawn, as it were, from these pages to aidin making up the four chapters of the
History of Seneca County, Ohio . ; milch cows. 740; dogs, 164; sheep killed bydogs, 24: domestic animals died from disease, 25 hogs. 49 sheep, 8 cattle and3 horses. CONCLUSION. So much has been wiitten in the general history relating to men and eventsconnected with this division of the county, nothing remains for this chaptersave a plain, matter-of-fact statement of its settlement and organization, of its[)ioneers and material progress. The professional men. the politicians, thesoldiers of Venice have all been withdiawn, as it were, from these pages to aidin making up the four chapters of the general history devoted to these sub-jects. There are other evidences of the principle. Robbing Peter to payPaul, to be found here; but withal, the writer is confident that the transferof such names and events to the general history will be found appropriate, in-somuch that such transfer is justified by the generality of the subject or itsspecial adaptation to the chapter wherein it finds mention. PART IV. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES,. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, ADAMS TOWNSHIP. ROBERT M. BARTLETT, lumber dealer. P. O. Green Spring. Thepater«al grandparents of the subject of this sketch were Samuel and Elizalxth(Hating) Bartlett. natives of Maine, who came to Ohio diuing the war of in 1820) settled in this county, where they died. Their son, Oliver (the father of Robert M.). was born in Hamilton County. Ohio, inISiy, and was man-ied, in Seneca County, in 1!S44, to Hannah E. AVarner,who was born in ]S26, in Berkley County, Va. (Her jiarents were natives ofVirginia, where her father died, his widow and family coming to Seneca , about 1888, and here Mi-s. Warner ilied at the age of seventy-eiii-htyears.) Oliver L. Bartlett began farm life in this county, where he improvedmany acres of land. In 1844 he removed to Sandusky County. Ohio. Therehe continued farming, reading law in leisure hours, and in a few years he com-menced the practice of law in his neighborho
Size: 2322px × 1076px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublisherchicagowarnerbeers