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Geauga County’s beautiful landscape and abundant natural resources have attracted waves of immigrants, from 19th century New Englanders and Amish to 20th century ethnic and suburban families. The result is a fascinating mix of past and present, rural culture and small town life, in seven school districts, sixteen townships, four villages, and one small city-all south of Lake Erie. Over 15,000 years ago, the Wisconsin glacier crept inexorably across northeastern Ohio’s Appalachian Plateau, shearing off and grinding down mountain tops, then depositing fine layers of topsoil and hills of glacial till, full of sandstone and granite pebbles. Massive ledges of Sharon Conglomerate were exposed to weathering and later used for the construction of buildings, roads, and bridges. With the retreat of the glacier, ancient Lake Maumee shrank to become today’s Lake Erie, leaving behind sand ridges for travel. These ridges developed from animal and Native American trails to the roads we know today as Johnny Cake Ridge, Middle Ridge, North Ridge, and Mentor/Euclid Avenue. During the glacial period, valleys were carved for the Grand Geauga, Cuyahoga, and Chagrin Rivers. All three of these major rivers rise today in Geauga County, flow south, then fishhook abruptly northward into Lake Erie. As the climate warmed, life returned to the lakeshore region. Hemlock and white pine trees grew on the hilltops, surrounded by valleys thick with maple, black walnut, chestnut, and oak. The heavy forest sheltered geese, elk, beaver, black bear, and timber wolves. Wild cats (which we know as raccoons) were so prevalent that the Native Americans named the rivers for the animal. The Grand Geauga River took it name from "Sheauga", a Native American word for raccoon. Native Americans hunted game using the ridges and rivers as transportation networks. Archeological excavations have uncovered remains of the Whittlesey people. When the Whittleseys departed the lakeshore during the Iroquois annihilation of the Erie tribe in the 1650’s, Geauga became a part of the far-flung hunting territory claimed by the Iroquois. Through the 1740s European trade focused on the Cuyahoga River, so little evidence has been found of the Native American in Geauga. A pioneer reminiscence recounts a small Native American village on the Upper Cuyahoga near Burton and a chief so taken with a young girl named Limery Umberfield that he offered to purchase her for $1000. When his offer was refused, he threatened to steal her.
Pioneers purchased land, then packed their belongings and dreams into wagons for the muddy, bumpy trek west. They followed the Lake Trail along the ridges of the ancient lakeshore or the Forbes Road through Pennsylvania, heading for a place described as a land of milk and honey in the 1803 Hartford Courant. Many were the families of Revolutionary War veterans.
The sweetest tradition New Englanders brought to Geauga was maple syrup. This tradition is still active through independent syrup production, a permanent sugar camp operated by the Chamber of Commerce on Burton Square, and the annual Geauga County Maple Festival. The Maple festival was founded in 1926 in an attempt to market Ohio syrup in competition with Vermont syrup. The Geauga County News announced that Chardon was "going to treat the general public to a good old fashioned maple sugar eat April 9 and 10." The event featured free dishes of maple syrup, a sugar camp, tapped trees, an ox team gathering sap, and a maple products display. Festival planners expected 5,000 visitors and worried over the April ice storm. Over 15,000 people attended, and now the festival is an annual tradition held the weekend following Easter. New England town planning is still apparent on the landscape. Geauga pioneers believed strongly in a central green surrounded by the community’s most valuable institutions-church, school, and government-and often supplemented by the homes of prominent families and primary commercial establishments. This pattern is preserved in the town squares of Chardon, Burton, and Thompson with variations in Parkman, Huntsburg, Claridon, and Chester. Both Chardon and Burton Square are listed on the National Register of Historic Placesand are the center of numerous community gatherings. Small crossroads communities serving nearby agriculture communities were founded in other areas of the county. East Claridon grew along water and railway transportation networks, while Fowler’s Mill and Fullerton developed as millstream hamlets.
Meanwhile, theGeauga County Commissioners purchased the land for the county seat for $400.00 from Boston entrepreneur Peter Chardon Brooks and the area was named Chardon. In 1812, Captain Edward Paine, Jr., county recorder and clerk of courts, constructed a log cabin on the square to serve as his family home and courthouse.
Geaugans gathered on the square on October 23, 1823, for the first Geauga Cattle Fair and Show. Rail pens were constructed for livestock while smaller articles were exhibited in the courthouse. The Geauga County Agriculture and Manufacturing Society awarded thirteen premiums, six for feminine arts such as table linen and grass bonnets. In 1853, the society moved its fair to permanent grounds in Burton where it remains today as a Labor day weekend event. The Great Geauga County Fair is now Ohio’s oldest, continuously operating fair, having held an exhibition every year since 1823, in spite of date changes, drought, and even war.
Geauga's population continued to grow and diversify. Amish families from Wayne and Holmes Counties migrated into eastern farmland beginning in the 1880’s. Czech-Slovak people from Cleveland moved into western Geauga in the 1890s and purchased 136 acres in 1925 for the small community of Taborville. African-Americans migrated from Georgia after World War I to work in a foundry near today’s Chagrin Falls Park Community. Clevelanders flocked to Geauga for recreation, then permanent homes. The hotels and water cure spa on Little Mountain attracted wealthy Clevelanders from the 1830s into the 1920s. Thompson became well known for the recreational possibilities of its hotel near the Ledges, and became a park in 1941. When the Bass Lake House was abandoned in 1919, a lake community was founded that attracted artists, bankers, and newspapermen. Aquilla Village, also clustered around a lake, incorporated in 1946, as summer cottages became permanent homes.
The extension of the Cleveland and Eastern Interurban into Geauga in 1900 spurred increased tourism. Punderson Lake, now a state park, became a popular destination, as did the hotel and dance hall at Chester Caves. Today Six Flag’s traces it’s origin back to the Giles Picnic Grounds that became the Geauga Lake Amusement Park, established in 1884 near the Erie Railroad. Today, Geauga’s population tops 91,000 and spreads over a landscape varying from western suburban to eastern rural. A key issue is preservation of quality of life. Increasing green space is preserved through parkland and conservancy acquisitions as well as a Farmland Preservation program, new in 2001. Fourteen properties are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Geauga’s beautiful landscape, abundant natural resources, and visual heritage still attract tourists as well as residents.
By: Bari Oyler Stith, Ph.D | |
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