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    10 matches on "Goshen (Ohio)"
    Zeisberger Cemetery in Goshen
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    Zeisberger Cemetery in Goshen  Save
    Description: This 1930s-era photograph shows an area surrounded by an iron fence with 10 stone pillars. The body of David Zeisberger, missionary and founder of nearby Gnadenhutten, as well as William Edwards, missionary, and William Henry "Chief Killbuck" Gelelemend, who was head chief of the Delaware Indian Council, are buried within the enclosure. There are also several rows of Indian graves and a few other missionaries buried in the cemetery. Zeisbergers Memorial Cemetery, sometimes called the Goshen-Indian Cemetery, is located between Goshen Valley Road SE (Township Hwy 322) and David Road SE in Goshen. A Moravian village was established in Goshen in 1798 by David Zeisberger, of Pennsylvania, and a band of Christian Indians. For 16 years after the Gnadenhutten massacre in 1782 the little band of refugees had moved from place to place. In 1798 they went back to Tuscarawas, setting up new villages on the 12, 000 acres of land granted them by Congress, and prospered for a while. But the deaths of the missionaries and the return of Pastor Heckwelder to Pennsylvania left the Ohio converts without effective guidance, and Goshen and the other missions settlements declined. In 1832 Goshen ceded its holdings to the Government for $6, 654, and the town virtually disappeared. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B15F01_018
    Subjects: Cemeteries--Ohio; Moravian Church -- Missions -- Ohio; Gnadenhutten Massacre, Gnadenhutten, Ohio, 1782; Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808
    Places: Gnadenhutten; Goshen (Ohio); New Philadelphia (Ohio); Tuscarawas County (Ohio)
     
    Zeisberger Cemetery in Goshen
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    Zeisberger Cemetery in Goshen  Save
    Description: Handwritten on reverse: "Zeisbergers Cemetery at Goshen. S.H. Green West High Ave. New Phila." This photograph shows an area surrounded by an iron fence with 10 stone pillars. The body of David Zeisberger, missionary and founder of nearby Gnadenhutten, as well as William Edwards, missionary, and William Henry "Chief Killbuck" Gelelemend, who was head chief of the Delaware Indian Council are buried within the enclosure. There are also several rows of Indian graves and a few other missionaries buried in the cemetery. Zeisbergers Memorial Cemetery, sometimes called the Goshen-Indian Cemetery, is located between Goshen Valley Road SE (Township Hwy 322) and David Road SE in Goshen. A Moravian village was established in Goshen in 1798 by David Zeisberger, of Pennsylvania, and a band of Christian Indians. For 16 years after the Gnadenhutten massacre in 1782 the little band of refugees had moved from place to place. In 1798 they went back to Tuscarawas, setting up new villages on the 12,000 acres of land granted them by Congress, and prospered for a while. But the deaths of the missionaries and the return of Pastor Heckwelder to Pennsylvania left the Ohio converts without effective guidance, and Goshen and the other missions settlements declined. In 1832 Goshen ceded its holdings to the Government for $6,654, and the town virtually disappeared. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B09F10_036_1
    Subjects: Cemeteries--Ohio--Tuscarawas County; Moravian Church--Missions--Ohio--History; Gnadenhutten Massacre, Gnadenhutten, Ohio, 1782; Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808
    Places: Goshen (Ohio); Tuscarawas County (Ohio)
     
    Friends Yearly Meeting House, Demascus
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    Friends Yearly Meeting House, Demascus  Save
    Description: This photograph shows the Friends Yearly Meeting House in Damascus in Mahoning County, Ohio. The sign above the door reads "Ohio Yearly Meeting Friends Church August 23-28 1938." Constructed in 1857, the meeting house served as a place of worship and community for members of the Quaker community, and remained in use until 1975. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06839
    Subjects: Quakers; Society of Friends; Quaker meeting houses; Religion in Ohio
    Places: Damascus (Ohio); Goshen Township (Ohio); Mahoning County (Ohio)
     
    Entrance to the Midvale Goshen mine in Wainwright, Ohio
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    Entrance to the Midvale Goshen mine in Wainwright, Ohio  Save
    Description: This is a photograph of Entrance No. 6 to the former Midvale Goshen Coal Co. It was located in Wainwright, Ohio in Tuscarawas County. In the Annual Report of the Adjutant General to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the year ending November 15, 1910 in the Executive documents, annual reports part 3, by Ohio on page 833, the entry for mine number 6 reads: "located in Wainwright, O, on B. & O. R. R. Operated by the same company as No. 4 and under the same management, except Robt. Reichman of Wainwright, O. is mine boss. Slope opening to No. 6, 4 ft. thick. Fan ventilation; motor and mule haulage; machinery mining; double entry system; 82 miners and 24 day hands employed. Visited Feb 3rd, conditions fair." View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B14F01_010_001
    Subjects: Tuscarawas County (Ohio); Coal
    Places: Wainwright (Ohio); Tuscarawas County (Ohio)
     
    National Colors of the 2nd O.V.I.
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    National Colors of the 2nd O.V.I.  Save
    Description: National colors of the 2nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Rectangular flag measures 208 cm high by 195 cm wide. Text on flag reads: Ivy Mountain; Stone River; 2nd OVI; Lookout Mountain; Perryville; Hoover's Gap; Chickamauga; Missionary Ridge. Pinned to flag are three streamers from reunions held in Addison, Goshen and Middletown. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL01863
    Subjects: United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865; Ohio History--Military Ohio
     
    National Colors of the 2nd O.V.I.
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    National Colors of the 2nd O.V.I.  Save
    Description: National colors of the 2nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Rectangular flag measures 208 cm high by 195 cm wide. Text on flag reads: Ivy Mountain; Stone River; 2nd OVI; Lookout Mountain; Perryville; Hoover's Gap; Chickamauga; Missionary Ridge. Pinned to flag are three streamers from reunions held in Addison, Goshen and Middletown. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL01863
    Subjects: Flags--Ohio; United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865
     
    High water on the Tuscarawas River
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    High water on the Tuscarawas River  Save
    Description: The caption reads: "Tuscarawas River under Goshen bridge, Tus. County." The photograph shows the high water of the Tuscarawas River as it passes under the Goshen Bridge in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B14F01_020_001
    Subjects: Tuscarawas County (Ohio); Bridges Ohio; Floods
    Places: Tuscarawas County (Ohio)
     
    Midvale Goshen Coal Co, mine No 7
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    Midvale Goshen Coal Co, mine No 7  Save
    Description: Reverse reads: "The former Midvale Goshen Coal Co. Kaderly- Campbell" The Goshen Oil and Coal company was founded in 1866 during a time when searching for oil was very popular. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B14F01_050_001
    Subjects: Railroad stations--Ohio--Pictorial works.; Coal mines and mining--Ohio
    Places: Wainwright (Ohio); Tuscarawas County (Ohio)
     
    Udney Hyde portrait
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    Udney Hyde portrait  Save
    Description: Photographic reproduction of a daguerreotype of Udney Hyde of Mechanicsburg, Ohio. Hyde's home was a stop on the Underground Railroad, and he is believed to have assisted over 500 slaves on their journey to freedom during his lifetime. Hyde is best remembered for his involvement with the case of Addison White, a fugitive from slavery who took refuge in Hyde's home, and was defended from his owner and federal marshals who sought to take him back to Kentucky by Hyde and the townspeople of Mechanicsburg. While White's case was being adjudicated, Hyde remained a fugitive from authorities who wanted to arrest him for violating state and federal law. Hyde was never captured, and following the White case, he returned home and continued to assist fugitive slaves. Hyde eventually settled in Goshen in Champaign County, and died in 1883. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02981
    Subjects: Mechanicsburg (Ohio); Underground Railroad--Ohio; Ohio History--Slavery, Anti-Slavery and Civil Rights; Fugitive slaves
    Places: Mechanicsburg (Ohio); Champaign County (Ohio)
     
    Hyde home photograph
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    Hyde home photograph  Save
    Description: Photograph of the home of Udney Hyde (1808-1883), which served as a station on the Underground Railroad in Mechanicsburg, Ohio. Hyde was a conductor on the Underground Railroad in Mechanicsburg, and supposedly assisted 513 fugitive slaves in attaining their freedom over his lifetime. Hyde is best remembered for his involvement with the case of Addison White, a fugitive from slavery who took refuge in Hyde's home, and was defended from his owner and federal marshals who sought to take him back to Kentucky by Hyde and the townspeople of Mechanicsburg. While White's case was being adjudicated, Hyde remained a fugitive from authorities who wanted to arrest him for violating state and federal law. Hyde was never captured, and following the White case, he returned home and continued to assist fugitive slaves. Hyde eventually settled in Goshen in Champaign County, and died in 1883. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02980
    Subjects: Mechanicsburg (Ohio); Underground Railroad--Ohio; Ohio History--Slavery, Anti-Slavery and Civil Rights; Fugitive slaves
    Places: Mechanicsburg (Ohio); Champaign County (Ohio)
     
      10 matches on "Goshen (Ohio)"
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