Van Wert County
By Cheryl Bauer
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About this ebook
Cheryl Bauer
Cheryl Bauer grew up in Tully Township and attended Crestview schools. A teacher and journalist, she cowrote the Arcadia book Hamilton with her husband, Randy McNutt. She is coauthor with Rob Portman of the book Wisdom�s Paradise: The Forgotten Shakers of Union Village.
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Hamilton Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Shakers of Union Village Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Madeira Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsButler County Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Van Wert County - Cheryl Bauer
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INTRODUCTION
Van Wert County was as optimistic as any place in America during the golden age of picture postcards in the first two decades of the 20th century. People eagerly showed off their towns, homes, businesses, churches, and schools to postcard photographers. By then, photography had become common enough that photographers could quickly shoot something, develop large amounts of film, and even play tricks on the viewer with retouched photographs and views enhanced by artists.
The picture postcard craze was also fostered by the Private Mailing Card Act of 1898 that allowed for inexpensive (one cent) mailing of cards. The picture side allowed the sender to share a favorite view and the correspondence side provided a quick way to convey a message to loved ones or business associates. Some businesses included a photograph or comic illustration to embellish their advertising postcards.
The cards in this book date from 1873 to the mid-1950s. Convoy, Delphos, Middle Point, Scott, Van Wert, Venedocia, Willshire, and Wren are represented here. The search for postcards from other Van Wert County communities continues.
This project began with a collection of cards I accumulated over 25 years of browsing at flea markets and antiques shows. Having grown up in Tully Township, I started with Convoy cards and branched out from there. When the possibility of a book arose, I was introduced to Ken Cripe, a retired WERT Radio broadcaster and consummate collector of Van Wert postcards.
Ken’s collection, gathered over 30 years and still growing, contains many rare and fascinating cards. I am especially indebted to Ken for his cards of the Van Wert County Fair and the Peony Festival, both of which earned their own chapters. Several postcards from the Van Wert County Historical Society round out the book.
A few general observations can be drawn about life in Van Wert County by looking through these postcards. People worked hard: on the farm, in corner shops, on delivery routes, in factories, and on the railroads that linked thriving villages around a busy county seat. Folks also liked to enjoy themselves by participating in parades, attending the fair, getting together with relatives and friends, and going out to movies and the theater.
Through the years, people have appreciated their rich history. The county was named for Isaac Van Wart, one of a trio of patriots who foiled a treasonous plot by Gen. Benedict Arnold and British spy Maj. John Andre in 1779, during the War for Independence. An infamous clerical error changed the spelling of the county’s name.
Capt. James Riley became the county’s first white settler in 1821, purchasing seven tracts of land near the banks of St. Marys River. Prior to that, many Native American people lived here, including members of the Pottawatomie, Wyandot, Delaware, Shawnee, and Miami nations. The U.S. government set aside 1,280 acres as a reservation for Jean Baptist Richardville, a nephew of the famous Chief Little Turtle, but when Richardville’s people moved on, the land was opened for white settlers. Riley, an adventurer and sailor, named the county’s first town for William Willshire, a British official in Africa who ransomed him after he was shipwrecked and enslaved there in 1815.
From Willshire’s settlement to 1854, when the first train rumbled through Van Wert, growth occurred rapidly. Residents drained swampy land, opened stores, organized churches, and started farms and grain elevators.
Some loss was inevitable. Native Americans who had once established towns and seasonal camps drifted away, hoping to maintain their independence in other regions. The great woods of oak, sycamore, walnut, maple, and ash that once covered the area were harvested to build the county and create a short-lived timber industry.
Transportation, a popular subject of picture postcards, helped shape the county. Delphos grew as a result of commerce on the Miami-Erie Canal, and as the 19th century progressed, the county’s other communities developed along train tracks and depots. When traction cars arrived in the early 1900s, the Fort Wayne-Van Wert and Lima Traction Company helped bring the city and the country together through the interurban electric rail system.
By the 1920s, the increasing availability of automobiles—thanks in part to Ohio City’s John W. Lambert—and sprawling highway networks made transporting people and products even easier. U.S. 30, later a section of the national Lincoln Highway, accommodated east-west travel, and U.S. 224 and U.S. 127 provided north-south routes.
During this time of growth, postcards provided memorable views of Van Wert County, but for us they cannot tell the county’s entire history. That job is best left to the books listed in the bibliography. Their researchers, editors, and writers have captured stories of the men and women who made Van Wert County such a good place to live, work, and visit.
One
AGRICULTURE
Weigh masters at rural grain elevators had to be intelligent, thorough, and absolutely trustworthy. A woman named Miss Mowrey performed the job at Pollock Grain Company in Middle Point at the beginning of