Tales!

This guy goes into his barber, and he's all excited. He says, "I'm going to go to Rome. I'm flying on

Alitalia and staying at the Rome Hilton, and I'm going to see the Pope." The barber says, "Ha! Alitalia is a

terrible airline, the Rome Hilton is a dump, and when you see the Pope, you'll probably be standing in back of

about ten thousand people."

So the guy goes to Rome and comes back and the barber says, "How was it?"

"Great," he says, "Alitalia was a wonderful airline. The Rome Hilton Hotel was great. And I got to meet the

Pope."

"You met the Pope?" said the barber.

"I bent down to kiss the Pope's ring."

"And what did he say?"

The Pope said, "Where did you get that crummy Haircut?"

Mansfield Ohio Weather

Mansfield Lahm Municipal Airport, OH

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Greenwich, Ohio

Dealing with Greenwich, Ohio

Greenwich Businesses when you were a kid?

Special Greenwich Events that were important to you?

Stories and other stuff?

Email your thoughts to gpz@grandpazoz.com or write  in the comments area of this post!  Click the “What do you remember when you  were in the Greenwich Area?” HEADER and use the comments section at the bottom of the page.

 

 

 

 

The 1870 village of West Greenwich occupied the Hiram Townsend Plot on this 1845 Plot Map.

The Hiram Townsend Farm is shown on the above 1845 Huron County plot map.  A village map of 1873 is below.

6 Townsend Street - First House in Greenwich in 1896 (Picturesque Huron County)

Hiram Townsend's Farm House - originally built in 1845 - 6 Townsend Street in 2012

The first settler was Henry Carpenter who came to the area in 1817.  There was no one living in the area prior to Carpenter’s arrival. Henry died in 1818 from over exertion at a house raising.  His child Abner was the first born in the township.  E.F. Barker was the second family to arrive. His place of residence was on an 8.75 acre lot which is now (2012) owned by the village of Greenwich.  It was located in the south west corner of the lagoons farm just north of the village. (p.81)

In 1821 Hiram Townsend bought 132 acres in what is now Greenwich. The Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad was chartered in 1836 and the process of purchased right-of-ways started in the early 1840s.  Early landowners, such as the Kniffins, Hiram Townsend and others fought the coming railroad  with several lawsuits for a time but in the late 1840′s Hiram Townsend sold ten acres to the Big Four Railroad for a roadbed, depot, and a park. This is the area bounded by North Railroad Street, South Railroad Street, the east boundary of section 6 (about 250 feet west of Maple Street) and the east-west section line road (now U.S. 224).  This cut his farm buildings off from the rest of his farm. Hiram build a lovely house (now the Church of Christ parsonage) in 1845, the oldest house in section 6 (p.82)     On February 21, 1851 the first train ran from Columbus to Cleveland, through Greenwich.  By 1853 the railroad was in fairly flourishing condition and there was talk of a double track. (p.20)

West Greenwich - in the 1873 Huron County Plot Book

By 1870 houses were being built on a least two edges of his farm.  Now people, eager to build near the depot, wanted his farm.  Townsend died in 1871.  The Greenwich Land and Building Association purchased the land in 1873 and Greenwich mushroomed. The Greenwich Land and building Association was incorporated for “the encouragement of local business interests and the development of the village.” The organization purchased the one hundred twenty acre farm  and divided one-third of it into lots.  The first building on one of these lots was constructed in 1874.  The village grew rapidly from seventy residents in 1874 to more than five hundred in 1879.   At first the new area was called Greenwich Station.  Later the “Station” was dropped (p. 82).

Today Hiram Townsend’s house which he built in 1845 still stands.  It is sturdy and in good repair.  Some construction details, such as floor joists which are smooth on top but still have bark on the other sides, are reminders of its age.  The house today serves as the parsonage for the Church of Christ and is located at 6 Townsend Street, a street named in honor of one of Greenwich’s most interesting pioneers(p.94)

Summarized from “History of the Greenwich Area”  July 1979

 

 

 

 

Greenwich Main Street - 8:30 A.M. - February 2012 - heading West

Unloading Concrete Manholes

 

 

 

 

Weeping Willow Tree coming Down

Willow Tree is Down

Pulling part of the willow tree to the chipper

Tile for sewer project & the chipper

12 Townsend Street Greenwich - Fetter Residence till 2004

This was the Fetter Residence in Greenwich  from before 1960 until their passing in 2004. This picture is from the Picturesque Huron County book from 1896.  A copy can be seen at the Greenwich Library.

Seminary Street/Center Street Intersection - July 2011

Seminary Street/Center Street Intersection in July 2011 before the Tree Removal Project Began.  The next post is a slide show showing Seminary Street trees as they were on Monday, January 23, 2012.

Seminary Street, looking west, on January 22, 2012.  After all the trees are down.

All Photos by Grandma Z

Flat Iron Building in Greenwich, Ohio

Does anyone know when the building looked this way?

Seminary Street/Center Street Intersection - October 2010

Seminary Street/Center Street Intersection - December 2011

Greenwich High School - Seminary Street - circa 1900

What year did this school burn down?