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The City of Monroe
The Village of Monroe was platted and the plat recorded in
1817. The two men whose names were on the plat were John H.
Piatt and Nathanial Sackett. The former was a merchant of
Cincinnati and during the War of 1812 he was the largest
army contractor in the west, it is doubtful if he ever lived
in Monroe, probably his interest was financial. Nathanial
Sackett was a descendant of Simon Sackett, who came to
America with Roger Williams in 1631. The grandfather of
Nathanial was a Presbyterian clergyman of West Chester
County, N.Y. and the father, Nathanial Sr. (1736-1805) was a
member of the Committee of Safety and head of the secret
service at Fishkill, N.Y. during the American Revolution.
Nathanial Jr., who founded Monroe, was married to Elizabeth
Terboss in Fishkill. She was baptized in the Episcopal
church there, in 1800, as an adult age 22. In 1805
Nathanial was baptized, as an adult age 35, (his tombstone
dates and age would make him nearer 36 or 37 in 1805) and in
the same year their daughter, Almira, was baptized. In 1809
a son, William Augustus, was baptized in the same church.
Nathanial Sackette came to Ohio in 1816, probably bringing
his family. In order to try to find a possible link to what
became of Monroe and this family, we will tell the story of
another man.
The last solider of the American Revolution to die in Butler
County was Pierson Sayre. Born in New Jersey in 1761, he
served two and a half years in that war. In 1809 he bought
a tavern called "Cross Keys", seven miles from Hamilton on
the Middletown road. He kept it for a few years, then moved
to Cincinnati and kept a tavern called the "Green Tree".
While in Cincinnati, he bought (from Col. James Clark) a
tract of land in Lemon Township, which under another owner,
was the site of the town of Monroe. He returned to Butler
County in 1814 and kept taverns in Hamilton and served
several terms as sheriff. He died in 1852.
Now it is possible that Pierson Sayre sold the tract of land
in Lemon Township to Mr. Piatt before he returned to Butler
County, and Mr. Piatt and Mr. Sackett were partners in the
founding enterprise.
However the land got into the possession of these men, they
did have it and as President James Monroe took office the
year of the founding, it was named for him.
Mr. Sackett bought a farm, with double log cabin, from a
pioneer named John Baker, (nothing is known of him except
that he had been here before 1800, he died January 4, 1852,
age 77 and is buried in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery).
The first plat of Monroe had a Main Street, (no Old Street)
with three cross streets, (now Lebanon, Church, and Elm) and
three alleys. There was an addition made in 1819, probably
(?) what is now West Elm Street to the end of the old school
yard on Lee Price. The next known addition was not made
until 1919/20 when the rest of Lee Price and Ohio Avenue
were added, in a subdivision known as Fairview.
In 1820 Nathaniel Sackett wrote to his brother Samuel, on
March 12, and told him he had laid out a town and there were
20 houses, 2 stores, and 2 taverns up and a Presbyterian
church on site.
The Presbyterian congregation was here by 1802, and built
first a log church. They may have been building their
second, frame, church at this time; the third, brick church
was built about 1834/35. This second one may be the one he
referred to in his letter.
In the same year Almira Sackett wrote a letter to a cousin
in New York, Dr. John Halstead Sackett, it was dated March
26, 1820 and reads: "Dear Cousin: After a long absence
from you and the rest of our relatives and friends, I am
glad to inform you that we are all at present in the
enjoyment of good health. Father has purchased a very
handsome farm. It is as elevated a situation as any in the
state. He has 100 acres of it cleared and a comfortable
house and barn on it, besides other outbuildings. Father
has laid out a town on a portion of his farm, which improves
very fast and has several handsome buildings on it. He has
named it Monroe, and I think you or some other eminent
doctor would do very well here, as at present we have no
doctors, only quacks, who are not fit to draw a tooth.
Father has a large stock of cattle, sheep and hogs, a yoke
of oxen and four elegant horses as handsome and fat as Old
Sorrel, and he, you know, is a great favorite of mother's.
Riding on horseback is very fashionable here. I have a
beautiful milk-white horse and a splendid saddle and
bridle..." the letter continues with how productive the
soil was and she expected to see "James and Mathew Dubois,
who are talking of moving here this summer."
Almire Sackett married George P. Williamson who was the
second postmaster of Monroe.
Another early settler was Isaac Conover, he came from New
Jersey to Ohio in 1802 and settled in Monroe in 1822. He
was a storekeeper and in business with Sackett. His son
Thomas raised the Butler County Hogs. A grandson I.A.
Conover lived for over 80 years, all of them in Monroe.
There were several early manufacturing establishments.
About 1840 Peter Jotter had a wagon shop and later made a
patented gate and corn markers. His son, William, took over
the business about 1872 and kept it for many years. The
shop was on the corner of the alley next to the hotel,
between Church and Lebanon.
Charles Warner owned the Paragon Plow Works, the business
was started in 1859, Mr. Warner invented the plow in 1976,
and it was the only plow of the type in the country. There
was also a blacksmith shop and Clarence F. Warner carried
this on,, his son, until 1955.
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