Litchfield, Ohio

Litchfield, Ohio
Unincorporated community
Nickname(s): #1 Township in the Country

Location of Litchfield, Ohio
Coordinates: 41°10′04″N 82°01′23″W / 41.16778°N 82.02306°W / 41.16778; -82.02306Coordinates: 41°10′04″N 82°01′23″W / 41.16778°N 82.02306°W / 41.16778; -82.02306
Country United States
State Ohio
County Medina
Township Litchfield
Time zone UTC-5 (Eastern (EST))
  Summer (DST) UTC-4 (EDT)
ZIP codes 44253
Website http://litchfieldtownship.com/

Litchfield is an unincorporated community in central Litchfield Township, Medina County, Ohio, United States. It is situated at the junction of State Routes 83 and 18, about nine miles northwest of the city of Medina.[1]

This town is part of the Buckeye Local School District.[2]

Litchfield Township was originally part of the Western Reserve, a tract of land King George II promised to the Colony of Connecticut in 1662.

Just after the war of 1812, an eastern land speculator and Puritan named Judge Uriel Holmes, Jr. of Litchfield, Connecticut bought the land in this area. Although records are scarce, it seems no one settled permanently in the territory at that time, even though he built three roads, including Smith Road. When no one claimed the land, its ownership reverted to the state of Connecticut and was later set apart as No. 3, Range 16.

The dwellings of the Wyandot Indians were seen along Center Creek as late as 1822, but they eventually moved to other lands as the newcomers to Litchfield and Liverpool vied for the wild game. No traces of them were found by the first settlers of Litchfield Township.

Official settlement of this area began in February 1830, when Cyrus Cook of Connecticut, his wife and child built a brush hut on the north part of the township land. That May, a group of Connecticut farmers and their families arrived; they had purchased or traded for tracts of land. These were our first settlers. In more recent history, the township was known for dairy production, specifically cheese. The term Western Reserve lives on in such institutions as Western Reserve Academy and Case Western Reserve.

Works Cited

Perrin, William Henry and JH Battle. History of Medina County and Ohio: Containing a History of the State of Ohio, from Its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time. Chicago: Baskin & Battey. 1881. EPUB file.

Notable people

References

  1. DeLorme. Ohio Atlas & Gazetteer. 7th ed. Yarmouth: DeLorme, 2004, p. 40. ISBN 0-89933-281-1.
  2. "Buckeye Local Schools :: Home". buckeyeschools.org. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
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