Fowler Township / Fowler Historic District - Fowler, OH
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member jonathanatpsu
N 41° 18.632 W 080° 39.347
17T E 528812 N 4573287
An historical marker describing the history of Fowler, Ohio
Waymark Code: WM172PC
Location: Ohio, United States
Date Posted: 11/26/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member wayfrog
Views: 1

This Ohio historical marker is located along Youngstown-Kingsville Road (Route 193) in the town of Fowler, Ohio. The sign describes the history of the town, as well as some of the historic buildings located there. The sign was erected in 2009, and was sponsored by the Fowler Township Historical Society and the Ohio Historical Society.

The text on the sign reads:

Fowler Township: Originally called Westfield Township, Samuel Fowler purchased this area in 1798 from the Connecticut Land Company for $12,903.23 while living in Westfield, Massachusetts. His brother Abner arrived the following year to survey the land and separate it into smaller plots that could be sold to people wanting to settle here. A Revolutionary War veteran, Abner was the first to arrive here and also the first recorded death in 1806, the same year that his son Abner Fowler II married the first school teacher in Fowler Ester Jennings. In 1817, Samuel Fowler gave five acres of land to Fowler Center to be used as a park or “common” with the provision that no permanent building ever be built on it. At about the same time, the township name was changed to Fowler to honor its founding family. Agriculture was and remains the main occupation in the Fowler area.

Fowler Historic District: The house on the northeast corner of the intersection of State Routes 305 and 193 was built as a hotel in the late 1840s by A.J. Smith. On the southeast corner is the 1852 brick home built by David Butts as a farm house that now houses two local government offices and the township museum. The 1850 one-room town hall stands on the southwest corner. North of that is a private home that was an early drug store. The post office is located in what was once a buggy repair shop and north of that is the 1864 general store that is still in operation. It was built by Darius Baldwin who also built the large house on the northwest corner, originally used as a hotel in 1865. A veterans memorial that includes named crosses representing every war related fatality from Fowler since the War of 1812 is also located on the northwest corner.

Marker Website: (visit link)
Marker Number: 24-78

County: Trumbull County

Significance of Location: Place

Bicentenial Mark: no

Website address: [Web Link]

Additional Coordinate: Not Listed

Additional Coordinate description: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
If possible, unique photographs taken at the site, are requested. These can be of the site, your companions on your visit, or whatever. Tell of what you learned or thought of the site.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Ohio Historical Markers
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
There are no logs for this waymark yet.