^ *£ ,v A* av , V j ^v ° Y> C»> •*>. 0"^ ^ 0T ♦ Wife, - .0-, o »•••'. ^ ' \^ ■b^. ■ b ^ **U- o^ °\ o * o "o / <3f> *° T *. *^6* 3v 4 ° <\ <-. 'bK •f *0 ^, / HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES RELATING TO THE CITY OF DAYTON, OHIO 1749-1896 Cygifiled by w. a.'shuey, a.m. /0 ^3 «V dayton, ohio United Brethren Publishing House W. J. Shuey, Publisher 1896 \ Copyright, L896 By \v. J. Shuky, Publishes All rights reservt d •-"jo HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES LOCATION AND AREA. Dayton, the county-seat of Montgomery County, Ohio, is located on both banks of the Great Miami River, at the confluence of Stillwater, Mad River, and Wolf Creek with the Miami, and on the line of the Miami and Erie Canal, sixty miles north-northeast of Cincinnati, and seventy-one miles west by south of Columbus. Its latitude is thirty-nine degrees forty-four minutes north, and its longitude is eighty-four degrees eleven minutes west from Greenwich, or seven degrees eleven minutes west from Washington. It is an important station on eleven railroads, which belong to four great systems, namely: The Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis and the Dayton & Western, of the Pennsylvania Lines; the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis and the Dayton & Union, of the "Big Four" System; the Cin- cinnati, Hamilton & Dayton, the Dayton & Michigan, the Cincinnati, Dayton it Ironton, and the Cincinnati, Dayton <& Chicago, of the C, H. & D. System; the New York, Pennsylvania it Ohio, of the Erie System; the Dayton, Lebanon & Cincinnati Railroad, and the Home Avenue Railroad. Thirty- six hard-graveled roads radiate in all directions from the city, with an aggregate length of over six hundred miles. The extreme dimensions of Dayton arc: cast , and west, five and one-eighth miles; north and south, three and one-half miles. Its area is about ten and three-quarters square miles. POPULATION. L796... .About 36. 1840.... 6,067. 1870.... 30,47a 1802... Five families. 1845.... 9,792. 1880.. . .38,678. 181(1.... 383. 1850.... 10,976. 1890.. . .61,220. 1820.... 1,139. 1800.... 20,081. 1896.. . .About 80,000. 1830.... 2,9.") 1. CITY GOVERNMENT AND INSTITUTIONS, i Compiled from latest reports.) Elected for two years; ex officio president of Board of Police Directors and Board of Health, and organizes the City Council; appoints the Board of City Affairs, the Tax Commission, Board of Work-House Directors, and Board of Elections. BOARD OF CITY AFFAIRS. Four members; term of office four years, one being appointed each year by the Mayor; powers executive. 221 222 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES CITY COUNTl I.. Sixteen members, elected from eight wards by the voters of the wards; term <>f office two years, half expiring each year; powers legislative. Measures Involving expenditure and public franchises must be approved by both City Council and Hoard of City Affairs. BOARD OF ELECTIONS. Three members, appointed by the Mayor, one secretary. BOAKI) OF EQTTALIZ VI 'ION. Seven members, elected by the City Council. MISCELLANEOUS. City clerk, elected by t he < touncil; treasurer, elected by the people; comp- troller, solicitor, engineer, sealer of weights and measures, market-master, superintendent of levees, appointed by the Board of City Affairs; wood- measurer, elected by the people. PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Board of Education. — Sixteen members, elected for two years from eight wards by the voters of the wards, half being elected each year. Officers and Teachers. — Clerk, superintendent of instruction, superintend ent of buildings, truant officer, city board of examiners with three members, twenty principals, twenty-five High School teachers, three Normal School teachers, two Manual Training School teachers, four special teachers, 251 district school teachers; total number of teachers, 305. Enumeration of School Youth ( Between six and twenty-one years of age). — Public schools, 10,960; private schools, 240; church schools, 2,102; no1 attend ing, 7,276; grand total, 20,578. Number of Pupils in Public Schools. — District schools, 5,143 boys, 5,037 girls, or a total of 10,180; High School, 297 boys, 174 girls, or a total of 771; Normal School, 31; grand total, 10,982. In Manual-Training School, 45 pupils from the High School and "ti pupils from the eighth grade of the district schools; total, 121. Schools. — Nineteen district schools, one high school, one manual training school, one normal school, two night grammar schools, two night drawing- schools. Buildings. — Twenty-nine district buildings, including annexes, one high- school building, one library building. Total value in 1895, (1,269,416.50; in- cluding personal property, 81,323,525.50. Value of High School: lot, 860,000; building, 8255,000; personal property, 811,358; total, 8326,358. Finances. — Receipts, exclusive of temporary loans and bonds, for the year ending August 31, 1895, 8314,878.14; expenses, exclusive of bonded debt and temporary loans, 8355,700.81; bonded debt, August 31, 1895, $485,000. PUBLIC LIBRARY. Board of six members, elected by the Board of Education; librarian, cal aloguer, five library assistants; occupies a fine stone library building, fire- proof, erected in Cooper Park in 1886-87, and valued at 8100,000; contains 35,325 volumes and 1,292 pamphlets; card and printed catalogues; museum attached; expenses, 1894 95, 810,830.50, of which 82,601.70 was spent for the purchase of books and periodicals, and jl,l)lll.o:i for the museum. CITY GOVERNMENT AND INSTITUTIONS 223 POLICE DEPARTMENT. Organization.— Mayor and four police directors, secretary, police judge, clerk of the police court, superintendent, captain, Ave sergeants, detective sergeant, surgeon, seventy-five patrolmen (eight mounted), two turnkeys, court bailiff, two telephone operators, one police matron. Headquarters. — In City Building. Equipment.— One central station, two substations, one patrol house, two patrol wagons, one ambulance, sixteen horses. Finances.— 1894 : Receipts, $76,622.31; disbursements, 969,959.99; balance, Jan- uary 1, 1895, 16,662.32. A police benevolent association. WORK - HOUSE. Four directors, appointed by the Mayor, superintendent, matron; one work-house. FIRE DEPARTMENT. Organization. — Four fire commissioners, chief and secretary, first assistant chief, second assistant chief, seventy-six firemen. Equipment.— Twelve engine, hose, and hook-and-ladder houses; a fire- alarm telegraph system, with over one hundred boxes; four steam fire- engines; two chemical engines; thirteen hose wagons; three hook-and-ladder wagons; two telegraph wagons; three buggies; thirty-six horses. Finances.— 1895: Cost of maintenance, $67,217.29; value of real estate, $90,500. Service.— Number of alarms in 1895, 344; total loss, $21,978.05; total value of property where fires occurred, $2,012,675; total insurance, $1,011,557. The loss amounted to only about twenty-five cents per capita of the population. A firemen's benevolent association. WATER - WORKS. Established, 1870. Organization.— Three trustees, secretary, assistant secretary, chief engineer, first assistant engineer, second assistant engineer, superintendent of street department, two inspectors and collectors. Equipment.— One pumping-house; three engines, with combined daily capacity of 29,000,000 gallons; eighty-five eight-inch tube-wells, driven to a depth of forty-five to fifty feet; over ninety-six miles of street mains, 937 fire-hydrants, 8,607 service connections, 1,300 meters. Finances.— Total expenditures, 1870 to December 31, 1895, $1,792,560.39; total income to December 31, 1895, $938,872.77; net cost to December 31, 1895, $853,- 687.62; water-works bonded debt, November, 1895, $765,000, which is gradually being paid; cost of pipe, hydrants, etc., and laying of same, 1870-95, $700,000; received from sale of water, 1870-95, $860,926.83; net earnings, 1870-95, $342,000. Quality of the Water.— The quality of the water, by recent analysis, has been found to be first-class. It is clear, cold, and remarkably free from injurious matter. In a recent analysis an average of only forty-eight germs to the cubic centimeter were found in the samples examined. The average temperature in the pipes is about 50°. BOARD OF HEALTH. Mayor and six members of the board, health officer, secretary, meat inspector, four sanitary policemen. 224 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES CITTt INI- IKMAKY. Three directors, superintendent, clerk, city physician. MARKETS. Two market-houses, with street markets adjoining; one market-master. TAX COMM tSSION. Six members, appointed by the Mayor. TAXES. ( Hty Expenses, 1891, 95. Board of Health and Sanitary LO mills 84,104 82 Bridges 25 mills 10,262 05 Elections 15 mills 6,157 23 Fire Department 1.75 mills 71,834 37 General Expense imi mills 24,628 93 Hospitals ( Deaconess and St. Elizabeth) 05 mills 2,052 11 Infirmary 05 mills 2,052 (1 Lighting 70 mills 28,733 75 Police Department L.10 mills 15,153 03 Parks and Levees 05 mills 2,052 11 Streel Cleaning 7.") mills 30,786 16 Street Improvement 35 mills 14,366 87 Sewers 05 mills 2,052 II Work House 05 mills 2,052 11 SchoolPaving L0 mills 4,104 82 6.10 mills $250,394 08 City [nteresl and Sinking Fund 5.45 mills •-"-'•"..til' 7:i -I71.hu; si Board of Education, 1895 98. Regular Levy 7.00 mills 8288,974 19 Manual-Training School 20 mills 8,256 11 Public Library •_'.". mills 10,320 52 Taxes for All Purposes, 1895-96. City, County, and State 26.00 mills $1,073,333 82 Tax Valuation, 1895 96. Taxable Property $41,282,070 BONDED DEBT. Oi in ml Bonds. ( Principal and Interest payable from a direct tax upon t he < J-eneral I duplicate.) ( Outstanding March I, 1895 Bridge 868,000 00 City Hall 7l,l«)lMiii City Prison 10,000 00 Extending Indebtedness 150,000 00 Fire Department 24,000 00 Funded Debt 249,000 00 PERIODICALS — CHURCHES 225 Outstanding March 1, 1895— General Street and Improvement $50,000 00 Levee 30,000 00 Park Street Sewer 120,000 00 Police Deficiency 30,000 00 Sewer 150,000 00 St reet Paving 528,000 00 Southwestern Sewer 17,000 00 Street Improvement 150,000 ill) Wolf Creek Improvement 50,000 00 Water -Works 505,000 00 Water- Works Enlargement 3,000 00 Water- Works Improvement 280,000 00 Total 82,197,000 00 Improvement Bonds. (Principal and interest payable from assessments upon abutting or benefited property.) Outstanding March 1, 1895— Street Paving 51,178,000 00 Sewer 180,000 00 Special Assessment 86,165 00 Total $1,394,165 00 PERIODICALS. SECULAR. Daily. — Six, one of which is German. Weekly.— Nine, one of which is German. Monthly.— Two. Total.— Seventeen. RELIGIOUS. Weekly.— Eleven, one of which is German. Semimonthly.— Nine, one of which is German. Monthly.— Three. Quarterly. — Nine, one of which is German. Total.— Thirty-two. Grand Total.— Forty-nine. CHURCHES. Baptist, 11. Methodist Episcopal, African, 2. Baptist Brethren, 1. Methodist Protestant, 1. Christian, 2. Methodist, Wesleyan, 1. Congregational, 1. Presbyterian, 7. Disciples of Christ, 2. Protestant Episcopal, 3. Dunkards, 2. Reformed, 5. Evangelical Association, 2. Roman Catholic, 7. Hebrew, 3. Salvation Army, 1. Lutheran, 7. United Brethren in Christ, 12. Methodist Episcopal, 10. United Presbyterian, 1. Total, 81. 15 226 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES CHURCH AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS. PROTESTANT. Union Biblical Seminary, the theological school of the Church of the United Brethren in Christ; four professors, one general manager, and forty- three students. St. Paul's German Lutheran School, common branches. ROMAN CATHOLIC. Eight parochial schools and academies, St. Mary's Institute; twenty-one officers and professors, 275 students in Institute, and 120 students in normal department. PRIVATE. Miami Commercial College. Young Ladies and Misses' School. Dayton Commercial College. Home School for Boys. English Training School. Conservatory of Music. Deaver Collegiate Institute. Dayton College of Music. BENEVOLENT AND CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS. Young Men's Christian Association.— A Protestant institution, founded in 1870; occupies a tine stone front building on the south side of Fourth Street, between Main and Jefferson; valueof property, over $100,000; membership, over 2,500; conducts religious, educational, and physical departments, includ- ing manual training and industrial education; has reception-room, par- lors, reading room, junior room, educational rooms, shop, entertainment hall, gymnasium, bath rooms, and athletic park; receipts in 1894-95,819,386.95; expenses, 819,269.65. Woman's Christian Association. A Protestant institution, founded in 1870; occupies excellent brick buildings on the south side of Third Street, between Ludlow and Wilkinson; value of property, 860,000; membership, about 350; includes a young woman's department; conducts religious, charitable, educational, and physical departments, lunch-room, and exchange; has r pt ion room, parlors, reading-room, educational rooms, entertainment hall, industrial class room, gymnasium, bath rooms, etc.; receipts in 1894-95, 84,279.41; expenses, 84,242.92. Young Women's League. — Founded In 1895; occupies a brick building on the west side of Jefferson Street, between Fifth and Sixth streets; member- ship, 450; conducts religious, educational, and physical departments, and lunch-room. Young Men's Institute.— A Roman Catholic institution; occupies a brick building on the south side of Fourth Street, between Ludlow and Wilkinson. ,S7. Joseph's Institute. — Conducted by the Catholic Gesellen-Verein, for the benefit Of young men; organized in 1868; furnishes reading-room, gymna- sium, and free circulating library; building Located on Montgomery Street. Protestant Deaconess Home ami Hospital. — Founded in 1890 by the Protestant Deaconess Society of Dayton; occupies an expensive pressed-brick building On south side of Apple Street, between Main and Brown, costing, with equipment, about 8150,000; capacity, 17."> patients. ,S7. Elizabeth Hospital. A Roman Catholic institution, founded in 1878; conducted by the Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis; occupies a large brick SOCIETIES AND CLUBS 227 building on the west side of Hopeland Street, between Washington and Albany, costing over $65,000; capacity, 242 patients. Widows' Home.— Founded in 1875, by the Woman's Christian Association; occupies a brick building on the northeast corner of Findlay and May streets; capacity, twenty-eight inmates; endowment, $37,358.79; receipts, for year ending October 5, 1895, S3.124.99; expenses, $2,911.59. Montgomery County CMldren's Home.— Founded in 1866; occupies a brick building on the east side of Summit Street, south of Home Avenue; number of inmates in February, 1895, fifty-one, of whom thirty-eight were boys and thirteen were girls; total received from the founding, 1,864. Christian Deaconess Home.— Monument Avenue, West Side. Children's Home. — 116 South Ringgold Street. Bethany Home.— For homeless girls and women; 159 East Park Street. National Soldiers' Home (Central Branch (.— Founded in 1867; located a short distance west of the city; grounds cover six hundred and twenty-five acres; number of inmates, about 6,000. Southern Ohio Asylum for the Insane. — Founded in 1852; located at the south end of Wayne Avenue; capacity, 800 patients. Humane Society. Women's Christian Temperance Union, No. 1. Women's Christian Temperance Union, No. 2. St. Joseph's German Catholic Asylum. Other Societies.— Numerous lodges of Masons, Knights of Pythias, Knights of St. John, Odd Fellows, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, Grand Army of the Republic, Sons of Veterans, Woman's Veteran Relief Union, Order of United American Mechanics, Knights of Labor, trades unions, and other orders. LITERARY AND MUSICAL SOCIETIES. Present Day Club. Shakespeare Club. Woman's Literary Club. Philharmonic Society. " H. H." Club. Mozart Club. Emerson Club. Harmonia Society. Friday Afternoon Club. Maennerchor. POLITICAL CLUBS. Garfield Club. Thurman Club. Jackson Club. Lincoln Club. Gravel Hall Club. SOCIAL, CYCLING, GYMNASTIC, AND OTHER CLUBS. Dayton Club. Dayton Gymnastic Club. Dayton Bicycle Club. Dayton Turngemeinde. Y. M. C. A. Wheelmen. Stillwater Canoe Club. Dayton Lawn Tennis Club. Ruckawa Canoe Club. Dayton Angling Club. Dayton Camera Club. MILITARY COMPANIES. Phoenix Light Infantry, Company G, Third Regiment Infantry, Ohio National Guard. Gem City Light Infantry, Company I, Third Regiment Infantry, Ohio National Guard. 228 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES STREET-RAILWAYS. City Railway. — Third Street Line, from the easl end of Third Streel to the Soldiers' Home; electric; Length of Line, over six miles of double track and less than one-quarter mile of single track. Fifth street Line, from the easl end of Huffman Avenue to the Soldiers' Home; electric; Length of line, six and one half miles of double track and about one half mile of single track. Green Line, from the east end of Richard street to the corner of Fifth and Wilkinson ; electric; Length of Line, over two miles of double track, Authorized capital, $2,100,000; total length of lines operated, over fourteen and one half miles of double track and aboul three-quarters oi a mile of single track. Oakivood Street-RaUway.- from the north end of Salem street in Dayton View to Oak wood, at the south end of Brown street; electric; capital, $300,- 000; length of line, about four miles of double track. White Line Street -Railway. — From the corner of Main street and Forest Avenue in Biverdale, via .Main, Third, Ludlow, Washington, and German- town streets to the Soldiers' Home; electric; capital, $400,000; Length of line, about six miles of double track. Wayne Avenue and Fifth Street Railway. — From the south end of Wayne Avenue, via Wayne Avenue. Fifth, Jefferson, First, Keowee, and Valley streets to the east end of Valley Street in North Dayton; horse-cars; capital, $100,000; Length of line, about three miles of double track and about one mile of single track. Dayton Traction Company.- South Main street, from the corner of Fifth and extending to Calvary Cemetery ; electric; capital, $250,000; length of line, one and one half miles of double track and one and one-half miles of single track. Total Length of streel railways operated, over twenty nine miles of double track and about three and one-quarter miles of single track. About two and one half miles of double track being used jointly, the net Length of double track is about twenty-six and one-half miles. STREET IMPROVEMENTS. Total length Of streets in the city, one hundred and fifty-eight miles, of which nearly twenty-five miles are paved, as follows: asphalt, fourteen miles; brick, nearly nine miles; granite, over one mile; Medina stone, over one-half mile. Total cost of paving, $1,800,000. Eighty-three miles of si reets are graded and graveled, and fifty miles are unimproved. Thirty-nine miles of sanitary sewers and forty miles of storm sewers have been laid, at a cost of $495,000. COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL. Board Of Trade. — Officers : president, first vice-president, second \ice pres- ident, secretary, treasurer, fifteen directors. National Banks. - Seven, with combined capital of $2,500,000, and cash assets Of over $3,000,000; a clearing house. Building 7.35 Number of Money Orders Paid 60,058 Value of Money Orders Paid $333,093.77 Pieces of First-Class Mail Received 4,480,000 Pieces of All Other Classes Received 3,948,800 Special Letters Received 9,831 Pieces of First-Class Mail Dispatched 7,020,907 Pieces of All Other Classes Dispatched 7,054,850 Special Letters Dispatched 6,257 Registered Letters and Parcels Received 40,920 Registered Letters and Parcels Dispatched 19,742 Total Number Pieces Received and Dispatched 23,120,645 Weight in Pounds of Second-Class Matter Mailed by Publishers... 47,441 Number of Carriers 40 Mail Trains Arriving Daily 39 Mail Trains Departing Daily 42 PARTIAL ENUMERATION OF MERCANTILE, MANUFACTURING, AND OTHER BUSINESS CONCERNS. Abstracters of Titles 4 Agricultural Implements, Deal- ers 10 Agricultural Implements, Mfs.. Architects 10 Architectural Iron, Manuf 1 Art Glass 1 Artificial Flowers 1 Artificial Stone Pavements 2 Artists 22 Asbestos Packing and Mill Boards 1 Asphalt Pavements 2 Asphalt Roofing 2 Attorneys-at-Law 123 Auctioneers 6 Autographic Registers, Manufs. 2 Awnings, Manuf s 4 Bakeries 50 Bakers' Supplies l Baking-Powder, Munufs 6 Banks, National 7 Barber Shops 120 Barbers' Supplies 1 Baskets, Manufs 9 Bicycles, I lealers 13 Bicycles, Manuf 1 Blackboards, Slate Stone, ML... I Blacking, Manuf 1 Blacksmith Shops 36 230 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES Blank Hooks, Manufs 5 Boarding Bouses 72 Boal Houses 3 Boats, Mamif 1 Boilers, Steam, Manufs 4 Bolt and Screw Cases 1 Bookbinders o Bookbinders' Machinery, Mf... 1 Book-Cover Dies and Tools 1 Book Publishers 4 Booksellers and stationers 10 Boot- and Shoe-Makers 118 Boots and Shoes. Retail -id Boots anil Shoes, Wholesale 1 Boxes, Manuf 1 Brass-Founders 3 Brass Goods 2 Brass Stamps 2 Breweries 17 Brick, Manufs 11 Bricklayers 17 Brickmaking Machinery 1 Brokers 18 Brooms, Manufs 11 Brushes, Manufs 2 Building and Loan Associations 17 Candy, Manufs 4 Candy-Molds, Manuf 1 Canning Factory 1 Carbon, Manuf 1 Car-Furnishings, Manuf 1 Carpenters and Builders lis Carpet Cleaners 7 Carpet Dealers 14 Carpet Weavers 11 Carriages and Buggies, Dealers. . 4 Carriages and Buggies, Manufs. !i Cars, Railroad, Manuf 1 Cash Registers, Manuf 1 Caterers 2 Cement Pavements 13 Chain, Manufs 2 Chairs, Manuf 1 China and Queen sware Dealers. 10 church Furniture 1 Cigar Boxes, Manufs 3 Cigar Dealers •")•'; Cigars, Manufs 58 Cistern Builders 5 Civil Engineers 6 Clearing-House 1 Clergymen 135 Clothing Dealers 27 Clothing Renovators 19 ( 'oal Dealers 40 Coal Miners 4 ( 'old Storage 1 Commercial Colleges 2 Commission Merchants ll ( on fed i oners, Retail 55 Confectioners, Wholesale 10 Cooper Shops 7 Coppersmith 1 Corsets, Manufs 3 Cotton Batting 1 Daily Markets 112 Dairies 25 Dental Electrical Specialties 1 Dentists 31 Detective Agency 1 Dressmakers 300 Druggist, Wholesale 1 Druggists and Apothecaries 55 Dry Goods, Retail 44 Dry Goods, Wholesale 4 Dye Houses 2 Electric Construction and Sup- plies 5 Electric Light Company 1 Electric Supplies, Dealer 1 Electrical Engineers 2 Electrical Goods, Manuf 1 Electrotypers 2 Employment Agency 1 Engravers Express Companies 7 Fancy Goods. 8 Fans, Ventilating 1 Feed Stores 32 Fences, Manufs , 4 File-Cases, Manuf 1 Files, Manufs 2 Fire-Alarm Operators 1 Fi re-Brick and Clay 4 Flavoring Extracts 2 Flax-Mill 1 Florists IS Flour-Mills 9 Freight Lines 9 Fresco Artists 2 Fruit-Growers 11 Fruits, Retail 10 Fruits, Wholesale 6 Furnaces, Warm Air 7 Furniture, Dealers 10 Furniture, Manufs 5 COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL 231 Furniture-Cars 12 Galvanized Iron Cornices 6 Gas-Burners and Appliances... 1 Gas Company 1 Gas Company, Natural 1 Gas-Engine, Manufs 3 Gas-Fitters and Fixtures 15 Gas-Machine, Manuf 1 Gas Range and Heater. Manuf. 1 Gasoline Stove, Manuf 1 Grain Dealers 5 Grain Elevator 1 Grocers, Retail 307 Grocers, Wholesale 9 Guns, Pistols, etc 2 Gunsmiths 3 Hardware and Cutlery 12 Harcrware, Wholesale 4 Harness and Saddles 17 Hats and Caps 20 Hedges 1 Hotels 19 House-Furnishing Goods 8 House-Movers and Raisers 2 Hubs, Spokes, etc 2 Hydraulic Machinery 2 Ice, Dealers 3 Ice, Manufs 2 Ice Cream 13 Ice and Refrigerator Machin- ery, Manuf 1 Ink, Manuf 1 Insurance Agents 38 Insurance Companies, Fire 9 Insurance Companies, Life 2 Iron-Founders 10 Iron Posts, Manuf 1 Iron- and Wood- Working Ma- chinery 1 Jewelers 26 Justices of the Peace 4 Kindergartens 3 Lamps and Lamp Goods 1 Lasts, Manufs 2 Laundries 17 Leather and Findings 2 Lime, Plaster, and Cement 11 Linseed- and Cotton -Oil Ma- chinery 2 Linseed Oil, Manufs 4 Lithographers 3 Livery-Stables 36 Loan Agents. 6 Loan Offices 5 Locksmiths 2 Lumber Dealers 15 Machine Knives, Manuf 1 Machine Tools 2 Machinists 15 Machinists' Tools 1 Malleable Iron Works 1 Mantels and Grates 4 Marble Dust 1 Marble Quarry 1 Marble Works 8 Mattresses, Manufs 4 Meats, Wholesale 2 Mechanics' Tools 3 Medicines, Patent 19 Men's Furnishing Goods 32 Mercantile Agencies 3 Milk Depots 8 Mill Supplies 4 Milliners, Retail 41 Milliners, Wholesale 2 Mineral Water, Manufs 2 Mittens, Manuf 1 Model Makers 2 Motor, Water, Manuf 1 Music Colleges 2 Music Publisher 1 Music Teachers 80 Musical Instruments, Dealers.. 5 News Depots 8 Notaries Public 114 Notions, Retail 20 Notions, Wholesale 5 Novelties, Manufs 2 Nozzles, Manufs 2 Nurseries 6 Nurses 37 Oculists and Aurists 3 Oils 15 Opticians 5 Overalls, Manufs 3 Oysters, Fish, and Game 7 Pails, Manuf 1 Paint, Manuf 1 Painters, House and Sign 73 Paints, Oils, etc 7 Pants, Manufs 3 Paper, Dealers 3 Paper, Manufs 7 Paper Bags 1 Paper-Box Makers' Machinery. 1 Paper Boxes, Manufs 2 S32 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES Paper Bangers 27 Paper I langings it Paper Mill Machinery 1 Paper and Wooden Plate, ML... l Parquetry Floors 1 Patenl Attorneys 3 Patenl Solicitors 2 Pattern-Makers ll Pension Attorneys 2 Pension t hiiin A.gents 3 Perfumery, Manul I Photographers it Photographers' Supplies 2 Physicians II" Pianos and ( >rgans 7 Pictures and Picture I'' rallies. .. it Planum Mills 8 Plasterers 21 Plo\v<, Manufs 2 Plumbers 15 Pork Packers 4 Potteries 2 Poultry Dealers 2 Printers. Book and Job 26 Pumps 8 Putty, Manul 1 Rags, .Metals, etc 7 Railroad Ticket Brokers :! Railway < Jars, Manuf 1 Kail\va.\ Supplies, Manuf 1 Real Estate 62 Restaurants 23 Popes and Cordage l Rubber Goods 1 Rubber stamps 3 Sale Deposit < 'onipanies 2 Saloons 399 Sash, Doors, and Blinds, Manufs 9 Sawmills 2 Saws, Manufs 2 Scales, Computing, Manuf 1 School Furniture, Manuf 1 Screws, Manuf 1 Sculptors 2 Sealing Wax, Manuf 1 Second Hand Stores 2 Seeds 1 Sewer Pipe 7 Sewing Machines, Dealers 15 Sewing-Machines, Manuf 1 sheet iron Workers •'! Shirts, Manufs (> Shoes, Manuf 1 Showcase Dealers 2 Si>.'ii Painters 10 Soap. Manufs (i Spice-Mills 5 Spraying-Machines, Manufs 2 Stained (ilass 1 stair Builder 1 Stationers 12 Steam-Engine Builders 3 Steam-Fitters 7 Steamship Agents 3 Stencils 2 Stenographers 6 Sto.dc Yard 1 Stockings, Manuf 1 Stone-Cutters' Tools, Manufs. .. :; Stonemasons 22 Stone-Quarries 3 Si one ware 2 Stone- Yards 5 Storage -1 stove Polish, Manuf 1 Stoves, Manufs 3 Stoves and Tinware, Dealers... .T> Straw Hoards, Manuf 1 Si net < 'a is, Manuf 1 st reel ( lonl ractors hi Street-Paving Contractors 2 street Sprinklers 7 Subscription Books 3 Sweeping-Machines, Manuf 1 Switch and ( !ar Locks, Manuf.. 1 Table Slides, Manuf 1 Tablets, Manuf l Tags, Manuf 1 Tailors, Merchant 38 Teas and Coffees, Retail 10 Teas and Coffees, Wholesale J Telegraph Companies 3 Telephone ( 'ompan v 1 Telephone ( 'oust ruction I Theaters 2 Tinware In Tobacco, Leaf 22 Tobacco, Manufs ;j Tobacco Machinery l Toilet Articles, .Manuf l Toys 3 Transfer Companies 2 Trunk Materials 1 Trunks, Valises, etc. 4 Twines and Cordage 2 Typewriters 3 CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD 233 Umbrellas, Manuf 1 Wheels, Manul 1 Undertakers 10 White Lead, Manuf 1 United States Commissioner.... 1 Wind Engines 1 Upholsterers 10 Window Glass 2 Varnish, Manufs 2 Window Shades B Veterinary Hospital 1 Wood Dealers 11 Veterinary Surgeons 4 Wood- and Iron-Working Ma- Wagon-Makers 26 chinery 1 Washing-Machines, Manuf 1 Wood Mantels, Manuf 1 Water-Supply 2 Wood and Willow Ware 2 Water-Wheels, Manufs 2 Yeast, Manufs 3 CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD. 1740 — French Major Celoron de Bienville ascended the La Roche or Big Miami River. 1751— Gist visited the Twightwee or Miami villages. 1780 — ( reneral George Rogers Clark led an expedition against the Indians of the Miami region, one of his officers being Colonel Robert Patterson. 1782 — November 9, A skirmish between American soldiers under General Clark and the Indians on the site of Dayton, in which the Amer- icans were victorious. 1786— Americans under Colonel Logan again defeated the Indians on the site of Dayton, one of the brigades being commanded by Colonel Robert Patterson. 1789— Plans formed for a town named Venice on the site of Dayton. 17!i.") — August 3, A treaty of peace made with the Indians at Greenville. < Ihio, l>y General Wayne — August 20, The site of Dayton purchased by Generals St. Clair, Dayton, and Wilkinson, and Colonel Ludlow — November, The town laid out by Colonel Israel Ludlow. 1796 — April 1, Arrival of first settlers, by the Miami River, landing at the head of St. Clair Street; two other parties coming a few days later by land — Newcom's first log cabin built. 179X— First sermon preached in Dayton by Rev. John Kobler, of the Metho- dist Episcopal Church— First Methodist Episcopal class, now Grace Church, organized, with eight members — Newcom's Tavern built— Taxes pai.l, $29.74. 1799 — First Presbyterian Church organized — Blockhouse built — First school opened— First industries established, consisting of distillery, saw- mill, and coin-cracker mill — First lime made — First flatboat left for New ( trleans — Dayton three years old and contained nine cabins — Only two houses on Main Street — D. C. Cooper appointed justice of the peace. 1800— Presbyterian meeting-house, eighteen by twenty feet in size, built of logs, on northeast corner of Main and Third streets — August 28, First wedding in Dayton, that of Benjamin Van Cleve and Mary Whitten —April 1-1, First child born in Dayton, Jane Newcom — First store opened, in Newcom's Tavern. 1801 — First male child horn in Dayton, John \V. Van Cleve. 1802 — Only rive families in Dayton — Ohio admitted into the Union. 1803 — D. C. Cooper resuscitated the town — Montgomery County organized — Dayton made the county-seat — First court held in Dayton — New- com's Tavern used as court-house, jail, church, and country store. 234 HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL TABLES 1804— Post office and mail-route established Mail every two weeks, between Cincinnati and Detroit, via Dayton -Letter postage twenty to twenty live cents — Log jail built on Court house lot — First grist- ii) i 11 erected Taxes for the year. 8458.40. I silo— The town of Dayton incorporated — First town election held -Presby terian log meeting-house sold for twentj two dollars and services continued in log tavern— Dayton Social Library Society incorpo- rated—First brick building erected— First disastrous Hood. 1806— First Court-house built, of brick, on present Court-house lot— Two brick stores erected -First newspaper published. 1807— Dayton Academy incorporated. 1808 First brick residence built — 196 votes cast — Repertory first published. 1809— Freight line of keel-boats established between Dayton, Laramie, and St. Mary's— Fourth of July celebrated with a procession —First drug-store opened — First political convention in the county. 1810— Population, 883— New sidewalks ordered by Select Council — Ohio Centi- nel first published. 1811 — Nine tlatboats left for New Orleans, with products of the surrounding country — A comet visible, and severe earthquake shocks felt. 1812— A company enlisted for the War of 1812— Ohio militia encamped in Dayton. 1813 First society of mechanics organized — First Dayton bank chartered — August l.'i, Present < J rand Opera House lot, on southeast corner of Main and First streets, purchased by .lames Steele and Joseph Peirce for twenty dollars. 1KU — First Methodist church completed — Ferry began to Operate at Ludlow Street— Ohio Republican first published — First Dayton bank opened for business— A 11 1. 1815— Dayton Female ( 'haritable and Bible Society organized — First market- house opened About one hundred dwellings in Dayton, chiefly log cabins — Moral Society and Society of Associated Bachelors formed — First school for girls opened. 1816— Firsl theater held in Dayton— Ohio Watchman first published. 1817— New Court-house finished -Presbyterians erected a brick church — St. Thomas Episcopal Parish organized— Bridge across Mad River built — Bridge Street Bridge Company incorporated — First Sabbath- School Association organized — Only two carriages owned in Dayton. 1818 — Stage coach line began to run between Dayton and Cincinnati. 181!) — A keel-boat arrived from Cincinnati — St. Thomas Episcopal church Organized— An African lion exhibited at Keid's Inn -Bridge at Bridge street completed. 1820— ( looper's Mills burned — Population, 1,000. 1822— Montgomery County Bible Society organized — Lancasterian method of instruction introduced The Gridiron published — Seven tlatboats and one keel boat left for New Orleans. 1823 Miami Republican ami Dayti ,,i Advertise)- first published. 1824— First Baptist Church organized First cotton factory erected, by Thomas Clegg. 1825— Law passed authorizing tin' construction of a canal from Dayton to Cincinnati -Stage line established between Columbus. Dayton, and Cincinnati— 4!I7 passengers by stage passed through Dayton during the year. 1826— The Watchman and Miami Republican consolidated, and named the CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD 235 Ohio National Journal and Montgomery and Dayton Advertiser, after- ward becoming tbe Dayton Journal. 1827 — First volunteer fire company organized — Baptist society built a church. 1828 — Water first turned into the canal — First canal-boat launched — Twenty stage-coaches arrived every week — First iron foundry established, now the Globe Iron Works — A flood. 1829 — First arrival of canal-boats from Cincinnati — First temperance society formed — A new market-house built — Last factory established, now Crawford, McGregor & Can by 's Dayton Last Works — Steele's dam constructed — A majority of the First Baptist Church established a Campbellite church, now the Church of Christ. 1830 — Population, 2,954 — Dayton Republican first published. 1831 — First public school opened — Christ Church Parish organized — First Catholic family arrived in Dayton — R. C. Sehenck began practice of law in Dayton. 1832— A fugitive slave captured in Dayton — First Board of Health appointed — Fifty-one brick and sixty-two wooden houses built — A silk man- ufactory established — Dayton Lyceum organized— First parochial school opened — A flood — Mad River & Lake Erie Railroad Company incorporated. 1833— First Reformed Church organized — Mechanics' Institute organized- Population, 4,000— Thirty-three deaths from cholera. 1834 — Democratic Herald first published — Police Department organized. 183.") — Firemen's Insurance Company chartered. 1836 — Main Street bridge opened for travel— First book published. 1837 — Emmanuel Catholic Church dedicated. 1838 — The "public square," now Cooper Park, prepared for and planted with trees — Convention held in the interest of free schools — Dayton and Springfield turnpike constructed — Montgomery County Agricul- tural Society organized — Erection of public school-houses ordered. 1839 — Dayton Township first divided into election precincts — First county agricultural fair held— Population, 6,064 — Dayton Silk Company organized, with capital of $100,000 — First English Lutheran Church organized. 1840 — Harrison campaign — General Harrison visited Dayton — Dayton Jour- nal began to issue first daily paper — Emmanuel Church of the Evangelical Association organized — Population, 6,067 — Paper-mill established — Montgomery County Mutual Fire Insurance Company organized. 1841 — The works of W. 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