Historical Houses
Overview
Dryer House
Ealy House
Kern-Harrington Museum
Photos for National Registry
Color
Black and White
More Ealy house photos
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The Ealy House
The New Albany Plain Township Historical Society at present is restoring the
Ealy House at 6359 Dublin-Granville Road, a mid-nineteenth-century building
reflective of historical development in the area.
The Ealys were a German family that immigrated to the United States in the
eighteenth century. By 1830 a branch had established itself next door to Ohio in
Washington County, Pennsylvania. In that year John Henry Ealy bought for $225 a
75-acre parcel where the Ealy House stands and moved his family there.
An interesting historical feature of the land John Henry bought is that it was part
of the 4000 acres in the southwest quarter of Plain Township which Dudley
Woodbridge bought from the Federal Government in 1800 and sold to John Huffman
in 1802. Huffman proceeded to sell off his holdings through metes-and-bounds
surveys. In 1820 Huffman sold what later became the Ealy parcel to his daughter
Catherine Roth for $120. In 1830 she sold it to John Henry. In the ways indicated,
John Henry's acquisition leads back into the early disposition of Federal lands in
central Ohio.
The 1830's were a time of much activity in the area. Noble Landon and William Yantis laid
out the town of New Albany in 1837. Shop keepers and craftsmen soon established
themselves along the High Street. John Henry dammed Rose Run, which ran through
his land, and constructed one of at least five water-powered sawmills in Plain Township,
which operated from the 1830's to the 1850's.
John Henry died in 1845. His will left all of his land to his son
George and half-interests in his mill to George and his brother Peter. Other
siblings in other ways found
footing in the Township's agrarian-entrepreneurial class. In time George felt ready to
follow a pattern familiar to those who were prosperous like himself,
namely, to build a substantial brick dwelling.
In 1860 he wrote with a pencil on an attic wall the names of the craftsmen
("workhands") who were building or had just finished building the Ealy House. Their
names are well known to the Historical Society: for example, the Beecher family of
carpenters who moved in about the time New Albany was founded; the Schott family of
masons who moved from Columbus' German Village to Plain Township in 1850. The
fine quality of local craftsmanship is part of the historical significance of the house as is
the house's architectural style, a transitional one between neo-classical
and Victorian. The house's solid composition and appearance might make one think they
resulted from the owners' German descent and the sense of proportion peculiar to its
German-immigrant masons.
Some of the workmen went off to fight in the Civil War soon after George wrote
their names on the attic wall, another historical association the Ealy House has. The
Ealys themselves contributed. George's brother Daniel and his three sons, Peter,
Henry, and Martin, all enlisted. Peter, who died at the age of thirty-two, seems to have
experienced shell shock. His wife in a petition claimed that Peter suffered
from "acute mania."
Restoration of the Ealy House is being carried out in accordance with the
Department of the Interior's guidelines. Mortar used in tuck pointing, for
example, is the same as that used originally.
Copyright © 2006 NAPTHS. All rights reserved.
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