Because three distinct survey methods were used to survey Plain Township
lands and are still meaningful, the
township can be thought of as a surveyor's museum. The township came into
existence by a 1796 act of Congress in
which the federal government established a Military District of Ohio to
satisfy the claims of Revolutionary War
veterans. The act divided the district into townships five miles square
divided into four quarter-sections containing
4,000 acres each. These boundaries were surveyed in 1797 after the Battle
of Fallen Timbers and the subsequent
Treaty of Greenville, which forced Indian removal. Because a veteran was
entitled to 100 acres, the southeast
quarter of the township was surveyed into 40 hundred-acre lots. From 1801
to 1805, veterans, their heirs, and
assignees, none of whom settled permanently in the township, claimed 24
lots. Abijah Holbrook, a land speculator,
acquired veterans' warrants for the remaining sixteen.
In 1800, Dudley Woodbridge acquired sufficient
veterans' warrants and purchased the entire
southwest quarter of the township from the federal government. He sold it
two years later to John Huffman for
4,000 gallons of whiskey. Over the next twenty years Huffman then sold off
much of that land in "metes and
bounds" parcels, meaning that the land was surveyed somewhat haphazardly by
direction, distance, and sometimes
description of landmarks such as rocks and trees. In 1810, civilian
governance began under the name Plain
Township. In 1812, the federal government sold the unclaimed land in the
northern half of the township for $2.00
an acre, surveying it, in accordance with an act of 1803, into mile-square,
640-acre sections, a measurement used in
the disposition of public lands across the country. The exact center of
Plain Township lies on the north boundary of
the Swickard Woods Park.
NEW ALBANY-PLAIN TOWNSHIP HISTORICAL SOCIETY
BOB EVANS FARMS AND NEW ALBANY COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
THE OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY
2003
In September 2006, this marker was irreparably damaged by vandals. Efforts are
underway to replace it.