Inscription
Platted in 1802 by John Zane and William Chapline along the old Wheeling Road, Morristown was named for Duncan Morrison, an early settler, innkeeper, and Justice of the Peace. Older than the state itself, Morristown prospered into the mid-1800s, nurtured by trade along the National Road, the first federally funded highway project in the United States. The National Road was a major overland route to the West in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. Federal style brick and frame structures that remain standing today replaced the original log cabins that first made up the town. Named to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, Morristown is a well-preserved example of a National Road town.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Belmont
King Solomon White (1868-1955) / “Sol” White In His Own Words
Bellaire, OH
King Solomon “Sol” White was born in Bellaire on June 12, 1868.
Watt Car and Wheel Company
Barnesville, OH
Joseph Watt and son James H. started a small foundry in 1862 making plow points, window sash weights, and heating stoves.
Groundbreaking Site of the National Road in Ohio / Belmont County
St. Clairsville, OH
Near this site on July 4, 1825 ground was broken in Ohio for the National Road.
Captain Thomas Drummond
St. Clairsville, OH
Here lies Thomas Drummond (1832-1865)- legislator, abolitionist and soldier.
Cornelius D. Battelle, Methodist Circuit Rider / The First United Methodist Church, Bellaire
Bellaire, OH
Cornelius D. Battelle was born July 13, 1807 in Washington County, Ohio.
