Inscription
During the 1830s, the Ohio & Erie Canal was built through Newark. The Lockmaster’s House was home to the lockmaster of Lock #9. In 1852, the first railroad locomotive steamed into Newark, signaling the beginning of the end for the canal. By 1871, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad took over the Lockmaster’s House and the encompassing land, and built the Little Red House on the corner for the stationmaster and telegraph operator. Passenger and freight stations, a freight yard, and roundhouse were constructed nearby and served as a B&O Division Point. In 1881, the Scheidler Machine Works built a factory to manufacture steam engines and sawmills. This building now houses The Works Museum. In 1890, an electric interurban railway line connected Newark’s B&O Station to the Toledo & Ohio Central station in Granville. By 1908, the old canal was filled-in. Interurban service ended in 1929 when the city purchased buses.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Licking
The Licking County Courthouse
Newark, OH
Licking County was established in 1808.
Licking County Sheriff’s Residence & Jail
Newark, OH
Designed by J. W. Yost, a renowned Ohio architect, the jail first opened for use in 1889.
Welsh Hills Cemetery / Welsh Hills Cemetery
Welsh Hills Cemetery was once part of the United States Military Tract given to veterans of the Revolutionary War.
The Elias Gilman House / The Wee White House
Granville, OH
The original structure, the central portion of the current house, is the oldest frame building in the village.
An Early Center of Education / Educating Young Women
Granville, OH
Just three weeks after reaching Granville, pioneer villagers decided on December 9, 1805 to build a log cabin where eighty children would...
