Inscription
John “Appleseed” Chapman is considered one of Richland County’s original pioneers. In the summer of 1809, Chapman arrived in the Mansfield area just as Mansfield’s first town lots were being offered for sale. Chapman purchased town lot 265 for $120 from Henry H. Wilcoxen. Wilcoxen served as Richland County Sheriff from 1820 to 1825. Chapman later sold the lot to Jesse Edgington on October 30, 1818 for $100. During the War of 1812, approximately two blocks west of this site, members of the Delaware Indian tribe were encamped in a ravine southwest of the public square. After being removed by military force and their village burned, the Delaware were en route from their village in Greentown to the Council at Piqua under Colonel Samuel Kratzer.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Richland
Ohio Standard Baseline
Mansfield, OH
The Ohio Standard Baseline (OSB) was a geodetic baseline that provided highly accurate measurements of the earth and made possible...
Louis Bromfield / Malabar Farm
Acclaimed author, conservationist, and farmer Louis Bromfield was born in Mansfield in 1896.
John Sherman, 1823-1900 / The Sherman Anti-Trust Act
Mansfield, OH
Born in Lancaster, Fairfield County, John Sherman moved to Mansfield to practice law and was elected to Congress in 1854 as one of the...
Hemlock Falls / The Groveport River
Hemlock Falls is located nearby.
The Ohio State Reformatory
Mansfield, OH
Designed by architect Levi T. Scofield, the Ohio State Reformatory opened its doors in 1896 as a facility to rehabilitate young male...
