Sharing history for 69 years in
Randolph County, Indiana

Sharing history for 69 years in Randolph County, IndianaSharing history for 69 years in Randolph County, IndianaSharing history for 69 years in Randolph County, Indiana
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  • More
    • Home
    • THE BLOG for RCHS
    • Library Indexes
    • County History
    • Townships & Cities/Towns
    • Sites & Structures
    • Schools
    • Churches
    • Post Offices
    • Businesses & People of RC
    • Homes of Randolph County
    • Resources
    • Covered Bridges

Sharing history for 69 years in
Randolph County, Indiana

Sharing history for 69 years in Randolph County, IndianaSharing history for 69 years in Randolph County, IndianaSharing history for 69 years in Randolph County, Indiana
  • Home
  • THE BLOG for RCHS
  • Library Indexes
  • County History
  • Townships & Cities/Towns
  • Sites & Structures
  • Schools
  • Churches
  • Post Offices
  • Businesses & People of RC
  • Homes of Randolph County
  • Resources
  • Covered Bridges

Randolph County, Indiana

County Formation

The Indiana General Assembly authorized the formation of Randolph County in 1818, naming it for Randolph County in North Carolina, once home to many of the area’s Quaker settlers. 

Randolph County, Indiana

A brief history

Randolph County is a place with a long and unique history. This history continues to shape the community’s values and way of life.


The first white settlers in what became Randolph County were Thomas W. and Anne Parker and their family, Quakers from Carolina, who arrived in 1814.


The Indiana General Assembly authorized the formation of Randolph County in 1818, naming it for the North Carolina, home of many of the area’s Quaker settlers. The county’s government was organized in August 1818 in the cabin of Benjamin Cox, a prominent Quaker who was a native of Randolph County, North Carolina. Five early settlers donated land for a county seat in 1818. Winchester, almost certainly named for Winchester, Virginia, was platted upon the site the same year and has remained the county seat for nearly two centuries.


Randolph County’s early history is distinguished by its embrace of abolitionism. Union Literary Institute, a racially-integrated school in the southeastern part of the county, was established in 1845. The county was home to three distinct settlements of free African-Americans, and numerous pieces of documentary evidence exist that show that the county was an important part of the Underground Railroad.


The period immediately before and just after the Civil War brought prosperity to Randolph County. Railroads created or revived all of the county’s other important towns: Farmland, Losantville, Lynn, Modoc, Parker City, Ridgeville, Saratoga, and Union City.


The discovery of oil and natural gas in the 1880s and 1890s brought industry. Winchester was dominated by the glass industry, while Union City’s industries were dominated by auto parts manufacturing. These activities remain important today.


Since Indiana was a political swing state during the Gilded Age, as a reliably Republican county, Randolph County took on new importance. Between 1850 and 1930, Randolph County produced one U. S. Senator, one U. S. Congressman, two Indiana Governors, one Indiana Lieutenant Governor, three Indiana Secretaries of State, and one Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Randolph County, Indiana maps

1795

1795 Greenville Treaty Line Map

1809

1809 Twelve Mile Purchase Map

1880's

1880's Range & Township Locator Map 

1880

1880 Named Townships Map

Travel Routes of early Randolph County, Indiana

Quaker Trace

"Begun in 1817."Source: Page 83, Tucker history, 1882. 


"Route passed through Arba, Spartansburg, Bartonia, South Salem, (west of) Union City, through Mount Holly, through Allensville, crossing the Mississinewa just north of that place, through North Salem, and crossing the Wabash at Jay City, Jay County, near Corydon."Source: Page 83, Tucker history, 1882. 



Williamsburg & Bloomingsport Pike (First Pike)

"The first pike asked for and granted it thought to have been the Williamsburg and Bloomingsport pike, September, 1858. Source: Page 67, Tucker history, 1882. 



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