
| This page is for our contributors to add additional historical facts about Crawford County that includes their ancestors which may have been historical figures in forming towns, townships, or Crawford County. |
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1889 Biographical and Historical Souvenir Crawford County, Indiana by: John
H. Weathers “There were pioneers in what
is now Crawford County---hunters and adventurers were here as early as
1804, among them John Peckinpaugh, but none of them settled permanently in
that year. In 1806, quite a number of families came to southern Indiana.
One man settled on the Cider Fork of Whiskey Run Creek in what is now
Whiskey Run Township. This was Thomas Stroud. He must, therefore,
be accounted the first settler of Crawford County, having settled in March
1806.” Source provided by: Lance Stroud descendant of Thomas Stroud
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History of Crawford County by: The Federal Writer’s Program of WPA 1941 “Into such an untamed
wilderness of deep ravines, sheer cliffs, and stone-capped knobs,
subterranean caverns, swift-flowing streams, and swampy malaria-infested
bottom lands came twenty-two families which settled in Orange, Washington,
Harrison and Floyd counties in March 1806. Among them was Thomas
Stroud, whom history records as the first white settler in what was to
be Crawford County.” Source provided by: Collection Assistant, Reference Services, Indiana Historical Society donated to Genealogy Trails Crawford Co by Lance Stroud descendant of Thomas Stroud
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History of Indiana from Its Exploration to 1922 by:
Logan Esarey, William Cronin, and Henry Barnhart “In 1806 the settlers braved
the hills of Crawford of county, settling in the northern part. It seems
that the first setters were a part of a large colony that scattered over
the northern part of Harrison county and the southern part of Orange and
Washington counties. Among those who came to Crawford county were Thomas
Stroud, E.E. Morgan, William McKee, and William Frakes. In 1807 came
Peter Frakes, William Van Winkle, John Peckinpaugh, followed shortly by
Captain Posey, and Conrads, the Clarks, and the Leavenworths. The latter
laid out the town of Leavenworth in 1818. This county was a great hunting
ground at that time.” Source provided by: Lance Stroud descendant of Thomas Stroud
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Illustrated Historical Atlas of the State of Indiana 1876 by: Alfred
T. Andreas “In March, 1806, a colony of twenty-two families settled in Orange, Washington and Floyd Counties. Among them came Thomas Stroud, who was the first settler in Crawford County. He settled on Clear Creek in the northeastern part of the county not far from the Orange County line just beyond which several families of the company had located and among them a brother and an uncle of Mr. Stroud was followed by E.E. Morgan, William McKee and William Frakes, the latter of whom settled in the northwest part of the county. In 1807, a number of families
were added to the settlers. Among these were Peter Frakes and William Van
Winkle. The former established himself on Big Blue River, near the
eastern boundary of the county. The Stroud neighborhood, in 1808
was increased by the accession of John Peckinpaugh, and Jacob and Jonathan
Rice and during the same year Malachi Monk settled on Whisky Run, near Big
Springs. During these years settlers came into the county more rapidly
than quite a number of years following.” Source provided by: Lance Stroud descendant of Thomas Stroud
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Pg 34 In March, 1806, Thomas
Stroud became the first settler in Crawford County. He settled on
Clear Creek in the northeastern part of Crawford County, not far from the
Orange County line. Several families, in 1807, settled on Big Blue River
near the eastern boundary of the county. “Big Springs” is on Whiskey Run
near the Buffalo Trace. It appears that these settlers came over the
Fredonia, the Big Blue River and the Buffalo Trace and settled near the
rangers’ camp on the Buffalo Trace. The Buffalo Trace rangers who
patrolled the Trace east from their camp near the corner of Crawford,
Orange, Washington and Harrison counties were in the charge of John Tipton
who later took a fighting part in the battle of Tippecanoe, become a
general of the Indiana state militia and still later a United States
senator from Indiana. Traces in the Crawford County ran from the Ohio
River to this camp and thus the junction of the traces became a place of
more than ordinary pioneer importance. By The Buffalo Trace
Commission, 1936 donated to Genealogy Trails Crawford Co by Lance Stroud descendant of Thomas Stroud
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© 2009 Christi Scovel
Crawford County Genealogy Indiana Trails
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