
WHITE COUNTY, INDIANA
Honey Creek Township
History
As A Civil Body, Honey Creek Township Dates From 1855. Its Territory
Was A Part Of The Original Union Township,
Created In 1834 As One Of The Four Divisions Of The Vast White County
Of That Day. Monon Township Was Lopped Off
From The Parent Body In 1836 And Princeton In 1844; Then, In 1855,
Another Thirty-Six Square Miles Was Taken From
The Western Portion Of Union To Form Honey Greek Township, Which Also,
About 1905, Was Presented With Five Square
Miles From Big Creek Township To The South. Although It Would Be
Difficult To Find Forty-One Square Miles Of Better
Land In The County Than Lie Within The Limits Of Honey Creek Township,
Their Fertility And Productiveness Have
Been Fairly Earned, As No Section Has Given More Freely Of Its Time And
Means To Reclaim Them From Their Primal
Disadvantages.
Draining And Road Building
Even For A Number Of Years After The Civil Organization Of The
Township, Its Soil Was Largely Water-Soaked And
Most Of The Land Was Considered Unmarketable, But About 1880 The
Settlers Took Up The Matter Of Ditching In An
Earnest And Practical Way. By 1882 They Bad Some Twenty Miles Of Good
Public Ditches, Besides Many Constructed
At Private Expense, And With The Rapid Reclaiming Of The Lands The
Farmers Also Did Their Full Share In Constructing
Good Gravel And Stone Roads; So That With The Increased Yield Of Their
Lands They Provided The Means Of Getting
The Produce To Market In The Most Advantageous Way. At The Present
Time, There Is Very Little Land In Honey Creek
Township Which Is Not Under A Fair State Of Cultivation And Which Is
Not Easily Accessible To Either A Substantial
Macadam Road Or A Line Of Railroad.
In The Construction Of Its System Of Macadam Or Gravel Roads, Honey
Creek Township Has Incurred A Bonded Indebtedness
Of $38,886, Divided As Follows: Weaver Road, $8,400; Ballard, $2,400;
J. H. Moore, $1,866; Wheeler, $4,060; Ward,
$4,050; Miller, $4,950; Byroads, $12,000; Lane, $1,160.
Honey Creek
Ditching And Road Building Have Been Made Especially Necessary In Honey
Creek Township Because Of The Sluggish
And Widespread Waters Of The Stream Which Gives It Its Name. Honey
Creek Rises In The Adjoining Townships Of West
Point And Flows In A Northeasterly Direction Through The Township And
Empties Into The Tippecanoe River Three Miles
North Of Monticello, In Union Township. Speaking Of This Stream, One Of
The Oldest Residents Of The County Says:
"It Might With Greater Propriety Be Termed A Lake, For It Had No
Well-Defined Channel From Its Entrance Into
The Township To Its Passage Out, But Was One Vast Sheet Of Water
Without Perceptible Outlet, Varying In Width From
A Few Hundred Feet To A Mile Or More, Until Within Two Miles Of Its
Outlet It Became A Rapid Stream, With Well-Defined
Channel, Flowing Through Heavily Wooded, Rugged Bluff Lands, From
Thence To The River. It Was Only After The Expenditure
Of Much Money And A Vast Amount Of Labor That A Channel Of Any Kind Was
Made Through The Township, And By Deepening
And Widening It From Year To Year The Water Has Been Removed To Such An
Extent As To Render The Larger Part Of
The Land Susceptible To Cultivation. There Is Not Another Township In
The Whole County Where So Much Has Been Done
To Improve Natural Conditions, Nor Is There One Which Has Equaled Honey
Creek In Its Advance In Material Wealth
And Prosperity."
Previous To The Building Of The Louisville, New Albany & Chicago
Railroad Through The Township In 1853-54,
And The Platting Of Reynolds In The Latter Year, Few Settlers Had
Ventured Into What Generally Was Put Down As
A Water-Logged Part Of The County. Conditions Were Better In The
Southern Half Of The Township Than In The Northern,
And The Consequence Was That, With Very Few Exceptions, The Pioneers
Who Located Before The Railroad Came Along
Settled In Sections 22, 26, 27, 28, 34 And 35. By Reference To Any Fair
Map It Will Be Seen That These Sections
Cover The Present Site Of Reynolds And Certain Portions Of The Township
Within Two Miles Of It.
Joshua Rinker And Wife
The First Settlers Of Honey Creek Township Were Joshua Rinker And
Wifethe Former Of German Blood And The Latter
(Louisa Reece) Of Scotch Ancestryboth Virginians, Who In 1834 Located
In What Was Then The Newly Organized County
Of White And Union Township. Mr. Rinker Threw Up A Little Log Cabin
Somewhere In Section 34 And There The Sturdy
Couple Established Themselves As The First Residents In What Is Now
Honey Creek Township. Long Afterward It Was
Stated By William H. Rinker Who Was The Third Of Their Eight Children
And Was Born In That Locality In May, 1836,
That For The First Two Years Of His Residence There, Joshua Rinker
Farmed On Shares, And That In 1836 He Entered
130 Acres Of Land In Big Creek And Honey Creek Townships. At First He
Erected The Rude Log Cabin Noted, But Afterward
Built The First Brick House Of The Township. His Wife Died In April,
1864, And He Followed Her In December, 1869.
The Son, William H. Rinker, Married Into The Old Bunnel [Sic] Family,
And Lived For Years On His Farm Not Far From
The Old Homestead In Section 34.
The Bunnell Families
Nathaniel Bunnell, The Founder Of The Family, Various Members Of Wbich
Have Become So Well Known In Honey Creek
Township, Was Reared And Married In Kentucky. When A Young Man He Was
Engaged In The Ohio River Trade And Was One
Of A Crew Who Brought The First Load Of Merchandise From Marysville,
Kentucky, To Chillicothe, Ohio. Soon Afterward
He Moved Into Ohio, And, After Making Several Changes Of Location And
Serving In The War Of 1812 Within The Following
Thirty Years, Settled With A Large Family In What Is Now Honey Creek
Township. The Tract Book Shows That He Entered
His First Tract Of Land In Section 34 On The 9th Of December, 1833, And
He Probably Did Not Settle Upon It Until
The Following Spring Or Summer, Following Closely Upon The Arrival Of
The Rinkers. The Families Naturally Became
Neighbors, And, Quite As Naturally, The Young People Commenced To
Intermarry.
In April, 1834, Both Nathaniel And Thomas Bunnell Entered Lands In
Section 27, And Various Members Of The Family,
Representing Several Generations, Have Resided At Reynolds And In
Neighboring Territory. Nathaniel Bunnell Died
On His Farm In Section 34 In The Year 1850.
Smith, Hiorth's Old Partner
It Is Said That Peter B. Smith, The Partner Of Hans E. Hiorth In The
Sawmill Established In The Norwegian Settlement
Two Miles North Of Monticello, Settled In Section 1, Northeast Corner
Of What Is Now Honey Creek Township, As Early
As 1834. If He Did So There Is No Record Of Any Purchase Of Lands By
Him At That Time; He May Have Been Simply
Scouting For Timber Lands. His First Entry In That Section Was Not Made
Until 1846.
Settlers And Land Buyers Of 1835
In 1835 The Settlers Included The Coles Joseph, James And Moses-- And
About The Same Time Jesse Grooms And The
Johnsons--Frank, Moses And Addison. Within The Following Two Years Also
Came Stephen Miller To Section 26, V. Mccolloch
To Section 27 And John Wilson To Section 22.
Early Settlers Also Report That A Bachelor By The Name Of Day Came Into
The Township In The Same Year And Began
Settlement In Section 35.
In 1835 The Only People To Enter Lands, According To The Records, Were
Also Bunnels [Sic] John Wesley Bunnell,
In Section 26, And Eliza Ann Bunnell, In Section 33, Both On December
16th.
In 1836 The Tract Book Gives The Following: Daniel M. Tilton, In
Section 1 (The Only Recorded Land Owner Of The
Early Times To Invest In The Northern Sections Of The Township),
December 12th; Levi Reynolds, May 25th; Benjamin
H. Dixon, February 4th, And Harrison Skinner, June 2dall In Section
28; And Thomas Brownfield, In Section 34,
May 3d.
Entered Lands In 1839-53
The Tract Book, Which Is The Only Reliable Authority By Which To
Determine The Entries Of Lands In The Township,
Records The Following As Having Bought Real Estate Of The Government
After 1836, Until The Township Was Organized
In 1855: Joshua Rinker (As Stated) In Section 34, August 1, 1839;
William M. Kenton, In Section 25, November 20,
1843, And In Section 24, October 9, 1848; In 1844 Richard Imes, In
Section 1, April 20th; William Turner, In Section
13, November 9th; Ellis H. Johnson, In Section 29, February 16th; John
R. Jefferson, In Section 31, May 2d, And
Richard J. Tilton, In Section 36, November 9th; James P. Moore, Sr.,
And James P. Moore, Jr., In Section 6, November
25, 1845; In 1846peter B. Smith, In Section 1, October 17th; Joseph
Coble, In Section 11, September 6th; William
Turner, In Section 17, September 28th; Adin And Israel Nordyke
(Residents Of Princeton Township), In Section 19,
October 5th; David H. Morse, In Section 21, July 14th; Thomas Spencer,
In Section 24, September 26th, And In Section
25, October 14th; Nathaniel White, In Section 26, September 29th; Isaac
Beasy, January 19th; Okey S. Johnson, May
13th, And John B. Lowe, May 21st, All In Section 29; And James Shaw, In
Section 34, February 25th; In 1847 Liberty
M. Burns, In Section 15, February 7th; David Marshall, In Section 22,
October 19th; Lewis C. Marshall, In Section
23, October 19th; James Witherow, In Section 25, June 22d, And James
Barnes. In Same Section, July 6th; David H.
Morse, In Section 26, August 9th; Aaron Chamberlain, In Section 30,
April 15th; Isaac Beasey [Sic], In Same Section,
May 18th; In 1848 William M. Kenton, In Section 24, October 9th; David
Marshall, In Section 26, Same Date; Nathaniel
Bunnell, In Section 34, December 9th, And Jordan Cain, In Section 36,
March 13th; In 1850 Abraham Smith (A Resident
Of Princeton Township), In Section 19, April 12th; John Lawrie (A
Citizen Of West Point Township), In Section 29,
December 16th, And John Day, In Section 34, September 24th; Loreno
Morse, James Shaw, James Brooks, John B. Cowan
And K. T. And N. Bunnell, Section 35, October 8, 1851; John Bunton, In
Section 31, March 5, 1852, And Levin Tucker,
In Section 29, October 24, 1853.
Two-Thirds Owned By Non-Residents
At The Organization Of The Township In 1855, It Is Estimated That Fully
Two-Thirds Of Its Area Was In The Hands
Of Non-Residents. The Swamp And Military Warrant Lands Taken Up Were As
Follows:
| Sections | Swamp Lands (Acres) | Military Lands (Acres) |
|
| 1 | 80 | . |
|
| 2 | 440 | ... |
|
| 3 | 600 |
|
40 |
| 4 | 360 | 80 |
|
| 5 | 400 | 240 |
|
| 6 | 120 . | .. |
|
| 7 | 320 . | .. |
|
| 8 | 480 | 80 |
|
| 9 | 180 . | .. |
|
| 10 | 280 | 40 |
|
| 11 | 400 . | .. |
|
| 12 | 280 . | .. |
|
| 13 | 200 | 60 |
|
| 14 | 480 | 80 |
|
| 15 | 480 | ... |
|
| 17 | 220 | ... |
|
| 18 | 640 | ... |
|
| 19 | 280 | 160 |
|
| 20 | 600 | 40 |
|
| 21 | 600 | ... |
|
| 22 | 400 | ... |
|
| 23 | 440 | 120 |
|
| 24 | ... | 80 |
|
| 25 | ... | 200 |
|
| 26 | 160 | ... |
|
| 27 | 160 | ... |
|
| 28 | 440 | ... |
|
| 29 | 280 . | .. |
|
| 30 | 480 . | .. |
|
| 31 | 240 | 160 |
|
| 32 | 560 | 40 |
|
| 33 | 160 | 160 |
|
| 34 | 80 ... |
|
|
| 36 | ... | 40 |
|
| Totals | 10,840 | 1,62 |
|
To The Foregoing Grand Total 12,460 Acres Of Swamp And Military Lands
Taken Up, With Few Exceptions By Land Speculators
Residing Outside The County, Are To Be Added Various Tracts Of Canal
Lands In Sections 27, 29 And 34, Which Were
Held Out Of The Government Lands Subject To Free Entry At $1.25 Per
Acre. Two Hundred Acres Of These Lands In Section
27 Were Purchased By Joseph Cole, Marshall H. Johnson And Micajah F.
Johnson; John Lawrie, Of West Point Township,
Bought Forty Acres In Section 29, And Joseph Day And Benjamin Reynolds
Entered 200 Acres In Section 34. Other Scattering
Tracts Bought Up By Speculators, Non-Resident In Honey Creek Township,
Would Bring The Total Of "Foreign"
Holdings Up To The 14,640 Acres, As Estimated.
Founding Of Reynolds
This Condition Undoubtedly Interfered With The Early Settlement Of The
Country, Which Failed To Show Much Progress
Until The Building Of The Louisville, New Albany & Chicago
Railroad. While The Line Was In Process Of Construction
Through The Township The Town Of Reynolds Was Laid Out By Benjamin
Reynolds, George S. Rose, Christian Cassell,
William M. Kenton And Joseph H. Thompson. The Original Plat Was
Recorded August 22, 1853, And Shows 155 Lots In
The Northeast Quarter Of 33. The Village Was Named After Benjamin
Reynolds, Its Acknowledged Founder, Who Erected
The First Building On Its Site, The Hotel Which Held Its Own In The
Central Part Of The County For Many Years Thereafter.
Thomas Bunnell And William M. Kenton Made The First Addition To
Reynolds In 1855. The Town Had Many Energetic And
Able Men Who Pushed It Along, Notwithstanding Its Early Setback During
The Inflated And Uncertain Times Of 1857-58.
The Pittsburgh, Chicago And St. Louis Railroad (Pennsylvania) Was
Completed Through The Township In 1859 And Gave
Another Boom To Reynolds, Which, During The Following Decade,
Especially, Was Acknowledged To Be A Rival To Monticello
"Away Off On The Eastern Borders Of The County." Being The Junction Of
The Two Lines, Although It Had
Prosperous And Substantial Business Houses, It Was Known For Many Miles
Around As "A Tough Railroad Town,"
With All That Expression Implies. But, Although All Of Its Ambitions
Were Not Realized, It Being Incorporated In
1875, It Has Long Been An Orderly Place, And Has Progressed Steadily As
One Of The Best Interior Centers In The
County. Reynolds Is The Banking And The Trade Center Of Quite A
District, Especially To The North, And Its Dealings
In Grain And Live Stock Are Considerable.
Guernsey
The Only Other Center In The Township, Which Is, However, Of
Comparative Unimportance, Is Guernsey, A Station On
The Monon Route In Section 12, Northeastern Part Of The Township. The
Place Has Never Been Platted; Is Only A Small
Hamlet And Derives Its Name From The Postoffice Established There.
Township Created
Very Soon After The Town Of Reynolds Was Platted, Benjamin Reynolds,
Leander H. Jewett, Abram Van Voorst And Others
Signed A Petition And Presented It To The Court Of County
Commissioners, Praying That Congressional Township 27
North, Range 4 West, Should Be Constituted Honey Creek Township. At Its
June Term, 1855, That Body So Ordered.
Schoolhouse And Town Hall
Not Long After The Township Was Created And Before Any Of Its Officials
Had Been Elected The Proprietors Of The
New Town Of Reynolds Made Arrangements To Build A Schoolhouse On Its
Site. It Was One Of The First Buildings To
Be Erected. Nathaniel Bunnell Gave $25 For The Purpose, Benjamin
Reynolds Donated The Ground And Other Settlers
In The Neighborhood Contributed Enough By Subscription To Complete The
Building, Which Was To Serve Both As A Schoolhouse
And A Town Hall.
Pioneer Citizen Voters
The First Election In Honey Creek Township Was Held At The Reynolds
Schoolhouse On The 7th Of April, 1856, And
The Forty-Three Who Cast Their Ballots At That Time Were Abram Van
Voorst, D. L. Hamilton, Newton Organ, M. M.
Sill, O. S. Dale, J. S. Goddard, Ira Keller, James Cole, Aaron Wood,
Joseph Cole, Thomas Glassford, Nathaniel Bunnell,
Thornton Williams, Samuel Horen, Washington Burns, Robert W. Sill,
Frederick Medorse, Jesse Holtom, Marshall Johnson,
Addison Johnson, Joshua Rinker, George Williams, Thomas Cain, John
Reffcoots, S. A. Miller, Abraham Irvin, Daniel
Coble, A. M. Dickinson, Patrick Horn, B. R. Pettit, John Horen, L. H.
Jewett, Isaac Barker, Isaac S. Vinson, John
Bates, Lewis Kruger, J. W. Bulger, J. N. Bunnell, Nathaniel White,
James Torpy, Isaac M. Cantwell, John Callis
And Frederick Helm. The Result Was To Elect Samuel Horen As Township
Trustee, For A Term Of Three Years; Abram
Van Voorst, For A Two Years Term, And A. M. Dickinson, For One Year;
Leander H. Jewett And M. M. Sill, Justices
Of The Peace For Two Years; R. B. Pettit And Homer Glassford,
Constables For One Year; Nathaniel Bunnell, Township
Treasurer, One Year, And Joshua Rinker, Newton Organ And James Coble,
Road Supervisors, One Year. At This Election
Thirty-Five Votes Were Received For A Road Tax. Ira Kells And Aaron
Wood Acted As Judges, And 0. S. Dale And M.
M. Sill As Clerks.
There Was Even A More Complete Turn-Out At The Election On The Second
Tuesday In October Of That Year; This Was
The First State Election Held In The Township And Nearly Every Voter In
It Reported At The Reynolds Schoolhouse.
The Names Follow: James Himes, William White, Aaron Wood, A. M.
Dickinson, J. B. Bunnell, Abram Van Voorst, J.
H. Thomas, Stephen Miller, L. H. Ambler, Thornton Williams, Marion
Hamilton, Samuel Harper, Isaac Ruger, J. S.
Reynolds, Samuel Horen, J. W. Brasket, William Harper, R. R. Pettit,
Thomas Harper, John Noah, William Headen,
Michael Foundry, F. Herper, L. H. Jewett, F. N. Holam, Lewis Shall, F.
Kefsis, James S. Miller, George F. Miller,
Jacob Heastur, James Dale, M. M. Sill, James Kenton, A. Page, J. S.
Goddard, M. Foram, John Candent, E. Lickory,
John Boles, Charles Keller, Henry Veslong, M. T. Johnson, John Cole,
Anderson Johnson, George Williams, James Cole,
Benjamin Clark, Hugh Irvin, Ira Keller, John Lealy, Patrick Henry, D.
L. Hamilton, N. W. Bunnell, G. Helar, A.
A. Ferryfold, Isaac Kentwell, Joseph Skevtington, John Cox, John
Jeffcoots, B. T. Meyers, A. Weise, George Emery,
Nathaniel White, C. Perry, Joshua Perry, James Pettit, Jerry Hamilton,
Thomas Spencer, Solomon Mccolloch, James
M. Bragg, John Horn, Nathaniel Bunnell, Adam Morgan, Joshua Rinker,
Adin Nordyke, Patrick Horn, Patrick Poating,
James Turpie, Joseph Dale, P. Hartman, W. P. Stark, Joseph Delong,
Abram Irvin And Newton Organ.
Public-Spirited Township
After The Founding Of Reynolds, Most Of The Pioneer Institutions And
Movements Of The Township Originated In That
Town; Consequently, Many Of The Details Connected With Such Early
Matters Are Reserved For The Special Sketch Of
The Village. Even In The Encouragement Of Such Enterprises As The
Construction Of Roads And Ditches, Which Affect
The Township At Large, The People Of Reynolds Have Always Been Helpful
To The Extent Of Their Means. In Fact, As
A Whole, It Is A Township Which Enjoys A Marked Public Spirit.