| Ohio (Licking County), Alexandria — Alexander Devilbiss |
| | Erected in memory of Alexander Devilbiss by the Citizens of Alexandria to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the platting of this village April 1830.
Alexander Devilbiss was born in Frederick County, Md., January 18th 1780; moved to Licking County 1821; died December 1831.
His body with that of his wife, Priscilla, lies buried about 350 yards due south of this memorial on the terrace of Raccoon Valley overlooking the site of the mill which he built. The successful operation of this mill . . . — Map (db m676) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Alexandria — William Mears Dawes Gristmill |
| | This grindstone from the farm of William Mears Dawes Gristmill built 1840 on Raccoon Creek one mile west. Stone quarried by Ephraim Cutler on Ohio River, brought here on steamboat and cart by Henry Dawes, grandfather of Beman Gates Dawes, founder, The Dawes Arboretum. — Map (db m16710) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Alexandria — 19-45 — Willoughby Dayton Miller |
| | 1853–1907. Born in Alexandria in 1853, Willoughby Dayton Miller received his primary education in a nearby one-room schoolhouse. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1875 and then studied in Edinburgh, Scotland. Later, he traveled to Berlin, Germany where he met an expatriate American dentist, Dr. Frank Abbot, who encouraged him to study dentistry. Graduating from the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine in 1879, Miller returned to Berlin and joined Abbot’s . . . — Map (db m675) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Amsterdam — Fairmount Cemetery Veterans Memorial |
| | In Memory of All of Our Veterans — Map (db m13381) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Buckeye Lake — 13-45 — Buckeye Lake |
| | [Marker Front]:
Formed by the retreating glacier more than 14,000 years ago, Buckeye Lake first existed as a shallow, swampy pond, named "Buffalo Swamp" by Ohio Company explorer Christopher Gist in 1751. Beginning in 1826 the State developed it as a water source for the Licking Summit of the Ohio and Erie Canal, it being the highest level between the Scioto and Licking rivers. Engineers dammed the north and west sides of the swamp, inadvertently creating a unique floating . . . — Map (db m12959) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Buckeye Lake — Buckeye Lake Amusement Park — -- the Playground of Ohio |
| |
How It All Started
In 1894, the Ohio General Assembly declared Licking Reservoir a public park by the name of Buckeye Lake. In 1904, the Columbus, Buckeye Lake and Newark Traction Company's Interurban Electric Railway was completed. Joining the trend of providing an attraction at the end of the line to boost weekend business, the rail company offered tourist attractions on a nine-acre plot at the north shore of the Buckeye Lake. By 1911, the Buckeye Lake area boasted two dance . . . — Map (db m12962) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Buckeye Lake — 12-45 — Buckeye Lake Park — “The Playground of Ohio” |
| | [Marker Front]:
Using a four-mile long dam, the state of Ohio impounded the Licking Summit Reservoir in the mid-1820s to supply water for the Ohio and Erie Canal. In 1894, the state renamed it Buckeye Lake and developed it for recreational use. The Columbus, Buckeye Lake, and Newark Traction Company developed an “electric park” here, bringing in excursionists on interurban cars between 1904 and 1929 and creating one of the region's most popular resorts. Hotels and summer . . . — Map (db m12960) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Glenford — 16-45 — Flint Ridge |
| | For more than 10,000 years, Flint Ridge was one of the most important flint quarries in eastern North America. The flint formed at the bottom of a shallow ocean 300 million years ago. The softer rocks surrounding the flint have washed away, leaving the hard flint exposed near the surface. Prehistoric people came here to quarry the flint, which they crafted into a variety of stone tools. Hundreds of quarry pits and workshops are scattered for miles along this ridge. The beautiful rainbow-colored . . . — Map (db m12949) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Glenford — Flint Ridge |
| | Flint Ridge is a chain of long, narrow hills extending from a few miles east of Newark almost to Zanesville, a distance of more than twenty miles. The surface of these hills is underlain with an irregular layer of flint, which may be only a few inches or several feet in thickness and varies greatly in color and texture. In many places along this ridge the soil has been eroded revealing the underlying flint. You are standing on one of these outcroppings.
Flint is formed by a geologic . . . — Map (db m12958) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Glenford — The Gilbert W. Dilley Museum at Flint Ridge |
| | This facility recognizes Gilbert W. Dilley (1902-1996), a life-long student of Ohio history; an avid collector of Ohio Indian artifacts; a long standing trustee, past president, and generous benefactor of the Ohio Historical Society; and a true steward of Ohio's significant historic sites, especially Flint Ridge.
Gilbert and his wife, Marguerite, encouraged and supported appreciation of Ohio's ancient peoples and the historical sites that afford a glimpse of Ohio's distant past.
His . . . — Map (db m12950) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 8-45 — "Alligator" Mound |
| | On this bluff lies one of the two great animal effigy mounds built by Ohio's prehistoric people. Shown here, Alligator Mound is a giant earthen sculpture of some four-footed animal with a long, curving tail. Archaeologists believe the animal is perhaps an opossum or a panther, but not an alligator. The earthwork is approximately 250 feet long, seventy-six feet wide, and four feet high. Like the Great Serpent Mound in Adams County, Ohio, Alligator Mound is not a burial mound. The Newark . . . — Map (db m17482) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 7-45 — Bank of the Alexandrian Society |
| | Built by William Stedman in 1816 of local stone, this building served as the Bank of the Alexandrian Society, which printed its own currency. The bank failed in 1817 and 1837. This building has also been used as a store, post office, and inter-urban railway depot. It was enlarged and opened as a museum during Granville's Sesquicentennial Celebration in 1955, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as part of the Granville Historic District in 1980. — Map (db m125) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — Bolen Memorial Park |
| | Dedicated to the memory of
Harry David Bolen
1892 - 1976
He loved life.... He loved people....
He gave of himself that
others might enjoy life.... — Map (db m12609) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 23-45 — Founding of Granville, The Licking Company / The Granville Site "The most eligible part" |
| | Founding of Granville
The Licking Company
In 1804 a group of neighbors in Granville, Massachusetts and Granby, Connecticut formed The Licking Company for the purpose of moving to "Newlands" in Ohio. Inspired and informed by the settlement of Worthington in 1803, the Company purchased 29,040 acres in the U.S. Military District. Advance parties surveyed and mapped a site, established a mill, and planted grain. The Company planned a public square, a school, library, quarry, burying ground, . . . — Map (db m12607) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — Granville |
| | A planned village and early center of education founded by New Englanders in 1805 — Map (db m12602) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — Granville Opera House |
| | The Granville Opera House stood on this site for one hundred years. Built as a Baptist church in 1849, the building was moved here in 1882. On April 7, 1982, it was destroyed by fire.
This bell from the church tower was first rung on Sunday June 29, 1872 to announce the death of the Reverend Samson Talbot, fifth president of Denison University. It also rang out the hours and sounded the fire alarm. — Map (db m12608) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 10-45 — Major General Charles Griffin |
| | Located 100 yards southeast of this marker is the boyhood home of Major General Charles Griffin. Born in 1825, he graduated from West Point in 1847 and rose to prominence during the Civil War. Griffin fought in most of the major engagements of the war's eastern theater, including the first battle of Bull Run, the Seven Days battles, and the Wilderness campaign. While under his command, units from the Fifth Corps of the Army of the Potomac blocked the Confederate retreat at Appomattox, . . . — Map (db m688) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 21-45 — Old Colony Burying Ground, 1805 |
| | Granville, Ohio, was settled in 1805 by the Licking Company, a group formed in Granville, Massachusetts, and Granby Connecticut, for the purpose of emigrating west. The Old Colony Burying Ground was defined on the first town plat of Granville in 1905. Many of Granville's pioneers are interred within this ground, and the cemetery retains its original form and most of its westward facing rows of sandstone and marble gravestones. The early settlers buried here helped lay out this town and . . . — Map (db m757) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 9-45 — The Granville Academy / The Anti-Slavery Movement |
| | The Granville Academy
The Granville Congregational Church erected this building in 1833 for its Female Academy and a church meeting room. The school prospered and, in 1837, moved to make way for the Granville Male Academy. The Welsh Congregational Church purchased the structure in 1863 and converted its two stories into a single room with full-height windows. Welsh language services were held here for sixty years. Granville Grange #2230 met in the building from 1923 to 1973. It then became . . . — Map (db m12604) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — 4-45 — The Robbins Hunter Museum Avery-Downer House |
| | Built in 1842 in the Greek Revival Architectural Style for Alfred Avery from designs by Minard Lefever, the house subsequently served as a home for the Spelman (1845-1873), Downer and Cole families (1873-1902). The Phi Gamma Delta (1902-1930) and Kappa Sigma (1930-1956) fraternities. This house was bequeathed to the Licking County Historical Society by Robbins Hunter Jr. (1905-1979) as a Museum of the 19th century. National Register of Historic Places. — Map (db m126) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — The Toledo and Ohio Central Railroad |
| | The path lies on the rail bed of the Toledo and Ohio Central Railroad, the first railroad constructed through this region in 1877. Primarily a coal hauling line from the mines of the Ohio River valley to northwest Ohio, the T & OC also offered the first passenger line service to the communities of Granville, Alexandria, and Johnston. "Central City", an old name given to the far west edge of Newark, probably got its name as a stop during this busy rail period. The T & OC was bought out in the . . . — Map (db m758) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Granville — This Fraternity House |
| | This fraternity house, built in 1930, has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior. Mu Chapter of Sigma Chi. Chartered March 2, 1868. — Map (db m301) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Heath — 2-45 — Ohio Canal Ground-Breaking |
| | At this site on July 4, 1825, Governor DeWitt Clinton of New York turned the first shovelful of dirt for the Ohio Canal. The ceremony was attended by area citizens of Master Masons.
In the early 1840’s James A. Garfield, who was to become the 20th President of the United States and a Master Mason, led tow horses on the canal. — Map (db m2377) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Hebron — 1-45 — Hebron |
| | Located at the crossing of the Ohio and Erie Canal and the National Road, Hebron was a favored commercial and agricultural center for Licking County in the nineteenth century. Only four miles north of the city Governor DeWitt Clinton of New York turned the first spadeful of dirt for the Ohio and Erie canal on July 4, 1825. The canal was completed through Hebron in 1828. Nearby Buckeye Lake served as a reservoir and feeder for the canal until 1894 when it was set aside for park purposes. The National Road was completed through Hebron in 1834. — Map (db m13878) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Hebron — Hebron Milling Company |
| | The Hebron Milling Company building was built in 1880 where the National Trail (Route 40) and the Ohio Canal crossed in the village of Hebron. The building sat on the edge of the “turning basin” in the village, where canal boats docked to load or unload. In the Basin, the canal boats could turn around for a return trip.
Mr. William Bebout built the building and operated it as a flour and saw mill. Mr. Bebout took young Davie Geiger in as a partner in 1891. He was with the mill . . . — Map (db m13879) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Hebron — Hebron Veterans Memorial |
| | In memory of all of our veterans — Map (db m12941) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Homer — Homer Veterans Memorial |
| | To Honor those Who served our Country in war and peace.
Metal badges representing Veteran's organizations from the various wars are displayed around the marker. — Map (db m12722) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Homer — 11-45 — Major General William Starke Rosecrans / Bishop Sylvester Horton Rosecrans |
| | Major General William Starke RosecransSoldier, engineer, and statesman, W.S. Rosecrans was born in Delaware County in 1819 and grew up in Homer. He graduated from West Point in 1842. During the Civil War, Rosecrans commanded the federal Army of the Cumberland. Popular with his troops, who called him "Old Rosy," he was a cautious commander and, though victorious at, Corinth, Murfreesboro, and Chattanooga, he suffered major defeat at Chickamauga in 1863. A skilled engineer, Rosecrans . . . — Map (db m12712) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Homer — 5-45 — Victoria Claflin-Woodhull-Martin / First Woman Candidate for President of the United States |
| | Victoria Claflin-Woodhull-Martin
Born in Homer in 1838, Victoria Claflin proved to be a woman with visions that exceeded her time. Victoria and her sister Tennessee, in 1870, became the first women stockbrokers in the country. Her opinions expressed in the Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly newspaper led her to become the first woman invited to address Congress.
First Woman Candidate for President of the United States
Because of her unrelenting advocacy of women's suffrage, Victoria . . . — Map (db m12713) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Jacksontown — 3-45 — Beard-Green Cemetery in the Dawes Arboretum |
| | Spring, 1800, Benjamin Green and family become the first legal settlers in Licking County, followed by the Stadden family; Col. John Stadden marries Elizabeth Green on Christmas Day. Spring, 1801, clearings cut for cabins on Hog Run; Johnny Appleseed plants his orchards. 1808, John Beard family settles. 1810, first burial. 1811-41, these families bury six Revolutionary War veterans. — Map (db m13132) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Jacksontown — Dawes Arboretum Hedge |
| | “Dawes Arboretum”
Hedge Lettering, 2,040 ft.
planted 1930 & 40; replanted 1990 & 91
The Dawes Arboretum
These evergreens forming the word “Dawes”
were planted by and dedicated to
Volunteers of the Dawes Arboretum
October 14, 1990 — Map (db m13133) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Jacksontown — Licking Township Fallen Firemen |
| | In Memory of
Fallen Firemen — Map (db m12940) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Johnstown — 17-45 — Johnstown Cemetery / War Veterans |
| | Side A: Johnstown Cemetery
In 1810, Dr. Oliver Bigelow from Cayuga County, New York, purchased a 4,000-acre tract of land in Monroe Township from John Brown of Boone County, Kentucky, for the sum of $10,000. President John Adams had deeded the land to Brown for military service during the American Revolution. Dr. Bigelow planned to build a town, and after mapping streets, alleys, the town square, and a cemetery, named the village Johnstown. Bigelow was the community's first . . . — Map (db m16711) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Johnstown — Johnstown Cemetery Revolutionary War Soldiers |
| |
In memory of these
Revolutionary War soldiers
buried in this cemetery
Elijah Adams
Benjamin DeWolf
Caleb Hill
Abel Jewett
John Martin
Thomas Perkins
Moses Scovell
Peter Stevens — Map (db m25579) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Johnstown — VFW Post 3097 Veterans Memorial |
| | Remembering all veterans and their unfailing love of country; loyalty to its institutions and ideals; eagerness to defend it against all enemies; undivided allegiance to the flag; and a desire to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and posterity. — Map (db m25529) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — 18-45 — A. H. Heisey Glass |
| | The A.H. Heisey & Co. produced high quality, hand-wrought glass in Newark, Ohio beginning in 1896. Glass originally produced by pressing was intended to simulate cut glass making elegant glass affordable to more families. Heisey was an innovator in production methods. He introduced colors and different patterns of glass to meet the social habits of the era. Highly skilled craftsmen produced, cut, and etched glass in many styles. The plant closed in 1957 because of Heisey's refusal to produce an . . . — Map (db m12561) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — Congressional Medal of Honor Recipients — State of Ohio, Licking County |
| | United States of America
Congressional Medal of Honor Recipients
State of Ohio, Licking County
Civil War
Hanna, Milton Sergeant Tennessee 1863
Inscho, Leonidas H. 1st Lt Maryland 1862
Morey, Delano Private Virginia 1862
Shellenberger, John Corporal Virginia 1864
Indian Campaigns
Wilson, Milden H. Ordnance Sgt. Montana 1877
Mexican Campaign
Beasley, Harry . . . — Map (db m12876) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — 22-45 — Early Transportation in Newark |
| | 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 . . . — Map (db m12582) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — Great Circle Earthworks |
| | The Great Circle Earthworks,
one remnant of the largest complex of geometric earthen enclosures ever built. The Newark Earthworks, situated on a high terrace between the South Fork of the Licking River and Raccoon Creek, once covered more than four square miles. At present, only the Great Circle, the octagon and circle combination, and a small portion of the square are preserved on public land.
The Newark Earthworks were built about 2000 years ago by the people we now call the Hopewell. . . . — Map (db m689) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — John L. Clem — 1851-1937 |
| | Considered the youngest ever to serve, Clem ran away from home at the age of 9 yrs. and 10 mos. to join the Union Army. At Snodgrass Hill, as a drummer boy in Co. “C” 22nd Michigan Volunteer Infantry, he won the sobriquet "The Drummer Boy of Chickamauga," a nickname that graces his monument at Arlington National Cemetery. Also known as “Johnny Shiloh,” he was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant after the war by President Grant. Clem served until 1915 when he retired with the . . . — Map (db m12579) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — 14-45 — John Sparks — Trail Blazer and Frontiersman |
| | As a private in the infantry of the 1st United States Regiment, and during the years 1805 to 1807, John Sparks (1758-1846) acted as guide, scout, and hunter for the two expeditions of Zebulon Pike, which helped to open up largely unknown areas in the headwaters of the Mississippi River and also in the far Southwest to the increasing westward expansion of the United States. Sparks spent his later years living on the north banks of the Licking River, and was often seen walking barefoot around . . . — Map (db m12875) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — Octagon Earthworks |
| | A Wonder of the World
These walls were once the center of an ancient civilization. The Octagon Earthworks, like a modern cathedral or county fairgrounds, were a focal point for the social and religious activities of the Hopewell people about 2000 years ago.
Octagon Earthworks are a major part of the Newark Earthworks - the largest set of geometric earthen enclosures ever built.
[the remainder of the marker is missing] — Map (db m17487) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — The Donald D. Hill County Administration Building |
| | County Commissioner 1969-1996
Dedicated November 16, 1996 — Map (db m12879) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — 6-45 — The History of Licking Memorial Hospital |
| | Newark's first hospital opened on this site in January 1898. In 1906, the building was moved to 22 Wyoming and attached to an existing structure, creating a 22-bed hospital. In December 1914, a new hospital opened at the corners of Everett and Buena Vista. Licking Memorial Hospital on West Main Street began operation on July 6, 1966. — Map (db m12874) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — The John W. Alford Building — 21 South First Street |
| | The Park National Bank dedicates this building to
John W. Alford
His leadership, judgement, dedication and integrity have been of inestimable value to this bank and this community for 50 years — Map (db m12512) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — The Newark Earthworks |
| | The Newark Earthworks is truly one of the most magnificent prehistoric Indian sites in the eastern United States. Covering an area two miles square, it once was the largest earthworks complex in Ohio. the main components of the site are the large circle (Moundbuilders State Memorial), a square enclosure (Wright State Memorial), and the octagon with connected circle (Octagon State Memorial). These features were originally connected by a series of earth walls. In addition, there were numerous . . . — Map (db m640) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — The Observatory Mound |
| | The form of this mound is unique among all the known Hopewellian mounds. Some 19th century archaeologists thought that the builders had planned to extend a set of parallel walls from the circle, bu thene changed their minds and blocked off the stubs with a mound. Since the mid-19th century, this mound has been called the observatory because it overlooks the rest of the circle and octagon.
On July 4, 1836, members of the Calliopean Society of the Granville Literary and Theological Institution . . . — Map (db m18101) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — Veteran's Park |
| | Dedicated as a lasting tribute to the men and women of Newark who served and died in honor of their country. This memorial is dedicated in sincere tribute to those men and women of Newark who served and died in all wars. “The freedom of a nation and its people is a cherished gift, and that gift was made possible by our veterans." Frank L. Stare III Dedicated Veteran's Day 1979 — Map (db m12563) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Newark — Wright Earthworks |
| | Ancient Architecture Now Lost
The two earthen walls before you are remnants of one of the wonders of the ancient world. They were part of the Newark Earthworks, the largest set of geometric enclosures ever built. Much like a modern cathedral or county fairground, they were a focal point for the social and religious activities of the Hopewell people about 2000 years ago.
The southern wall was part of a square earthwork enclosing 20 acres. You are standing at a point that would have . . . — Map (db m17485) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Outville — 15-45 — Outville |
| | Arriving in 1853, the Central Ohio Railroad called this place “Kirkersville Station,” and it was later changed by stationmaster James Outcalt, who renamed the town Outville after himself. As rail traffic increased in Ohio, a successor company, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, built numerous rural depots, this one in 1899. After 1940, the depot was closed and then sold and moved from town in 1963. The Harrison Township Trustees arranged for the return of the depot to Outville in . . . — Map (db m16712) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Pataskala — 20-45 — Conine Homestead |
| | Born in New Jersey, Richard and Sarah Conine, the founders of the village of Pataskala, moved to Lima Township and lived on this site as early as 1821 when Richard established a grist mill nearby. Their homestead also served as a stagecoach stop on the mud pike between Columbus and Newark prior to the coming of the railroad. Richard platted "Conine Town" south and west of here in 1851, and the town was renamed Pataskala soon after. The public-spirited Conines contributed to the building of . . . — Map (db m13876) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Pataskala — 24-45 — Pataskala Elementary School |
| | The first school in what is now Pataskala was a “subscription school” operated by Amariah Cubberly on the nearby banks of the South Fork of the Licking River in the 1820s. Subscription schools, which charged fees, were the forerunners of rural public schools in many parts of Ohio. By the 1830s several one-room public schools served the children of the area, but in 1870 the civic minded citizens of Pataskala provided a centralized building for grades one through twelve on Main . . . — Map (db m13880) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Thornville — Eagle’s Nest |
| | Old National Road, built 1825, rebuilt 1914 through the efforts of James M. Cox, Governor of Ohio. Columbus 39 ms. Cumberland 720 ms. — Map (db m274) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Utica — "Ye Olde Mill" — Built in 1817 |
| | This grist mill erected by an early settler, Clarence McKnight, was one of the largest on the frontier. The entire mill was powered by an overshot water wheel. The existing 2,000 pound water wheel is 18 feet in diameter.
Restoration began in 1970 by the Velvet Ice Cream Company in conjunction with the Dager family. Ye Olde Mill is dedicated to our American heritage and for the enjoyment of all.
[Second Marker at Site]
Ye Olde Mill, Utica, Ohio
The original Ye Olde Mill . . . — Map (db m19869) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Utica — Ice Harvesting |
| | During the 18th century ice cream was a rarity and considered a dish of the very wealthy. This was because ice was difficult to come by until the widespread use of “ice harvesting” and the insulated icehouse.
Then the number of confectioners who sold ice cream increased, and ice cream parlors began appearing in major cities. By the mid-19th century ice cream had become popular with the masses. — Map (db m19870) |
| Ohio (Licking County), Utica — The Hufford House |
| | Long time residence of S. Dwight and Ethel Jewett
Donated to Utica Historical Society for use as a meeting place and museum by the family of Ned B. Hufford, Utica resident and businessman who died December 12, 1993 June, 1997 — Map (db m13855) |