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The adoption of the Ordinance of 1787 by the federal government provided for the legal establishment of the first governmental
unit in Ohio, the township.
A surveyor was appointed by Congress to divide the Ohio Territory into five or six mile square units. The square plats were
marked into numbered units one mile square or 640 acres. These lots then were offered for sale to the public by the federal
government. Section 16 was reserved for the establishment of a township public school.
When Ohio became a state in 1803, the township also became a political subdivision of the state. As such, the township has
only those powers granted to it by the state legislature and performs its functions as directed by the state.
Over the years, these functions have changed or grown. In 1804, provisions were made to care for the poor, maintain the roads
and the peace of the township, to register livestock brands, and in general, to serve the basic needs of township residents.
Elected officials were required to perform these duties: a board of three trustees, a clerk, two overseers of the poor, a
select number of highway supervisors, a justice of the peace, and constables. In later years, a treasurer, an assessor, a
board of education and health were added. Currently the number of elected officials has been reduced to three trustees and
a clerk, each elected to a four-year term. They fulfill their duties on a part-time basis. The other previously mentioned
elected officials have become obsolete as have their functions. County or municipal government has assumed many of these responsibilities
for the obsolete offices.
The state legislature has granted the township the latitude to provide a wide variety of services to the public which allow
for a more modern and workable local government. Some of these services include: artificial lighting on any public road, place,
or building within township boundaries and outside municipal limits, the care and management of cemeteries, waste disposal,
zoning, police and fire protection, and township road and ditch construction, care, and maintenance.
TOWNSHIP OFFICES
Board of Education
Now obsolete, the township Board of Education, from its establishment in the early 1850s until its consolidation in 1914-1915,
was responsible for all educational functions on the local level. These included: building and maintenance of schools, purchasing
supplies, employing teachers, curriculum selection, collecting of assessed taxes for school support, and providing for the
distribution of those monies for school needs.
In 1914, the township Board of Education, which consisted of five township members elected at large along with the township
clerk/treasurer as ex officio member(s), was transformed into a rural school district. The township Board was supervised by
the County Board of Education.
The records of the obsolete township Board of Education may be found listed under the respective townships or under the County
Board of Education.
Board of Health
Ohio laws continually have made provisions for health care in the state. It was not until 1893, however, that the laws pertaining
to local Boards of Health with the township trustees as members were reorganized. The township clerk served as the clerk for
the new board. The township Board of Health could appoint a health officer and as many sanitary officers as necessary. The
Board of Health's duties included the prevention or restriction of disease, inspections of dairies, food establishments, and
the like, and the calling of quarantines if required.
In 1919, township Boards of Health became obsolete when they were consolidated with County Health Districts/Boards of Health
by an act of the Ohio legislature.
The records of township Boards of Health may be found listed under the township or county health districts/boards.
Board of Trustees
The Board of Township Trustees consists of three members elected to a four year, part-time term. They are responsible for
the supervision and maintenance of all township functions. In the early days of township history, the Board of Trustees cared
for the poor, maintained the roads, preserved the peace, and registered brands.
Today, the board's responsibilities include providing for the artificial lighting of any public road, place, or building under
township supervision, excluding cities and villages, the care and maintenance of township cemeteries, providing for sanitary
waste disposal, rural zoning, police and fire protection, township road and ditch construction and maintenance, and other
services as needed.
Township Clerk
The Township Clerk is an elected official serving a four year, part-time term. Besides assisting the Board of Trustees with
their duties, the clerk is responsible for administering and allocating the township funds, keeping the minutes of board meetings,
and administering all records of the township.
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