Ohio History Journal

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The Shaker Community of Warren County

The Shaker Community of Warren County.       251

 

 

 

THE SHAKER COMMUNITY OF WARREN COUNTY.

ITS ORIGIN, RISE, PROGRESS AND DECLINE.

By J. P. MACLEAN, PH. D.

 

INTRODUCTION.

Located three miles west of Lebanon, Ohio, is the seat of the

bishopric of the Shaker communities west of the Allegheny

Mountains. The tract of land possessed by them is irregular in its

boundaries, and embraces 4,500 acres of as rich soil as may be

found in the state. Its location meets the approval of the most

critical eye. The postoffice is known as Union Village, but to the

surrounding country it is known as Shakertown. The people who

own this tract of territory are honored and respected by their

neighbors. The land has been brought under a high state of cul-

tivation, and the buildings are commodious, well constructed with

all modern improvements. The Shakers number about forty-five

souls, who take life quietly, and enjoy all the luxuries they desire.

The office, where resides the ministry, is one of the finest executive

buildings in America, and furnished more luxuriously than any

business office in the state. Notwithstanding the fact that here

we may find nearly every desire that an upright mind might de-

mand, yet the community is growing less, and apparently its days

are numbered.

On Monday, May 20, 1901, I called upon Dr. Joseph R. Slin-

gerland, first in the ministry, who has both special and general

charge of all the western communities of Shakers, for the purpose

of obtaining all the facts relative to the transactions of the mob of

181O, and further to see if I could secure the privilege of examin-

ing the archives of the recently extinct community at Watervliet,

near Dayton. During the conversation I was informed that there

was a MS. history of the Union Village community. Requesting

the loan of the MS., it was placed in my hands, with liberty to

make such use of its contents as I might deem advisable.