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Leatherwood Creek (Tawana Creek tributary)

Ohio river stubsRivers of Champaign County, OhioRivers of Miami County, OhioRivers of OhioRivers of Shelby County, Ohio
Use American English from February 2025

Leatherwood Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Ohio. The 10.6-mile (17.1 km) long stream is a tributary of Tawana Creek. Leatherwood Creek was named for the leatherwood which grew along its course.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Leatherwood Creek (Tawana Creek tributary) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Leatherwood Creek (Tawana Creek tributary)
SR 29,

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N 40.265555555556 ° E -84.088333333333 °
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SR 29
45365
Ohio, United States
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Fulton Farm
Fulton Farm

The Fulton Farm, also known as "River Bend Farm," is a historic farmstead in Shelby County, Ohio, United States. Located on the southern side of the city of Sidney, the farm is composed of five buildings spread out over an area of approximately 2 acres (0.81 ha). Built primarily in 1848, the distinctively Gothic Revival farm buildings are a leading element of Shelby County rural architecture; few pre-Civil War farmhouses elsewhere in the county are more elaborate. Besides the farmhouse, the complex includes four less important buildings, two brick and two wooden: a smokehouse, a carriage house, and two smaller barns. Prominent farmer Isaac Fulton built the one-and-one-half story farmhouse and other buildings for his wife, the former Jane Taylor, soon after their 1848 wedding. The construction, which was not finished until 1850, was almost entirely Fulton's work; he even made the bricks by himself. Fulton used an unusual floor plan; the house's footprint is asymmetrical, and its windows are a mix of trabeated and traditional Gothic Revival styles. A rectangle large enough to support the entire house would measure approximately 50 feet (15 m) by 42 feet (13 m). In 1979, the Fulton Farm was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It qualified for inclusion on the Register because of its impact on two different areas of local history: its well-preserved historic architecture and its place in the development of agriculture in central Shelby County.