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Barton, Ohio

1880 establishments in OhioAppalachian Ohio geography stubsPopulated places established in 1880Unincorporated communities in Belmont County, OhioUnincorporated communities in Ohio
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Barton is an unincorporated community in southern Colerain Township, Belmont County, Ohio, United States, along Wheeling Creek. It has a post office with the ZIP code 43905.Barton is part of the Wheeling, WV–OH Metropolitan Statistical Area.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Barton, Ohio (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Barton, Ohio
Blaine Barton Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.107222222222 ° E -80.841111111111 °
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Address

Blaine Barton Road (County Road 10)

Blaine Barton Road
43905
Ohio, United States
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Nearby Places

Concord Hicksite Friends Meeting House
Concord Hicksite Friends Meeting House

The Concord Hicksite Friends Meeting House is a historic Friends meeting house located near the community of Colerain, Ohio, United States. Constructed in 1815 for a group formed in 1801, it has been named a historic site. Founded as "Concord", Colerain was the second community to be founded in present-day Belmont County. The founders were Friends who emigrated largely from North Carolina and Virginia to escape slavery.: 155  The first monthly meeting at Concord was held on December 19, 1801, but in the early years, its locations varied from the vicinity of Wheeling, the nearby Short Creek, and Plainfield in Coshocton County.: 213  Until Miami Monthly Meeting was established in 1803, many Friends settling in southwestern Ohio were members at Concord.: 218–219  Other members left around the same time to form a separate monthly meeting, Stillwater, in Warren Township. By the late nineteenth century, this settlement had grown to the point that it had become the permanent meeting place of Ohio Yearly Meeting.: 218  Both Concord and Stillwater suffered division in 1828, as the Hicksite controversy saw the secession of individuals following Hicks' new teachings.: 219–220  Concord was particularly deeply involved in spreading innovation in Ohio Yearly Meeting, and the quarterly meeting having oversight of Concord was forced to appoint a committee to visit its other monthly meetings to check the spread of dissension.: 91  Virtually none of the members remained in communion with Orthodox meetings,: 93  and from the Orthodox perspective, the meeting was quickly laid down, i.e. disorganized.: 95 Constructed in 1815, the Concord meeting house is a simple brick building with no architectural style; the foundation is stone, and slates cover the roof. The structure is a basic rectangle, with doors on both long and short sides; one window pierces the end, and two shuttered windows (one on either side of the doorway) pierce the front. The end rises to a gable, and a small chimney sits atop the peak of the roof. Transom lights are placed above the entrances, which sit atop small flights of steps that rise from a footpath that runs around the building.In 2009, the Concord meeting house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, qualifying both because of its place in local history and because of its historically significant architecture. It is Colerain Township's only National Register-listed site, and one of twenty-six countywide.