Amesville Community Resources for Entrepreneurs
ACRE started in 2011 as the result of the sale of the old Amesville Elementary School. The building had been vacant for over six years and was, at times, slated for demolition. The opportunity to acquire a wonderful space for artists, new businesses, and other organizations could not be missed, and thus, ACRE was started as a pilot project to encourage local artists and businesses. The school is located in Amesville, Ohio, which has a rich and diverse history.
Amesville has been home to many people. Slaves escaping the South walked through Amesville as part of the Underground Railroad. Its landmarks—such as the Masonic Hall on Franklin Street—are important to families living there and visitors to the village. Other landmarks, such as the old Clover Farm Stores building, have been abandoned or torn down, but new landmarks and memories are taking their place.
Amesville is perhaps best known for the Coonskin Library. At an 1803 town meeting -- held to discuss roads -- settlers talked about their desire for books and their lack of money to pay for them. Most of the business was done by barter, so little money was circulating. However, the surrounding forest had pelts that could be sold in the East to buy books. In the spring of 1804, Samuel B. Brown was given the pelts and, accompanied by Ephraim Cutler, went east to bring back books for the town. Fifty-one books -- mostly on religion, travel, biography, and history -- were purchased for $73.50. These books were passed from home to home until Ephraim Cutler was elected librarian in 1804.
The original books are at the Ohio Historical Society and Ohio University's Alden Library. A commemorative marker, placed by the Nabby Lee Ames D.A.R. Chapter of Athens in 1925, is located near the Community Bank on State Street. The Coonskin Library Museum opened in May 1994 in the former cafeteria of the Amesville Grade School.
Amesville is a village in Athens County, Ohio. The community was named after Sylvanus Ames. The latitude of Amesville is 39.400N. The longitude is -81.955W. It is in the Eastern Standard Time zone. The elevation is 633 feet. The estimated population in 2020 was 171. To get more information about Amesville, Ohio, CLICK BELOW
ACRE started in 2011 as the result of the sale of the old Amesville Elementary School. The building had been vacant for over six years and was, at times, slated for demolition. The opportunity to acquire a wonderful space for artists, new businesses, and other organizations could not be missed, and thus, ACRE was started as a pilot project to encourage local artists and businesses. The school is located in Amesville, Ohio, which has a rich and diverse history.
Amesville has been home to many people. Slaves escaping the South walked through Amesville as part of the Underground Railroad. Its landmarks—such as the Masonic Hall on Franklin Street—are important to families living there and visitors to the village. Other landmarks, such as the old Clover Farm Stores building, have been abandoned or torn down, but new landmarks and memories are taking their place.
Amesville is perhaps best known for the Coonskin Library. At an 1803 town meeting -- held to discuss roads -- settlers talked about their desire for books and their lack of money to pay for them. Most of the business was done by barter, so little money was circulating. However, the surrounding forest had pelts that could be sold in the East to buy books. In the spring of 1804, Samuel B. Brown was given the pelts and, accompanied by Ephraim Cutler, went east to bring back books for the town. Fifty-one books -- mostly on religion, travel, biography, and history -- were purchased for $73.50. These books were passed from home to home until Ephraim Cutler was elected librarian in 1804.
The original books are at the Ohio Historical Society and Ohio University's Alden Library. A commemorative marker, placed by the Nabby Lee Ames D.A.R. Chapter of Athens in 1925, is located near the Community Bank on State Street. The Coonskin Library Museum opened in May 1994 in the former cafeteria of the Amesville Grade School.
Amesville is a village in Athens County, Ohio. The community was named after Sylvanus Ames. The latitude of Amesville is 39.400N. The longitude is -81.955W. It is in the Eastern Standard Time zone. The elevation is 633 feet. The estimated population in 2020 was 171. To get more information about Amesville, Ohio, CLICK BELOW
www.amesvilleohio.org