Maynard, Ohio
Maynard is an unincorporated community located in western Colerain Township, Belmont County, Ohio, United States, along Wheeling Creek.[1][2] Although it is unincorporated, it has a post office, with the ZIP code of 43937.[3] Maynard is part of the Wheeling, WV-OH Metropolitan Statistical Area. The community is near Wheeling Township and its sister community of Blainesville. Maynard is a part of the St. Clairsville-Richland City School District.
Name origin
Maynard was named for Postmaster General Horace Maynard,[4] who would serve under President Rutherford B. Hayes when the community would apply for its post office in 1880.[5] While serving as a Representative from Tennessee, Maynard had visited the county seat St. Clairsville stumping on behalf of President Andrew Johnson and his policies while on the Swing Around the Circle campaign nearly fifteen years before the Post Office's naming.
Until its postal application, the rail stop was called Henderson's Station after the Henderson family. Undoubtedly, Maynard would have been named Henderson if the name had not already been in use. A short-lived mail stop on the St. Clairsville-Cadiz Pike (today State Route 9) in Belmont County near the border with Harrison County was named Henderson in 1877 after its postmaster.[6] Stockdale was proposed as a name for the community, but upon the recent news of Horace Maynard's appointment to President Hayes' cabinet, the current name was selected.[7][8]
History
The Maynard area saw initial development as Henderson's Station as a stop on the Cleveland, Tuscarawas Valley & Wheeling Railway. Purchased by the Cleveland, Lorain and Wheeling Railway in 1875, the line was still frequently referred to as the Tuscarawas Valley (T.V.) line. Maynard saw substantial growth as coal works were mined, commencing around the time its post office was established through the 1920s. Railroad executive and coal mine owner Selah Chamberlain purchased land and developed a grouping of 77 company houses on a hill above Maynard, which would be called New Pittsburgh in 1883.[9] In 1916, statistics show Maynard to have 1,588 adults and 259 children members at St. Stanislaus Catholic Church alone.[10]
Notable person
- Robert H. Allison, Illinois state legislator and lawyer
References
- "Maynard,, Ohio". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
- Ohio Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, Me.: DeLorme. 1991. pp. 62–63. ISBN 0-89933-233-1.
- Zip Code Lookup
- Overman, William Daniel (1958). Ohio Town Names. Akron, OH: Atlantic Press. p. 85.
- Hunt, W. J. (26 October 1882). "editor". The Belmont Chronicle. 22 (42): 3.
- Hunt, W. A. (22 February 1877). "editor". The Belmont Chronicle. 17 (6): 3.
- Overman, William Daniel (1958). Ohio Town Names. Akron, OH: Atlantic Press. p. 85.
- https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/rg-028/M1126/M1126-447/M1126-447-0854.jpg
- Hunt, W. J. (7 June 1883). "editor". The Belmont Chronicle. 23 (23): 2.
- Centennial. Unknown: Taylor. 1989. pp. 20–26.