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Orders Road Schoolhouse Tour
The restored Orders Road Schoolhouse will be open for tours at Century Village next Wednesday, July 17 from 12p-4p. Come see the building where some of your ancestors going back to 1879 might have learned their letters.
Admission and parking is free.
Please note that the Schoolhouse is NOT ADA-compliant. Navigating a few stairs to enter the building is necessary. No food or drinks are permitted in the buildings.
Saloon to Hotel?
Town Marshal Denny Brake once promoted the idea that the saloon operated by the Enders family should be renamed the Grove City Park Hotel. That never happened. Brake lived in one of the two houses just behind Enders where the Safety Building sits today.
William G. Sibray
Kathleen White’s great grandfather, William G. Sibray, purchased the first lot in Grove City from the town’s founder, William Foster Breck. Sibray spent a whopping $16 for his property. A native of Baltimore, MD, he had been living in Pickerington when he moved to Jackson Township with Breck.
Grove City’s Stage Coach
Before William F. Breck created a plat for the Grove City settlement in 1852, W. B. and J. A. Hawks operated a stage coach and mail route along a dusty trail between Columbus and Harrisburg. By 1850, Joseph O’Brien and William Bender had taken over the route maintaining a regular schedule then between Columbus and Mt. Sterling with stops in Grove City and Harrisburg.
Corbett and McCormac
Katherine Grant Corbett, daughter of Adam Grant, was an avid bird watcher according to an article by naturalist Jim McCormac, a feature writer for the Columbus Dispatch. In 1909, McCormac received a note pad that belonged to Katherine where she recorded every bird species she had witnessed. A bird guide book that was a Christmas gift helped identify them. She wrote the house sparrow was “seen everywhere on every day of the year” and pointed out that bird was also called a “street urchin.”