A Victorian Christmas at the Hunt House, 2023

We trimmed the tree and decked the halls, the windows, the parlor,
the staircase, the fireplaces and mantels, and anywhere else
we could find to hang lights and ornaments!

We welcomed guests to the finale of a very busy year, and we look forwward to seeing old and new friends in 2024. Before we move on, one more look at a Victorian Christmas.

We thank Lisa Egan for reading The Night Before Christmas to the delight of our young guests and all guests who enjoyed the story of their childhood. The story by Clement Clarke Moore is 200 years old.

We want to thank the Young Professionals Choral Collaborative for their festive reditions of many seasonal pieces. They performed for three hours, outside and in the parlor.

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Save the Dates!

Saturday, October 28, 1:00-4:00

It’s harvest time on the Hunt farm—see the authentic farm equipment and tools that were used by the Hunts through the years. Also, Halloween crafts for the kids and other special treats and surprises!

Saturday, December 9, 1:00-4:00

Victorian Christmas at the Hunt House. Holiday treats, music, and fun for all ages.

Cincinnati, Early 1800s Through the Civil War

Many thanks and much appreciation to Dana Gagnon for her enlightening and informative portayal of Harriet Beecher Stowe at the Hunt House on July 15, 2023. We appreciate her presence for over three hours, which gave us time to interact and ask questions. It was as if we were transported to the 1800s.

Following is an adaptation of the PowerPoint shown on July 15.

The early pioneers were mostly from the East Coast and of British descent. Cincinnati was a destination for German and Irish immigrants beginning in the 1830s and 1840s. Cincinnati was on the road to freedom for runaway and freed slaves and home to abolitionist Harriet Beecher Stowe.

In the 1850s, Cincinnati was nearly four times the size of Chicago and the Midwest leader in manufacturing and commerce.

Known as Porkopolis, Cincinnati was responsible for a quarter of the hogs slaughtered in the United States and about the same number of cattle.

Industries spun off the pork packaging industry—

Barrel making

Boots and shoes

Harnesses

Tanneries

Mattresses

Soap and candles

And second to the pork industry was the Eagle Iron Works, the company of Miles Greenwood which became the second largest in the West.

Made by Eagle Works—

Sash weights

Shutter lifts and catches

Pulleys

Teakettles

Tailor sheers

Machine castings

Munitions for war

Cincinnati was a hub for Southern goods and produce. The Miami and Erie Canal ran through downtown Cincinnati and connected Cincinnati to the Great Lakes.

Photo courtesy of Only in Your State

John Craig Hunt was a gentleman farmer who transported his produce by flatboat downriver to markets along the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. He was also an agent for other farmers. Produce demanded higher prices in southern markets.

“Cincinnati was home to six major publishers, 43 book stores, and nearly 4000 print publications.” The Good Country by Jon K. Lauck

Inspired by the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and the loss of a child, Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin. This book became a best seller. However, there was worry from laborers about the competition for jobs with former slaves. Race riots in Cincinnati broke out in 1829, 1836, and 1841.

Cincinnatians also worried about a loss of southern markets in the event of war. And then Confederates opened fire on Ft. Sumter on April 12, 1861, and Cincinnati mobilized for war.

The Ohio Second Regiment, the Ohio Ninth Regiment, and the Ohio Tenth Regiment were formed. Those not in a regiment formed home guards to protect Cincinnati. Camp Dennison was a training camp, a hospital, a protector from an attack on Cincinnati, and a mustering out camp after the war.

In the first 18 months of the Civil War, river trade collapsed, banks failed, farm produce gutted the markets, and there was poverty among the working class.

Confederate troops threatened Cincinnati in 1862, and Cincinnati was unprepared for a direct attack.

In the first 18 months of the Civil War, river trade collapsed, banks failed, farm produce gutted the markets, and there was poverty among the working class.Confederate troops threatened Cincinnati in 1862.

Confederate troops could not have occupied Cincinnati indefinitely, but they would have gained access to the 12 warehouses of boots and shoes. And the psychological victory would have been huge.

General Lewis Wallace

General Lewis Wallace commanded a force of 72,000 men from the city and rural “squirrel hunters.”

Earthwork defenses were constructed in Ft. Mitchell. Troops crossed the Ohio River on a pontoon bridge to Kentucky followed by a three mile march to Ft. Mitchell.

Meanwhile, officers were training “citizen defenders.” So many volunteers arrived in Cincinnati that Governor Todd requested that no more show up. The Confederate troops that numbered 10,000 were no match for the 72,000 Union soldiers and volunteers prepared to defend Cincinnati. The Confederates under General Heth retreated.

Squirrel hunters were treated so well in Cincinnati that they did not want to leave, so they were issued discharges and told to go home. 

Vicksburg, May 18 to July 4, 1863

The siege of Vicksburg ended and gave control of the Mississippi River to the Union. Victory was won by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant.

General Ulysess S. Grant

What it meant for Cincinnati—

Renewed river traffic

War contracts

Return to good economic times

Gettysburg, July 1-July 3, 1863

What it meant for the war—

The Union victory dashed Confederate hopes for independence.

Morgan’s Raid began in Tennessee and covered 1000 miles from June 11 to July 26, 1863.

Its purpose was the draw Union troops back to Ohio. The Confederate cavalry led by General Morgan entered Ohio at Harrison on July 13 and moved so quickly that Union General Hobson was unable to get ahead of the Confederates.

General Edward Henry Hobson, photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
 General John Hunt Morgan, Photo courtesy of the U.S. National Park Service

July 14, 1863

Morgan’s hungry men visited every house within 1 ½ miles of the Hunt House. Gen. Morgan had breakfast at the Schenck house in Deer Park.

Both sides stole fresh horses, sometimes exchanging Kentucky thoroughbreds for work horses.

The Hunt House barn from which General Morgan’s men four stole horses on July 14, 1863

What it meant for the country—

This raid prolonged the war and suffering on both sides.


April 9, 1865—General Robert E. Lee, on the right, surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House.

Photo courtesy of the Galena/Jo Daviess County Historical Society

News reached Cincinnati at 9:30 pm. A downpour of rain could not stop Cincinnatians from celebrating with bonfires and fireworks.

The war ended, the president assassinated— President Lincoln’s funeral on April 19, 1865.

Photo courtesy of Library of Congress

 Sources:

Only in Your State

 National Museum of American History

 Photos offered free from various Internet sites

 Cincinnati the Queen City

 Morgan’s Raid by David Mowery

 The Good Country by Jon K. Lauck

 Rising Tide by Davis Dyer, Frederick Dalzell, and Rowena Olegario

The story of pioneer Mary Craig Carpenter Dunlevy

This is the story of Mary Craig, the grandmother of John Craig Hunt, and the journey that brought her to the Ohio Country in 1788 when she and her husband, James Carpenter, were caught up in the excitement over emigration to Ohio. Her life story is one of courage and conviction. First, a look at her life leading up to the frontier of Southwestern Ohio.

John Craig, his wife, and their eldest child, Jane, set sail from Scotland.  Their second child, Mary Craig, was born circa 1765 on the voyage to America. The family settled in New York, and a son, John Craig, was born. Mary’s father died not long after their arrival.

Mary’s mother worried about her family’s safety as the British began the seven year occupation of New York City.  She renewed her acquaintance with a gentleman she had known in Scotland, who was now an officer in the British Navy or the British Army. She and Alexander Fergeson were married.

Ten year old Mary sided with the Patriots and moved to the home of Dr. Halstead in Elizabethtown, New Jersey. Mary assisted Dr. Halstead as the wounded soldiers were brought to his house, which served as a hospital. Mary bravely protected property in Elizabethtown from the British and once had a sword drawn on her.  She stood her ground, trusting that her young age would protect her. 

Mary witnessed General George Washington marching to New York and strewed flowers on the road as he passed by.

Mary’s sister married an Englishman and moved to England. Mary’s mother and stepfather, along with her brother and half-sister, relocated to Nova Scotia.

James Carpenter and Mary Craig were married in 1787 and joined John Cleves Symmes on the journey over the Allegheny Mountains and down the Ohio River to Columbia, five miles upriver from present day downtown Cincinnati. The frontier in 1788 was protected by only 600 soldiers. Native Americans did not welcome the settlers.

A blockhouse and log cabins were constructed. Sadly, James Carpenter succumbed to the strenuous work of building a cabin for his young family, leaving Mary and his daughters Hannah and Rebecca.

For fifteen months, Mary Craig Carpenter shunned the sometimes rough language and behavior she found “repulsive” in the blockhouse and chose to live “several hundred yards from the blockhouse.” Her children slept in the cellar underneath the floor of their cabin while their mother sat up every night to watch for Indians. She used this time to knit or do house work that could be done in the dim light of embers.

One night, as Mary succumbed to sleep, her dog slept by the door and awakened her with a growl. She gathered her babies and raced toward the blockhouse. She was spotted by a guard in the Fort Washington tower, and soldiers were summoned.

Francis Dunlevy, a young teacher at Columbia, was smitten by the brave young mother. 

Judge Francis Dunlevy had served in numerous Indian campaigns and arrived at Columbia in 1792. He had a classical education, and he excelled in advanced math. He taught in the school in Columbia, which was one of the first in the Northwest Territory.

Francis Dunlevy and Mary Craig Carpenter were married in January of 1793. They had six children who lived to adulthood. Francis Dunlevy served in the legislature and at the Ohio Constitutional Convention in 1802. He was the presiding judge in the Court of Common Pleas.

Mary’s daughter Hannah married Isaac Hunt in 1808 and settled on the land her father had purchased from John Cleves Symmes. 

Moving to the Ohio Country meant one might never again see family. However, a letter addressed to Mary “in the Miami country” arrived.

Mary’s brother had returned to the United States from Nova Scotia. Mary’s sister returned to New York from Liverpool, England, to reconnect with Mary and their brother. Mary’s sister learned their brother John Craig* had died that same year, 1806, and her sister was in the “far West.” The sister refused to enter “Indian country” and arranged to meet Mary in Pittsburgh.  Sadly, the sister contracted and died of yellow fever while in New York.

Mary died in 1828, her heart broken by the deaths of adult children, one of whom was Hannah who died after the birth of her twelfth child. The Hunt House was built circa 1860 by Hannah’s son John Craig Hunt. The house remained in the family until it was sold to Blue Ash in 2003.

This information is adapted from Hunt family papers archived with the Blue Ash Historical Society.

*The letter from N. H. Dunlevy dated December 9, 1851 relates the following about Mary’s brother:

“From Nova Scottia, John Craig and both the Fergusons, father and son, about 1800 returned to northern New York State…John Craig married a Mis [sic] Runsom, bought a large tract of land on the shore of Lake Champlain, was busily and profitable [sic] engaged in rafting lumber down Lake Champlain in the St. Lawrence and thence to Quebec. But in a storm in 1806 wa drowned leaving wife and one child.”

From this same letter, it appears the mother of Mary Craig Carpenter Dunlevy died in New York prior to the family’s move to Nova Scotia. Mr. Ferguson, John Craig, and the child she had with Mr. Ferguson relocated after the recapture of New York.

Blue Ash Photos Now on the Cincinnati Public Library website!

We are extremely grateful to the Cincinnati Public Library for preserving photos of places and people that tell the story of Blue Ash.

We are also indebted to those who have provided us with their family photos and stories. Click on the link to visit the website.

Included with the local Blue Ash collection are aerial photos of Cincinnati and other points of interest which were taken by photographers who flew out of the two Blue Ash Airports.

 bit.ly/historicalphotos2023

Holiday Celebration at the Hunt House, 2022

Mark your calendars for December 10, from 1-4 pm. The house will be decorated with many of the traditional greenery and ornaments associated with Christmas. We invite you to join us for refreshments, including hot wassail.

We are happy to welcome Lisa Egan as our special guest. She is a teacher and will have several readings for children and the young at heart during the afternoon. Her attire will be Victorian.

Do you wonder why we have poinsettias at Christmas? Do you wonder why Santa Claus’ “clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot”? The following was shared with us, and we pass it along.

The Legend of the
Candy Cane


Honoring the birth of Christ was the original
inspiration for the traditional, highly symbolic
Christmas candy cane.
Upright, it’s a shepherd’s staff; upside down, it’s
the letter “J” for Jesus. White is for purity, while
the red stripes represent the blood of Christ. One
bold stripe is for belief in one God; the three fine
stripes represent the Holy Trinity.
Candy canes were first made in 1672, mentioned
in association with Christmas in 1874, and first
hung on trees in 1882. The earliest patent for a
candy cane machine was 1920.


Ivy


Ivy is a plant more closely
associated with Christmas in
England than in America. It is
considered to be a symbol of
eternal life. Christian symbolism relates ivy’s
need to cling to a support to man’s need for
divine support.


Christmas Cactus


A native of the South American
jungle, the Christmas cactus is a
popular seasonal plant. Its tendency to flower
just before the winter solstice makes it a natural
choice for holiday displays. Available in colors
from white to rich red to salmon to bright
fuschia, this plant will brighten the dreariest of
winter days.


Christmas Rose

Named for its tendency to bloom in late
December or early January, the Christmas rose is
not a true rose.
One story about this flower takes place in the
Goinge Forest of Sweden. It tells of a Christmas
Eve when an abbot and a skeptical monk walked
through the forest. Magically, all the trees were
in full leaf, all flowers were in bloom, and the
birds were singing. The doubting monk was
convinced that this was a work of evil. In return
for his skepticism, the miracle ended, and only
the Christmas roses were left in bloom.


Poinsettia


Called the “Flor de la Noche
Buena” in its native Mexico, this
“Flower of the Holy Night” was
brought to America over 100 years ago. It is
named for Dr. Joel Poinsett, our first ambassador
to Mexico.
One legend of this popular holiday plant
describes a poor peasant girl who left the church
on Christmas Eve, weeping because she had no
gift to lay on the altar for the Christ Child. An
angel appeared and told her that any gift, when
given with love, would be acceptable. She
gathered some weeds from the side of the road
and placed them on the alter. They were
transformed by miracle into the bright red
flowers of today.


Mistletoe


Almost everyone is familiar with
the custom of kissing under the
mistletoe. This practice has its roots in the myths
of Scandinavia. Legend says that the god Baldur
was killed by an arrow made from mistletoe. The
tears of his mother, Frigga, goddess of Love and
Beauty, became the white berries of the
mistletoe. Balder’s life was restored, and Frigga
is said to have kissed anyone who passed under
the mistletoe.
The Druids believe this plant could bestow health
and good fortune. In Wales, a good mistletoe
crop is said to foretell a good crop the following
season. In some parts of England, Christmas
mistletoe is burned on Twelfth Night, lest all the
boys and girls who kissed beneath it never get
married.


Holly


Holly is one of the oldest plants to be associated
with the holiday season. All over the world it is
steeped in tradition. In Germany, a sprig of holly
that has been used in a church decoration is
considered to protect against lightning. British
farmers put sprigs of holly on beehives because it
is believed on the first Christmas the bees
hummed in honor of the Christ Child. A sprig of
holly on a bedpost is said to bring sweet dreams.


St. Nicholas


St. Nicholas is the gift-bearer for children.
The people of Germany believe that on the
night of December 5th, the eve of his feast
day, St. Nicholas goes from house to house
with his “Book of Sins.” For those children who
have been good throughout the year, gifts are left
in the shoe or boot that has been left by the
fireplace. For those who have not been so good,
they can expect to see a boot full of twigs.
The tradition of gift-giving is based on the story
in which he generously gave the entire
inheritance left him by his wealthy parents to the
poor and protected them from the cold and
hunger.


Shopping Mall Santas


Gift-giving has been an important
part of holiday celebrations.
Stores began to advertise Christmas
shopping in 1820, and by the 1840s
newspapers were creating separate sections for
holiday advertisements, which often featured
images of the newly-popular Santa Claus. In
1841 thousands of children visited a Philadelphia
shop to see a life-size Santa Claus model. It was
only a matter of time before stores begin to
attract children with the lure of a peek at a “live”
Santa Claus.


In the early 1880s, the Salvation Army needed
money to pay for the free Christmas meals they
provided to needy familues. They began dressing
up unemployed men in Santa Clause suits and
sending them into the streets of New York to
solicit donations. Those familiar Salvation Army
Santas have been ringing bells on street corners
ever since.

In 1822, Clement Clarke
Moore, an Episcopal
minister, wrote a long
Christmas poem for his three
daughters entitled “An
Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas.”


Moore’s poem, which he was initially hesitant to publish
due to the frivolous nature of the subject, is
largely responsible for our modern image of
Santa Claus as a “right jolly old elf” with a
portly figure and the supernatural ability to
ascend a chimney with a mere nod of his head
and fly from house to house in a sleigh led by
eight reindeer.


In 1881, political cartoonist Thomas Nast drew
on Moore’s poem to create the first likeness that
matches our modern image of Santa Claus.


His cartoon depicted Santa as a rotund, cheerful man
with a full white beard, holding a sack laden with
toys for lucky children. It is Nast who gave
Santa his bright red suit trimmed with white fur,
a North Pole workshop, elves, and his wife, Mrs.
Claus.

Early Sites in Blue Ash

9522 Conklin Avenue, built in 1890
9561 Conklin Avenue, built in 1888. This house is a modest example of Queen Anne architecture in Blue Ash and is associated with John Conklin, the son of Isaac Conklin, an early Sycamore Township settler. John, a farmer and real estate developer, owned this property in 1884. In 1858, the post office was located in east Sycamore, just south of Blue Ash, with Ebenezer Ferris serving as Postmaster.  That station closed in 1884. The post office in Blue Ash was established in 1882.  John Conklin was named Postmaster in 1887.  The post office was in Conklin’s house, which was common in those days.   Door-to-door delivery arrived in Blue Ash in the 1950s.  The post office served as the social and business center for most small communities. General information was disseminated at the post office when residents came to pick up their mail. In 1914, the property belonged to Sophia Hilsinger, widow of Jacob Hilsinger, a bookkeeper and founder of the Blue Ash Building and Loan.* *Historic Inventory of Hamilton County
The Blue Ash Building and Loan was founded in 1907.  Edwin L. Strawser, president of the Blue Ash Building and Loan, joined the local loan company in 1915.  He stored the receipts from the day’s business in a cigar box that he took home at night.  This one-room building served as the bank until 1952 when they moved to the current location at 4811 Cooper Road.  It was open only one night a week.  In addition to the limited hours of operation, customers were required to have a good reason for withdrawing their money!  It has the honor of being the longest-running business in Blue Ash.

4619 Cooper Road, built in 1890
4625 Cooper Road, built in 1880
4658 Cooper Road, known as the Conklin House, built in 1845. This is one of the few remaining farm houses in Blue Ash. It was owned by Isaac Conklin, an early settler in Sycamore Township. He worked in the lumber business and later farmed in Walnut Hills. He moved to this house from the Mill Creek Valley. John Conklin, his son, was a farmer and real estate dealer and owned the house and 100 acres in 1869. John Conklin subdivided property north of Hunt to Cooper and from Conklin east to Railroad Avenue in a plat approved in 1890.    Part of this property was known as the Conklin Subdivision, including Conklin Avenue. In 1914, John’s son, Charles, owned only five acres and the house.* *Historic Inventory of Hamilton County

4677 Cooper Road, once the Weber Store, built in 1900. The Louis Weber family moved to Blue Ash in 1921 and opened Weber’s Grocery Store at the corner of Cooper Road and Railroad Avenue. Mr. Weber added space for a post office at the rear of the grocery store adjacent to the train tracks on the south side of Cooper Road.  The first Blue Ash library was in Weber’s Grocery Store, on one shelf.   Books came from the downtown library.  Alma Weber, daughter of the owner, earned five cents for each borrowed book. The building is currently the home of The Leist Group, Realtors.
9527 Highland Avenue, built in 1880

4364 Hunt Road, built circa 1860. This house is an excellent example of the transitional period between Federal and Greek Revival styles of architecture. The farmstead was owned by the Hunt family, prominent farmers in Sycamore Township. Upon the death of John Craig Hunt in 1868, the property passed to his son Wilson. At that time, the farm consisted of an orchard and a dairy operation. The 1869 Atlas also shows a blacksmith’s shop on the site. Wilson Hunt owned the property in 1914.*
*Historic Inventory of Hamilton County

8849 Kenwood Road, built in 1830 by Solomon Ferris. 1990 photo. Solomon Ferris bought 50 acres on Kenwood Road in 1826, on which he built this house. He was the younger son of John and Elizabeth Ferris, Sr. The 1869 Atlas shows the house on the property of J.L. Hosbrook; in 1884 the house was owned by M. E. Pritchett. In the 1914 Atlas the house is owned by another Solomon Ferris, perhaps Solomon Ferris, Jr. * *Historic Inventory of Hamilton County
8992 Kenwood Road, built in 1830 (The Hamilton County Auditor’s website shows 1865 as the date of construction.) Known as the John Ferris home, this early brick L-house is on land purchased by Elizabeth Ferris in 1801. She was the wife of John Ferris, Sr., who had purchased land in Sycamore Township in 1791.* John and Elizabeth were the first settlers in Blue Ash in 1791. They relocated to Lexingon, KY, and returned after the Indian Wars ended in 1795. *Historic Inventoy of Hamilton County

4510 Leslie Avenue, built in 1875. This house is one of the few remaining 19th century structures in this subdivision. J. H. Crugar owned 53 acres of land. In 1889 Louis Ellman had this area surveyed and platted for a subdivision in Blue Ash. The irregularly shaped frame house has a cross gabled roof and a multisided 2-1/2 story tower topped by a finial capped roof. The tower appears to be a late 19th century addition. A porch with turned posts and a decorative spindled frieze wraps around the south and east sides.* *Historic Inventory of Hamilton County
10193 Zig Zag Road, known as the Archibald Johnson home, built in 1840. This is one of the few remaining early farmhouses in Sycamore Township, now the City of Blue Ash, and was the home of Archibald Johnson who platted the first subdivision in Blue Ash.* *Historic Inventory of Hamilton County
4752 Alpine, built in 1890. This Victorian is known as the Sibley-Brennemann House, named for the first families who lived in it. It is believed the Brennamann family acquired this home in 1901. The previous owners were James Sibley who died in 1893 and his widow, Mary Sibley, who died in 1901.
9544 Conklin Avenue., built in 1902. The carriage house at the rear of the house is said to have housed the early fire department. This home has the distinction of being included in “The Historic Inventory of Hamilton County, An Historic Survey of 42 Suburban Communities” prepared by The Miami Purchase Association and authorized by the Hamilton County Board of County Commissioners in 1991.

9545 Conklin Avenue, built in 1900.
4548 Ellman, built in 1890

9360 Floral, built in 1865
9519 Highland Avenue, built in 1890. This home is part of the Mission Baptist Church campus.
4741 Hunt Road, built in 1895
9503 Kenwood Road. The original portion of the Strawser Funeral Home was built in 1900. The funeral home (first floor) was constructed in 1931. The property has been in the Strawser family since 1900.

10243 Kenwood Road, built in 1900.
9507 Railroad Avenue, built in 1886.
9511 Railroad Avenue, built in 1886
9655 West AVenue, built in 1893

The Hunt House Through the Years

The Hunt House was built circa 1860 and replaced a log cabin. This photo was taken pre 1900. The house remained in the Hunt family until purchased in 2003 by the City of Blue Ash. According to a survey conducted in the 1850s, the Hunts were gentlemen farmers. They took their produce and that of other farmers downriver. Pork especially commanded higher prices in Southern markets. However, travel down the Mississippi River came to a halt with the Civil War. Cincinnati was then in a depression until the Union victory at Vicksburg in 1863 opened downriver trade.
This was the side porch in a 1930 photo.
The Hunt House in 1960.
This was the original back porch.
A restored widow’s walk until recent years crowned the Hunt House.  It is commonly believed that women along the East Coast would climb to the widow’s walk, hopefully and prayerfully scanning the horizon for their husbands’ ships.  There was joy when the vessel was sighted and mourning when the vessel failed to return to shore.
Actually, the widow’s walk had a more critical purpose.   The railed platform was built around the chimney, allowing access to the chimney from the interior of the house.  A bucket next to the hearth was filled with sand or water, ever ready to extinguish flames, either at the hearth or down through the chimney.  The photo on this page shows the chimneys outside of, but within reach, of the widow’s walk.
According to Beverly Mussari, Blue Ash historian, the widow’s walk was also a retreat for widows to grieve as that was done in private.
Betty Hunt Bell’s cousin Harry Hunt remembered climbing to the widow’s walk to enjoy the Fourth of July fireworks being set off from what is now the Cincinnati Zoo.
It has also been noted that one might ascend to the widow’s walk in order to watch for the mail carrier.
A widow’s walk was considered part of Italianate architecture.

The front porch was the formal entry that would have been used for guests. This is a view of the home when Blue Ash acquired it from Elizabeth Hunt Bell, a descendant of the pioneers Isaac and Hannah Carpenter Hunt. Hannah’s father, James Carpenter, paid $1000 to John Cleves Symmes for 640 acres in about 1789. The architect Jim Fearing took the house back to the 1800s.

The Hunt House when acquired by the City of Blue Ash. Notice the widow’s walk, which has since been removed.

This is the barn from which General John Hunt Morgan’s soldiers stole horses in 1863. Wilson Hunt, the son of John and Eliza Hunt, looked out his window and saw the soldiers making off with the horses. He told his father who responded that they could do nothing to stop the raiders. The family filed a claim for the loss of four horses with a value of $495.

.This is the Hunt barn in 1930.
An aerial photo of the Hunt property taken in 1920.

Kitchen

Kitchens were often separate from the rest of the house due to the heat from cooking and the threat of a fire. The Hunt House kitchen, however, is incorporated in the symmetry of the house.

A sign in the window for a 25, 50, 75, or 100 pound block of ice would tell the distributor the size of the block the family needed.
The tongs on the far upper left would be used to lift the block of ice. This table was used in food preparation and for homework.
The stove is a working replica of the one used in the house. It was manufactured in Ohio. Burn marks on the floor indicated the location of the original stove.

The kitchen used by the Hunt family in modern times.
During renovation to the 1800s kitchen.

Hunt House Reopens

Welcome back to the Hunt House! We are happy to again open the doors to guests. The blue ribbon was cut by Mayor Marc Sirkin and historical society president Tom Bell. We wish to thank the City of Blue Ash for the work that’s been done to the Hunt House and for their support in so many ways.

It’s always a pleasure to tell about the house and its place in history. We also enjoy hearing our guests tell their family stories, whether of life in Blue Ash or elsewhere.

The Blue Ash Historical Society has not been on hiatus for the past two years. The Blue Ash Recreation Center graciously provided a room for us to store, sort, and archive documents. We named the room “The Dungeon” and went to work, thinking about the days when we would return to the Hunt House. We do appreciate the space!

A huge event was held at the Carpenters Run Pioneer Cemetery last fall. An amazing program was presented by the Sons of the American Revolution. It was well attended, and we hope to do this again. One guest even had an ancestor buried in the cemetery.