User:Addis-Bot/township/Category:Townships in Ohio by county/Liberty Township, Butler County, Ohio

Liberty Township, Butler County, Ohio
镇区
格言:"Embraced by Nature. Inspired by Progress."
Location of Liberty Township in Butler County
Location of Liberty Township in Butler County
Butler County
Butler County
国家美国
州份俄亥俄州
Butler
面积
 • 总计29.3 平方英里(75.8 平方公里)
 • 陸地29.2 平方英里(75.7 平方公里)
 • 水域0.04 平方英里(0.1 平方公里)
海拔[1]751 英尺(229 公尺)
人口2010
 • 總計37,259人
 • 密度1,274人/平方英里(492.0人/平方公里)
时区东部(EST)UTC-5
 • 夏时制EDT(UTC-4
FIPS代码39-43050[2]
地名信息系统特征识别码1085812[1]
網站liberty-township.com

Liberty Township, one of thirteen townships in Butler County, 俄亥俄州, 美国, is in the east-central part of the county, just south of the city of Monroe. With an area of about 29平方英里(75平方公里) it is smallest of the thirteen townships but one of the fastest growing areas in southwest Ohio, having a population of 37,259 at the 2010 census,[3] up from 22,819 in 2000 and just 9,249 in 1990. It was named for Liberty, Pennsylvania, at the suggestion of John Morrow, a resident in the township at the time of its formation in 1803 who was the brother of Ohio Governor Jeremiah Morrow, after his hometown. The first settler was John Nelson, who arrived in 1796, seven years before Ohio became a state. It is one of 25 Liberty Townships statewide.[4]

The northeast corner of the township is part of the city of Monroe, the sole municipality in Liberty Township. Unincorporated places are Bethany, Four Bridges, Hughes Station, Kyles Station, Jericho, and Princeton.

History and geography 编辑

One of the original five townships of the county, it was erected by the Butler County Court of Quarter Sessions on May 7, 1810, with these boundaries:

Beginning at the southeast corner of section No. 14 of the second township in the second entire range on the south boundary line of the county: thence north to the Great Miami; thence northeastwardly up the Miami to the northern boundar of fractional section No. 10 of the second township in the third of military range; thence east to the eastern boundary of the county; thence south with the eastern boundary of the county to the southeast corner thereof; thence west with the southern boundary of the county to the place of beginning.

The original boundaries included what is now West Chester Township, which was separated from Liberty Township by the Butler County Commissioners on June 2, 1823. Today, the township is located in the eastern part of the county and borders the following townships:

Government 编辑

The township is governed by a three-member board of trustees, who are elected in November of odd-numbered years to a four-year term beginning on the following January 1. Two are elected in the year after the presidential election and one is elected in the year before it. There is also an elected township fiscal officer,[5] who serves a four-year term beginning on April 1 of the year after the election, which is held in November of the year before the presidential election. Vacancies in the fiscal officership or on the board of trustees are filled by the remaining trustees. Day-to-day functions are overseen by a township administrator, hired by the trustees, who typically has an assistant, also approved by the trustees. Politically, Liberty Township leans heavily toward the Republican Party. In the 2004 presidential election, George W. Bush carried the township with over 80% of the vote.

Transportation, utilities, and schools 编辑

 
Rapid development has led to widespread construction in Liberty Township.

The Miami and Erie Canal passed through the northwest corner of the township. The Dayton Short Line, now the Norfolk Southern, ran through the township.

The old Cincinnati and Dayton Turnpike, later known as Dixie Highway and U.S. Route 25, is now Cincinnati-Dayton Road. It connects the township to Monroe to the north and Sharonville to the south. Major highways today include the Butler County Veterans Highway (also known as State Route 129), which connects Interstate 75 to Hamilton through the southern tier of the township, and State Route 4, which links Hamilton to Middletown. I-75 runs through the eastern edge of the township with direct access to Liberty Township at Liberty Way (Exit 24), plus at two exits along the Butler County Veterans Highway (State Route 129).

Most of the township is in Cincinnati Bell's Bethany (West Chester) telephone exchange, but a part in the west and southwest centered on Princeton is in Cincinnati Bell's Hamilton exchange. Electric and natural gas service is provided by Duke Energy.

Most of the township is served by the Middletown post office, with the Hamilton post offices serving a large area in the west. Areas on the margins of the township are served by several other post offices: West Chester in the south, Fairfield in the southwest, Lebanon on the east, and Monroe on the north. The lack of their own post office and ZIP code has recently become an issue of debate amongst residents, who feel that since West Chester has its own ZIP code and post office, Liberty should have one as well - particularly since West Chester grew out of Liberty.

Except for the northeast corner, the entire township is in the Lakota Local School District. The remainder in the northeast is in the Monroe Local School District.

Historic population figures 编辑

  • 1900—1,024
  • 1910—986
  • 1920—1,024
  • 1930—1,481
  • 1940—1,628
  • 1950—2,195
  • 1960—3,143
  • 1970—3,736
  • 1980—6,506
  • 1990—9,314
  • 2000—22,819
  • 2010—37,259

参考资料 编辑

Further reading 编辑

  • Bert S. Barlow, W.H. Todhunter, Stephen D. Cone, Joseph J. Pater, and Frederick Schneider, eds. Centennial History of Butler County, Ohio. Hamilton, Ohio: B.F. Bowen, 1905.
  • Jim Blount. The 1900s: 100 Years In the History of Butler County, Ohio. Hamilton, Ohio: Past Present Press, 2000.
  • Butler County Engineer's Office. Butler County Official Transportation Map, 2003. Fairfield Township, Butler County, Ohio: The Office, 2003.
  • A History and Biographical Cyclopaedia of Butler County, Ohio with Illustrations and Sketches of Its Representative Men and Pioneers. Cincinnati, Ohio: Western Biographical Publishing Company, 1882. [1]
  • Ohio. Secretary of State. The Ohio municipal and township roster, 2002-2003. Columbus, Ohio: The Secretary, 2003.

外部链接 编辑

Template:Butler County, Ohio