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Newsletter - June 17, 2021

Then, Now, Tomorrow!


84’-deep Hand-dug Stone-lined Well
 
Hansel Park

This story is about another park that will be developed in the next few years, Hansel Park.

THEN (before 2017)  The property now known as Hansel Park is 32 acres in the east-central part of Fairfield County. The site was acquired by donation from Evelan Hansel.

The Bookmobile

This place came with oral history stories that, while interesting, may have proved to be untrue. One story says Evelan was the librarian who began the bookmobile program in Fairfield County. Traveling the dirt and gravel roads, she made reading materials available to residents who did not have easy access to books or newspapers.

According to an article that appeared in Lancaster Eagle-Gazette on Sunday, April 1, 2001, “The Lancaster Public Library’s first bookmobile arrives in the city in this 1949 photo. Its first driver was Russell Whartenby and first bookmobile librarian was Viola Paisley.” That article also said, “Logan librarian Evelyn Hansel, with 13 years library experience, was named head librarian in March 1957. Hansel resigned as head librarian at the Logan-Hocking-Vinton County Library after a disagreement with that library board’s decision to dissolve their bookmobile agreement with Vinton County.”

Assuming that information is accurate, she did not begin the program nor was she the first to drive Fairfield County’s bookmobile. She was, apparently, passionate about the benefits a bookmobile provided to those outside the city!
 
Interior of Hansel Park's Log-framed House

Log-framed House & Hand-dug Well

Everyone loves a log cabin! Is that because we immediately start to think of what life must have been like so many years ago? The early 1800s structure is a small log-framed house that was moved to this property. The original location and when or why it was moved are unknown. One oral history proposes it was the first doctor’s office in Pleasant Township. The heavy white oak front door is said to have been removed and used as a surgical table when the need arose. Is that true? We do not really know. It is a great story that calls to mind a family arriving by buckboard or horseback with an injured father or daughter, perhaps in the middle of the night.  Holding their lanterns above their heads, they carry the injured one inside to be laid upon the hard wood door, perhaps to receive needed but painful surgery!  While many of us long for slower-paced and simpler lives, modern medicine does provide much better surgical options than what some had to endure in that age.

Interior of Hand-dug Well

Close to the cabin is an 84’-deep hand-dug, stone-lined well. It is surrounded by a matching brick patio and half wall. It has been said that Ebenezer Zane himself dug the well. Careful research revealed that the house and well were not actually on Zane’s Trace, however, but were on what is called The New Road. The route of Zane’s Trace was south of The New Road; it ran through what is now Mambourg Park. Nevertheless, that well must have been a welcome sight to travelers after many hours on hot, dusty roads.

NOW (2017-2021) & TOMORROW   In November 2020, a master plan for the development of Hansel Park was created. It recommends using the log-framed house as a Zane’s Trace history museum. It also proposes walking trails and a story walk, a picnic shelter, a nature-based play area, a park office, and public restrooms. Those with dogs will be excited to know this location will feature a dog park with separate areas for large and small dogs! Dogs are welcome at all our parks* but this one will be an actual dog park.

Hansel Park is at 5500 Cincinnati-Zanesville Rd NE (US-22), about seven miles east of downtown Lancaster.

This is the tenth and final article in the Then, Now, Tomorrow series.  Thanks to all who sent comments or called to say they enjoyed the stories and have followed the entire run!  It won’t be the last of our news, though - something is always happening at the parks!  Watch for a future editions of this newsletter, our website, Facebook and Instagram pages for updates.
 
Get Out to Explore & Discover your Fairfield County Parks!

*Pets are not allowed in nature preserves such as Wahkeena Nature Preserve.
 

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly | Photo Credit: Josh Trego

Community Events
Come see us in our booths at these community events.  Learn about Ohio's plants and animals, the parks, and learn about our new summer program!

July 24
Lancaster Festival Fair Day
Fairfield County Fairgrounds

August 5-7
Baltimore Festival
Johnson Park
Rock Mill Days 2021 (image of Rock Mill)
Rock Mill Days

Stebelton Park at Rock Mill
1429 Rockmill Place NW
Lancaster, OH  43130

May through October
(Weather Permitting, see Description)
Wednesdays & Saturdays from 11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
and Sundays 1:00-4:00 p.m

Additional dates and times may be added. Before visiting, check for updates to this event on Facebook, the news ticker on our website, the website’s Calendar of Events page, or call 740-243-4436.
 
Lock South 11 in Lockville Canal Park
"Unlocking Lockville"

Lockville Canal Park
5895 Pickerington Rd
Carroll, OH  43112

Saturdays - July 17, August 14, September 11, October 9  |  5pm-7pm
 
Without the Ohio & Erie Canal, St John’s Episcopal Church on Main Street in Lancaster may not have stained glass windows! Come, find out why.

Drop in anytime between 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. Jack Campbell, Interpretive Historian, will be on site to share interesting information about the Ohio & Erie Canal and how it shaped Ohio’s history.
PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT 

Monthly Meeting
Board of Park Commissioners
Monday, August 9, 2021, at 2:00 p.m.
Meetings are open to the public. They are held on the second Monday of each month. Exceptions are when the date coincides with a recognized holiday. To get more information about these meetings, see the Board of Park Commissioners page of our website, our Calendar of Events, or call 740 681-7249 ext 101.
NEWSLETTER ARCHIVE 
To see all stories in the Then, Now, Tomorrow series or other past issues of this newsletter, visit the newsletter archive.
 
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