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Minerva, Ohio

Minerva, Ohio
Village
Market Street in Summer
Market Street in Summer
Location of Minerva, Ohio
Location of Minerva, Ohio
Location of Minerva in Stark County
Location of Minerva in Stark County
Coordinates: 40°43′44″N 81°6′7″W / 40.72889°N 81.10194°W / 40.72889; -81.10194Coordinates: 40°43′44″N 81°6′7″W / 40.72889°N 81.10194°W / 40.72889; -81.10194
Country United States
State Ohio
Counties Stark, Carroll, Columbiana
Government
 • Mayor Brianna Moyer
Area
 • Total 2.23 sq mi (5.78 km2)
 • Land 2.23 sq mi (5.78 km2)
 • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2)
Elevation 1,056 ft (322 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 3,720
 • Estimate (2012) 3,703
 • Density 1,668.2/sq mi (644.1/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 44657
Area code(s) 330, 234 205
FIPS code 39-50834
GNIS feature ID 1056427
Website http://ci.minerva.oh.us/

Minerva is a village in Carroll, Columbiana, and Stark counties in the U.S. state of Ohio. The population was 3,720 at the 2010 census.

The Carroll and Stark County portions of Minerva are part of the Canton-Massillon, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area, while the Columbiana County portion is part of the Salem, OH Micropolitan Statistical Area.

The village of Minerva began when a surveyor named John Whitacre purchased 123 acres of land from Isaac Craig in 1818 for the construction of a log mill. The town, named for his niece, Minerva Ann Taylor born April 19, 1833, grew up around the mill. Minerva's first schoolhouse was built in 1846. In its early years the Sandy and Beaver Canal helped drive Minerva's economy, to be replaced in importance by the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1840s. Minerva manufacturers Willard and Isaac Pennock patented the United States' first steel railroad car in the nineteenth century.

In 1915, the town's weekly newspaper, The Minerva News, charged one dollar for an annual subscription.

According to local legend, in the 1760s the French held possession of Fort Duquesne, which later became Fort Pitt in Pittsburgh. George Washington was leading a company of 2000 British troops from the east to attack the fort. The British held up at Turtle Creek for the night. Indian scouts reported to the French that an attack was coming. The French loaded one ton of gold, which was to be the French payroll, onto ten pack horses and sent them west along the Great Trail. They were to head to present-day Bolivar, Ohio, where there was a blockhouse for shelter and provisions. That location later became the location of Fort Laurens. The British were successful in overthrowing the fort and learned of the escape with the gold. Four days out of Pittsburgh, the British were catching up to the French, so the French buried the gold to avoid it falling into British hands. It was reportedly buried at the fork of three springs. One mile to the west of that location, a rock was placed in the fork of a tree. Over the years, many have tried to locate the legendary buried treasure, but to this day it has not been found.


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