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Profiles

  • Jonas M Beachy (1843 - 1912)
  • Howard Hershberger (1921 - 2005)
    Howard Hershberger, 83, of Berlin died Saturday, June 4, 2005, in Walnut Hills Nursing Home.He was born July 22, 1921, in Holmes County the son of the late Homer and Leora Hochstetler Hershberger. He r...
  • Lucinda Ann Yoder (1953 - 2023)
    LuCinda Ann "Cindy" Yoder, 70, of Sugarcreek, passed away on Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at Union Hospital following a 4 month stay at Hennis Nursing Home in Dover. She was born in Millersburg on May 15,...
  • Katie A. Yoder (1929 - 2001)
    From the 1950 United States Census, Katty [ Sic ] Troyer lived with her mother, father, and two brothers in Berlin Township, Holmes County, Ohio. The family at the time consisted of: Head Albert J...
  • John Oliver Gerber, Jr. (1926 - 1995)
    From the 1930 United States Census, John Gerber, Jr. lived with his mother, father, and two brothers in Shanesville Village, Sugarcreek Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio. The family at the time consist...

Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Holmes County, Ohio.

Official Website

Holmes County was formed from Coshocton, Tuscarawas and Wayne counties. It has the second largest Amish population behind Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

Holmes County was formed on January 20, 1824, from portions of Coshocton, Tuscarawas and Wayne counties. It was named after Major Andrew Holmes, who was killed in action at the Battle of Mackinac Island.

In 1863, during the Civil War, numerous small anti-draft riots took place, mainly in the German-speaking areas. Holmes County at the time was a Democratic stronghold, dominated by its Pennsylvania Dutch settlers, along with many recent German immigrants. With the passage of the Conscription Act in March 1863, Holmes County politicians denounced both Congress and President Lincoln as despotic, saying that forced military service was little different from slavery. Conscription had been common in their former German homelands, and it was one of the reasons they had moved to America. Violent protests broke out in June, and they continued until the Union Army marched into the county and declared martial law.[10] Stephen E. Towne in 2019 using archival records argues that many of the resisters belonged to secret organizations that opposed Union tactics to defeat the Confederacy.

Adjacent Counties

Cities, Towns and Communities:

Baltic | Becks Mills | Berlin | Big Prairie | Charm | Clark | Farmerstown | Glenmont | Hardy | Holmesville | Killbuck | Knox | Lake Buckhorn | Lakeville | Loudonville | Mechanic | Millersburg (County Seat) | Monroe | Mt. Hope | Nashville | Paint | Prairie | Richland | Ripley | Salt Creek | Saltillo | Stillwell | Trail | Unionville | Walnut Creek | Washington | Welcome | Winesburg

Wikipedia

Amish Country, Ohio

USS Holmes County - LST-836

Genealogy Trails

Roots Web

Holmes County Genealogical Society

Genealogy Express

RAOGK

New Horizons Genealogy

Forebears.io

Ohio Amish Library - Genealogy



upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/57/Map_of_Ohio_highlighting_Holmes_County.svg/300px-Map_of_Ohio_highlighting_Holmes_County.svg.png