Last week I wrote about the origins of Chattanooga, Ohio, aka Chatt to the locals.
Some of the landowners’ names on the early plat maps in that area are familiar names to us today, while others are not.
One land owner, Tobias Plants, spelled Plantz on the 1853 Liberty Township map, caught my interest. Plants purchased 80 acres on what is now the northeast corner of Chatt, the east corner of State Route 49 and Strable Road, described as the N½ of the NW¼ of Section 5, Liberty Township. He purchased the land on 12 September 1850 from Albert Cortelyou of Hamilton County, Ohio, for $200. [1]
Tobias Plants and his wife Maria were enumerated in Liberty Township in 1850, 1860, and 1870. Tobias gave his occupation as grocer in the 1870 census and was likely one of Chatt’s first businessmen. Then they disappeared from the area.

1912 picture postcard of Chattanooga, Ohio.
Tobias Plants sold his 80 acres in Chatt to Jacob Deitsch for $3300 on 8 October 1870, witnessed by John Schlenker and Eli D. Plants. [2] Then Tobias and his family moved out of the area.
I wondered what happened to Tobias Plants, so I continued to research his family, with hopes of learning a little more about Chatt. You never know where you may find some new information, new information that may change previous assumptions.
Tobias Plants did something a little unusual. Most people migrated westward when they moved on, but Tobias moved eastward, to Crestline, Ohio. Crestline is roughly 40 miles west of Wooster, Wayne County, where Tobias was born. He and his wife Maria remained in Crestline the rest of their lives.
Tobias Plants died of paralysis in Crestline on 12 July 1888, aged 69 years. Information from his obituary:
Tobias Plants was born in Wooster, Wayne County, Ohio, 11 March 1820. In 1828 he moved to Ashland County with his father and remained with him until he was of age, then left to work as clerk in a mercantile establishment in Tennessee. He married Miss Mariah Neville on 6 June 1850 and that same day they moved to a farm in Mercer County. After twenty years, he tired of farming, sold out, and moved to Crestline in October 1870. He became a druggist and was a druggist until his death on 12 July 1888, a few days after having two strokes. He was survived by his wife and son William. [3]
Tobias’ widow Maria (Neville) Plants died in 1903 and her obituary was just as informative:
Mrs. Maria Plants died at the home of her sister, Mrs. Anna Carney, on Seltzer Street, on 3 March 1903. She was born in Beaver County, Pennsylvania on 3 March 1819. She married Tobias Plants on 6 June 1850, and shortly after that moved to Mercer County, Ohio, where they conducted a general store for 17 years. In 1870 they sold out and moved to Crestline, buying a drug store and continuing in that business until the death of Mr. Plants in 1888. Mrs. Plants was the mother of three children, all deceased. She was survived by two grandchildren, one brother, William Neville, and two sisters, Nancy Neville, and Anna Carney. [4]
Those two obituaries, from across the state, give a little information about Chatt.
From that information, I am rethinking how old Chatt really is. Maria Plants’ obituary indicates that they ran a general store, probably in Chatt, for 17 years, which would have been 1853-1870. That is much earlier than I speculated in last week’s post.
There were small stores scattered about in rural areas so people would not have to travel far to get goods and supplies. Stores in locations such as Skeels Cross Roads, Hinton, Brehm, and Chatt.
I wonder what they called the village back then. Was it always called Chattanooga?
It is also very interesting to learn that Tobias Plants worked in a mercantile store in Tennessee before he married and moved to Mercer County. Where in Tennessee? Chattanooga, Tennessee?
Lots of conjecture and theories. We may never know.
Here is a little timeline and some additional information about the Tobias Plant family:
1850 census, Liberty Township, enumerated 16 September 1850: Tobias Plants, 30, born in Ohio, Mariah, 31, born in Pennsylvania. Tobias was a farmer and his real estate was valued at $200. [5]
Three children were born to Tobias and Maria while they lived in the Chatt area. Two of their children are buried in Duck Creek Cemetery, north of Chatt, in Black Creek Township.
Daughter Ann E. Plants was born 2 August 1851 and died 24 August 1851, aged 22 days. She is buried in Duck Creek Cemetery. [6]
Son William A. Plants was born 22 November 1852. [7]
Son Francis Plants was born 29 Nov 1856. [8]
1860 census, Liberty Township, Skeels PO: Tobias Plants, 41; Maria, 42; William, 7; Marion F, 5. [9]
Tobias was a Liberty Township Justice of the Peace, beginning 6 October 1860, per the 1882 Mercer County History.
Son Francis Plants died 2 March 1864, age 7 years, 3 months, and 2 days. He is buried in Duck Creek Cemetery. [7] He was probably the Marion F. enumerated with the family in 1860,
1870 census, Liberty Township: Tobias Plants, 50, grocer; Maria, 51, keeps house; Susan, 20, school teacher; William 17, attends school; and Jane, 14, attends school. All born in Ohio except Maria, who was born in Pennsylvania. [10] At this point I am not exactly sure who Susan and Jane were, but I have an idea.
Tobias sold his 80 acres in Liberty Township to Jacob Deitsch on 8 October 1870 and moved to Crestline, Ohio. [2]
1880 census, Crestline, Crawford County, Ohio, 470 Thoman Street: Tobias Plants, 60; Maria, 61; and William, 27. Tobias’ occupation was druggist. [11]
Tobias died 12 July 1888, age 68 years, and is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline. [12]
Their son William died 5 December 1890, age 38 years, and is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline. [7]
The widow of Tobias Plants, Maria (Neville) Plants, died 3 March 1903, age 84 years, and is buried in Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline. [13]
People may live in an area for a while and then move away, and it is wonderful when they leave a trail that shows their contributions to the community.
There was another Plants who lived a few miles north of Chatt, in Black Creek Township. Was he related or connected to Tobias in some way? I am working on that…

Chattanooga, Ohio.
[1] Albert Cortelyou to Tobias Plants, Mercer County, Ohio, Deeds Vol. P:48, 12 Sep 1850; Mercer County courthouse.
[2] Tobias Plants to Jacob Deitsch, Mercer County, Ohio, Deeds Vol. 16:441, 8 Oct 1870; Mercer County courthouse.
[3] Death of Tobias Plants, obituary, Crestline Advocate, Crestline, Ohio, 20 Jul 1888; Newspapers.com.
[4] Mrs. Maria Plants obituary, Crestline Advocate, Crestline, Ohio, 12 Mar 1903, Newspapers.com.
[5] 1850 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Liberty, p.287B, dwelling 27, household 28, Tobras [sic] Plants; Ancestry.com.
[6] Ann E. Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 26808905, Duck Creek Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.
[7] William A. Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 100998965; Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline, Richland County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.
[8] Francis Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 26800209, Duck Creek Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.
[9] 1860 U.S. Census, Ohio, Mercer, Liberty, p.359, dwelling 1007, family 1012, Tobias Plants; Ancestry.com.
[10] 1870 U.S. Census, Liberty, Mercer, Ohio, p.149B, dwelling 124, family 112, Tobias Plants; Ancestry.com.
[11] 1880 U.S. Census, Crestline, Crawford, Ohio, ED 103, p.468D, dwelling 470, family 503, Tobias Plants; Ancestry.com.
[12] Tobias Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 100998955; Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline, Richland County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.
[13] Maria Plants, Find a Grave memorial no. 100998934; Greenlawn Cemetery, Crestline, Richland County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.
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