Ethan Stone
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Ethan Stone (1767–1852) was an American lawyer, banker, politician, and philanthropist from Cincinnati, Ohio.{{cite book|title=Photographic Treasures from the Cincinnati Art Museum|first=Kristin L.|last=Spangenberg|publisher=Cincinnati Art Museum|date=1989|page=15|isbn=978-0-93-153705-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9zHrAAAAMAAJ|via=Google Books}} A major property investor, he became influential in state politics, but his fortunes waxed and waned with the local property market.{{cite news|title=Property in Cincinnati|agency=Cincinnati Gazette|work=Niles' National Register|location=Baltimore|volume=56|date=August 17, 1839|page=387|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xqI-AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA387|via=Google Books}} His considerable wealth at the time of his death produced the first elections open to local women as part of the longest trust case in state history.{{cite news|title=Cold case: 1852 probate claim finally being closed|first=Kimball|last=Perry|work=The Cincinnati Enquirer|date=October 23, 2012|pages=A1, A8|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/81530154/|via=Newspapers.com}} [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/81530255/]
Career
Stone originally lived in Massachusetts. In 1802, he arrived in Cincinnati by covered wagon and established a legal practice. He made extensive property investments, eventually becoming a millionaire. He served as a trustee on the Cincinnati Select Council in 1805{{cite book|title=Greater Cincinnati and Its People: A History|volume=1|first=Lewis Alexander|last=Leonard|publisher=Lewis Historical Publishing Company|location=University City, Missouri|date=1927|page=245|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VkVZCldfYxAC&pg=PA245|via=Google Books}} and as clerk of council in 1810.{{sfn|Greve|1904|p=1040}} From 1805 to 1806, he represented Hamilton County in the Ohio House of Representatives as a member of the Federalist Party. He also served as a justice of the peace.{{sfn|Greve|1904|p=528}}
In 1810, Stone used his political clout to convince the Ohio General Assembly to lease to him Section 29 of Cincinnati Township, which he would then sublet. In 1814, the Bank of Cincinnati was organized with Stone as president.{{sfn|Goss|1912|p=111}} From 1818 to 1820, he and the bank suffered heavy losses as the property market crashed. The lease was amended in 1821, allowing him to rent the section for $40 annually for 99 years, renewable in perpetuity. It would prove lucrative to Stone.
Stone twice ran unsuccessfully to represent Ohio's 1st congressional district in the United States House of Representatives in 1812 and 1818. By the early 1820s, he had retired from banking due to failing eyesight.
Mill Creek bridge
In 1816 or 1817, the Hamilton County Board of County Commissioners commissioned Stone to build a bridge across Mill Creek. However, a flood in the spring of 1822 washed away the bridge before the commissioners would accept it. He bore the entire loss of more than ${{format price|100000}}, which nearly ruined him. He spent the next 20 years making his contract good, erecting a more elaborate stone and wood structure, which the commissioners purchased and made a free bridge. A flood in 1832 carried the wooden portion down to an island above Louisville, Kentucky, where it was dismantled and shipped back to Cincinnati by flatboat. Years later, the bridge was again destroyed by fire.{{sfn|Greve|1904|p=578}}{{sfn|Goss|1912|p=113}}
Religion and philanthropy
Stone belonged to the Episcopal Church. In 1817, he co-founded Christ Church along with other prominent city leaders. He served as the first warden along with Elijah Bemis and as the first delegate to the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio.{{sfn|Goss|1912|p=517}}
Around 1823, Stone helped Dr. John Locke establish the Cincinnati Female Academy, a nonsectarian school for the city's elite. He was a major donor to the College of Cincinnati at its inception.{{sfn|Greve|1904|p=607}}
Personal life
File:Mrs. Ethan Stone (Abigail Maria Storrs) MET ap39.132.jpg
Stone married Abigail Maria Storrs in 1795.{{cite web|title=Mrs. Ethan Stone (Abigail Maria Storrs)|date=1795 |publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art|accessdate=June 24, 2023|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/13076}} Though she was known as Mrs. Ethan Stone, he named Storrs Township after her maiden name.
His nephew, Dan Stone, served in the Illinois General Assembly and as an Illinois circuit court judge.{{cite book|title=History of the Early Settlers, Sangamon County, Illinois|first=John Carroll|last=Power|authorlink=John Carroll Power|location=Springfield, Illinois|publisher=Edwin A. Wilson & Company|date=1876|page=690|isbn=978-5-87-753661-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2m0NAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA690|via=Google Books}}
Death and legacy
Stone derived considerable profit from subletting ministerial land in Storrs Township, which was subject to a provision that proceeds from the sale or sublease of land were to be used for the funding of Christian churches and schools in the township. At his death in 1852, the proceeds were valued at over $32,000 annually. His will, drafted by Alphonso Taft, directed the money to the Cincinnati Orphan Asylum, an elderly care facility, Storrs Township churches, and Cincinnati College. After the college declined to use the funds for training Episcopal priests, the funds were instead directed to the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio, later the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio.
After Cincinnati largely annexed Storrs Township in 1869, the city failed to carry out the trust until 1881, when the Hamilton County Probate Court stepped in.{{cite court|litigants=Mehitable C. Wilson vs. Frederick Tischbein|vol=9|reporter=Weekly Cincinnati Law Bulletin|court=Hamilton County District Court|date=February 5, 1883|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gAhIAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA63}} In 1893, the Probate Court ordered that trust funds be disbursed to a church chosen in an election every ten years. The elections were open to Protestants at least 15 years of age. These were the only elections open to local women until the Nineteenth Amendment took effect in 1920. The last election, in 1993, awarded the funds to Price Hill United Methodist Church.
By 2003, the land no longer generated a profit and too little money remained in the trust for further elections. In 2012, Stone's trustee asked the Probate Court to award full title to the lessees. By the time the case was closed on March 22, 2019, 167 years after Stone's death, it was the longest open trust case in Ohio and presumably the oldest active court case in the United States.{{cite news|title=Millions of Hamilton County records headed online|first=Dan|last=Monk|work=Cincinnati Business Courier|date=April 16, 2015|accessdate=July 15, 2021|url=https://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/print-edition/2012/04/20/millions-of-hamilton-county-records.html}}{{cite web|title=Stone, Ethan|publisher=Hamilton County Probate Court|location=Cincinnati|accessdate=July 15, 2021|url=https://www.probatect.org/court-records/court-record-search/case-search-results/case-detail?case_id=176}}
References
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Further reading
- {{cite book|title=Cincinnati, the Queen City, 1788–1912|first=Charles Frederic|last=Goss|authorlink=Charles Frederic Goss|volume=1|publisher=S. J. Clarke Publishing Company|location=Chicago|date=1912|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5TYWAAAAYAAJ|via=Google Books}}
- {{cite book|title=Centennial History of Cincinnati and Representative Citizens|volume=1|first=Charles Theodore|last=Greve|location=Chicago|publisher=Biographical Publishing Company|date=1904|url=https://archive.org/details/centennialhistor12grev/|via=Internet Archive}}
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Category:1893 in United States case law
Category:2019 in United States case law
Category:American bank presidents
Category:American justices of the peace
Category:Lawyers from Cincinnati
Category:Members of the Ohio House of Representatives