Everything about Warren County Ohio totally explained
Warren County is a
county located in the
state of
Ohio,
United States. As of 2000, the population was 158,383. The Census estimate for
July 1,
2006 was 201,861 making Warren County the second fastest growing county in Ohio and 80th in the United States. Its
county seat is
Lebanon. Warren County was erected
May 1,
1803 from
Hamilton County, and named for Dr.
Joseph Warren, a hero of the
Revolution who sent
Paul Revere on his ride and who died at the
Battle of Bunker Hill.
Geography
According to the
U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 407 square miles (1,054 km²). 400 square miles (1,035 km²) of it's land and 8 square miles (19 km²) of it (1.84%) is water. The county is a rough square with the sides roughly 20 miles (30 km) long.
Adjacent counties
Beginning in the northwest corner and proceeding clockwise, the following counties border Warren County:
Montgomery,
Greene,
Clinton,
Clermont,
Hamilton, and
Butler.
Boundaries
Warren County was created by the first
Ohio General Assembly in the Act of
March 24,
1803, which also created Butler and Montgomery Counties. The act defined Warren County as "all that part of the county of Hamilton included within the following bounds, viz.: Beginning at the northeast corner of the county of Clermont, running thence west with the line of said county to the
Little Miami; thence up the same with the meanders thereof to the north boundary of the first tier of sections in the second entire range of townships in the
Miami Purchase; thence west to the northeast corner of Section No. 7 in the third township of the aforesaid range; thence north to the
Great Miami; thence up the same to the middle of the fifth range of townships; thence east to the County line; thence with same south to the place of beginning." Originally this included land now in
Clinton County as far east as
Wilmington.
Clinton County proved a continuing headache to the legislature. The Ohio Constitution requires that every county have an area of at least four hundred square miles (1,036 km²). Clinton County's boundaries were several times adjusted in an effort to comply with that clause of the constitution. One of them, the Act of
January 30,
1815, detached a strip of land from the eastern side to give to Clinton. That would have left Warren under four hundred square miles (1,036 km²), so a portion of Butler County (the part of
Franklin Township where
Carlisle is now located) was attached to Warren in compensation. The 1815 act was as follows:
- Section 1--That all that part of the county of Butler lying and being within the first and second fractional townships in the fifth range, and adjoining the south line of Montgomery County, shall be and the same is hereby attached to and made part of the county of Warren.
- Section 2--That eleven square miles 28 km² of the territory of the county of Warren and extending parallel to the said eastern boundary of Warren County, along the whole length of such eastern boundary from north to south, shall be and the same is hereby attached to and made a part of the county of Clinton."
Except for the sections formed by the Great and Little Miamis, the sides are all straight lines.
Lakes and rivers
The major rivers of the county are the
Great Miami River, which flows through the northwest corner of the county in
Franklin Township, and the
Little Miami River which zig-zags across the county from north to south. There is one sizable lake, the
Caesars Creek Reservoir, created by a
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dam on Caesars Creek in the northeast part of the county in
Massie Township.
Demographics
Further Information
Get more info on 'Warren County Ohio'.
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