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Founded: 1802
Population: 17,896 (2002 Census)
Location: Warren County, Ohio
Education: 6 Public Schools, 2 Private Schools, 2 Vocational Schools, 2 Colleges/Universities

Settled by early pioneers after the American Revolution, Lebanon saw its first cabins in the 1790s. In 1802, a surveyor laid out the community with Broadway and Main Streets intersecting at the center of town. Broadway was to be "six poles wide" to ensure that a six-horse stage could turn completely around in front of the tavern. The town was then divided into 100 lots of 50 rods each, with the four center lots to remain reserved for public lands. Turtlecreek Twp is in the central part of the county and surrounds Lebanon.

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Turtlecreek is one of 11 townships in Warren County. The Warren County commissioners established Turtlecreek on Aug. 15, 1804 from parts of Deerfield and Clearcreek Union and Salem townships. Turtlecreek is the largest township in the county in terms of its geographic size. It had 12,617 residents n 2000, up from 10,383 in 1990.

Lebanon flourished as stagecoaches rumbled through her streets bearing travelers and settlers from the East. In 1805, the first courthouse and jail were built by public subscription, and in 1807, John McLean began publishing Ohio's oldest weekly newspaper, The Western Star.

The township is governed by a three-member board of trustees, who are elected to four-year terms. There are two state prisons located along Ohio 63 in the western part of the township: Lebanon Institution and Warren Correctional Institution. Both Interstate 75 and Interstate 71 cross the township, as do U.S. Route 42 and state routes 48, 63, 123, 350, and 741. The Warren County Airport is also located on Greentree Road south of Lebanon.

The first settlement in what was to become Warren County was at BeedleÕs Stating in 1795. From 1805 until the early 20th century the township was the home of Union Village, one of the largest Shaker communities, located between Lebanon and Springboro along Ohio 741. This is now the site of the Otterbein Retirement Community.

One of the earliest influences on the Lebanon area came from a religious sect known as the Shakers. Although their community, Union Village, was sold over half a century ago, local interest still exists in their culture and buildings, which form the nucleus of the present day Otterbein Retirement Community. Turtlecreek is the largest township in the county in terms of its geographic size. It had 12,617 residents n 2000, up from 10,383 in 1990.

The history of Lebanon is rich in the philanthropy and foresight of its founders and their followers. In 1855, with the arrival in Lebanon of Alfred Holbrook, came the Southwestern Normal School. Its maverick methods and texts were nationally admired and copied. By 1917, the University, which grew out of the School, boasted 80,000 graduates.

Upon her death in 1867, Mary Ann Klingling left $40,000 to establish a home for orphaned children. The bequest required a community match and so it was not until 1886 that the County Commissioners built the Mary Haven Home for children.

In the 1900s, Lebanon became the recipient of her strongest private benefactors: William Harmon and a mysterious Jedediah Tingle. (William Harmon and Jedediah Tingle were later discovered by The New York Times to be one and the same person. Apparently, William Harmon used the name of his maternal great-grandfather for much of his charity correspondence.) He provided much needed funding and encouragement to a variety of community projects. In 1915, Harmon organized and endowed the Harmon Civic Trust, specifically for on-going community improvement projects. This Trust still exists today.

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