Skip to main content
  • Ghost Stories: The Battle of Fort Dunn

    As the army of Hillsboro ladies gear up for another siege and Brigadier General W.H.H. Dunn prepares a counterattack, let’s pause for now, and we’ll continue next week.
  • Ghost Stories: Now he belongs to the ages
    George Washington Barrere served as a lieutenant colonel in the Civil War, and on April 19, 1865, his family and residents of Highland County picked up their local newspaper and saw the headline, “A Nation in Mourning,” under a photo of an American flag.
  • Ghost Stories: Stand by for news
    George Washington Barrere, one of the pioneer settlers of Highland County, had several close calls in battles in the 1700s and early 1800s. His son, John Mills Barrere, at the age of 62, lost an arm in the Battle of Harpers Ferry.
  • Ghost Stories: Money in the bank
    In the days of Highland County pioneer George Washington Barrere, who was born in 1770 and passed away in 1838, money was scarce and most things had to be obtained by barter. But as the 1800s progressed, that began to change.
  • Ghost Stories: Esquires and Congressmen, continued
    Like his uncle, Granville Barrere would become a top-notch lawyer and would later serve in Congress. But unlike Uncle Nelson, Granville would not call southern Ohio home much longer.
  • Tigers fall on road at Chillicothe
    It wasn't their best outing of the season, but the McClain Tigers did score a touchdown early in the fourth quarter, but the host Chillicothe Cavaliers eventually defeated the Tigers, 70-7 Friday night at Herrnstein Field.
  • Tigers fall on road at Chillicothe
    It wasn't their best outing of the season, but the McClain Tigers did score a touchdown early in the fourth quarter, but the host Chillicothe Cavaliers eventually defeated the Tigers, 70-7 Friday night at Herrnstein Field.
  • Tigers fall on road at Chillicothe
    It wasn't their best outing of the season, but the McClain Tigers did score a touchdown early in the fourth quarter, but the host Chillicothe Cavaliers eventually defeated the Tigers, 70-7 Friday night at Herrnstein Field.
  • Ghost Stories: Esquires and congressmen

    Two days before Christmas of 1833, nearly 182 years ago, Nelson Barrere was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Hillsboro. Longtime Highland County historian Mrs. Jean Wallis described Nelson Barrere as a “brilliant leader.”

  • Ghost Stories: An old soldier, true patriot and a good man laid to rest

    Ladies and gentlemen, five sons of John Mills and Margaret Morrow Barrere went off to fight in the Civil War. As we’ve discussed, three of their sons never came home and John Mills Barrere, who was in his 60s when America’s bloodiest conflict broke out, lost an arm in the battle of Harpers Ferry in September of 1862.

  • Ghost Stories: Risking life and limb
    Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve discussed how terrible the Civil War was for the family of John Mills and Margaret Barrere. They lost three of their sons, Bebee, William and Thomas Jefferson Barrere, to America’s bloodiest conflict.
  • Ghost Stories: Detention, disease and death
    In days where we can communicate with our loved ones at a moment’s notice, I can only imagine how John and Margaret Barrere felt as their sons languished in prison camps so far away from Highland County.
  • Ghost Stories: Casualties of the Civil War
    In his lifetime, George Washington Barrere saw action in numerous battles – he was presumed to be dead following St. Clair’s Defeat, plus fought in the War of 1812 when he was in his 40s.
  • Ghost Stories: Casualties of the Civil War
    In his lifetime, George Washington Barrere saw action in numerous battles – he was presumed to be dead following St. Clair’s Defeat, plus fought in the War of 1812 when he was in his 40s.
  • Ghost Stories: Casualties of the Civil War
    In his lifetime, George Washington Barrere saw action in numerous battles – he was presumed to be dead following St. Clair’s Defeat, plus fought in the War of 1812 when he was in his 40s.
  • Ghost Stories: Founder and master of the Lodge and a true pioneer passes away
    Several of the Founding Fathers were Freemasons, such as Washington, Benjamin Franklin and James Monroe, among others. Andrew Jackson, Paul Revere, Mark Twain, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Winston Churchill, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Harry Houdini, Irving Berlin, Henry Ford, Cy Young, Clark Gable, Will Rogers, Gene Autry and John Wayne are also on the list of famous Freemasons.
Subscribe to Steve Roush