RESEARCH
FAMILIES M-P: McVICKER ~ Duncan McVicker
Duncan McVicker
According to the Darrtown Family Tree, both husband and wife, Duncan McVicker and Abigail (Seward) McVicker are "Darrtown Pioneers."
RIGHT:
The family of Duncan and Abigail McVicker:
The first and second generations of McVickers to be associated with Darrtown history.
Overview of Duncan McVicker
Duncan McVicker:
• born in Scotland;
• came to this country in his early twenties;
• stopped briefly in New Jersey and Kentucky;
• purchased 300 acres of land from the United States government, in Hanover township, Butler county, Ohio;
• constructed a home, three miles south of Darrtown, that still stands in Hanover Township.
(Unless noted otherwise, the following images were provided by Sally (Rinal) Johnson - January, 2008.)
BELOW: The history of the McVicker family of Darrtown is linked to the large stone house shown in the following photo.
The history of this family-built structure appears in an October 8, 1953 edition of the Oxford Press (reprinted below).
BELOW: The historic McVicker homestead is located two miles south of Darrtown at 3432 Hamilton-Richmond Road.
The house sits on the east side of Hamilton-Richmond Road, about two hundred yards north of NIchols Road. The Four Mile Creek flows, north to south,
just a few hundred feet east of the house.
"McVicker Home Near Darrtown Was Constructed In 1832
By Jo Brickels
The date 1832, high on the side of the large stone house located two miles south of Darrtown, definitely establishes the home as one of the oldest in the area. Built by Duncan McVicker, the home was occupied by one of his descendants until only a few years ago, when it was sold to Al Mense of Hamilton.
Constructed of large flat pieces of rock, the exterior of the home, which has been painted white, seems to have weathered well the century and a quarter. The deep windowsills and recessed doors show plainly the 18 inch thickness of exterior walls and interior partitions, also constructed of rock.
The ceilings of the rooms, only nine-feet high, coverer with wide boards similar to the five-inch flooring is an unusual feature of the home, as are the windows, all of which are placed along two sides of the house with none facing the road. The lower edge of all windows forms a part of the chair rail found in each room.
Steps Are Hollowed
The stone home included a parlor and huge kitchen on the first floor, each with four windows and two doors, three bedrooms and a hall with three windows on the second, a basement entered from the outside, and an attic approached by a ladder from a bedroom wardrobe. The steps of the narrow, winding, enclosed stairway between the first and second floor have been slightly hollowed by their many years of usage.
The doors, shorter than average, with a transom above, are fitted with their original hardware. Nearly every room boasts of a built-in cupboard of a style similar to the corner cupboard, although these are built flush with the wall on either side of the fireplaces, which are no longer used. High on the wall, at the top of each of the cupboards in the parlor is another small, narrow enclosure with a door about a foot square in which firearms were kept, easily accessible and yet out of reach of the children.
A frame section, extending at the back of the home, was added later to include a dining room and additional bedroom.
Of Scotch Descent
Duncan McVicker, as his name would imply, was of Scotch descent, born in a small Scottish hamlet, coming to this country in his early twenties. He stopped briefly in New Jersey and then went to Kentucky, where he lived for ten years before coming to Hanover Township in 1805, having purchased 300 acres of land from the United States government.
The settlement of McVicker and his family of five children near Darrtown preceded by a year the laying out of that village and by five years the sale of the first lots in Oxford. In later years, the family recounted the many animals seen in the frontier wilderness, as they cleared a site for their first home (built of logs) and told of once watching a bear kill a deer.
The log cabin was enlarged and served as a home for the family for 25 years, while they cut down the virgin timber and cultivated the large farm. Indians traveling back and forth to warmer climates frequently called at the log house and one occasion an Indian squaw was taken in to give birth to a papoose.
During their residence in the log house, the McVickers were making plans for the big house to be built about a mile away on Four Mile Creek. They decided to make use of the many stones available in the nearby Stony Run and near the creek. The stones were hauled by wagon and several years were taken for the construction of the home. In the process of moving one large rock, almost a cubic yard in size, which is placed in a front corner, the senior McVicker, then in his sixties, fell from the wagon and broke his leg, but continued to direct the work of his sons.
Duncan McVicker lived 15 years after the completion of his new home. In that period, several business establishments were in operation in Darrtown. The Knee brothers had a blacksmith shop, Abram Darr had a tavern and a still house, Aaron Chamberlain had a wagon-making business, and Lane’s saw mill was in operation on Four Mile Creek. The Darrtown hall, built in 1826, was used by all religious congregations as a place of worship and a cemetery had been laid out and used since 1806.
Family Inherit Home
After the death of the Duncan McVickers, their son, James, and his wife, the former Mary Ann Showalder, lived in the home; and another son, Bennington, a bachelor, resided with them. Several grandchildren of these early owners live in the vicinity. Luther McVicker, who owns a garage in Darrtown; Clarence McVicker, who owns a farm on Scott Road; Carl McVicker, a retired farmer now living in Camden; B. L. McVicker, a retired teacher and newspaper man, now living in Marion, Ind.; Mrs. Edward Thome, who lives in Darrtown; Mrs. Harry Kapp, who lives in Oxford; and Mrs. Robert Skillman, who lives near Hamilton. Some of them recall visits to the old stone house almost three-quarters of a century ago, and they all recall tales they have been told about the period of their grandparents’ regime.
One of them remembers that their grandparents kept money in a butter churn in the basement and another recalls seeing their grandmother pick up 20 dollar gold pieces in the front yard. They remember the large flock of pea fowls kept by their grandmother and the feather dusters she made from the peacock’s tail feathers.
In 1881, sometime after James McVicker’s death, the family settled the estate, with several farms and the homestead exchanged in the procedure. Richard Reed McVicker, one of James’ sons, who had been living in Indiana, became the owner of the home, and his uncle, Bennington, was to reside there with him. James’ widow was to make her home with another of her sons; but, a few years later, the two people, both of whom wanted a home of their own, were married and resided in Darrtown in a frame house next to where Luther McVicker’s garage is now located.
After Richard McVicker’s death in 1919, his widow, the former Mary Scholl, and the son, Luther, resided in the home until 1926 when once again the family had a property settlement, with Luther’s sister, Mrs. Ed Thome (Dora McVicker) and her husband becoming owners of the stone homestead. Her son, George, now employed by the Bell Telephone Co. in Hamilton, and her daughter, Mildred, now Mrs. John Probst, of Hamilton, were the fifth generation to reside in the home.
The McVickers like to reminisce about the family dinners and holidays celebrated in the old stone house and take pride in the history of the home, although it is no longer owned by a member of the family."
Sally (Rinal) Johnson, granddaughter of Luther and Opal McVicker, contributed the following October 8, 1953 Oxford Press news article, while attending the April 18, 2009 "Darrtown Gathering."
McVicker homestead - May, 2018
Est. 1832
Luther Scholl McVicker
Opal (Trew) McVicker
RIGHT:
Luther and Opal McVicker are seen standing in front of McVicker's Garage (circa 1950's)
LEFT: The Luther McVicker family in the 1950s
This photo of the McVicker / Rinal family, was taken in the front yard of the Luther and Opal McVicker residence on Scott Road.
Family members in the photo include (left to right):
Back row: Dick Rinal, Opal McVicker, Luther McVicker, Merle Trew (Opal's sister), and Larry Simison.
Middle row: Jeanne Rinal with Jon, "Mom" and "Pop" Trew (Opal's parents), Mary Simison holding Nancy Simison.
Front row: Sharon Rinal, Sally Rinal, and Peggy Simison.
ABOVE: Opal McVicker in an undated photo. Notice the side curtains over the car windows.
ABOVE: This photo above shows Luther sitting on the car fender. The other man is unidentified. The K of P Hall appears in the background.
RIGHT:
The photo above shows Sally (Rinal) Johnson in the Clarence McVicker barn with one of the young lambs (circa 1952-53).
Clarence McVicker raised sheep on his Scott Road farm - which was located just east of Luther and Opal's property and immediately west of Darr's Run.
ABOVE: Seen in this photo (left to right) are family members: Mary Lou (McVicker) Simison; Donald Trew McVicker; Jeanne (McVicker) Rinal; and Helen (McVicker) Augsburger, Olive Hansel's daughter.
ABOVE: This photo was taken during a family reunion at the Clarence and Kate McVicker home on Scott Road. Left to right: Mary Skillman, Mildred "Mick" (Thome) Probst, and Dorie Thome. Dorie was the mother of Mildred and George Thome.
ABOVE: This "McVicker Siblings" photo shows
(L-R): Edna (McVicker) Skillman, Luther McVicker,
and Dorie (McVicker) Thome.
RIGHT: This photo was taken in front of Luther's Garage.
Left to right: Unknown, Ed Thome, Dorie (McVicker) Thome, Fay (Bufler) Thome, Opal (Trew) McVicker, and Luther McVicker.
RIGHT:
The Mcvicker Clan
Photo taken at Skillman's home / farm, which was located on the east side of St. Rt. 177, at intersection of the Stillwell -Beckett Road.
LEFT:
1. Luther McVicker / 2. Jeanne (McVicker) Rinal / 3. ____ (sister of Mary Skillman) / 4. Mary Lou (McVicker) Simison / 5. George Thome / 6. Opal McVicker / 7. Larry Simison / 8. ____ ? / 9. Dora "Dorie" (McVicker) Thome / 10. ____ ? / 11. Jane (Skillman) Weekley / 12. ____? / 13. Robert Eibel (spelling?) / 14. Mildred "Mick" (Thome) Probst / 15. Mary Skillman / 16. John Probst / 17. Edna (McVicker) Skillman / 18. Faye (Bufler) Thome / 19. Linda (or Lisa?) Thome / 20. Karen Weekley / 21. Dale Weekley / 22. Sally (Rinal) Johnson / 23. Nancy (Simison) Wolterman / 24. Peggy (Simison) Arcari / 25. Jon Rinal / 26. Sharon (Rinal) Francis
FYI: Luther McVicker (#1) was the brother of Dora Thome (#9) and Edna Skillman (#17).
ABOVE: The handwriting on this image indicates that this group includes:
(L-R) Minnie McVicker Copp, Carl McVicker, Ben McVicker, Clarence McVicker, Luther McVicker and Lucille McVicker Lipmas.
Following Frank McVicker's untimely death, his heirs held an auction of his farm equipment and livestock. The sale was augmented with farm equipment and livestock from farms from surrounding counties.
A local newspaper described the September 9, 1926 event as "Probably the greatest auction sale of farm equipment and stock to be held in Butler county this year."
Luther and Opal had three children: one son, Donald Trew McVicker (1922-1944) and two daughters, Doris Jean McVicker (1924-2012) and Mary Lou McVicker (1926-2006).
In 1944, at the age of 22 years, Donald McVicker died in the service of his country during World War II military action. See: Casualty of War: McVicker, Donald Trew
The Luther McVicker family lived about a half-mile east of Darrtown on Scott Road.
Click to see:
RIGHT: This image (circa 1959-1960) shows Jon Rinal (crouching at the left) and an unidentified boy, as the two fished in Darrs Run, near the Clarence McVicker home on Scott Road. The stone foundation in the background suggests that this fishing spot was located beneath the Scott Road bridge that passed over Darrs Run, just east of the Clarence McVicker farm.
The Clarence McVicker farm was located about one-half mile east of Darrtown on Scott Road. The bridge was about 200 yards east of the McVicker farm.
This image was contributed, in July 2023, by Jon Rinal's sister, Sally (Rinal) Johnson.
RIGHT: Presumably, these photos are evidence that Dora (aka "Dori") McVicker used the McGuffey Reader as a student in 1901.
Dora Pauline McVicker (1889-1975) was Luther McVicker's sister.
These two images were contributed, in July 2023, by Sally (Rinal) Johnson.
Click the links beneath the images to see them enlarged.
Click to see more about William Holmes McGuffey and his renown McGuffey Readers.
TREW SCHOOL PHOTO
The image at the right was donated by Mr. and Mrs. Kim Johnson. Kim's wife, Sally, is the granddaughter of Luther and Opal (Trew) McVicker. This image was among items that the Johnsons inherited from Luther and Opal.
Markings on the original photo suggest that the girl standing in the second row, with her hands clasped, is Merle Trew - sister of Opal (Trew) McVicker. Merle was born in 1895, which suggests that this photo was taken circa 1902-1905. The school location has not been determined.
Click the link at the right to see an enlargement of this image.
On August 2, 1926, 45 year-old Frank McVicker died after being kicked in the head by one of his horses. Click the following link to see more about this tragic accident.
Frank McVicker's obituary appears at People/Individuals/M-Q.
FRANK MCVICKER KILLED BY HORSE
More than 300 people attended the auction, according to the newspaper. Published items appear at the following links.
FRANK MCVICKER AUCTION IS WELL ATTENDED
Link to Frank McVicker auction.
CLARENCE AND KATHERINE McVICKER APPOINTED TO COUNTY POSTS
A 1942 news item reported the appoinment of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McVicker to the respective positions of superintendent and matron of the Butler County Home.
Click the link below to see the announcement.
The information at the right, about the county home, was found at the Butler County Historical Society website.
Butler County Infirmary/Butler County Home
1700 Princeton Pike, Fairfield Township
(Circa 1907)
The Butler County Home for the Aged was constructed in 1884 on a hill at the east end of High Street, overlooking the city. It was constructed to house 155 residents. By the 1950's the home was inadequate and the third floor of the building was closed because it did not meet fire and health standards. After the passage of a tax levy in November, 1974, a new county home was constructed. The old building was vacated in 1976 and in February, 1983, fire claimed the building and the ruins were soon demolished.
Link to McVickers at county home