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Judges of the Courts of Common Pleas.

ELECTED SESSION OF 1850-Concluded.

Name.

County.

John Duvall, Sr.

Samuel Foot

Seth C. Parker

Samuel D. Hunter

Eber D. Howe

Benj. Johnson

John Newton
Elizur Abbott

Edward Fitzgerald
John W. Simpkins
Fletcher W. Pratt

Robert P. Brown
Jacob D. Lutz
John Sharp

Thos. Daugherty
Isaac Brayton
Luther L. Brown
Samuel Hafford
Jacob P. Noel

Joseph Cummins
Andrew Lugenbeel

Peter Loutzenheiser Peter Vorhes

Jacob G. Will

Jarius Curtis
Hugh Welch

Highland. Huron. Huron. Jefferson. Lake. Lawrence. Lawrence.

Licking.

Madison.

Madison.

Madison.

Montgomery.
Pickaway.
Pike.
Pike.
Portage.

Portage.

Sandusky.

Scioto.

Shelby.

Seneca.

Stark.

Summit.

Vinton. Wood. Wyandot.

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THE COURTS OF COMMON PLEAS SINCE 1851.

HE Constitution of 1851 contained the following provisions by which the state was permanently subdivided into Common Pleas Districts, and these again divided into three subdistricts each, and the election of the Judges of these courts vested in the people of the subdivision instead of in the General Assembly as heretofore.

Article 4, Section 3. The State shall be divided into nine Common Pleas Districts of which the county of Hamilton shall constitute one, of compact territory and bounded by county lines, and each of said districts, consisting of three or more counties, shall be subdivided into three parts of compact territory, and bounded by county lines, and as nearly equal in population as practicable; in each of which one Judge of the Court of Common Pleas for said district, and residing therein, shall be elected by the electors of said subdivision. Courts of Common Pleas shall be held by one or more of these judges in every county in the district, as often as may be provided by law; and more than one court, or sitting thereof, may be held at the same time in each district.

Article 4, Section 4. Judges thereof, shall be

The jurisdiction of the Courts of Common Pleas, and of the fixed by law. (See Const. 1802, Art. III, §§ 3, 4, 5, 6.)

The first election for Judges under the new Constitution was held on the second Tuesday of October, 1851. The term of the old Judges and Clerks was extended by Section 4 of the Schedule, to the 2d Monday of February, 1852, at which the new Judges began their terms of office.

COMMON PLEAS DISTRICTS IN OHIO IN 1851, AS FIXED
BY THE CONSTITUTION.

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Common Pleas Districts in Ohio in 1851.

COMMON PLEAS DISTRICTS IN OHIO IN 1851-Continued.
THE THIRD DISTRICT.

Counties.

Shelby, Auglaize, Allen, Hardin, Logan, Union and Marion First.
Mercer, Van Wert, Putnam, Paulding, Defiance, Williams,

Henry and Fulton

Wood, Seneca, Hancock, Wyandot and Crawford

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Subdivision.

Second.
Third.

Subdivision.

First.
Second.
Third.

Subdivision.

First.
Second.
Third.

Subdivision.

First.
Second.
Third.

Subdivision.

First.
Second.
Third.

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THE COMMON PLEAS DISTRICTS IN OHIO IN 1901, AS FIXED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY UNDER ITS CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS, BY THE ACT OF

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Defiance, Paulding and Williams

First,
Second.

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