In 1830, Daniel and Catharine Arnold, of Rockingham County, Virginia, along with
their five children, decided to move west. They sold their land, packed their possessions
in a wagon, and set off for Ohio. After a long journey by ox and wagon, they settled
along Dry Run, a tributary of the Mad River. The property they settled on was initially
purchased by Henry Harshbarger, Catharine Arnold’s father, in 1830. Upon arriving,
the family moved into a log house previously built on the site. In the spring, Daniel
Arnold bought 158 acres from his father-in-law for $2,000. A new house was finished
by the Arnold Family in 1836.
Prior to his father’s death in 1864, Henry H. Arnold, the youngest of the Arnold
sons, had purchased 144 acres of the old Arnold farmstead from his father. With
Henry as the owner, the farm would see much growth and prosperity in the years ahead.
In 1878, Henry Arnold accomplished two major additions to the farm. First, a new
addition was added on to the original brick house, featuring a winter kitchen. Second,
a new barn was built to house both livestock and crops. Throughout the 1880s, the
farm remained extremely productive and prosperous.
In 1891, Henry Arnold’s son, Henry C. Arnold married Sally Deeter, and the newlyweds
set up housekeeping in the Daniel Arnold House. Henry Arnold then moved into the
original log house at the farm. Henry C. Arnold tended to the farm until 1908 when
he moved to Covington, Ohio to settle his own farm.
Emma Arnold then took care of the old Arnold Farmstead, even after the death of
her father, Henry Arnold, in 1910. Finally in 1916, Emma Arnold sold off her family’s
farm and moved to Dayton. After passing through several families’ hands, the farm
was eventually acquired by the Dayton-Montgomery County Park District, now known
as Five Rivers MetroParks, in 1968.
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