Shelby Township, Jefferson County, Indiana

Shelby Township
Township

Location in Jefferson County
Coordinates: 38°52′43″N 85°16′34″W / 38.87861°N 85.27611°W / 38.87861; -85.27611Coordinates: 38°52′43″N 85°16′34″W / 38.87861°N 85.27611°W / 38.87861; -85.27611
Country United States
State Indiana
County Jefferson
Government
  Type Indiana township
Area
  Total 48.51 sq mi (125.6 km2)
  Land 48.33 sq mi (125.2 km2)
  Water 0.18 sq mi (0.5 km2)  0.37%
Elevation 823 ft (251 m)
Population (2010)
  Total 1,133
  Density 23.4/sq mi (9.0/km2)
GNIS feature ID 0453844

Shelby Township is one of ten townships in Jefferson County, Indiana, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 1,133 and it contained 453 housing units.[1]

History

The first land acquired by settlers was in 1809 on the northern border with Ripley County. Many early settlers were Scotch-Irish and were prominent in forming the Jefferson Presbyterian Church in 1818. Another early group was what was known as "Low Dutch", families primarily of Dutch origin who had lived in the New Amsterdam settlements in New York and New Jersey and who moved to Kentucky in the early 1780s. They were also involved in the formation of Jefferson Presbyterian, but joined the former Pleasant Presbyterian church in neighboring Switzerland County when it formed in 1829.

About 1817, families of Lowland Scots began arriving, and more continued to arrive through the early 1830s. Many were from towns such as Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and the Edinburgh area. They founded a predecessor to Caledonia Church in 1818, which lasted until 1825, and formed the bulk of that church's membership when it was organized. The Scottish settlement stretched in Pleasant and Craig Townships in Switzerland County on the east and Milton Township in Jefferson County to the South.

Shelby Township was created from the northern part of Milton Township and the remnant of Pittsburgh Township on February 12, 1823[2] by the Jefferson County commissioners. The action wiped out Pittsburgh Township. Shelby was named after Isaac Shelby, who commanded troops at the battle of King's Mountain during the Revolutionary War.

Geography

According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of 48.51 square miles (125.6 km2), of which 48.33 square miles (125.2 km2) (or 99.63%) is land and 0.18 square miles (0.47 km2) (or 0.37%) is water.[1] The streams of Barbersville Creek, Black Branch, Bloody Run, Brushy Fork, Canaan Branch, Dry Fork, East Prong Indian-Kentuck, Hannibal Branch, Horton Branch, Little Brushy Fork, McCurry or McCrory's Branch, Miller Branch, Puncheon Camp Creek, Razor Fork, Salem Branch, Seals Fork, Shaw Branch, Spring Branch, Toddy's Branch, Vestal Branch, West Fork Indian-Kentuck, White Eye Branch, and Wilson's Fork, run through this township.

Unincorporated towns

Adjacent townships

Cemeteries

The township contains these cemeteries: Canaan, Copeland, Etherton, Fry, Indian Kentuck, Jefferson Presbyterian, Lee, Lemen, Mathis, Means, Mermoud, Mount Pleasant Baptist, Pullum (or Pulliam), Riker, Risk, Rogers, Short (Blackhawk), Skeen, Spencer, Thornton, Vestal (Evans Farm) and Welch. Two cemeteries span the county line between Shelby Township and Pleasant Township, Switzerland county—Brushy Fork Baptist and Caledonia Presbyterian.

Major highways

References

Notes
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.