Congratulations, you found it!

Light Switches: Immediately after opening the front door, you will find a light switch built into the mantle on the left. This switch controls the lights in the dining area, part of the living room, and bedroom (gotta love old buildings). 

The kitchen lights are controlled with a switch that is near the toaster on the far side of the kitchen.

Things to do nearby:

  • Check out all of the neat stores and shops within Roscoe Village
  • Visit the nearby wineries
  • Visit Wooly Pig Farm Brewery
  • Check out the antique mall in Coshocton
  • Take a drive through nearby Amish Country
  • Walk or bike ride the trails through Lake Park
  • Be sure to visit the Coshocton Visitor’s Bureau for additional information and ideas. (432 N Whitewoman St.) 

Restaurants in the area:

  • Medbery Marketplace – subs, salads, snacks, deli, wine
  • The Warehouse – burgers, sandwiches, pasta, steaks
  • Lava Rock Grill – diner featuring burgers, soups, sandwiches and salads (open for lunch only)
  • McKenna’s Farm Market – subs, salads, snacks, beer & wine, deli
  • Raven’s Glenn Winery – Italian restaurant
  • Sorrell’s on the Square – American restaurant & bar Click here for menu
  • Main Street Station – American restaurant
  • Railroad Restaurant & Saloon – upscale steakhouse & bar
  • The Yucatan – local Mexican restaurant
  • Tlaquepaque – local Mexican restaurant

Local Taxi Services

  • High Caliber Cab – (740) 575 – 6564
  • Shelly’s Taxi – (740) 622 – 4203
  • Bob’s Taxi – (740) 202 – 0171 

 History about the Village
(from Wikipedia)

Historic Roscoe Village is a restored Ohio and Erie Canal town that was laid out in 1816. It was originally named Caldersburgh after its founder James Calder.

After going bankrupt, the Coshocton merchant moved across the Muskingum River to some land he had managed to retain. Setting up a store and naming the place after himself, Calder reasoned that the rural farmers would much rather do business in Caldersburgh than pay the twenty-five cents for the ferry over to Coshocton. In 1830, two prominent citizens petitioned the state legislature to rename the village Roscoe in honor of William Roscoe, the famous English author and abolitionist of the time.

The transformation of Roscoe from a small, sleepy community into a thriving port along the Ohio and Erie Canal came with the arrival of the canal and the landing of the first canal boat, the Monticello, on August 21, 1830. The Ohio and Erie Canal, which provided cheap transportation for people and goods, granted great economic development for communities along the waterway. With its status as the fourth largest wheat port on the canal, Roscoe’s prosperity ignited a chain of businesses in the area, including a blacksmith, a cooperage, a hotel (the building you’re in now), a mill, and several stores. State Route 16, which runs parallel to Roscoe today, is the location of the original Ohio and Erie Canal bed.

Until the great flood of 1913, the canals continued to operate, but the coming of the railroads marked the passing of the canal heyday. Along with the demise of the canal industry came the decline of Roscoe’s prosperity, and the once thriving canal port and its beautiful Greek Revival buildings rapidly deteriorated.

In 1960, the idea of historical restoration in Roscoe came to prominence at the presentation of the Canal Days mural the distinguished American artist Dean Cornwell painted for Coshocton’s 1961 Sesquicentennial Celebration. Cornwell chose a robust 1850s canal scene from Roscoe Village as the subject of his mural. This beautiful 24-foot-by-8-foot mural hangs today in Bank One of Coshocton while a smaller reproduction graces the lobby of the Roscoe Village Visitor Center.

Fascinated and inspired by the painting, retired Coshocton industrialist Edward E. Montgomery, and his wife, Frances, purchased the 1840 Toll House in August 1968, thus beginning the restoration of Historic Roscoe Village. Roscoe Village would be, as Mr. Montgomery stated, “a living museum so that people of the 20th century and succeeding ones could enjoy a visit back to the 19th century where aged brick buildings, hoop-skirted women, and quaint shops would bring the canal era back to life.” Today, Roscoe Village is the result of more than 35 years of dedicated work.

The Foundation also purports to promote education with regard to life along the Ohio and Erie Canal in the mid 19th century. Living history is displayed and there are annual events which attract tourists from all over the country.

The Johnson-Humrickhouse Museum is located in the village, and features decorative arts, pioneer and Native American artifacts and local history displays.

 

 

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