In 1787, the fledgling United States defined the
Northwest Territory, which included the area of present-day Indiana. In 1800, Congress separated
Ohio from the Northwest Territory, designating the rest of the land as the
Indiana Territory. After the
Michigan Territory was separated and the
Illinois Territory was formed, Indiana was reduced to its current size and geography. By December 1816 the Indiana Territory was admitted to the Union as a state. Starting in 1794, Native American titles to Indiana lands were extinguished by usurpation, purchase, or war and treaty. The United States acquired land from the
Native Americans in the 1804
Treaty of Vincennes, which included the future Gibson County. Settlers had been pouring into the extreme southwest part of the Indiana Territory starting in 1789, and by 1813 there was sufficient population to form a local governing body. The area included in present-day Gibson County had been first placed under the jurisdiction of
Knox County, formed in 1790. Parts of that extremely large county were partitioned off in 1801 to create
Clark, in 1808 to create
Harrison, in 1810 to create
Jefferson and
Wayne, and in 1811 to create
Franklin counties. On April 1, 1813, the Territorial legislature authorized partitioning a further large section of Knox to create Gibson County. The boundaries of this new county were reduced that same month (April 30, 1813) to create
Warrick; in 1814 to create
Perry and
Posey; in 1816 to create
Pike; and finally in 1818 to create
Vanderburgh counties. The first white settler of the future Gibson County was John Severns, a native of
Wales who had come with his parents to North America several years before the
Revolutionary War. He settled in Gibson County in 1789–90 on the south bank of the
Patoka River at a place now known as Severns Bridge. Another early Gibson County settler was William Hargrove, who came from
Kentucky by pack
mule in 1803; Captain Hargrove commanded a company of militia from Gibson County at the
Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811. The Rev. Joseph Milburn and his son Robert also arrived in 1803. They settled near
Princeton, between the Patoka and
White Rivers. The Milburns were from the area of
Washington County, Kentucky. Rev. Milburn, a Baptist, established the first church; Robert established the first distillery in Indiana. In 1805,
Jacob Warrick arrived, along with his father-in-law, Thomas Montgomery. They burned out the last
Native American village in 1807, chasing the inhabitants into the
Illinois Territory. Captain Warrick was killed at the
Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811. Gibson County was named for
John Gibson, an officer in the
French and Indian War and the
Revolutionary War. Gibson was Secretary of the
Indiana Territory, serving as acting Governor on two occasions. The two counties of Gibson County and Warrick County, separated by Rector's Base Line, were formed March 9, 1813. Gibson County was organized on April 1, 1813, while Warrick County was organized on April 30, meaning that both territories fell under Gibson County for that nearly month-long period. Gibson County occupied everything from the Wabash River and from the White River's extension to the Paoli Base Line down the 2d Principal Meridian to the Rector's Base Line. The area south of this line became
Warrick County, which covered the area from the 2d Principal Meridian west to the Wabash River and down the Wabash River and with meanders up the Ohio River back to the 2d Principal Meridian (which had separated Knox County from Harrison County, Indiana Territory).
Orange County,
Spencer County,
Pike County,
Dubois County, and
Crawford County all came from the roughly area occupied by the original Gibson County, as well as small portions of
Lawrence County,
Perry County,
Posey County, the current
Warrick County, and
Vanderburgh County. When the county was organized,
Patoka was intended to be the county seat. However, Patoka's low-lying location along the
Patoka River gave rise to a malaria epidemic; to avoid this, the commissioners chose to establish a new town, eventually known as
Princeton, on higher ground approximately south. However, although Princeton contends it was the only county seat, some contend county records indicate
Owensville was a temporary county seat since Princeton was not laid out until late 1814, at least a year after Gibson County's organization.
Abolitionists Although Indiana was technically a "free state," those assisting runaway slaves were guilty of breaking the law and could be prosecuted and jailed. Despite the legal threats, the Abolitionist movement was strong in Gibson County where many were active in the
Underground Railroad, some openly known as Abolitionists such as David Stormont and his wife who maintained a station at their home three miles northwest of Princeton, along with John Carithers who aided runaway slaves at his home east of Princeton, Sarah Merrick, Princeton, was jailed (after she was unable or unwilling to pay her $500 bail) in Gibson County for helping a runaway slave and her children from nearby Henderson, Kentucky (where slavery was legal), to escape to free territory. Reverend Thomas B. McCormick, a Presbyterian minister, was so well known as an Abolitionist that he fled to Canada after the Kentucky governor requested his extradition. Joseph Hartin of Princeton politically identified himself as an Abolitionist. James Washington Cockrum, originally from North Carolina, maintained a station at his home in Oakland City, first hiding runaways in a root cellar at his log cabin. His son William, who later authored
History of the Underground railroad as it was conducted by the Anti-slavery league; including many thrilling encounters between those aiding the slaves to escape and those trying to recapture them, aided him helping the runaway slaves. Their family home in Oakland City, now known as Cockrum Hall, is located on the grounds of present-day
Oakland City University and is recognized as a prominent station on the Underground Railroad. ==Geography==