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Mortonsville, Indiana

Coordinates: 40°21′33.7″N 86°19′6.8″W / 40.359361°N 86.318556°W / 40.359361; -86.318556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mortonsville, also known as Martinsville,[1] is an extinct small town in Forest Township, Clinton County, Indiana in the United States. In 1860 it gained a post office with Martin Davis as the first postmaster and, though on a contract route and not appearing in the official list of U.S. post offices, served the community for a number of years.

When the Clover Leaf railroad was built through the township it bypassed Martinsville and established instead a station at Forest about two miles away, leading to the town's demise.[2]

Geography

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A 1913 history of Clinton County gives Martinsville's position as "at the northeast corner of section seventeen" in Forest Township.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Nancy Hawlick Stein (1976). Descendants of Wm. Oliphant of North Carolina. Oliphant Family History. p. 114.
  2. ^ a b Claybaugh, Joseph (1913). "Forest Township". History of Clinton County, Indiana. Indianapolis: A. W. Bowen & Company.

40°21′33.7″N 86°19′6.8″W / 40.359361°N 86.318556°W / 40.359361; -86.318556