Renner, Indiana Explained

Official Name:Renner, Indiana
Settlement Type:Ghost town
Mapsize:120px
Pushpin Map:USA Indiana Blackford County
Pushpin Label:Renner
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Blackford County
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Indiana
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Blackford
Subdivision Type3:Township
Subdivision Name3:Licking
Timezone:Eastern (EST)
Utc Offset:-5
Timezone Dst:EDT
Utc Offset Dst:-4
Coordinates:40.4722°N -85.4314°W
Elevation Ft:919
Postal Code Type:ZIP code
Postal Code:47348
Area Code:765
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank Info:18-63765[1]
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID
Blank1 Info:441895

Renner is an extinct American village in Indiana's Blackford County.[2] Although Renner has been listed as a “populated place” by the U.S. Geological Survey, this description is misleading. Renner was a railroad stop on the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railroad. The land around the railroad stop was originally used to supply timber for railroad crossties, and eventually became a livestock farm. Housing for the families of the employees of the livestock farm was also located nearby. Although it is not known for certain, Renner is thought to have been named for railroad executive John W. Renner.[3] Renner was an executive of the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railroad, and later the Pennsylvania Railroad, and retired with over 50 years of railroad experience.[4] Another community, Rennerdale, Pennsylvania, was named in his honor in 1895.[5] [6]

The 530acres farm adjacent to the Renner railroad station was owned by Benjamin Johnson. It became known as the Renner Livestock Farm in the early 1890s, and produced prize-winning Hereford cattle, Hampshire hogs, and horses – including the horse “Poetry of Motion”, a champion show horse.[7] Livestock were shipped from the Renner station, and the railroad made as many as four stops per day. In the early 1900s, the Renner station was considered one of the principal railroad stations in Blackford County.[8]

In 1919, Johnson sold all the farm's livestock, and then sold the farm. The farm was purchased by Fred A. Stimson. Stimson had purchased some of the Renner Stock Farm's cattle, and returned them to the Renner Stock Farm. He successfully continued the farm's tradition of award-winning livestock.[9] Early in 1927, Stimson sold the cattle, and general farming was practiced afterward. In 1937, the farm was sold to the Scripps Foundation in connection with Miami University (Oxford Ohio).[10]

History

The Renner railroad stop was located in Blackford County's Licking Township, northwest of Hartford City. (See railroad map herein.) The Renner railroad station was used by the nearby Renner Stock Farm to ship livestock all over the world. Although the rail line came to Blackford County in 1867, the farm was not started until the early 1890s. The Renner Stock Farm is credited as the originator of the beef cattle breed of Polled Hereford known as the Bullion 4th.[11]

Railroad

The railroad line that ran through Renner was named Union and Logansport Railroad Company by the time it entered Blackford County in 1867, and it was the county’s first railroad.[12] This line was proposed in 1862, and completed to Hartford City in 1867 — running through the Blackford County communities of Dunkirk, Converse, Millgrove, Hartford City, and eventually Renner. The railroad was eventually named Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railroad.[13] Other names for the railroad since that time include the Panhandle division of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Penn Central Transportation Company, Conrail, and Norfolk Southern Railway.[14] The line is now abandoned east of Hartford City, but still in place west of the city through Renner to Upland, Indiana.[15]

Geography

thumb|right|250px|Blackford County railroads 1890sRenner is in East Central Indiana, northwest of Hartford City. The northern half of Indiana, including what became Licking Township and Renner, was flattened by two glaciers millions of years ago.[16] These glaciers are also responsible for the rich Blackford County farmland.[17] The region is still agriculture-oriented. Soybeans and corn are the most popular crops grown in Blackford County, and over 65000acres are devoted to these two crops.[18] Additional crops and livestock are also grown in the county. A farm still exists in the area, and can be seen via satellite, but the railroad station is gone.

Major highways

Adjacent cities

Notes and references

References

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: U.S. Census website. United States Census Bureau. 2008-01-31.
  2. Blackford County Historical Society's "Ghost Towns in Blackford County, Indiana".
  3. The Blackford County Historical Society believes that the Renner railroad stop is probably named after railroad executive John W. Renner.
  4. Pennsylvania Railroad, p. 3.
  5. Web site: A General Chronology of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, Its Predecessors and Successors, and Its Historical Context 1895. Pittsburgh suburb of Rennerdale founded by employees of the Lines West Accounting Dept. and named for John W. Renner, Comptroller; purchase 60 acres on PCC&StL line near Pittsburgh at $200-300 per acre. (RyW) . Christopher T. Baer. December 2010. 2011-07-15.
  6. Web site: Collier Township, Rennerdale . Collier Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania . Collier Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania . 2011-07-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120327173957/http://www.colliertownship.net/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC=%7BA5C45397-F1D3-4324-B870-4BBE1457EF8B%7D . 2012-03-27.
  7. Shinn, p. 36. Portions of Shinn’s book have been reproduced on web pages.
  8. Blatchley, p. 473.
  9. American Cattle Breeding Association, p. 754.
  10. News: (untitled) . Hartford City News . 1937-02-13 . 6A .
  11. Roberts, p. 8.
  12. Biographical and historical record of Jay and Blackford Counties...., pp. 759-760, and pp. 239-240.
  13. Biographical and historical record of Jay and Blackford Counties..., pp. 759-760.
  14. A History of Blackford County..., p. 19.
  15. Web site: Norfolk Southern Railway Company — Abandonment Exemption — in Blackford County, IN . Surface Transportation Board . 2011-07-01.
  16. A History of Blackford County..., pp. 8-9.
  17. A History of Blackford County..., p. 10.
  18. [Purdue University]