The City of St. Marys was legally established in 1823, incorporated in1834, and became a city in 1904.
Population (per 2000 census): 8,342
First Mayor: Judge Stacy Taylor - elected in 1834
High School: St. Marys Memorial - the current school was opened in 1924 and graduated its first class in 1925. 
Lemon Gray Neely, the town's first millionaire, donated the
land for the new school.
He asked that the name "Memorial" be used for the new school as a tribute to his late wife.
McBroom Jr. High was erected
in 1952 and named after Charles C. McBroom who had served 39 years as Superintendent
plus additional years as a teacher.
Largest Employers: AAP St. Marys Corp. - established in 1987
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company - established in 1939
Joint Township District Memorial Hospital - established in 1953
Omni Manufacturing, Inc. - established in 1984
Parker Hannifin Corporation - established in 1920
St. Marys Foundry, Inc. - established in 1984
Setex, Inc. - established in 1988
ST. MARYS: HISTORIC CITY:
Before the white men ever came to the area, Indians found the St. Marys
River to be an important travel route. By portages of only six miles at high
water and 26 at low water they could travel all the way from Lake Erie to the
Gulf of Mexico.
Before the construction of Grand Lake St. Marys, which drained about half
of the river's watershed area, the river could handle the largest flat-bottom
boats.
All of Gen. Mad Anthony Wayne's supplies for this army traveled the St. Marys
River.
Before the Miami & Erie Canal, all supplies coming into western Ohio came
on the river route.
Consequently, since St. Marys was a portage point on this trail, it is
plain to see that the locale played an important part in the development of
the Northwest Territory.
Because of the traffic, the renegades Simon and James Girty set up a
trading post in what is now St. Marys, and the community came to be known as
Girtystown, the name by which it continued to be known until 1823, when St.
Marys was legally established.
In 1794, Gen. Wayne built a fort and drove away James Girty, who was
considered an evil man involved with Indian raids. The first white settler,
Charles Murray, moved in then.
Later a second fort called Fort Barbee was ordered built by Gen. Harrison
and was reputed to be the most important military post in Ohio.
In 1818 an Indian treaty was signed, which opened the way for more
settlers.
Some of the soldiers who had come here with Gen. Wayne liked the area so
much that, after their military service was completed, they returned here to
make their homes.
Among them was Capt. John Armstrong, who settled south of St. Marys on
Greenville Road. Members of the Armstrong family played an important part in the early
development of this area.
St. Marys was founded by Charles Murray, William Houston and John McCorkle
in 1823. They bought 400 acres of land from the government and laid out the village
of 68 lots, extending from Perry St. on the west to Front St. on the east,
North St. on the north and South St. on the south.
Main St., a part of the Anthony Wayne Trail, was expected to be the main
street of the town. But with the opening of the Miami & Erie Canal, completed
in 1845, the town expanded eastward, with businesses opening up near the
canal, which became the main artery of transportation. Spring St., named because of the natural spring along the roadway, then
became the main thoroughfare.
In 1824, St. Marys was the county seat of Mercer County
and was incorporated in 1834. In 1849, it became a part of the
newly formed Auglaize County and became a City in 1904.
GRAND LAKE ST. MARYS:
Grand Lake St. Marys came into being as a reservoir to supply water for the
Miami & Erie Canal. It was begun in 1837, long before the days of mechanized
equipment.
The lake was constructed by men wielding shovels and axes - they cut down
trees in the great swamp, which was to be a natural storage place for the
water needed to supply the canal and operate its locks.
Seventeen hundred men, mostly Irish and German immigrants, were employed in
building the east and west banks of the reservoir.
They worked from sunrise to sunset. Their wages amounted to 30 cents a day
plus one jigger of whiskey (much relied on to combat malaria).
The lake was completed in 1845 at a cost of $600,000 and, for many years,
the 17,500-acre reservoir was the largest artificial body of water in the
world.
The lake has 52 miles of shoreline and is approximately nine miles long and
three miles wide. It is still the largest artificial body of water in the
world built without the use of machinery.
With the opening of the canal, men and women of German heritage came here
on canal boats from Cincinnati, and soon had acquired land for farming.
Earlier settlers were mostly of English, Irish and French heritage.
The completion of the canal and its fee-reservoir also made a vast
difference in living costs. Freight rates dropped from $1.00 for hauling a
bushel of wheat 100 miles to 15 cents for hauling a ton of wheat the same
distance.
The canal did a thriving business until it was supplanted by the railroads
(the Norfolk and Western Railway was constructed through St. Marys in the late
1860's).
In 1888 and 1889, oil was discovered in the St. Marys area and many wells
were drilled during the oil boom that followed. Some of the wells were drilled
in Grand Lake St. Marys, whose surface was once studded with derricks.
Grand Lake St. Marys is a part of the divide between the north and south
waterways of the canal. Water flowing out of the canal to the east went
eventually to Lake Erie and the other Great Lakes, while water flowing south
and west found its way into streams and rivers (the Ohio River, for one) that
are a part of the Mississippi River system.
From its completion in 1845 until 1915, the lake provided this area with
some of its most colorful history.
In 1915, however, the lake was no longer needed to feed the canal. The Ohio
General Assembly at that time passed an act through which this body of water
and adjacent lands owned by the state were dedicated and set apart forever for
the use of the public, as public parks or pleasure resorts. Grand Lake St. Marys State Park is one of the
busiest tourist areas in Ohio with approximately 700,000 visitors to the
park each year.
MIAMI & ERIE CANAL -
STILL A WONDER TO BEHOLD:
At the top of the list of historical attractions in and around St. Marys is
the Miami & Erie Canal.
The canal, a marvelous feat of engineering when it was built in the early 1800's,
is still a wonder today.
Surrounded by a veritable plethora of natural beauty - mulberry trees, lily
pads, blackberry bushes, reeds and rushes - the canal and its sidekick, the
towpath, are a delight to see and leisurely stroll along.
According to the compiled history of the canal, as published by the Miami &
Erie Canal Society, construction of the waterway, which stretched from the
Ohio River on the south to Lake Erie on the north, began July 12, 1825.
It took more than 500 men two years to build just one 15-mile stretch of
the 248.8 mile-long ditch.
Men worked from sunrise to sunset to construct the canal, which cost
approximately $8,062,680 to build. The waterway was dug by men using only picks, shovels and wheelbarrows.
Two guard locks and 103 lift locks allowed boats to move up and down the
canal, and it was designed so that the Loramie Summit (the highest point of
the canal) was more than 500 feet higher than the Ohio River and 400 feet
higher than Lake Erie.
The canal had a minimum water depth of four feet, and the towpath for
horses that pulled the canal boats was about 10 feet wide.
Many other businesses were built along the canal in the St. Marys area.
There was a gristmill and a lumber yard/sawmill, a linseed oil mill and woolen
mill - all of which were run by water power.
A large basin where the present Chestnut Street Parking Lot is located was
surrounded by businesses, including a slaughterhouse, blacksmith shop and
livery stable.
According to a history of the canal compiled by various area residents, the
growth of St. Marys was in direct proportion to the canal period between 1830
and 1900. It was, by definition and actual fact, a canal town.
Area lakes - Grand Lake St. Marys, Lake Loramie, and Indian Lake - were all
built as feeder reservoirs for the canal.
Grand Lake St. Marys provided water for the canal's northern leg, and Lake
Loramie and Indian Lake fed the southern portion of the waterway.
The canal's use began diminishing in 1913 when a disastrous flood hit the
canal area, causing extensive damage to it. Today the canal is vital to the
St. Marys Power Plant, which uses water from it to cool its power-producing
machinery.
In the ensuing years, the State has turned the reservoirs into recreation
areas. Much of the canal towpath has been allowed to become overgrown and much
of the canal structures and banks have long been ignored. A visitor
walking along the towpath near Minster, St. Marys and Spencerville can still
see the beautiful water, magnificent mulberry trees and abundant water life.