Planted in fertile soil and cultivated from humble beginnings, West Chester took root in southeast Butler County, Ohio in 1823. The community was first named Union Township.

Like many emerging communities on the frontier of the Northwest Territory at the turn of the 19th century, West Chester sprang up and was spurred on by access to transportation. Key in those early days were two major north-south thoroughfares still with us today: US Route 42 (Cincinnati-Columbus Road) and Cincinnati-Dayton Road.

Primitive versions of these modern routes existed well before colonial America and its westward expansions. Paths were stamped out by herds of American bison and indigenous species that roamed the wild land from one watering place to the next. Native American tribes adopted the buffalo trails for hunting and foraging in the 17th and 18th centuries. European missionaries, explorers, hunters, traders, surveyors, scouts and marching military units traversed the very same trails as early as the mid-1600s.

The first settlers in West Chester were largely German, Irish and English. They were attracted here in the late 1700s by the quality and beauty of the land. Pioneers hiked the time-tested trails either by foot or on horseback, as weather allowed, until the dirt paths could be widened to accommodate wagons. They cleared land for homes and gardens and did what they could to survive. Over time the dirt roads were transformed into paved turnpikes, tracing what would ultimately become many of today’s familiar concrete expressways, highways, streets and roads.

As the networks and modes of transportation continued to improve, villages sprouted up inside all sections of West Chester Township’s 35-square mile border. So too did commerce.

In the 1820s, at a time when a portion of the Miami and Erie Canal carved its way through the western region of the township, mule-drawn canal boats were used to move travelers and commercial goods to and from major Ohio cities including Cincinnati, Middletown, Dayton and later Toledo. The burgeoning steam powered railroad companies of the 1850s pinned tracks along lines similar to those original paths, allowing for even greater transport throughout the Midwest. Finally, starting with the era of mass-produced automobiles of the early 1900s, and through construction and improvement of the federal highway systems beginning in the 1950s, the ability for movement within the community and across the interconnected United States improved exponentially. Interstate 75 is built through the heart of West Chester Township, which today encompasses three interchanges: Union Centre Boulevard, Cincinnati-Dayton Road, and Tylersville Road.

Access to transportation, in its many forms over decades, allowed the people who came here to flourish. They built homes and churches and schools and businesses on prime real estate along essential avenues. Growth and success was intrinsic, nurtured by a community at-large – people like neighbors who started schoolhouses from their log cabin homes, farmers who tended crops and livestock, enterprising movers and shakers who platted villages, tradespeople who opened stores and shops, and so forth.

Agriculture, logging, tanning, milling, blacksmithing and mercantile pursuits formed the backbone of the initial business community. Travel, hospitality, and entertainment followed closely behind in the way of taverns, inns and stagecoach stops, and these industries have remained steady pillars of the local economy – granted in new and constantly evolving forms – ever since. Today nearly 3,700 businesses operate in West Chester with the industries of life sciences, information technology, advanced manufacturing, corporate headquarters and Class A office, healthcare, and consumer marketing leading the way.

Advancements in technology and transportation helped bring huge waves of population growth to West Chester starting around the 1960s and peaking in the 1990s. The Fire (1963) and Police (1967) departments were organized in these times. Conservation and preservation, when reasonably feasible, came into greater focus with the changing landscape of the community around this same period. Many of the community’s public park spaces were being acquired and built, and historic landmarks like the National Voice of America Museum of Broadcasting were being officially designated for their cultural significance, as part of this era.

Through all the changes, West Chester leadership remained grounded to core competencies best suited for the township form of government, namely infrastructure improvement and public safety. This way of life is an important and cherished part of the community’s legacy that continues to bear fruit for current residents and stakeholders.

In 2000, voters officially claimed West Chester Township for the community’s name, a namesake derived from the early beginnings of life and development along the Cincinnati-Dayton Road corridor. Since then, West Chester has come to be defined by its contemporary vision statement as a place, “Where Families Grow and Businesses Prosper.” And that’s not been a result of luck, accident or happenstance.

Guided by intentional planning and balanced with careful stewardship – all rooted in the toil, dreams and determination of the people and events that shaped West Chester history – the promise of our community’s forefathers has continued to come to fruition over the course of 200 years.

A rich history. A bright future. West Chester Township is fortunate to stake claim to both.

West Chester celebrates its bicentennial anniversary in 2023 with great admiration for the accomplishments of yesteryear and even greater anticipation for all that remains to be achieved hereafter.

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    Employees of the Fox Paper Company pose for a photo at the Crescentville mill in June 1928.

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    Paper mill factory men pose for a group photo.

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    Mahlon and Hattie Conover family at their home on Tylersville Road, circa 1897.

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    Holtsinger-Memorial Presbyterrean Church, Bus No. 1, Gano, Ohio.

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    Seven Chimneys, a.k.a. Spread Eagle Tavern or James D. Conrey House, was a stop on the Underground Railroad.

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    West Chester School 8th Grade Class circa 1920.

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    West Chester School, Ms. Otto, 1st and 2nd Grade circa 1920.

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    Union-Port Union High School, Class of 1945, West Chester, Ohio.

  • West Chester Township Bicentennial Anniversary

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    Pisgah School.

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    Truck drives State Route 42 in Pisgah.

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    Hills Grocery, Pisgah, circa 1930.

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    Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the former Bethany Station is now VOA Museum and open weekends.

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    West Chester Fire Department was founded in 1963.

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    In June 1963, the Trustees ordered the first 50 badges and purchased a Sutphen fire truck for $8,000 marking the start of what has become the West Chester Township Fire Department.

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    On July 28, 1963, ground was broken on the community's first fire station on the same site of today's Fire Station 71 and Fire Department headquarters.

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    West Chester Police Department was founded April 17, 1967.

  • WCPD Journal-News 1971 web

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    "Fledgling Police Department Faces Big Challenge in Growing Union Twp."

  • WCPD K9 Unit web

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    West Chester Police K9 Unit was founded in 1993.

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    West Chester Community Services Department.

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    Voice of America Bethany Station, now the National Voice of America Museum of Broadcasting, circa 2002.

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    On November 25, 1997, the Union Centre Boulevard interchange celebrates opening ceremonies. The new interchange opens to traffic later that December.

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    On November 25, 1997, the Union Centre Boulevard interchange celebrates opening ceremonies. The new interchange opens to traffic later that December.

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    On November 25, 1997, the Union Centre Boulevard interchange celebrates opening ceremonies. The new interchange opens to traffic later that December.

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    On November 25, 1997, the Union Centre Boulevard interchange celebrates opening ceremonies. The new interchange opens to traffic later that December.

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    Since the opening of the Union Centre Boulevard interchange, West Chester has reaped $3,858,754,817 in new investment and more than 44,600 new jobs.

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    Since the opening of the Union Centre Boulevard interchange, West Chester has reaped $3,858,754,817 in new investment and more than 44,600 new jobs.

  • West Chester Memorial Day Parade

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    The Memorial Day Parade Ceremonies through Olde West Chester and at West Chester Cemetery have remained a community tradition for more than 150 years.

  • Cabin in the Clearing 1993 web

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    The Cabin in the Clearing at Keehner Park was dedicated on November 7, 1993.

  • Keehner Park Amphitheater web

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    The Keehner Park Amphitheater celebrated its grand opening on Labor Day 1997.

  • West Chester Senior Van web

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    The Union Township Senior Transportation Service begins operations thanks to the purchase of a community van by Trustees in 1997.

  • West Chester Claim the Name web

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    On June 28, 2000, Union Township formally changes names to West Chester Township by a vote of residents.

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    The Boundless Playground at Beckett Park is opened in 2009.

  • The Square web

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    The Square @ Union Centre opens in 2008.

  • West Cheser History Center web

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    On January 24, 2019, the Trustees transferred ownership of the Station Road Schoolhouse to the West Chester~Union Township Historical Society for $1.00.

  • West Chester-Union Township Historical Society

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    West Chester History Center, 6670 Station Road, celebrated its Grand Opening on June 3, 2023.

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