Buckeye Lake Expert
Jeff NoeJeff NoeCommunity Visions Realty PartnersRE/MAX Consultant GroupCommunity Visions Realty Partners
Phone:614.855.2822
Cell:740.404.7032
Fax:740.888.0409
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My other neighborhood pages:BexleyGranvilleHarbor HillsJohnstownMillersportMount Vernon CityNewarkThornville
"RETHINK REAL ESTATE for good"

Buckeye Lake

Buckeye Lake ~ Rich in History, Tradition, and Beauty
Buckeye Lake Real Estate Information and History


The building of the canal enlarged the lake to 7¼ miles in length and about 1¼ miles in width at its widest point, the dimensions of the lake as we know it today.  Outcries from early Ohio settlers wanting to buy and sell goods convinced state legislators to open trade routes.  On July 4th, 1825, the first shovel of earth was turned to begin the Ohio-Erie Canal System.


Approximately 100 years after the ceremony, a granite boulder with a bronze plaque was erected on the site by Licking County residents.  Construction of the dike, blocking drainage into the South Fork of the Licking River, began in 1826 and was completed in 1830, forming the Licking Summit Reservoir which eventually became Buckeye Lake.  In the canal days Buckeye Lake gained yet another name, the "Licking Summit", because it was one of the high points along the canals planned path.


As the water level rose, several large mats of sphagnum moss broke loose from the bottom and became "floating islands".  Other islands were also created because the land was above the water level.  The canal was our forefathers' only means of transportation from the Ohio River to Lake Erie. Port towns and mills sprung up all along the canal system during it's construction.  Horses and mules pulled the barges up and down the canals from the tow paths built along the sides of the canal.  In fact, the North Bank of Buckeye Lake was a tow path and today is known as the "Old Tow Path".  Barges first used the route in 1831, six years after ground breaking.  Even then, canals exerted a great influence on transportation because eventually highways and railways were often constructed along the old, abandon canal routes.

The Deep Cut Canal is the most discernible part of the Ohio and Erie Canal in Fairfield County, running Bickel
Church Road to Buckeye Lake, approximately 4 miles in length.  The Deep Cut is actually a very deep cut canal made specifically to get the canal water in the Lake to flow towards Baltimore, Canal Winchester and on to Circleville.  This canal goes right through downtown Millersport.  Years ago in the summertime, a grocery boat could be seen paddling along through downtown Millersport.  Did you know one of Fairfield County's lost towns is located on the southern edge of Millersport along the bank of the "Deep Cut"?

The community of Monticello was established for those folks working on the construction of the canal.  Records show from 1827-1833 there was a post office there. In 1825 a road was opened from Lancaster to Monticello.  Today nothing remains of the lost town of Monticello.  The building of the canal had other effects on the Lake.  While the canal flooded and drowned most of the "boggy site", one section of the sphagnum mat floated to the surface during the filling of the reservoir.  Today it continues to exist as an island conducive to the growing of cranberry plants and has produced a crop every year.  The island, now known as the "Cranberry Bog State Nature Preserve, at one time spread over nearly 50 acres, but it has been shrinking.  The bog island is simply decaying.  There is no other island like it in the United States.  Many interesting and rare plants exist on the island, such as Grass Pink Orchids, Marshfield, Cinnamon & Royal Fern,
Ground Nut Winter Holly and Arctic Cotton Grass, which is otherwise found only in northern Canada. It is also covered in Pitcher Plants and Sundew Plants; both of these plants eat insects.  The bird life on the island is also quite fascinating including all types of warblers, sparrows and waterfowl.  When the ducks and geese are migrating, they find Cranberry Marsh an ideal place for rest and feeding.  Thus it is also a hunters paradise.  An open house is held once a year on the last Saturday of June to tour the bog.  The Blue Heron Rookery is located in an area close to the Cranberry bog.  Most of the Blue Herons come there to roost towards the end of March and stay until October.

All told there are about 127 Nests in the colony.  The birds build their nests in large beech trees generally 30' to 80' above the ground.  Traditionally, an annual Blue Heron Spring Fling is held at the end of March.  The reservoir's hidden trees and debris became a big problem especially in 1906 when a group of recreation minded gents came together to form the Buckeye Lake Yacht Club. The "stump skippers", as the yachtsmen sometimes refer to themselves, worked long and hard to reduce the hazards to the boats caused by the skeletons of old trees left in the former reservoir. The Yacht Club today is still a vigorous group of 400 members, headquartered where it has been since 1912 on a small island known as Watkins Island, which is connected to the North Bank by a bridge.  It is a private club and the only Island Yacht Club in America.  The Yacht Club sponsors several sail boating contests and an antique wood boat parade.  Several members of the Yacht Club enter sailing contests all over the United States and do extremely well in competition.  Any member can invite you to the Yacht Club restaurant.

Buckeye Lake real estate has exploded over the course of the past decade with luxury homes, weekend or summer getaway, low-maintenance condos, the many island communities that dot the lake (including Lieb's Island - the largest and  only road accessible island on the lake), and newer developments such as Heron Bay, Snug Harbor, and many more. Lakefront home prices begin at $200,000 and climb well over $1,000,000 plus - and even more for some of the private island homes that occasionally become available.  Many towns and villages border the land around Buckeye Lake including Millersport, Buckeye Lake, Thornville, Thornport, and Hebron.  Having been a former resident with my family (and still a homeowner on Lieb's Island at Buckeye Lake), it truly offers something for everyone - boating, recreational water sports, personal watercraft fun, sailing, championship fishing - and hundreds of secluded spots just to kick back and relax.  Every season brings something new, fresh, and exciting on the lake.  Come see what all the excitement is about!  If you're interested in Buckeye Lake real estate, let us give you a tour of Buckeye Lake the way it's meant to be seen - from the water.

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