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  1. Hamilton was first incorporated by act of the Ohio General Assembly in 1810, but lost its status in 1815 for failure to hold elections. It was reincorporated in 1827 with Rossville, the community across the Great Miami River in St. Clair Township .

  2. The town was mapped, government was seated, and Hamilton was formally incorporated as a city by the Ohio General Assembly in 1810. By the mid-1800s, Hamilton had become a significant manufacturing city, producing machines and equipment used to process the region’s farm produce.

  3. Aug 8, 2024 · Hamilton, city, seat (1803) of Butler county, southwestern Ohio, U.S., on the Great Miami River, about 25 miles (40 km) north of Cincinnati. In 1794 a town called Fairfield was laid out adjoining Fort Hamilton, an outpost used against Indians. Fairfield was later renamed for Alexander Hamilton.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The town was mapped, the government was seated, and Hamilton was formally incorporated as a city by the Ohio General Assembly in 1810. By the mid-1800s, Hamilton had become a significant manufacturing city, producing machines and equipment used to process the region’s farm produce.

  5. In 1803 Hamilton was made the county-seat; in 1810 it was incorporated as a village; in 1854 it annexed the town of Rossville on the opposite side of the river; and in 1857 it was made a city. In 1908, by the annexation of suburbs, the area and the population of Hamilton were considerably increased.

  6. Jul 4, 2020 · Hamilton was incorporated in 1810, but because of irregularities, the town’s charter was forfeited a few years later, according to a Hamilton Daily News article from Dec. 10, 1932.

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  8. Hamilton County was organized in 1790 by order of Arthur St. Clair, governor of the Northwest Territory, as the second county in the Northwest Territory. Cincinnati was named as the seat. Residents named the county in honor of Alexander Hamilton, who was the first Secretary of the Treasury of the United States and a founder of the Federalist Party.