Local wrestlers take on the USA Wrestling National Duals competition
Sports
June 24, 2026
Reese Thomas gets wrangles with an opponent from the state of Washington (Journal-Tribune photo provided by Shawn Andrews)

Local wrestlers take on the USA Wrestling National Duals competition

By Sarah Vollrath

Team Ohio took on the USA Wrestling National Duals tournament in Westfield, Indiana starting on the 16th and lasting through the 20th. Numerous local athletes had the opportunity to compete at the national level, including Marysville’s Cami Leng, Avery Riley, Kirra Streng, Layla VanCura, Laney Gri...

USGA Senior Open Championship is underway
Sports
Image of Colin Montgomerie preparing for tee time at the USGA Senior Open Championships (Journal-Tribune photo by Kevin Behrens)
By Sarah Vollrath 
July 1, 2026
The USGA Senior Open Championship will begin on the second of July at the Scioto Country Club in Columbus, accepting nearly 3,000 entries from 49 states, 38 foreign countries, the District of Columbia...
Sports
By Sarah Vollrath 
July 1, 2026
Following an investigation regarding an OHSAA Bylaw, Olentangy Orange was found to have violated Administrative Responsibility and Institutional Control requirements. The investigation was prompted by...
12U baseball championship
Sports
Top left to right: Owen McClelland, Carter Mills, Ben McCarthy, Zach Layne, William Hirtz, Reis Conrad, John Feldschau, Jonathan Perkins, Coach Kelly Daniel, Tyler Daniel, Vinny Farmer, Coach Jacob Fox, Carter Fox Bottom left to right: Assistant Coach Rob Miller, Head Coach Vince Hostetler, Reid Means, Luca Brant, Nate Gunning, Brantley Whitlock, Ryan Miller, Shawn Moran, Brandon Weaver, Marco Parente, Brantley Hostetler, Grayson Tobias, Declan Brown, Gavin Long (laying down), Justin Evans (laying down).
June 30, 2026
Winning team: Plain City Alder Black Final Score: 15-7
America’s birthday meets small-town tradition
News, Plain City, Plain City News
Above, a large crowd fills downtown Plain City during one of the community’s original Corn Carnivals. Held annually from 1914 through 1919, the Corn Carnival drew visitors from across the region with parades, contests, entertainment and agricultural exhibits. The festival celebrated the area’s agricultural heritage while bringing together residents for one of the community’s largest annual gatherings. More than a century later, the Corn Carnival remains one of the most cherished traditions in Plain City’s history. (Photos submitted)
Plain City revives Corn Carnival for country’s 250th
By Jack Christian 
July 4, 2026
The Village of Plain City is preparing to host a week of festivities as part of the nationwide America 250 commemoration, celebrating the 250th anniversary of the United States. The celebration will b...
Living history: Union County’s pioneer story lives on
Local News, News
The Doellinger-Geer cabin is pictured circa 1898 on the family farm along Weaver Road south of Marysville. Shown, left to right, are Anna Elisabeth Rausch Doellinger (1829-1904), widow of Stephen Doellinger; grandsons Henry Geer, Albert Geer and Walter Geer; daughter Anna Mary Doellinger Geer; and son-in-law John Leonard Geer. Two younger grandchildren, Lawrence Geer and Matilda “Tillie” Geer, who was born in the cabin in 1903 and is believed to have been the last person born there, were not yet born when the photograph was taken. (Photo submitted)
Historic cabin finds new home at St. John’s Lutheran Church
By From JT Staff Reports 
July 4, 2026
Editor’s note: The following article is supplied by Nina Boerger. ––– In the spring of 2024, St. John’s Lutheran Church began the process of preserving a piece of Union County history by relocating a ...
Before the fireworks: Marysville’s first Fourth of July
Local News, News
Fireworks light up the night sky during a past Independence Day celebration in Marysville. Community Fourth of July festivities have been a local tradition since 1828, when about 75 people gathered in the village’s tiny frontier settlement for Marysville’s first Independence Day celebration. (Journal-Tribune file photo)
By From JT Staff Reports 
July 4, 2026
Editor’s note: Information from the following story comes from articles appearing in an article in the Marysville Tribune of July 10, 1878 and one from a special Bicentennial edition of the Journal-Tr...
Jonathan Alder: The frontier captive who bridged two worlds
Local News, News, Plain City News
Jonathan Alder’s cabin at the Madison County Historical Society’s Museum of History. (Photo submitted)
By From JT Staff Reports 
July 4, 2026
Few people in Ohio history lived a life as extraordinary as Jonathan Alder. He was a child of the American Revolution, a frontier captive, an adopted son of the Mingo and Shawnee, a warrior in Ohio’s ...
Union County’s Revolutionary roots
Local News, News
Our story begins long before county's creation in 1820
By From JT Staff Reports 
July 4, 2026
Editor’s note: The following article is supplied by Stephen W. Badenhop, Union County Archivist. ––– 250 years ago, a group of men, known as America’s founding fathers, gathered in Philadelphia at the...
From revolution to Union County
Local News, News
The grave of Col. James Curry, shown above at Oakdale Cemetery, marks the final resting place of one of Union County’s founders and a Revolutionary War veteran. Originally buried on his Jerome Township farm after his death in 1834, Curry and his wife were reinterred at Oakdale Cemetery in 1883, where the monument stands as one of the county’s most significant links to the American Revolution. (Journal-Tribune photo by Kevin Behrens)
How America's first veterans helped settle Ohio's frontier
By From JT Staff Reports 
July 4, 2026
When delegates gathered in Philadelphia in 1776 to declare independence from Great Britain, the forests, prairies and streams that would one day become Union County lay hundreds of miles beyond the na...