One plaque in the park reads, "Known as the "Workman Cabin," this log home was built between 1838 and 1840. It originally stood three miles northeast of Loudonville along what was once the old Wooster - Mt. Vernon pike and stage route – which later became the 3C Highway. The structure served as the home of Morgan and generations of his descendants, and also being used as a meeting house for the Church of the Brethren and as an inn for weary travelers along the road.
"Built of white oak logs stacked with a V-notch cut at each end, the cabin originally consisted of two rooms downstairs and a sleeping loft for the children overhead. Plaster walls were used to divide the interior into rooms, while chinking – a mixture of clay mud, straw, and hair – was used to provide insulation between the beams of the outer walls and to help shed water away from the logs.
"It was remodeled a number of times, but in its original state was believed to have only one door in the front with the sleeping loft accessed via a ladder. There is no evidence the cabin ever had a fireplace; it was one of the earliest cabins in the area to rely on a cast iron stove for cooking and heat. A luxury at the time, the home was also built with glass windows – whereas less fortunate settlers relied on oiled paper to provide the slightest natural light."
Another plaque continued the story. "In 1963 the cabin – by then unoccupied since 1915 and its logs hidden by lap siding – was given by Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lifer, on whose land it stood, to the Mohican Historical Society to use as the headquarters for the Loudonville area Sesquicentennial celebration to be held the following year. Volunteers removed the siding, along with an addition to the structure, and transported the cabin, intact on a flatbed truck, to its present site.
"The cabin was not expected to become a permanent fixture in the park, but after the sesquicentennial in 1964 it had become a popular landmark and so the Mohican Historical Society furnished the cabin with items from pioneer days and operated it as a museum until the Cleo Redd Fisher Museum was constructed in 1973. After 1973, the cabin's entry room was used as a tourist information center for a number of years but otherwise was not open to the public.
"In 1995, thanks again to the hard work of volunteers, the cabin – with most of its pioneer furnishings intact – was opened for tours and has remained an example of early life on the frontier."
I took my picture while returning home late in the day, so my photo of the cabin has the sun behind it – unlike the morning shot seen on the vintage postcard.
Here are a few more shots.![]() |
| A hallway in the Lodge |
![]() |
| The Gorge Overlook |


















































