To Grady: Persons claiming vacant land Dec. 1802 to Apr 1803: Solomon Rhoads, 50 acres Jan 1802: Jacob Rhoads, 200 ac on Pond River Mar 1801: Daniel Rhoades, 200 ac on Caney Creek Feb. 1803 Court Records: Henry Rhoades Sr., Alney McLean and Jermiah Langley were appointed commissioners to convey to Leonard Stom 200 acres agreeably given to William Campbell and Robert S. Russell. Feb. 1807 court records: David Rhoads was overseer of road from Greenville to Solomon Rhoads and the following hands added: David Casebier, Jacob Sever, and Robert Simmons. David Rhoads then appointed a surveyor in place of Daniel Rhoads. Mrs. Cordena Elizabeth Ashby of Centertown, Ohio County, stated that her grandmother, Elizabeth (Rhoads) Landis was a daughter of Solomon Rhoads of Muhlenberg and his wife Rachel Boone, a daughter of Squire Boone, brother of Daniel Boone. [Manley notes he has read the genealogy of Daniel Boone and there is no Rachel listed as the daughter of Squire.] May 1805 Court Records: Jacob Studebaker was appointed to survey a road from Daniel Rhoads' to the Logan county line. August 1806 Court Records: Tobias Penrod has been shot from ambush while in his field and his wife Catherine, asked for letters of administration, by oaths of Henry Rhoads Sr. and Solomon Rhoads. The personal estate of Tobias Penrod was to be appraised by Jacob Studebaker, Daniel Rhoads Sr., Leonard Stom and Thomas Foster. Re the founding of Vienna (now Calhoun): On Feb. 23, 1785, Henry Rhoades, Isaac Morrison and Isaac Cox were ordered to lay off a town site....The town was first called Rhoadesville, perhaps after the surveyor, Henry Rhoades. Soon it was changed to Vienna but no one knows why. Collins History states, "The first fort built by Solomon rhoades in 1788 was called Vienna. This town became the county seat but was later changed to Calhoun in honor of Judge John Calhoun."