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Although Heekin today is only a small place, it
was once a community business center with two blacksmith shops, a saw
mill, two toll-gate houses, a schoolhouse, and a post office.
Heekin was named by a man who worked for Heekin Spice Company in
Cincinnati. The community had its beginning when Willie Hall set up a
one-room millinery shop where she made and sold women's hats. Then Mood
Hall started a general store and Heekin began to grow.
The earliest settlers of Heekin were the Chipmans and the Scroggins.
They bought the land for fifty cents an acre. On Mr. Scroggin's land
there were wild hogs which he caught and sold to help pay the debt for
his large farm.
Two creeks run close to Heekin; Rattlesnake Creek was so named because
of the many rattlers killed close by, and the Wicked Willow, which got
its name because it caused so much damage when it overflowed. Now the
Wicked Willow is called Grassy Run.
The Grassy Run Baptist Church at Heekin was organized in 1849; the Mt.
Olivet Christian Church was established at Cross Roads in 1871, but
later moved to Heekin; and Salem Methodist Church, the oldest of the
three, was begun in 1841.
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