Anderson Township Historic Society

The Miller-Leuser log house

The Miller-Leuser Log House

standing the test of time for well over 200 years!
Built in 1796

intro video:
the history of the Log House

Built in 1796

Come visit the Log House

Miller–Leuser Log House : named from the first and last occupants.

The Miller–Leuser Log House is a historic eighteenth-century log cabin near the city of Cincinnati in Hamilton CountyOhioUnited States. One of the oldest houses in the area, it has been named a historic site.

When Columbia Tusculum was founded in 1788 as Hamilton County’s first settlement, the pioneers spread out as far upriver as today’s Anderson Township. Land in the township, including the location of the Miller–Leuser House, was surveyed five years later as part of a general survey of the Virginia Military District. In 1796, explorer Nathaniel Massie purchased the site of the present house and quickly devised it to Ichabod Miller; he is believed to have constructed the house by the end of the year, and he retained ownership until selling it in 1836. The cabin remained in residential use until 1971, when it was bought by the Anderson Township Historical Society; as one of the oldest buildings in southwestern Ohio, and as a typical component of the pioneer built environment, locals deemed it a highly significant part of their history.

In building his house, Ichabod Miller employed a mix of logs: some were hand-hewn, while others retained their original round shape, and all are notched to enable them to fit together at the corners. The entire building is one and one half stories tall.

In 1974, the Miller–Leuser Log House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, one of more than three hundred such locations in Hamilton County. It qualified for inclusion primarily because of its architecture, rather than because of its place in local history. The house is one of twelve National Register locations in Anderson Township, along with one house in the Mount Washington neighborhood of Cincinnati, three sites in the village of Newtown, and seven other places in the unincorporated portions of the township.

Historical Marker Information

The Ohio Historical Society Marker Number 76-31
Erected 2010 by Anderson Township Historical Society.

Ichabod Benton Miller purchased 440 acres in Anderson Township on April 2, 1796. The log house Miller built on his property around 1796 was continuously occupied for more than 170 years until the Anderson Township Historical Society purchased the building in 1971. The log house is located on its original site and is one of the few surviving structures built by the pioneers who settled the Ohio River Valley in the late 1700s. The house is named for the first and last families who owned it.

ATHS Log House, Chimney Restoration Project

The Miller-Leuser log house in Anderson Township, Ohio has stood the test of time for well over 200 years. But unfortunately, the original stone chimney has suffered the effects of time and weather, and was in dire need of repairs. The restoration is complete. And with your help and the help of the Ohio History Connection we were able preserve one of the last few original-location log homes still standing in Ohio. We thank you for your support!

The Anderson Township Historical Society Miller-Leuser Log House Chimney Restoration is made possible in part by a grant from the Ohio History Connection’s History Fund.  The History Fund is supported exclusively by voluntary donations of Ohio income tax refunds, sales of Ohio History “mastodon” license plates, and designated gifts to the Ohio History Connection. www.ohiohistory.org/historyfund.com

The Miller-Leuser Log House

6550 Clough Pike
Cincinnati, OH 45244.
(513)-231-2114

Tours by appointment & open the 1st and 3rd Sunday, May through October 1:00 – 4:00  pm