English: The Dr. Simon Hyde House. This Federal style house sits within the Rushville Historic District in Rushville, OH. This house was constructed circa 1830 and stands along the old Zane's Trace road. It is considered one of the historically and architecturally important buildings in the District. It was built by Dr. Simon Hyde and used as a station on the Underground Railroad in Rushville in the years before the Civil War. It is believed that Joe Selby, a fugitive slave who was the inspiration for Benjamin Hanby's popular anti-slavery ballad "Darling Nelly Gray", died in this house after fleeing from Kentucky in the 1840s.
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