The small unincorporated community known as Weyers or
Weyers Station was located at the junction of Skadden and Bardshar Roads in
Section One of Margaretta Township, Erie County, Ohio. It was named for an
early resident of the area, Matthias Weyer. An article found in the historical
files of the Sandusky Library Sandusky Research Center states that Matthias
Weyer, a native of Germany, settled in Margaretta Township in 1852. His son,
also named Matthias Weyer was named Postmaster of Weyers in 1895. By 1902, the
Post Office at Weyers closed, and the mail that had been delivered there was
sent to Parkertown, where Portland Road crosses the railroad. Below is a page from the U.S. Appointment of U.S.
Postmasters, 1832-1971, a database from Ancestry
Library Edition.
The old Mad River and Lake Erie Railroad, and railroads
that superseded it, passed through the community of Weyers, most likely picking
up and dropping the U.S. mail as it traveled through. It is said that
there was an old quarry south of the railroad crossing, which was used to
furnish gravel for the road bed of the first railroad. There was once a grain
elevator at Weyers, and a store and lunch counter were in business there for a
time.
Matthias Weyer, the son, died in 1902. His will is on file at Erie
Probate Court, as well as at Ancestry
Library Edition. Below is a portion of his will.
Matthias Weyer, the former Postmaster, was buried in Sandusky’s St. Mary’s Cemetery. Many of his descendants still reside in Erie County, Ohio today.