John M. Pattison and his family moved to Promont in 1879. He became the 43rd governor of Ohio in 1905, but died six months later. (photo by Rachael Chillcott)
“The structure of a Victorian Italianate house is the same on every floor, even the basement. It has a center hallway and two rooms on either side,” explains Donna Amann, administrator of the Greater Milford Area Historical Society, which is based in the mansion. “The house is very balanced in design.”
Promont sits on property that belonged to Milford’s first settler, Francis McCormick, a Revolutionary War veteran with a 1,000-acre land grant who built a log cabin here in 1796. But the Little Miami River was what helped the city grow, as mills and other small businesses began popping up in the early 1800s.
More than 200 years later, the river that separates Milford’s bustling small-business district from the paved Little Miami Scenic Trail is still the town’s centerpiece. The city of fewer than 7,000 residents has become known as a trail town, thanks to its location at the intersection of eight recognized North American pathways that stretch more than 22,000 miles in all.
Milford still has a bit of a frontier vibe, too, especially walking the row of storefronts along Main Street. But instead of warehouses and mills, the area is today home to galleries and restaurants, boutiques and specialty stores.
“In the last 10 years or so, we’ve gotten a lot more boutiques,” says Mayor Laurie Howland. “You still have some of the antique stores, but there’s a nice mix. … I can pretty much do all my Christmas shopping — except for my 14-year-old daughter — on Main Street now. You can find something for everybody down here.”