BENJAMIN C. HOWARD AND THE "TOLEDO
WAR":
SOME LETTERS OF A FEDERAL COMMISSIONER
by WILLIAM D. HOYT, JR.
Associate Professor of History,
Loyola College, Baltimore
The "Toledo War"-a dispute
between the state of Ohio and
the territory of Michigan over their
joint boundary-was reaching
its climax and threatening to break out
in active hostilities when
President Andrew Jackson decided to
intervene. The area in ques-
tion was not large: a strip of land five
miles wide at its western
end and eight miles at its eastern; but
it was rich agricultural
soil and had as a chief asset the harbor
at Toledo. So strong was
the feeling that the militia of both
Ohio and Michigan were called
out, men were on the march, and quick
action was essential in
order to avert an armed clash.
On March 22, 1835, the secretary of
state, John Forsyth, wrote
to Benjamin C. Howard of Baltimore,
asking him to serve as one
of two "confidential &
influential friends" to confer with the
quarreling governors.1 The
other commissioner was to be Richard
Rush, lawyer, diplomat, and statesman,
and the pair of them were to
start for the frontier immediately.2
Three days later, March 25, they
were on their way. Meanwhile, the
opposing governors were ap-
proaching the debated boundary line, and
it was only through heroic
efforts that Howard and Rush arrived in
the nick of time to prevent
the battle which seemed inevitable.
The story of the hurried journey to Ohio
and of the shuttling
back and forth between the headquarters
of the two governors is
told vividly by Howard in a series of
letters to his wife in Baltimore.
These communications, penned amidst
confusion and often late at
1 Forsyth to Howard, March 22, 1835, in
the Howard Papers at the Maryland
Historical Society. The letter is marked
"Confidential" and indicates that Howard
was chosen in the place of "Mr. [William Cabell]
Rives," who had declined the
mission. John Forsyth (1780-1841) served
as secretary of state from 1834 to 1841.
The letters reproduced herein, as well
as others cited below in the notes, are all
from the Howard Papers at the Maryland Historical
Society.
2 Richard
Rush (1780-1859) had been minister to England in 1817-25 and
secretary of the treasury in 1825-28.
The errand to settle the Ohio-Michigan boundary
dispute was a small incident in a career of
international significance.
297
298
Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly
night, show clearly the difficulties of
travel, the poor accommoda-
tions, and something of the early
history of the communities
visited. They reflect the tenseness of
the atmosphere surrounding
the peace negotiations, and they
describe dramatically the assembly
of men determined to defend by force
their claims to the disputed
area.
Benjamin Chew Howard (1791-1872) was a
man of good family
and had behind him a record of able
public service. The son of
Colonel John Eager Howard, a
distinguished Revolutionary officer
from Baltimore, and Margaretta Oswald
Chew of Philadelphia, he
entered the College of New Jersey
(Princeton) at the age of four-
teen and graduated in 1809. Three years
later he received a master's
degree from the same institution, and
then he studied law in a
Baltimore office. He began the practice
of his profession in 1816,
entered the Baltimore City Council in
1820, and was in the Mary-
land House of Delegates during 1824-29.
He was a member of
congress for two terms, 1829-33, and,
after a two-year interval, had
just returned for four more years when
the boundary dispute re-
moved him from the scene temporarily.
Howard's wife, the recipient of the
letters from Pittsburgh, Cleve-
land and points west, was Jane Grant
Gilmor (1801-1890), eldest
child of William and Marianne Smith
Gilmor; they had been
married seventeen years at the time of
the correspondence. It was
her younger brother, Charles Smith
Gilmor, a lad of eighteen, who
went on the trip with Howard and Rush
and who was particularly
interested in acquiring a
"Michigan pony."3 In 1835 the Howards
were living at "Belvidere,"
the family estate just north of Baltimore,
and to that house the letters were
directed.
Washington March 23
Monday
My dearest wife
Promptness is the order of the day and
I must conform to it with the
rest. What do you think of my starting
on the day after to-morrow? And
yet it must be so. I shall be at home
to dinner to morrow, but not an early
3 Charles Smith Gilmor (1817-1866), the
eighth child of William Gilmor,
married Charlotte Patterson in 1839 and
had six children.
Benjamin C. Howard and the
"Toledo War" 299
one; and then one evening is all that I
can take to make the arrange-
ments for absence. The Law of Ohio is to
be put into effect on the 1st
April and we have not a day to lose. By
this mail I am writing to your
Uncle to tell him that Charles must be
ready to start on Wednesday
morning.4 I can do very well
(perhaps better) without a servant. After
you get this, you had better employ
yourself about packing up my clothes.
My other arrangements can be made in an
hour. I am afraid of missing
the mail. Ever and truly your
attached husband
BCH
Pittsburg Sunday, March 29. 1835
I seize the earliest possible moment, my
dearest wife of letting you
know where and how I am. You will see
from a brief sketch of our mode
of journeying that not a moment had
hitherto occurred, and which I would
gladly have availed myself of, even to
drop you a single line. My in-
clination is to follow the example of
the Parthian of old and turn around
in my flight at every opportunity to
send a missile behind me, although God
forbid that I should discharge arrows.
We did not arrive at Chambersburg
on the day of our departure from home,
until after midnight and it was
past one before I could stretch my weary
limbs upon a comfortable bed
in a clean room. Sleep is a capricious
friend. It pays it's visits to suit itself
and often stays away when it's presence
is most wanted. In this instance
it did not visit me until late and at 6
in the morning I was up again.
Here we exerted all our powers to get
into the Fast Line (as it is called)
from Phila. to Pittsburg but without
success and again set off after breakfast
in the line in which we had before
travelled. From that time until now
I have not been in bed. We rode all day
and all night all next day and
night and reached this place after
breakfast this morning. I am now
writing after dinner in a very well
furnished parlour where we have been
as quiet as the case would admit.
Tomorrow morning we must be off
again to Cleaveland where (I think) I
asked you to write to me. How
long we shall be there I have no idea as
yet--whether one or more days
or hours: for if the Governor of Ohio is
not there we must go after him.
We shall have to ride all day, all night
and next day to reach the place.
The road is muddy but not dangerous.
Take the large map and shew
4 The uncle was Robert Gilmor, Jr.
(1777-1848), Baltimore merchant and art
collector, who was guardian of her
younger brothers and sisters after their father's
death in 1829. Howard to Gilmor, March 24,
[sic] 1835.
300 Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly
the children where I have come. It will
be a good lesson in Geography.
The route is marked as far as this by
the towns-Chambersburg, Bedford,
Stoys Town, &c then shew them 30
miles down the Ohio to Beaver; where
we turn North to Cleaveland on Lake
Erie. Continue to direct to Cleave-
land, Ohio, until I give you further
notice, for although we may leave there
in a short time, yet we may return to it
or I will direct the Post Master
where to send your letters. So far our
journey although fatiguing has been
pleasant; for the powers of endurance
are called forth by necessity to an
amazing extent. For example at this
moment I am stronger than when I
set out and one night's rest, which I
hope to get, will place me far ahead
of the point of strength at which I left
home. Rush is extremely agreeable,
and I am glad too that we brought
Charles. He grumbles at little at riding
all night &c, but we laugh at him.
The jaunt will be of service to him.
We are trying to make an arrangement to
perform the first 30 miles
to morrow in a Steam Boat to Beaver
instead of the Mail: in my next I
will tell you how I succeeded. Don't
shew my letters--I am in earnest in
this--because I write so hurriedly that
they are fit only for yourself. This
evening we must read over all our
Documents, if we can keep awake; for
as yet we have not a chance to talk over
the impressions that we respec-
tively and separately received at our
interviews with the President &
Forsyth-which took place with us
separately. The prospect threatens too
of being obliged to get up at 3 oclock
in the morning, although as I have
said we are trying to arrange that
matter so as to leave this at 9 in the
boat. As for weather, we have already
rode out two rainy spells and count
it as nothing. I suppose the Waynes have
gone and left you to your
desolations. But remember that your
husband is always thinking of you;
and take that idea as a companion. Good
bye kiss all--even to Ellen,
though she can't understand why.
ever & truly your
attached Husband
Cleaveland, Ohio. Wednesday
April 1st 1835
I hope you received my letter from
Pittsburg announcing our safe
arrival over bad roads which kept us
back 12 hours longer than we ought
to have been. Succeeding in the
arrangement about the Steam boat, we
were enabled to get a good night's rest
to prepare for further fatigue and
at 9 oclock set off down the River to Beaver
in a little Steam-Boat, from
which we took the Stage about 12 oclock
in the day of Monday. From
Benjamin C. Howard and the
"Toledo War" 301
that hour till 5 this morning we were
riding day and night over roads
that were just passable and no more. For
example it took us five hours to
come 12 miles and hard work too. About
55 miles from this place we
abandoned Stages and took to Waggons in
which we performed the rest
of the journey, for Stages would have
been upset and mired in many places
that a low light wagon could be pulled
through. Since I left home until
this moment therefore I have spent but
one night in bed and of course
feel somewhat bruised and jaded.5 After
getting here, I turned in and slept
until 10 oclock since which we have been
busy in collecting information
of all kinds to send to Forsyth: and
having made up our despatches I have
a few moments to scribble to you. My
strength has held out amazingly well
in every respect except one, and that in
a quarter where I did not expect
a failure, for my eyes gave way
yesterday. The want of sleep affected them
to such a degree together with exposure
to the night air that they became
inflamed, bloodshot and swollen. To day
they are better since my morning's
nap and I hope that a nights rest will
restore them. As for sleeping whilst
travelling you may judge of it's
impossibility when I tell you that once
my hat was jolted right off my head into
the road in passing over one of
the numerous log passages through the
swamps. Charles kept awake pretty
well, and he is such a sleepy headed fellow
that nothing short of absolutely
desperate jolts could keep his eyes
open. But we are all doing well. I
brought a book with me intending to keep
a journal, but not being able
to write in the Stage and never having
been out of it, it of course remains
untouched. At Beaver, just as the Stage
was getting ready I saw a crowd
running to the creek and ran too, just
in time to see a poor wretch carried
towards the dam in a boat and go over
the fall. Twice he came up and
endeavored to swim out! but the cruel eddy
swept him under the fall
again and after the 2d he came up no
more. If I have time I mean to take
up my book and journalize; but find more
to do as we draw [nearer] the
scene of action. As yet hostilities have
not commenced, but there is great
excitement on the side of the people of
Michigan and we must hurry
forward. How we can go, I do not know.
There is no Steam Boat here
or we would charter her. One will arrive
to-morrow and we are trying to
hire her to start as soon as she
arrives. If we cant go up the lake towards
Detroit, we must go by land along it's
Southern Shore by a road that is
worser & worser. It is difficult to
imagine how we can get along at all
5 Rush, writing ten months later,
referring to a trip made by one Horner and
obviously recalling his own journey,
mentioned driving "through ditches for the
sake of good roads." In the same
letter he also remembered "tough beef, bad butter,
'tea dust' and no cream (no milk I
mean)." Rush to Howard, January 7, 1836.
302 Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly
over such. But you need not be uneasy,
for at places where it is likely
to upset we get out. I send you a piece
of poetry cut out of a paper today--
it is applicable except that Time has
not "dimmed your Eye"
Ever sincerely & affectionately
your attached Husband.
Cleaveland, Ohio.
Thursday April 2. 1835
My dearest wife.
I intend to drop you a line whenever I
get an opportunity for two of
the best reasons in the world, because
you asked me and because I wish
to do so from my own feelings. Last
night I wrote you a letter saying
that we were making an arrangement for a
Steam Boat which we have just
concluded. It is to take us to
Perrysburg at the head of the Lake, about 40
or 50 miles south of Detroit and on the
Miami River, where the Governor
of Ohio is supposed to be at present. On
the map which hangs in the
office you can find where this place is,
although it's name is probably not
put down. We shall start to morrow
morning and reach it during the night,
but are obliged to give the Captain 100$
for the trip which of course must
be charged to the Government. To morrow
there is a chance before our
departure, of receiving a letter from
you although there is but just time
for it to get here if you wrote on
Saturday. Indeed, I fear that I shall
miss it by one day, for we travelled so
fast that a letter which Forsyth
wrote the day after we left Washington
reached us only this morning. But
even if I miss it to morrow, I shall
soon get it, for this will be our
Head Quarters in some measure. We will
either write from above to the
Post Master here to send our letters to
us, or suffer them to remain here
until we come back. There is no
convenient way of returning from above
unless by passing through this place;
therefore continue to send me the
news papers and write to Cleaveland
until I can give you further accounts
from the borders. Our duty will be somewhat
arduous and delicate. To
interpose as a Mediator is always a nice
affair and more difficult when
dealing with men who represent public
bodies, because they are afraid of
being censured by those whom they
represent. From sundry papers and
documents that we have seen, the
Governor of Ohio seems resolutely bent
upon carrying out the law of his State
which embraces the disputed ground
within Ohio. Now, if the other party is
equally obstinate we shall have
much difficulty in preventing collision;
and have occupied ourselves all
this day in studying the Papers which we
brought from Washington and have
Benjamin C. Howard and the
"Toledo War" 303
not hitherto had time to read. We must
say and do what we can and may
have to pass and re-pass several times
between, the two Governors who are
about 20 or 30 miles apart. In my next I
can tell you what our prospects
are of adjusting this matter.
This is a flourishing little town. Our
accommodations are more com-
fortable than one would expect, for we
have a private parlour and good
beds. To day my eyes are much better.
The inflammation is subsiding and
another entire night's sleep will
probably restore them. You don't know
how anxious I am to hear how you are
getting on. I hope the poetry will
arrive safe. I shewed it to Mr Rush and
he copied & sent it to his wife
too. So you see we agree in loving our
Wives.
Most Faithfully & tenderly
your attached Husband.
Toledo--at the Mouth of the
Miami River--
1 oclock in the morning
of Saturday April 4th.
My dearest wife
You see by the date that I am writing
for a moment only; for we must
set off as soon as possible for Monroe a
town about 20 miles north of this,
where the Govr. of Michigan is. We got
here about 2 hours ago in the
Steam boat and whilst Mr Rush is writing
a few lines to Forsyth. I seize
the chance of a line to you, that you
may know I am so far safe. We are
just in time. In a day or two (perhaps
to day, Saturday) some collision
might have taken place, for the Governor
of Ohio arrived at his nearest
town last night. We are mid way between
the two Governors, and our
difficulties are rather increased by the
news we learn here; for the Govr.
of Michigan has brought with him 1000
stand of arms and 15 Kegs of
Cartridges. But I think we can keep him
quiet.6
I got your letter this morning at
Cleaveland, but no papers. No matter
-what I wanted most was to hear from
you. It was the letter written the
day the Waynes went away. My eyes are
nearly well. Good bye. God bless
you. It is the fervent wish of your
truly
attached Husband
Give all the little ones a kiss
round? B C H
6 Robert Lucas (1781-1853) was governor
of Ohio from 1832 to 1836. After
two years of retirement he became
territorial governor of Iowa for the period 1838-41.
Stevens Thomson Mason (1811-1843) served
as territorial governor of Michigan in
1834-35, and then became Michigan's
first state executive for 1836-40. Both these
men were Virginians by birth.
304 Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly
2 miles outside of the World
or
Monroe, April 5. 1835. Sunday.
You will see by the above date, my
dearest Wife, where we have got to;
and as it is a rainy Sunday varied every
few minutes by being a snowy
day, it gives me a chance of sending you
a line. We are on the Michigan
side of the "disputed ground"
and in the same tavern with the Governor,
which throws us together so often that
we have been able to establish a
free and friendly intercourse with him.
There is better hope of influencing
him than the other Governor for many
reasons which you would easily
understand (for you know very well that
I highly estimate your capacity for
politics) if time would allow me to
explain them. Still however the matter
is by no means finally adjusted even
with him. We have succeeded so far
as to obtain from him a promise not to
take any step that will lead to a
broil, until we have seen the Governor
of Ohio which we hope to do to-
morrow night. So far we have done some
good. Were it not for our inter-
ference there would have been trouble
before this; because an occurrence
happened last night which would have caused
violence and probably blood-
shed if it had not been for our
conversation with Govr. Mason in the
morning. Some men were arrested
yesterday by the Sheriff who was
bringing them to this town, when he was
assaulted by a party friendly
to Ohio and the prisoners rescued from
his custody. About midnight he
arrived and made his report; and I am
quite sure that but for our pre-
vious interference there would have been
a general rush of these people
to reclaim the liberated captives and
seize also those who had set them
free. To morrow there will be an
election under the law of Ohio in
the disputed ground and arrangements had
been made to march in and
put a forcible stop to the proceeding,
which could scarcely have been
accomplished without bloodshed. Now,
there is every reason to hope that it
will pass over in peace. The people who
live in the disputed district wish
to belong to Ohio and will therefore
conduct the affair quietly, as it is
not for them to cause a tumult when that
is performing which they wish to
be done. The Governor of Ohio is coming
to Toledo to morrow (from
which place I wrote my last to you) and
there we expect to meet him at
night. I fear we cannot do much with
him, as he is very firm in his
character and though doing what nine
tenths of the nation will hereafter
pronounce wrong, yet will listen to no
argument upon the point, because
he says that his State has decided upon
it and it is his duty to execute her
laws. Thus much for the present
political aspect of affairs. You will take
Benjamin C. Howard and the
"Toledo War" 305
an interest in it because I am so much
mixed up with it; otherwise I would not
have said so much. But I am fortunate
enough to have a wife whom I not
only love dearly, but whose intelligence
I respect; and I mention all my
difficulties that you may sympathize
with me. If we can calm this storm
we shall be entitled to some little
merit; and we shall exert our best
powers so to do.
Yesterday we met with Mr. Wing, the
former member of Congress from
this Territory who invited us to tea.7
You will wonder how his wife
managed to entertain 10 Gentlemen and
give us the most comfortable meal
we have had since leaving Pittsburg,
without the assistance of a single
servant male or female. And yet there
seemed to be no difficulty about it.
In the parlour the candles were lighted
and fire burning--nothing was
required there. After a while we went
into another apartment where
the tea table was set out with bread,
cakes, preserves, &c; then the lady
began at one end and went all round
helping each one to tea or coffee
and the bread &c was all passed from
hand to hand. Afterwards the
preserves &c were distributed by the
lady in the same way and we
retired again to the parlour. These new
countries are very scarce in servants,
and their absence is not felt because
every body helps him or herself all
day long. I am rejoiced we did not bring
one. Our meals are of short
duration and early hours dining for
example at 1/2 past 12. We returned
from the party last night after staying
a good while and got home at
1/2 past 8. Charles generally gets to
bed about 8. He has not yet met
with a Michigan pony, but there are some
at Detroit, and if he can get it
home in any way, he will buy one for
Susan. I have not seen, a decent
pair of Carriage Horses. Good bye
Ever & sincerely your
attached Husband
Toledo, Tuesday April 7. 1835
Finding that the mail does not go
through this place, my dearest
Wife, until 9 o'clock and having time to
give you a line, I take pleasure
in shewing how much you are in my
thoughts; and the more cheerfully
because our interview with the Governor
of Ohio has terminated more
favorably than I had anticipated and
quite as much so as I hoped. We
are now on our way back to Monroe to the
other Governor with whom we
have some further arrangements to make,
before our business can be con-
7 Austin Eli Wing (1792-1849) had served
as delegate from Michigan Territory
during 1825-29 (while living in Detroit)
and 1831-33 (after moving to Monroe).
306 Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly
sidered as thoroughly adjusted. There
will be no insurmountable difficulty in
effecting these, so that I look upon our
mission as almost certain to
produce the result which the President
and Forsyth wished. We came here
from Perrysburg this afternoon on
horseback and to morrow shall take the
stage for Monroe. I begin to see my way
out of these woods and think that
by the end of the week, shall be ready
to turn my face homeward at a more
leisurely pace than we came out; for as
I told you, I nearly rode my eyes
out to get here in time. It is fortunate
in the extreme that we hurried;
otherwise there would have been a
conflict and bloodshed, for the
preparations were all made and the time
fixed for Monday and we reached
the spot on Saturday only two days
before. Your letters are still lying
at Cleveland, for I will not run the
risk of losing them by writing for
them to be sent up to this
neighbourhood. Good bye--my beloved Wife
and believe me
Ever yours
B C H8
Monroe April 10th. 1835
Friday
My dearest wife.
I can snatch a moment or two from this
busy day to give you a line,
and even between the beginning of this
letter and this far seven hours
have intervened. Since we got back here
things have got dreadfully worse.
The Court is sitting and has ordered
some men in the disputed district to
be arrested--and the Sheriff has gone
out with his Posse Comitatus (mean-
ing every body he can pick up) to arrest
them. During the whole day
the village has been alive and in the
afternoon the spectacle quite animating,
notwithstanding the bad cause. Men
galloping about--guns getting ready--
waggons being filled with people and
hurrying off, and every body in
commotion. They are to rendezvous to
night about 11 miles off and
march to the hostile village (11 more)
to morrow morning. Altogether,
the muster will be 4 or 500 men. Still,
there will not be a fight. The op-
posite party are too weak to stand a
moment & must fly to the woods.
But then will come the muster from Ohio,
too strong for these to resist--
8 Apparently
Howard did not describe fully his stay in Toledo, for Rush, writing
after the return home to comment on the
progress of the boundary affair, remarked:
"My remembrances to our young
friend and fellow traveller Charles. O the days of
Toledo! Positively you or he must, one
of these days, immortalise them in verse.
I am no poet. What a character Captain
Allen would make in the piece! The Indian
chief, Otto-kee, and my rifle shot at
the duck, might also come in." Rush to Howard,
June 21, 1835.
Benjamin C. Howard and the
"Toledo War" 307
Charles has lost it all, having gone to
Detroit for a day or two. We
have done all we could to keep the
peace, and shall be detained longer
from home in consequence of it. Being
Ambassadors, no body will trouble
us, of course. Good bye. I give you an
imaginary & affectionate kiss.
Ever yours
B C H
The letters end thus abruptly. The work
of the commissioners
continued about a month longer; then
they made their way east
at a pace more leisurely than that of
the outward journey. The
actual boundary settlement was delayed
and congress refused to
admit Michigan as a state until the
argument was settled in favor
of Ohio; but when this was done, Michigan
received as compen-
sation the Upper Peninsula, an area
which later turned out to have
rich mineral resources of greater value
than the disputed "Toledo
strip." Even so, there were
rumblings of discontent and criticisms
of the handling of the mission.
Concerning charges that the com-
missioners had acted without authority
and had exceeded their in-
structions, Rush commented:
With what anxious thoughts did we hang
over the case, day and night,
turning in our mind every possible
expedient for a temporary compromise
to ward off bloodshed threatening us
every hour almost? But no matter;
we did our duty as well as we could,
knowing, seeing, feeling, all the
embarrassments on the spot; and I
venture to feel sure that when all that
we wrote comes to be seen, nobody will
blame us, for who has been able
to do better than we would have done?9
Certainly Howard and Rush performed
their task to the complete
satisfaction of the president, for
Asbury Dickins, acting secretary
of state, wrote: "On the
termination of your mission, it gives me
pleasure to communicate to you the
President's entire approbation
of the zeal and ability with which you
have discharged the im-
portant and delicate trust which was
confided to you."10
9 Rush
to Howard, September 18, 1835. See also Rush to Howard, September 15,
October 19, 1835, January 7, 1836; and
Forsyth to Howard, October 29, November
12, 1835.
10 Dickins to Rush and Howard, May 27,
1835. Howard retired from congress
in 1839, became a member of the Maryland
Senate in 1840, and in 1843 resigned to
accept appointment as reporter of the United States
Supreme Court.
BENJAMIN C. HOWARD AND THE "TOLEDO
WAR":
SOME LETTERS OF A FEDERAL COMMISSIONER
by WILLIAM D. HOYT, JR.
Associate Professor of History,
Loyola College, Baltimore
The "Toledo War"-a dispute
between the state of Ohio and
the territory of Michigan over their
joint boundary-was reaching
its climax and threatening to break out
in active hostilities when
President Andrew Jackson decided to
intervene. The area in ques-
tion was not large: a strip of land five
miles wide at its western
end and eight miles at its eastern; but
it was rich agricultural
soil and had as a chief asset the harbor
at Toledo. So strong was
the feeling that the militia of both
Ohio and Michigan were called
out, men were on the march, and quick
action was essential in
order to avert an armed clash.
On March 22, 1835, the secretary of
state, John Forsyth, wrote
to Benjamin C. Howard of Baltimore,
asking him to serve as one
of two "confidential &
influential friends" to confer with the
quarreling governors.1 The
other commissioner was to be Richard
Rush, lawyer, diplomat, and statesman,
and the pair of them were to
start for the frontier immediately.2
Three days later, March 25, they
were on their way. Meanwhile, the
opposing governors were ap-
proaching the debated boundary line, and
it was only through heroic
efforts that Howard and Rush arrived in
the nick of time to prevent
the battle which seemed inevitable.
The story of the hurried journey to Ohio
and of the shuttling
back and forth between the headquarters
of the two governors is
told vividly by Howard in a series of
letters to his wife in Baltimore.
These communications, penned amidst
confusion and often late at
1 Forsyth to Howard, March 22, 1835, in
the Howard Papers at the Maryland
Historical Society. The letter is marked
"Confidential" and indicates that Howard
was chosen in the place of "Mr. [William Cabell]
Rives," who had declined the
mission. John Forsyth (1780-1841) served
as secretary of state from 1834 to 1841.
The letters reproduced herein, as well
as others cited below in the notes, are all
from the Howard Papers at the Maryland Historical
Society.
2 Richard
Rush (1780-1859) had been minister to England in 1817-25 and
secretary of the treasury in 1825-28.
The errand to settle the Ohio-Michigan boundary
dispute was a small incident in a career of
international significance.
297