Ohio History Journal

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THE ORDINANCE OF JULY 13TH, 1787

THE ORDINANCE OF JULY 13TH, 1787.

 

THE intrinsic merits of that organic law which was enacted

by the old Continental Congress on the 13th of July, 1787,

"for the Government of the Territory Northwest of the river

Ohio," have been so fully discussed and are so well under-

stood that any attempt in that direction would be little more

than a repetition of views already familiar to an intelligent

audience.  Its merits can now be measured by its fruits.

Results are its monument and its highest eulogy.

It is not surprising that as a century is rounded up, the

thoughtful inquirer should look back and endeavor to trace

the beginnings and look up the extrinsic circumstances as

well as personalities that were connected with such an enact-

ment.

So far as organic law is concerned we are sitting under

"vines and fig trees," are "eating of the oliveyards and vine-

yards that we planted not." Who were the planters? Why

was the planting done?

In pursuing this inquiry we are met with the difficulty

arising from  a lack of authentic historic material.  One

hundred years ago the proceedings of legislative bodies were

not kept with that plethora of discussion, and detail of

motions, references and reports that distinguish modern Con-

gressional Records. The wasting processes of a century have

destroyed valuable family papers, and memories of early

actors and listeners have faded out, so that fragments of fact,

incident and history must be gathered up and carefully applied.

Still the gleaner must be content with a gleaner's share of the

harvest.

The passage of the ordinance at the time has one peculiar

characteristic that is worthy of notice. That is the leading

fact that it stands out in history as an isolated effort on the

part of its authors to forecast a complete system of govern-

 

1Read before the Ohio Archaeological and Historical Society at its Third

Annual Meeting, February 23, 1887.

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