Ohio History Journal

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ADDRESSES OF APRIL SEVENTH

ADDRESSES OF APRIL SEVENTH.

 

ADDRESS OF WELCOME BY GOVERNOR J. B. FORAKER.

 

FELLOW-CITIZENS: The duty that has been assigned

to me in connection with this occasion is very simple in its

character. It does not require nor even allow me to enu-

merate, much less elaborate, any of the many interesting

and important suggestions which a consideration of the

event we celebrate is calculated to start in every intelligent

mind. Neither does it authorize me to recount the progress

and the triumphs of the century that has since elapsed.

All this has been assigned to others, who are here formally

to address you. They will tell who the men were who

constituted that brave, heroic pioneer band who landed

here on the seventh day ofApril, 1787. They will tell you of

their trials and tribulations, their sacrifices and sufferings,

their proud patriotism and their peerless purposes. And

they will also point out to you the importance, directly and

indirectly, of that first settlement, upon not only this North-

west Territory, but also upon the United States and the

whole world. They will indicate how the spirit of liberty

that saved and dedicated this section to free institutions

thus turned the balance in favor of freedom as against

slavery, and saved this Republic, with its recognition of

human rights, to be the beacon light and cheer and encour-

agement to the liberty-loving people of the whole civilized

earth.

These orators will also doubtless tell you the thrilling

story of how the wilderness has been transformed into a

garden, how farms and cities have succeeded forests and

savages, how manufactures, commerce, art, science, educa-

tion, literature and morality have here flourished and

blessed mankind. All this, I say, pertains to the duties that

are imposed upon the distinguished gentlemen who are soon

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