Ohio History Journal

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ORATION OF HON

ORATION OF HON. GEORGE F. HOAR.

THERE are doubtless many persons in this audience who

have gathered here as to their Father's house. They salute

their Mother on her birthday with the prayer and the con-

fident hope that the life which now completes its first cen-

tury may be immortal as liberty. If we were here only to

do honor to Marietta-to celebrate the planting of this

famous town, coeval with the Republic, seated by the beau-

tiful river, her annals crowded with memories of illustrious

soldiers and statesmen-this assemblage would be well

justified and accounted for.

But there is far more than this in the occasion. The

states which compose what was once the Northwest Terri-

tory may properly look upon this as their birthday rather

than that upon which they were admitted into the Union.

The company who came to Marietta with Rufus Putnam

April 7, 1788, came to found, not one State, but five, whose

institutions they demanded should be settled, before they

started, by an irrevocable compact. These five children,

born of a great parentage and in a great time, are, as we

count the life of nations, still in earliest youth.  Yet they

already contain within themselves all the resources of a

great empire. Here is the stimulant climate of the tem-

perate zone, where brain and body are at their best. Here

will be a population of more than fifteen millions at

the next census. Here is an area about equal to that of

the Austrian Empire, and larger than that of any other

country in Europe except Russia. Here is a wealth more

than three times that of any country on this continent ex-

cept the Republic of which they are a part-a wealth a

thousand times that of Massachusetts, including Maine, a

hundred years ago; one-third larger than that of Spain;

equal to that of Holland and Belgium and Denmark com-

bined; equal now, I suppose, to that of Italy; already

half as great as that of the vast empire of Russia, with its