Ohio History Journal

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ADDRESS AT MARIETTA, OHIO, 1858

ADDRESS AT MARIETTA, OHIO, 1858.1

 

 

BY HON. THOMAS EWING.

EDITED BY C. L. MARTZOLFF, ATHENS, OHIO.

Ladies and Gentlemen:-

We meet to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the first

landing of our Pioneer Fathers on the shores of the Ohio, in the

North Western Territory. An age-the full age allotted to

men has elapsed since that hardy band of brave men and brave

women, fresh from the war of the Revolution, a few of the

boldest and most adventurous of the relics of that war, through

fresh toils and yet untried dangers, came and planted themselves

on this remote and then almost inaccessible shore.

We at this day can ill appreciate the trials and privations

through which they passed. The world has since changed.

Man has acquired dominion over the elements, the powers of

nature, which he had not then attained. There is hardly any

habitable spot on the earth now as difficult of access. You may

reach the Red River of the North, ascend the Missouri, the

Amazon, the La Plata, the Oregon, to their sources and plant

yourselves at either foot of the Rocky Mountains or the Andes;

pass to the farther Indies, to New Zealand or Australia more

speedily; carry with you more of the necessaries of civilized life

and reach the spot with less toil and danger than those daring

and determined men encountered. They came aware of all they

had to encounter, and prompt to meet it all. They came full of

high hopes of a mighty future, Heaven directed, urged on by

an impulse which looked for its result in generations to come;

they comprehended their destiny, and they fulfilled it.

With an earnestness of purpose approaching enthusiasm,

with an exaltation of feeling, proper to the great cause to

which they devoted themselves, they blended the consideration,

 

1Published for the first time from the original manuscript. - EDITOR.

(186)