Ohio History Journal

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OHIO'S CONTRIBUTION TO NATIONAL CIVIL

OHIO'S CONTRIBUTION TO NATIONAL CIVIL

SERVICE REFORM

 

BY C. B. GALBREATH

 

Ohio is great in many ways. The achievements of

her sons are not confined to the spectacular vocations of

statesmanship and war. Piatt and Howells and other

writers have given her a respectable place in the lit-

erature of the republic. The Darling Nelly Gray of

our Hanby, the Dixie of our Emmett and the Softly

and Tenderly Jesus is Calling of our Thompson have

gone round the world and found an abiding place

wherever the tender melodies of the heart are played or

sung. Our Edison and our Brush have extended the

domain of invention, applied new forms of energy in

the field of productive industry and released the light

electric that rivals the day and flashes from the uplifted

torch of Liberty Enlightening the World. It was left

for the Wright brothers to achieve the impossible, to

first rise from the earth on wing, to ride the impalpable

air, to thrill the world with the "audacity of their design

and the miracle of its execution."

But these flowers do not bloom in the conservatories

of our orators and their choicest garlands are reserved

for the warriors and politicians--the statesmen, per-

haps, for Ohioans have risen to that eminence.

And what is a statesman? "One versed in public

affairs and government," says Webster; "a successful

politician," half ironically declares a writer; "a dead

politician," observes another; while a well known plat-

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