Ohio History Journal

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II

II

BRIEF HISTORY OF THE OHIO STATE

ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HIS-

TORICAL SOCIETY

 

 

BY THE EDITOR

The Pioneers of Territorial Ohio seem to have been

conscious of the fact that they were making history.

Intimations of this are found in the addresses and let-

ters of St. Clair and his associates and on the printed

pages of William  Maxwell's Centinel of the North-

Western Territory.

The first definite movement of an organization to

collect the materials of this early history appears to have

been consummated in 1822. On February first of that

year an act was passed by the General Assembly incor-

porating the Historical Society of Ohio. The incor-

porators named in this act were: "T. H. Genin, J. C.

Wright, Ralph Granger of Geauga, Edward King, D.

K. Este, Jeremiah Morrow, Benjamin Ruggles, Ethan

A. Brown, J. M. Goodenow, Philemon Beecher, and

their associates." Just how long this society existed

and what it accomplished does not appear to be definite-

ly recorded. One writer says that "it seems to have

published nothing." There is evidence, however, that

this statement is not strictly correct. In 1852 there was

published Biographical and Historical Memoirs of the

Early Pioneer Settlers of Ohio with Narratives and In-

cidents Which Occurred In 1775, by S. P. Hildreth,

(543)