Ohio History Journal

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AN EARLY PROPOSAL FOR A STATE

AN EARLY PROPOSAL FOR A STATE

POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL

 

 

BY ROSCOE H. ECKELBERRY,

Assistant Professor, Dept. of History of Education,

Ohio State University

The proposal by Governor Ethan Allen Brown of

Ohio on January 8, 1819, for the establishment of a

state polytechnic school must have been one of the

earliest in this country. The early governors of Ohio,

like those of many of the other states, were far ahead

of the legislatures in their educational vision and their

conviction of the necessity of state participation in the

provision and control of educational institutions. Al-

though Ohio did not create a state system of elementary

schools until 1825,1 twenty-two years after its admission

to the Union, every governor during this period, in his

inaugural address, his messages to the Legislature, or

both, urged the importance of legislative provision for a

system of common schools.2

Mr. Brown was inaugurated Governor on December

14, 1818, succeeding Thomas Worthington. On Decem-

 

1 Ohio Laws, XXIII, 36. The law of 1821 merely set up a method by

which local communities that desired to do so might establish schools. It

was entirely permissive in character. Ibid., XIX, 51.

2 This statement is based on an examination of the addresses and mes-

sages of the governors as reprinted in the different volumes of the Ohio

Senate Journal and the Ohio House Journal. Thomas Kirker and Othniel

Looker, who occupied the position of Acting Governor in 1807-08 and 1814

respectively, made no recommendations concerning education.

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