Ohio History Journal

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THE NAMING OF THE CITY OF CINCINNATI

THE NAMING OF THE CITY OF CINCINNATI

 

 

By EDGAR ERSKINE HUME

Dr. William Holland Wilmer, the famous ophthalmologist

of Johns Hopkins and president of the New Jersey Society of

the Cincinnati, tells of a traveling salesman in a Pullman smoking

car, who interrupted another passenger reading his paper. "What's

that pale blue silk button you are wearing?" he asked. The other

told him that it was the rosette of the Society of the Cincinnati.

"Fine," replied he, "I'm from Cincinnati myself and belong to a

lot of societies there." The other said something about the Society

of the Cincinnati not having anything to do with the city of Cin-

cinnati, and the conversation ended.

Many residents of the Queen City of Ohio know no more

of the Society of the Cincinnati than did the man in Dr. Wilmer's

story, and probably comparatively few of them have ever even

wondered how their city got its Latin name. Here is how it

came about.

On April 19, 1783, General George Washington at his head-

quarters at Newburgh-on-the-Hudson, announced the cessation of

hostilities with Great Britain. American independence had been

achieved and it only remained for the Continental Army to dis-

band. Major-General Henry Knox, Washington's chief of

artillery, happily hit upon a plan to preserve the bonds of affection

which had joined the officers together during the eight long years

of the War of the Revolution. He proposed that they form a

society that would have branches in each state and at the meetings

of which the comrades in arms could renew their friendships, and,

if necessary, aid each other, including their families, in distress.

The Institution, the document drawn up and signed by the officers,

begins with these words:

It having pleased the Supreme Governor of the Universe, in the dis-

position of human affairs, to cause the separation of the colonies of North

America from domination of Great Britain, and, after a bloody conflict

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