Ohio History Journal

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CALEB ATWATER

CALEB ATWATER

AS

HISTORIAN

by PHILIP SKARDON

Caleb Atwater, whose A History of the State of Ohio, Natural and Civil,

published in 1838,1 was the first lengthy survey of Ohio's development, has

remained relatively obscure to this day despite a multi-faceted career with

several exceptional achievements. He has been credited variously with pro-

ducing the "earliest systematic and well authenticated account" of the pre-

historic Indian remains in the Ohio Valley,2 and with being a founder of

Ohio's public school system.3 In addition to having been a historian, anti-

quarian, and educator, Atwater was a Presbyterian minister and a lawyer.

Indeed, he was "one of the intellectual pioneers of the West."4 Moreover, at

one time or another, he was postmaster of Circleville, representative to the

general assembly from Pickaway County, prosecutor for that county, and

an Indian commissioner.5

When Atwater died on March 13, 1867, in Circleville at the age of

eighty-eight, his career was far behind him. His last published work had

appeared nearly a fourth of a century before. He had ceased many years

previously to be active in politics. Apparently his law practice never was

extensive; and he had given up the ministry for reasons of health as a

young man.

Yet Atwater was remembered in one quarter for the work he had done.

A spokesman for the American Antiquarian Society recalled during the

annual meeting in October 1867 at Worcester, Massachusetts, that in 1820

the society had published Atwater's earliest important study, "Description

of the Antiquities Discovered in the State of Ohio and Other Western

NOTES ARE ON PAGES 58-59