Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  

270 OHIO HISTORY

270                                                        OHIO HISTORY

 

98. A Centennial Biographical History of the City of Columbus and Franklin

County, Ohio (Chicago, 1901), 318.

99. Owens, These Hundred Years, 129; Loy, Story of My Life, 369.

100. Taylor, Centennial History of Columbus, I, 229; Catalogue of the Officers and

Students of Capital University, 4-8.

101. Lutheran Standard, February 1, 1865, p. 21.

102. Swinehart, "The History and Development of Health," 14.

103. Catalogue of the Officers and Students of Capital University, 27.

104. Lutheran Standard, April 15, 1864, p. 7.

105. Ohio Minutes, 1842, 18-19.

106. Sheatsley, History of the Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod, 127.

107. Loy, Story of My Life, 285.

108. Lutheran Standard, April 15, 1864, p. 1, 4, 5.

109. Ohio Minutes, 1902, 65.

110. A baptismal hymn, "Jesus Took the Babes and Blessed Them," and a de-

votional hymn, "Jesus, Thou Art Mine Forever," Number 260, Number 518, the

Service Book and Hymnal of the Lutheran Church in America (Columbus, 1958).

111. For examples of Samuel Simon Schmucker's thought, see his The American

Lutheran Church, Historically, Doctrinally, and Practically Delineated (Springfield,

Ohio, 1851) and American Lutheranism Vindicated (Baltimore, Maryland, 1856).

112. Theodore G. Tappert, "Orthodoxism, Pietism, and Rationalism," The Lutheran

Heritage, Vol. II of Christian Social Responsibility, edited by Harold C. Letts (Phila-

delphia, 1957), 43-50.

113. Loy, The Christian Church, 94-95.

114. Matthias Loy, "Introduction to Volume II," The Columbus Theological Maga-

zine, II (February 1882), 6.

115. Fred W. Meuser, The Formation of the American Lutheran Church: A Case

Study in Lutheran Unity (Columbus, Ohio, 1958), 10, 12.

116. Loy was elected on October 25, 1860. See Ohio Verhandlungen, 1860, 7.

117. See Charles William Heathcote, The Lutheran Church and the Civil War (New

York, 1919), Paul S. Dybvig, "Lutheran Participation in the Civil War," The Lu-

theran Quarterly, XIV (November 1962), 294-300, and Jon Lloyd Joyce, "Effects

of the Civil War on the Lutheran Church," ibid., 301-314.

118. Walther was repelled by Methodist Abolitionists, the liberal attitudes of the

German "forty-eighters," and the "Republican rabble." He was convinced that slavery

was upheld by the Scriptures and that the United States was a confederation similar

to the Holy Roman Empire. See Abdel Ross Wentz, A Basic History of Lutheranism

in America (Philadelphia, 1955), 169.

119. See Ohio Verhandlungen, 1861, for the eastern and northern districts; for the

southern district, ibid., 1863; also the Lutheran Standard, August 15, 1865, p. 132, and

July 1, 1864, p. 3.

120. Proceedings of the Convention held by Representatives from Various Evan-

gelical Lutheran Synods in the United States and Canada Accepting the Unaltered

Augsburg Confession at Reading, Pennsylvania December 12, 13, 14, A. D. 1866 (Pitts-

burgh, 1867), 5.

121. Ohio Verhandlungen, 1867, 10.

122. Walter A. Baepler, A Century of Grace: A History of the Missouri Synod, 1847-

1947 (St. Louis, 1947), 198; Loy, Story of My Life, 363.

123. Ibid., 355.

124. Sheatsley, History of the Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod, 245.

125. Ibid., 256, 257, 275, 291, 292.

126. Lutheran Standard, February 6, 1915, p. 88.

127. Owens, These Hundred Years, 121.

128. Ohio State Journal, January 27, 1915.

129. Lutheran Standard, February 6, 1915, p. 89.

LEWIS D. CAMPBELL AND THE KNOW-NOTHING

PARTY IN OHIO

The author, William E. Van Horne, wishes to dedicate this article to Miss Ella

Mae Cope of Hamilton, Ohio, the lady who was an inspiration to more than a generation

of high school students and who first kindled the writer's abiding fascination with

American history.

1. Frederick J. Blue, "The Ohio Free Soilers and Problems of Factionalism," Ohio

History, LXXVI (Winter-Spring), 17-32.

2. Allan Nevins, Ordeal of the Union (New York, 1947), I, 217.

3. Ray Allen Billington, The Protestant Crusade (Chicago, 1964), 301, 331.

4. Ibid., 239.