Ohio History Journal

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ANDREW R

ANDREW R. L. CAYTON

 

"A Quiet Independence":

The Western Vision of

the Ohio Company

 

 

Speculative schemes and idealistic visions merged in post-

Revolutionary America to produce many new towns in the rapidly

expanding Northwest Territory. A group of New England veterans

of the American Revolution, organized as the Ohio Company of

Associates, established the first such community on April 7, 1788, at

the confluence of the Ohio and Muskingum rivers, some 200 miles

downstream from Pittsburgh. They called their town Marietta.

Within the next several years, many of the 594 associates of the

Ohio Company cleared land, built homes, settled their families, and

sought fortune and security in or near this city. Above all, they

attempted to protect and stablize their financial and ideological in-

vestment in what they called "the western world" by providing

Marietta with a pervasive and enduring form and character.1

Indeed, the construction of Marietta was the culmination of a long

contemplated effort by a highly organized elite to establish a com-

munity designed to secure individual fortune within the context of

communal order. In a 1790 letter seeking to obtain increased protec-

tion from Indians, to gain the opening of the Mississippi River, and

to assuage eastern fears about depopulation, Ohio Company Super-

intendent Rufus Putnam told Congressman Fisher Ames that the

"Genus" and "education" of no other people was "as favorable to a

 

 

Andrew R. L. Cayton is a Ph.D. candidate in history at Brown University and an

Instructor in the history department at Harvard University.

 

 

1. "A Contemporary Account of Some Events," in James M. Varnum, An Oration

Delivered at Marietta, July 4, 1788 (Newport, 1788), in Samuel Prescott Hildreth,

Pioneer History: Being an Account of the First Examination of the Ohio Valley and the

Early Settlement of the Northwest Territory (Cincinnati, 1848), 515. Hildreth is a

detailed account of the founding of Marietta by an early resident. For a concise,

modern narrative, see Beverley W. Bond, Jr., The Foundations of Ohio, Carl Wittke,

ed., The History of the State of Ohio (5 vols., Columbus, 1941), I, 275-90.