THE FIRST NEWSPAPER
OF THE NORTHWEST
TERRITORY.
THE EDITOR AND HIS
WIFE.
C. B. GALBREATH.
The first newspaper published northwest
of the Ohio River
was edited by William Maxwell, a
Revolutionary soldier. After
the recognition of our national
independence, he set out for
the great west to seek fortune in the
new field that called many
worthy, brave and adventurous spirits.
He crossed the Alle-
ghanies, proceeded to Pittsburg, came
down the Ohio, and took
up his abode in the little village of
Cincinnati, then numbering
about two hundred souls.
Having determined before starting west
to enter upon a
journalistic career in the new country,
he had his outfit trans-
ported over the mountains on pack horses
and shipped down from
Pittsburg on a packet boat. It consisted
of a Ramage press,
much like the one used by Dr. Franklin,
and a few cases of type.
A man could have moved the materials at
a single load in a
wheelbarrow.
Mr. Maxwell proceeded at once to set up
his office in a
log cabin at the corner of Front and
Sycamore streets. The
coming of the press had been announced
and a list of subscribers
had been secured. Now the work of
arranging copy, setting
type, and getting ready for the first
issue became the soul-ab-
sorbing occupation of the editor and his
faithful helpmate. It
is needless to say that the work in
progress at the office of the
printer was of more than ordinary
interest to the inhabitants
of the little community. After many
delays the natal day arrives.
"The printer daubs his buck-skin
roll in the ink and then daubs
it on the face of the type. The lever
creaks, and lo, born to the
light of day" is The Sentinel of
the North-Western Territory,
(332)
334 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications.
November 9, 1793. Momentous event! From
this humble be-
ginning what an evolution the century
has wrought!
While practically nothing has been
written about the editor,
much has been printed in regard to The
Sentinel of the North-
Western Territory. About the only good thing that has been
said of it is found in a favorable
comment by a historian, on the
happy choice of name. As Cincinnati,
then on the western fron-
tier of civilization, was the gateway to
the rich territory beyond,
it was deemed especially appropriate
that a "centinel" should stand
guard at this outpost. The same writer
speaks of the early issues
as containing "few advertisements,
no editorials, and no local
items." Another writer says that
"it had no editorial articles,
no local news, reviews, or poetry,"
and even so careful a writer
as William T. Coggeshall, an Ohio man, a
journalist by profes-
sion, and one of the best librarians
that the state ever had, in
his "Origin and Progress of
Printing, with Some Facts About
Newspapers in Europe and America,"
published in 1854, states
that the issues of The Centinel were
"irregular," that they con-
tained nothing "but meager details
of foreign news, not more
than half a dozen advertisements, no
editorials, no local news,
no opinions on country, state, or
national questions, no lessons
from history, no poetry, no wit, no
sentiment." In commenting
on the mechanical make-up of this paper
he says that there were
no rules between the columns. These
statements are so sweep-
ing and have been so widely and
frequently copied that some-
thing tangible must be offered to
warrant a dissenting opinion.
We appeal to the paper itself-to The
Centinel of the North-
Western Territory-a copy of which Mr. Coggeshall and those
who have quoted his statements certainly
never saw.
To begin with, the paper was not issued
irregularly. As
stated, the first number appeared
Saturday, November 9, 1793,
and every subsequent Saturday, for a
year at least, it was deliv-
ered to subscribers. A rapid but
somewhat careful examination
of the files does not bring to light the
omission of a single issue
within the entire period of its
publication. A facsimile of part
of the first page of the first issue,
herewith submitted, shows very
clearly that the paper had rules between
the columns. And what
is true of this is also true of every
subsequent issue.
The First Newspaper of the Northwest
Territory. 335
The Centinel was indeed a
"brief chronicler of the times."
It was a four page, three column sheet,
in small quarto form, the
type of each page occupying a space
eight and one-half by ten
and one-fourth inches. The columns were
lengthened three and
one-half inches, July 12, 1794. The motto
at the masthead,
"Open to all parties-but influenced
by none," one generous
critic assures us has never been
violated by its successors in
the states formed from the Northwest Territory. Whatever
may be true of the
"successors," it is safe to say, after a thorough
examination of the files of The
Centinel, that its editor, through
the three years of its life, did not
deviate from the motto. Oppos-
ing interests were presented through
their local champions, but
he maintained a sphinx-like silence. In
the printing of communi-
cations he was discreet and just. At the
head of the first page
of the first issue is the editor's
salutatory. He says in part:
The Printer of the Centinel of
the North-Western Territory, to the
Public :1
"Having arrived at Cincinnati, he
has applied himself to that which
has been the principal object of his
removal to this country, the Publi-
cation of a News-Paper.
"This country is in its infancy,
and the inhabitants are daily ex-
posed to an enemy who, not content with
taking away the lives of men
in the field, have swept away whole
families, and burnt their habitations.
We are well aware that the want of
regular and certain trade down the
Mississippi, deprives this country in
great measure, of money at the
present time. These are discouragements,
nevertheless I am led to
believe that the people of this country
are disposed to promote science,
and have the fullest assurance that the Press,
from its known utility,
will receive proper encouragement. And
on my part am content with
small gains, at the present, flattering
myself that from attention to busi-
ness, I shall preserve the good wishes
of those who have already counte-
nanced me in this undertaking, and
secure the friendship of subsequent
population.
"It is to be hoped that the
CENTINEL will prove of great utility to
the people of this Country, not only to
inform them of what is going on
on the east of the Atlantic in arms, and
in arts of peace - but what more
particularly concerns us, the different
transactions of the states in the
Union, and especially of our own
Territory, at so great a distance from
the seat of the general government. It
is a particular grievance, that the
people have not been acquainted with the
proceedings of the legislature
Capitalization and punctuation of
original are followed.
336 Ohio Arch. and
Hist. Society Publications.
of the Union, in which they are as much
interested, as any part of the
United States. It is expected that the
CENTINEL will in a great measure
remedy this misfortune.
*
* * * *
"The EDITOR therefore rests his success
on the merits of the publica-
tion. * * * I hope therefore, all men of
public spirit will consider the
undertaking as a proper object of
attention, and not consult merely their
own personal interests, but the interest
of the public and the coming time."
Following this is a short story from
Sterne; news from
London, dated July 15th; from Portland,
Maine, August 25th;
from New York, September 4th; from
Philadelphia, September
4th; from Fredericksburg, Va., October
3d. There are also
items of local news under date of
September 9th, 1793. They
read in part as follows:
"Many reports having been
circulated with respect to the attack made
by the savages upon a convoy of
provisions, some little time ago, between
Fort St. Clair and Fort Jefferson, the
following is an authentic account
of that affair.
"Lieut. Lowrie, of the second, and
Ensign Boyd, of the first sub-
legions, with a command of about ninety
non-commissioned officers and
privates, having under their convoy
twenty wagons loaded with grain
and commissary stores, were attacked
between daylight and sunrise, seven
miles advanced of Fort St. Clair, on the
morning of the 17th ult. These
two gallant young gentlemen, with
thirteen non-commissioned officers
and privates, bravely fell in action. *
* * The Indians killed or car-
ried off about seventy horses." * *
*
"In the twilight of Saturday
evening, the 19th ult., a party of about
forty or fifty Indians made an attack
upon White's Station, ten miles
north of this place. * * * One of the
men and two of the children
were killed. * * *
"The army are preparing to go into
winter quarters on the south-west
branch of the Miami, six miles in
advance of Fort Jefferson. The ground
of encampment is already laid off in the
form of a rhombus, three hundred
yards long, on a commanding
situation." * * *
Here is local matter, of interest not
only at the time, but
for all time. Of personal items, the visits of friends, social
events, and the like, there is a dearth,
but these matters did not
figure prominently in the everyday life
of a people engaged in
the work of subduing the wilderness.
In the early issues, as the critic
states, there were few ad-
vertisements, but later they were
comparatively numerous. In
The First Newspaper of the Northwest Territory. 337
the first number the editor uses the advertising column to extri- cate himself from a dilemma. He was so deeply interested in getting out his first paper that he lost a memorandum contain- ing a partial list of his subscribers. The notice is so quaint and original that we reproduce it: |
|
This reveals business method that would not pass muster to-day. There is no evidence, however, that the notice did not meet the exigencies of the occasion. The advertisements cover a wide range. There were re- wards for the return of lost property, stray cattle, deserters from the army and runaway apprentices. There were announce- ments of the sale of dry goods, houses and lands. One patron wishes to tell the public that he is prepared to do "blacksmith- ing and whitesmithing." The railroad time table does not appear, but in its place is a full column setting forth the advantages of rapid transit by packet boats, which made the voyage "from Cin- cinnati to Pittsburg and return in four weeks." The pioneer school master made known the fact that he was ready "to teach the young idea how to shoot," with a gentle re- minder that he reserved the right to enforce moderate discipline. 22 Vol. XIII. |
338 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
As a primitive educational
"ad." it is not without interest. Here
it is:
"THE SUBSCRIBER
INTENDS to open School on Wednesday the
16th inst. in the house lately
in possession of John Paul nearly
opposite to Dr. M'Clures, in Sycamore
sereet, where he proposes to educate
youth in reading, writing, arithmetic,
book keeping, Geometry, trigonometry,
mensuration of surfaces and sol-
ids, dialing, guaging, surveying, navigation
and algebra. No more than
thirty scholars will be admitted, and
the terms of admittance may be
known by applying to the Public's very
humble Servt.
STUART RICKY.
CINCINNATI, Dec. 4,
1795.
N. B.-None need apply but such as allow
of moderate correction
to be used in said school when necessity
requires it."
Those were strenuous times. Ample proof
of that fact is
found in the lengthy "Public
Notice" to the effect that within
a certain specified time and designated
territory, including Cin-
cinnati and vicinity, $168 would be paid
for "every scalp, having
the right ear appendant, for the first
ten Indians who shall be
killed within the time and limits
aforesaid."
But we are told that there were "no
opinions on country,
state or national questions." If this refers to the editor, the
statement is true; but it was far
from being true of the paper.
The very first issue contains an article
signed "Manlius" on the
subject of unequal taxation under the
territorial government. It
includes a sharp criticism of the
legislature, which then con-
sisted of Governor St. Clair and the
judges of the territory.
In speaking of the law imposing special
taxes on merchants
and tavern keepers, the writer says:
"It cannot be supposed that the
legislature are disposed to make this
law perpetual, and yet no limitation is
in the act; it appears to have been
calculated merely to save the landed
interests from paying taxes; and
this is not astonishing, when one of the
greatest land holders in the gov-
ernment was, and still is, one of the
legislature. Human nature is the
same in all countries, and self interest
is never taken away by any office;
man is man, and he will do what conduces
to his private emoluments,
whether he be peasant, judge or king. If
taxes are necessary under this
government * * * the people ought
to be taxed in proportion to their
property."
The First Newspaper of the Northwest
Territory. 339
In subsequent issues the territorial and
national governments
were criticised and defended, and the
opening up of the Missis-
sippi to free navigation was advocated
with vigor. No favor
was shown and even the "Father of
his country" did not escape
the pungent pens of some of the
Jeffersonian correspondents.
This pioneer journal reflects the deep
interest in matters political,
which has ever characterized the states
carved out of the North-
west Territory.
But we are told that the editor gave no
space to "poetry,
wit or sentiment." This is a serious charge that is hardly
sus-
tained by reference to the paper. The
first issue contains the
following "anecdote":
"Milton was asked by a friend,
whether he would instruct his daugh-
ters in the different languages. To
which he replied, 'No, sir; one tongue
is sufficient for a woman.'"
This, of course, is a little ancient,
but doubtless we all
should have enjoyed and appreciated it
one hundred years ago.
No. 2 has the following in the anecdote
column:
"Col. Bond, who had been one of
King Charles the First's judges,
died a day or two before Cromwell, and
it was strongly reported that
the protector was dead. 'No,' said a
gentleman who knew better, 'he has
only given bond to the devil for his
future appearance.' "
This may not be wit, but it prepared the
way for some of
the "pungent paragraphs" of
modern times.
In the first issue of The Centinel occurs
the following:
"Why should our wishes miss their
aim?
Why does our love of wealth and fame,
With jarring pursuits clash?
My friends, 'tis strange, self-love that
rules
The bulk of men, should make them fools,
Their pockets drain of cash.
The mystic cause I did explore,
My neighbors' failings counted o'er.
And blamed their want of thought.
My occupation I despised,
New schemes and calling straight
devised.
And found them all but naught.
340 Ohio
Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
To Cincinnati shaped my course,
With stick in hand, without a horse,
'Twas galling to my mind!
Till on the banks of Ohio's flood,
I near a chinky cabbin stood,
For selling grog designed.
Behind his bar the cheerful host,
Had sat him down, his books to post,
First took a morning dram;
Thrice the blotted leaf he turned,
The want of money still he mourned,
The license fees did damn.
The profits of a barrel told,
If paid for, but as soon as sold,
Would count him full ten pounds;
But swallowed by five hundred throats,
One-half not worth so many groats
'Twould scarcely be ten crowns.
Happy the grog man near the fort
When soldiers with their money sport,
And give it for a song.
But Oh, the cruel late campaign
Has called away this jolly train,
I hope they'll not stay long.
Thus sagely spoke the man of grog,
My rapturous soul was quite agog,
While he tipped off a glass;
Sure then I cried could I but know,
When times again would turn out so
Light should my hours pass.
Pray H y K, pray tell me when
Those jovial souls will come again,
With three months' pay, or two;
Swift as the streams of Ohio glide
I'd roll a keg to the fort side
And keep a tavern too."
The feet here are somewhat lame. Imagery
is lacking.
This is hardly poetry. With our modern
vocabulary we should
call it "the army canteen." It
shows that some things do not
The First Newspaper of the Northwest
Territory. 341
change much, after all, with the flight
of time. In close prox-
imity to this effusion is an appeal in
rhyme to the local bards
to awake and "court the smiles of
Apollo." And the bards in
time responded. When Col. Robert Elliot,1
contractor for army
supplies, was killed by Indians near
Fort Hamilton, October 6,
1794, a friend wrote a tribute of some
length from which we
quote the following:2
"In star hung chambers of the
empyreal sky,
The winged ghosts in vast assembly join;
O'er time involving shades with sun
veils fly,
To illumine Elliot to his newborn clime.
Swift from his pictured hope of earthly
bliss,
From golden store and honour's luring
wreath;
Fate cast him o'er that silent dread
abyss,
Which circles time and forms the vale of
death.
The ambushed savage, stained with sacred
blood,
And taught to murder by his ruthless
sire;
With fell deceit beneath the shadowy
wood,
Emblaz'd his path with death enkindled
fire.
*
* * * *
There on the hill where savage spectres
throng,
He lay forlorn beneath the pall of
night;
The moping owl performed his funeral
song,
While pity sickened at the dismal sight.
'Til generous mourners by their tender aid,
'Mid hazy wilds where devious travelers
roam,
Through midnight gloom the bleeding
corpse conveyed,
With guardian pirty to its wonted dome.
*
* * * *
Blest be thy fate, my dear departed
friend,
May sweet repose her slumbers o'er thee
spread;
May heavenly vigils o'er thy grave roof
bend,
To guard thy peace within the clay-bound
bed.
Cheerless the hall where once glad mirth
inspired
Each welcome guest around the social
board,
Where all that liberal honour e'er
required,
Was seen approaching on thy cheery word.
* * * * *
1For brief biography and detailed
account of Col. Robert Elliot's
death, see History of Butler County,
Ohio.
2This poem is signed "by a
friend."
342 Ohio
Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
Envy ne'er breaks the folded gates of
death,
Revenge is madness o'er a fallen foe,
But sorrowing love may pass that frozen
heath,
Where time's encumbered stream must
cease to flow.
The brightest star that's crossed
death's sable field,
That ever blazed around his shadowy
throne,
The noblest trophy that e'er man could
wield,
Is honest virtue-an imperial sun.
Those who bewail thy sad untimely fall,
Must know that fortune, power and hopes
are vain;
That they, like thee, must hear the
lordly call,
And lie entombed among the legions
slain.
The cot of penury, the golden court,
The humble statue and the pride deckt
bust,
Will soon become death's ravaging
resort,
Who chemic-like turns kingdoms into
dust.
*
* * * *
Death on his mighty, fleet-bound, bleachen
steed!
Without an offspring or a guardian sire,
Pays court to all with unmolested speed,
To gather spoils for nature's funeral
fire.
Heir to a crown, no monarch ever knew,
With coat of arms no herald ever caught,
No painter e'er his wondrous portrait
drew,
Since he ne'er sat to have the picture
wrought.
He is a traveler on life's slippery
shore,
To meet the beings of a doubtful day,
He is the porter to unbar that door,
Which hides the grandeur of the immortal
way.
His valley seems a solemn, nightly pass,
Which spreads its by-paths to this thicket
world,
But when illumined by hope's colouring
glass,
It shows a drawing room with scenery
furled.
Cease, then, each mournful sigh, dispel
the gloom,
Which hovers o'er the shadowy realms of
death,
One mighty change will burst the
slumbering tomb,
And crown the weeds of woe with joyful
wreath.
Like Elliot dead! we pass this changed
state,
Our power, our fortune and our hope must
yield,
To death the victor of Almighy fate,
Who stalks forever on his spoil-deckt
field."
The First Newspaper of the Northwest
Territory. 343
This breathes the solemn grandeur of the
new world.
Through it the spirit of the wilderness
speaks of the mysterious
trinity-life, death, eternity. True, it
reveals a writer under
the spell of Gray's Elegy, but there are
stanzas that have dis-
tinctive merit and reflect credit upon
this unknown bard. The
effusion has a genuine western flavor
and stands as our first
published "view of death,"
with occasional lines foreshadowing
the Thanatopsis.
In the summer of 1796, William Maxwell,
who had been
appointed post-master of Cincinnati,
sold The Centinel of the
North-Western Territory, to Edmund Freeman, who changed the
name to Freeman's Journal. It was
issued here till about 1800.
when it suspended publication and
followed the Territorial
Government to Chillicothe, where Mr.
Coggeshall tells us that
Mr. Freeman purchased the Gazette. Here
Mr. Coggeshall is
again in error. Freeman's Journal was
published for a time in
Chillicothe, where the editor died. In The Scioto Gazette of Oc-
tober 19th, 1801, appears a notice of S.
Freeman, administrator,
relative to the death of Edmund Freeman,
late of Chillicothe,
printer, deceased. Nathaniel Willis,
editor of The Scioto Ga-
zette, purchased the outfit of Freeman's Journal in
October,
1801.
It was therefore merged into The Scioto Gazette, which
continues under that name to the present
day.
Having described somewhat at length this
early newspaper,
it is fitting that more be said of the
editor and his wife. Of
the latter we shall speak first, because
our information in re-
gard to her remarkable career is more
complete and definite.
Nancy Robins was a typical pioneer
heroine. She was born
in Virginia, August 6th, 1760. Her parents
settled at Grave's
Creek, about twelve miles from the
present site of Wheeling, W.
Va., where she grew up to young
womanhood. Here her father
was killed and scalped by the Indians.
With her mother and a
few neighbors she made an almost miraculous
escape1 to Ft.
Henry, where the whites were closely
besieged by the savages.2
1An Indian caught her dress and was
about to strike her down
when hunters came to her rescue.
2September
1, 1777. See Lossing's Pictorial Field Book of the Rev-
olution, Vol. II, 291-283; Hildreth's Early Settlers of
Ohio; Otis's De-
fense of Fort Henry; Hunter's
Pathfinders of Jefferson County, in Ohio
Archaeological and Historical Quarterly,
Vol. VI, 131-133.
344 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications. Every reader of pioneer history is familiar with the story of the conduct of the sister of Ebenezer Zane on that occasion. The defenders of the fort having exhausted their supply of powder, it became necessary to send some one to a house about sixty yards distant to bring ammunition to continue the defense. The brave women in the fort insisted that none of the men should |
|
be sacrificed in the undertaking, as the loss of one of the garrison would greatly endanger the safety of all. Miss Elizabeth Zane and Miss Nancy Robins both volunteered to go, but as the latter was molding bullets, a work in which she was skilled, it was decided that Miss Zane should make the hazardous trip. With fleet step she ran the gauntlet, and amid a storm of arrows and bullets, bore the powder into the fort. The garrison held |
The First Newspaper of the Northwest
Territory. 345
out till reinforcements arrived and
compelled the savages to
raise the siege.
Afterward Miss Robins and her mother
lived with the
Zane family.1 Miss Nancy went to
Cincinnati and there met
William Maxwell, whom she subsequently
married. She aided
him in all his work, helped to print the
newspaper, and with
her own hands, in 1796, bound the
Maxwell Code,2 the first
book printed within the limits of the
Northwest Territory. In
1799, she accompanied her husband to
Dayton, Ohio, which was
then a military post. Here she remained
until Mr. Maxwell,
assisted by some discharged soldiers
employed for that purpose,
cut a road through to Upper Alpha. This
road afterwards be-
came a part of the Dayton and Xenia
Pike. Mrs. Maxwell was
the first white woman to travel over it.
To the new log cabin in the wilderness
she came with her
husband and two children, William and
Eliza. Here the little
family grew until there were eight children.
After the death of
her husband she married John White, whom
she survived many
years. Of the second union six children
were born, one of
whom, Mrs. Elizabeth Webster, of Dayton,
Ohio, is still living
at the age of eighty-three years.
In her old age, Mrs. (Maxwell) White
moved with relatives
and friends to Sidell, Illinois, where
she died November 9th,
1868,3 at the age of one
hundred and eight years, three months
and six days. Amiability and
cheerfulness were native to her.
Through life she was blessed with good
health. To its last
hour she retained full possession of her
faculties. She was the
mother of fourteen children, whose
descendants are now living
in many states. A modest monument,
fittingly inscribed, marks
her last resting place.
1Later
Mrs. Robins became the second wife of Ebenezer Zane.
2The
"Code," bound in pioneer style, was sewed with wax ends,
tipped with bristles.
3Just seventy-five years after the
publication of the first issue of
The Centinel of the North-Western
Territory.
4Of
the first union were born William, Elias, Rachel, John, Ludlow,
Nancy, George, Eliza; of the second,
Margaret, Lemuel, Catherine, Eva-
line, Elizabeth, Anne.
346 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
Of the early life of William Maxwell little is known. His father, whose name was also William, came from Scotland. Ac- cording to statements of some of his descendants, the son was born in New York, about the year 1755. He had evidently re- ceived a fair education for the times. It is not known where he learned the printer's trade. In his salutatory, published in the initial number of The Centinel, he states that he same to the western country to establish a newspaper. It is therefore fair to presume that he had learned something about his trade before leaving the East. His granddaughter is authority for the state- ment that he came west in 1788. This date is not supported by documentary evidence and it is probable that he came later. After his arrival in Cincinnati, as already stated, he married Nancy Robins who survived him more than half a century. |
|
Mr. Maxwell was the first local public printer of the North- west Territory. In 1796 he published the Maxwell Code. He was second postmaster of Cincinnati, having been appointed to that position the year previous, as the following notice in The Centinel of September 6th, 1795, explains: "W. Maxwell is appointed Post-Master at this place in lieu of A. M. Dunn, Esq., deceased. Gentlemen, and others, wishing to send letters by the Post, may leave them at the Printing-Office; where the Post-Office is now kept." In 1799, he moved to land on the Little Miami, in what is now Beaver Creek Township, Greene County, Ohio. It was then a part of Hamilton County. He was elected to the House of Representatives of the First General Assembly of Ohio, which convened in Chillicothe, March 1st, 1803. The Journal of the House shows that he was an active member and that he served on important committees with associates some of whom after- ward attained prominence in the history of the state. Among these were Kirker and Worthington. |
The First Newspaper of the Northwest Territory. 347
He favored the law providing for the erection of Greene County and was elected one of its associate judges by the Legis- lature on April 6th, 1803. On the 10th of the following month, at the house of Owen Davis, on Beaver Creek, he aided in organ- izing the first court held in the county. The building was a log structure of the pioneer type. He resigned the office of associate judge December 7th, 1803, was chosen sheriff of Greene County and served till 1807. He took an active interest in organizing the state militia and, in 1805, held the rank of major. He was a man of thrift and fairly prosperous. On his large tract of land, he devoted himself chiefly to the industry of cattle raising. |
|
William Maxwell's last days were spent on his farm. Here where his furrow broke the "stubborn glebe," where the forest bowed beneath his sturdy stroke, this modest, brave old pioneer in 1809 sank to rest. Cadmus sailing into Greece on a mission that enlightened the world, is doubtless a myth. But William Maxwell, soldier, pioneer, and printer, bending over the types and losing his subscription list in a soul-absorbing effort to bring forth The Centinel of the North-Western Territory, William Maxwell, laboring by blazing knot and tallow dip over his "code," William Maxwell bearing letters into the western wilderness, is |
348 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
a reality! From this humble beginning, what a marvel the cen- tury has wrought. Books and papers everywhere. Great jour- nals, reeling off daily issues aggregating not hundreds or thou- sands, but millions of copies. Vast hives of literary industry, where the roll of cylinder and the click of linotype echo without interruption the whole year round! And he who touched the magic spring that opened up the way for this wondrous and beneficent miracle, sleeps alone on the quiet farm his last long sleep. His grave is at the edge of the forest, on an eminence that commands a fine view of the valley of the Little Miami. |
|
Around are green meadows, waving orchards, the fragrance of flowers, and the melody of birds. A plain slab, hewn from the native rock, without a line or a letter, marks his last resting place. The patrons of the press, the lovers of books, and those who manifest a patriotic pride in the intellectual development and ascendency of the prosperous realm now embraced within the original limits of the Northwest Territory, have a duty to per- form. They should unite in raising over the dust of William Maxwell a plain shaft, appropriately inscribed, that would be to the modest worth of this pioneer editor and maker of books a fitting memorial. Ohio should lead in rendering appropriate |
The First Newspaper of the Northwest Territory. 349
tribute to him who in "the long ago," appealed for the press, and asked the pioneer fathers "not to consult merely their own personal interest, but the interest of the public and the coming time." ACKNOWLEDGMENT. The writer of the foregoing article makes grateful ac- knowledgment to Miss Etta G. McElwain, Librarian of the Xenia Public Library, and Miss Electra C. Doren, of the Dayton Public Library, for valuable information relative to the descend- ants of William Maxwell; to the Misses Mary and Rebecca Maxwell, granddaughters of William Maxwell, for assistance in collecting material; to Mrs. Jennie Sharf, granddaughter of Elizabeth Webster and great-granddaughter of Mrs. (Maxwell) White for additional data and the loan of the rare photograph from which the cut is made for this sketch; to Dr. C. E. Rice for the loan of an early Ohio manuscript from which the facsimile of the signature of William Maxwell was made. |
|
THE FIRST NEWSPAPER
OF THE NORTHWEST
TERRITORY.
THE EDITOR AND HIS
WIFE.
C. B. GALBREATH.
The first newspaper published northwest
of the Ohio River
was edited by William Maxwell, a
Revolutionary soldier. After
the recognition of our national
independence, he set out for
the great west to seek fortune in the
new field that called many
worthy, brave and adventurous spirits.
He crossed the Alle-
ghanies, proceeded to Pittsburg, came
down the Ohio, and took
up his abode in the little village of
Cincinnati, then numbering
about two hundred souls.
Having determined before starting west
to enter upon a
journalistic career in the new country,
he had his outfit trans-
ported over the mountains on pack horses
and shipped down from
Pittsburg on a packet boat. It consisted
of a Ramage press,
much like the one used by Dr. Franklin,
and a few cases of type.
A man could have moved the materials at
a single load in a
wheelbarrow.
Mr. Maxwell proceeded at once to set up
his office in a
log cabin at the corner of Front and
Sycamore streets. The
coming of the press had been announced
and a list of subscribers
had been secured. Now the work of
arranging copy, setting
type, and getting ready for the first
issue became the soul-ab-
sorbing occupation of the editor and his
faithful helpmate. It
is needless to say that the work in
progress at the office of the
printer was of more than ordinary
interest to the inhabitants
of the little community. After many
delays the natal day arrives.
"The printer daubs his buck-skin
roll in the ink and then daubs
it on the face of the type. The lever
creaks, and lo, born to the
light of day" is The Sentinel of
the North-Western Territory,
(332)