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PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY. On August 19, 1904, a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Trustees of the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society was held in the conference room of the Public Library, with the following members present: Mr. Geo. F. Bareis, Col. John W. Harper, Prof. B. F. Prince, Hon. D. J. Ryan, Secretary E. O. Randall and Mr. E. F. Wood representing Mr. S. S. Rickly. Letters of regret on account of inability to attend were received from Mr. W. H. Hunter, Chillicothe; Hon. M. S. Greenough, Cleveland; Prof. C. L. Martzolff, New Lexington and Prof. G. F. Wright, Oberlin. Mr. E. F. Wood made a verbal report of his visit to Ft. Ancient on July 4th and 5th, when he held a conference with Mr. Warren Cowen, the custodian, and also made a careful inspection of the Fort, and study of contemplated improvements on the property. Mr. Wood's statement was one exceedingly satisfactory to the committee and complimentary to Mr. Warren Cowen. The latter has been most loyal and faithful in his labors in the care of the Fort and in looking after the interests of the Society. Mr. Cowen has also been most efficient and painstaking in carrying out all instructions of the Trustees in their supervision of the property. After hearing the report of Mr. Wood the Secretary was instructed to renew the present contract, with some slight changes, which the Society has had with Mr. Cowen the past two years, the new con- tract to be effective from August 1, 1904, and continue for two years, until August 1, 1906. Standing committees for the ensuing year were decided upon as follows: Finance, Rickly, Ryan, Bareis; Ft. Ancient, Prince, Harper, Bareis; Serpent Mound, Martzolff, Hunter, Randall; Museum and Li- brary, Wright, Greenough and Brinkerhoff; Publications, Ryan, Keifer and Randall. The Secretary reported an account of his visit to the St. Louis Exposition on June 15th and 16th, at which time he carefully inspected the exhibit being made by the Society in its quarters in the Anthropolo- gical Building. This is one of the permanent and therefore most desirable buildings on the grounds, it being one of the main structures recently erected for the Jefferson University, to be occupied by the University after the Exposition has closed. In the same building is the Egyptian (558) |
Editorialana. 559
exhibit, and several exhibits of
archaeology and anthropology. About
one thousand people daily inspect the
display of the Society, and
amongst these are professors, scholars
and students from all parts of
the world. The Society is certainly to
be congratulated upon the exhibit
it is making and upon the attention it
is attracting from the public and
the influence it is exerting in behalf
of the Society. The newspapers
not only in St. Louis but throughout the
country are giving it admirable
and wide-spread notice. Prof. Mills has
most admirably arranged the
exhibit and he has been the recipient of
innumerable compliments for his
competency as Curator of the Society.
The Secretary reported the issuing of
the July Quarterly and stated
that the October Quarterly was being
rapidly prepared for publication,
and would probably come from the press
early in September. He also
reported that the reprint of the
Centennial proceedings had been com-
pleted. Fifteen hundred copies were now
at the disposal of the Society,
and a certain number would be sent to
each member of the last legis-
lature in lieu of their failure to
receive the contingent which had been
provided for in the appropriation bill,
and which item had been vetoed
by the Governor.
The committee authorized the Secretary
and Treasurer Wood to
arrange for a visit by the Executive
Committee to Fort Ancient on
Monday, August 29th.
On Monday, August 29th, in accordance
with the decision of the Exe-
cutive Committee at its last meeting,
members of the Executive Committee
and certain invited State officials made
a visit to Fort Ancient. Those
participating were: Hon. L. C. Laylin,
Secretary of State and Mrs.
Laylin; Hon. W. D. Guilbert, Auditor of
State and Mrs. Guilbert; Prof.
C. G. Heckert, President of Wittenberg
University, Springfield,
and Mrs. Heckert; Mr. W. H. Raynor,
Springfield and Mr. D. A. Ran-
dall, Columbus. Of the members of the
Executive Committee there
were Hon. D. J. Ryan and Mrs. Ryan,
Columbus; Mr. Geo. F. Bareis and
Mrs. Bareis, Canal Winchester; Col. John
W. Harper and Mrs. Harper,
Cincinnati; Prof. C. L. Martzolff and
Mrs. Martzolff, New Lexing-
ton; Prof. B. F. Prince and Miss Grace
Prince, Springfield; Secretary
E. O. Randall and Mrs. Randall,
Columbus. The party reached the Fort
at 9:00 A. M., and were met at the
station by Mr. Warren Cowen the
Custodian, who with carriages, escorted
the party to and about the
Fort. A thorough examination of the
embankments and enclosures was
made. The work done by the Society in
the embellishment and improve-
ment of the property was also carefully
noted and commended. Further
proposed work by the Society was also
considered and certain features
of it determined upon. The party partook
of a sumptuous country
dinner at the Fort house; all agreeing
that if the menu enjoyed was
any sample of the provender partaken of
by the prehistoric man, the
560 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society
Publications.
mysterious Mound Builder was at all
events a good liver. The weather
proved delightful, and the State
officials, as well as trustees, pronounced
themselves as highly pleased first with
the fact that the State had secured
the property, and second that it was
being so admirably protected under
the custodianship of the Ohio State
Archaeological and Historical Society.
HARRISON-TARHE PEACE CONFERENCE
MEMORIAL.
On Tuesday, June 28, 1904, at Columbus,
Ohio, a most delightful and
appropriate program of ceremonies was
carried out by the Columbus
Chapter of the Daughters of the American
Revolution commemorative
of the peace conference between
President Harrison and the famous
Wyandot Indian chief, Tarhe, at
Franklinton, on the west side of the
Scioto, opposite Columbus. This peace
conference was held June 21,
1813. The exercises of the celebration
were held in the open air near the
historic spot where the conference took
place. Temporary seats were
provided for the auditors in the little
park which ornaments that part of
the city, the speakers occupying an
elevated platform over which was
spread a canopy. The audience, it goes
without saying, was a sym-
pathetic one, being composed mainly of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution, Sons of the American
Revolution, and members of the Ohio
State Archaeological and Historical
Society, to whom the committee in
charge had courteously extended
invitations. The Columbus Rifles Band
furnished fitting music. Invocation was
pronounced by the Reverend
Washington Gladden. An immense granite
boulder made an imposing
monument, upon which was attached a
beautiful bronze tablet stating the
event which it commemorated. A most
admirable and appropriate ad-
dress presenting the peace memorial to
the City was made by Mrs. Edward
Orton, Jr., Regent of the Columbus
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, and to whose energetic and
persistent efforts was mainly due
the idea and its fulfillment of the
erection of this tablet. The act of unveil-
ing was most unique and interesting, as
the immense stars and stripes
which served as the veil were drawn
aside by Masters Milton Wilcox and
Allen G. Thurman. The address of
acceptance on behalf of the City
was made by Hon. Robert H. Jeffrey,
Mayor of Columbus, who spoke
briefly but eloquently of the
inspiration of honored ancestry. The chief
address of the occasion was made by
General Benjamin R. Cowen, life
member of the Ohio State Archaeological
and Historical Society, who spoke
at some length, in his usually graceful
and scholarly manner, dwelling
upon the historic conflict between the
white and red races for supremacy,
the past achievements, present
conditions and future prospects of the
white race. It was an occasion much
enjoyed by those who were so fortu-
nate as to be prsent, and greatly to the
credit of the Daughters of the
Revolution, who find in such occasions
fitting opportunity to express
Editorialana. 561
their enthusiasm in and loyalty to the
order to which they belong. We
do not give the proceedings in full as
they will be published in book
form by the Columbus Chapter Daughters
of the American Revolution.
HARWOOD R. POOL.
Mr. Harwood R. Pool, a life member of
the Ohio State Archaeo-
logical and Historical Society, died in
New York, December 30, 1903.
He was the son of Lieutenant-Colonel
Joseph Pool, and was born in
Elyria, Ohio, October 22, 1860. He went
to New York in 1868, attended
private school and later fitted for
college at Hopkins Institute, New
Haven, Connecticut. In 1877 he entered
the Ohio State University, and
was graduated therefrom on June 22,
1881, with the degree of Ph. B.
While in college he took lead in
important measures affecting college
life, and was one of the organizers of
the Greek letter society, Phi
Gamma Delta. He was one of the
organizers and first president of the
Alcyone Literary Society. He was also
one of the establishers and first
editors of the college paper, "The
Lantern." He was a splendid student,
a fine athlete, and, through his frank
and winning manner, not only
one of the leaders in all college
affairs, but a most popular man with
all classes of students. Immediately
upon his graduation from O. S. U.,
he attended the Columbia Law School,
from which he received his
diploma on June 13, 1883, as Bachelor of
Laws "cum laude," and was
admitted to practice by the Supreme
Court in 1883. He took a most active
interest in the progress and welfare of
his Alma Mater, O. S. U., and
was honored by receiving office
from the Alumni Association. He
also became prominent as an alumnus of
the Law School at Columbia
University. He was elected a member of
the Loyal Legion, New York
Commandery, of the second class, April
4, 1888. This latter order, at
a stated meeting of the commandery held
at Delmonico's, made fitting
recognition of the decease of their
honored member, the formal reso-
lution being presented by Brevet
Brigadier General Anson G. McCook.
The death of Harwood Pool in the prime
of his activity was not only
a sad blow to his innumerable friends
and associates but a decided loss
to the community and profession of which
he was so conspicuous and
valuable a member. Mr. Pool, from the
beginning of his membership in
the Ohio State Archaeological and
Historical Society, took deep interest
in its welfare; his removal to New York
and residence in that metropolis
seemed in no way to lessen his love for
his native state and interest in
the progress of the society which
promotes the history of the Buckeye
Commonwealth.
Vol. XIII- 36.
562 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
GATHERING UNDER THE OAKS.
On July 6th the Secretary of the Society
was the honored invitee
of the committee of arrangements at the
semi-centennial anniversary
celebration of the birth of the
Republican party held at Jackson, Mich.,
in a picturesque grove of oak trees just
outside the city limits.
It was at Jackson, Mich., on July 6,
1854, that the first great mass
meeting of members of the Whig,
Abolitionist, Anti-slavery Democrat,
and other members of nondescript
political parties met "under the oaks"
and organized and named the Republican
party. This meeting led to
the nomination of a State ticket for
Michigan, which was elected the
following fall. Some ten thousand voters
in Michigan signed the peti-
tion for this meeting. The anniversary
meeting was one of great
interest and patriotism. The platform
for the speakers was located in a
hollow of the grove, in front of a large
temporary enclosure, to the
seats of which were admitted some eight
hundred veteran Republicans
who cast their first vote in that party
for Fremont in 1856. Of these
eight hundred, some four hundred were
present at the initial meeting
held in Jackson fifty years before. It
was a remarkable audience of
political veterans, many of them scarred
and maimed from service in
the great rebellion. The honor address of the day was by Mr. John
Hay, the distinguished Secretary of
State, formerly private secretary
to President Lincoln, and since the
statesman and diplomat, and a life
member from its organization of the Ohio
State Archaeological and
Historical Society. His address was in
eloquence and scholarship worthy
of the occasion and the reputation of
the speaker. Addresses were also
made by Senators Fairbanks and Burrows,
Governor Bliss of Michigan,
Speaker Joseph Cannon and others,
HISTORICAL BULLETIN.
The Historical Bulletin, an
interesting publication issued at Wash-
ington, D. C., and devoted to genealogy,
patriotism and historical
research, in its issue for August, 1904,
has, as its initial article, an in-
forming account of the inception of the
National Society Sons of the
American Revolution, by George Williams
Bates, of Detroit, Michigan.
Mr. Bates is the Historian-General of
the National Society, S. A. R.,
and moreover one of its most
enthusiastic and popular workers. At
the last National Convention of the
Society, held at St. Louis, Mr. Bates,
who
on that occasion delivered
an admirable address
on the
Louisiana Purchase, was re-elected
Historian-General for the fourth
term, evidencing not only the value of
his labors in his office but
the appreciation of the same by the
members of the organization. Mr.
Bates is a descendant of a number of
distinguished New England
Editorialana. 563
families, through his mother being
connected with Roger Williams and
related to the Reverend John Robinson,
pastor and founder in 1606 of
the Pilgrim Church at Leyden, Holland.
Mr. Bates is a graduate of the
University of Michigan, and is a
practicing attorney in the city of his
birth, Detroit, and wields a potent
influence in social, Masonic, educational,
and scientific circles of that
beautiful, enterprising city. Mr. Bates is
an orator of unusual force and eloquence
and is always listened to with
great pleasure and interest, especially
by audiences of the Sons of the
American Revolution.
OHIO STATE BAR ASSOCIATION.
The Ohio State Bar Association held its
25th annual meeting at
Hotel Victory, Put-in-Bay, July 6-7-8,
1904. It was unusually well
attended, there being some four hundred
lawyers of the State present
at the various sessions. Addresses were
delivered by the Hon. Henry
J. Booth, annual address of the
President; Judge William Z. Davis, of
the Ohio Supreme Court on "The
Trial Judge"; Hon. S. S. Wheeler on
"State Taxation of Real and
Personal Property"; Hon. Lebbeus R.
Wilfley, Attorney-General for the
Philippine Islands, on "The New
Philippine Judiciary"; Mr. Emilius
O. Randall, Reporter of the Ohio
Supreme Court, on "Legal Reporting
and Indexing." Hon. Joseph Wilby
and Hon. David F. Pugh discussed the
subject of "Municipal Ownership."
LETTERS BY GOVERNOR TIFFIN.
Through the courtesy of Hon. Robert W. Manly,
the Society has re-
ceived as donations for permanent
possession, from Mr. Charles G.
Comegys, Cincinnati, and Edward T. Cook,
Chillicothe, both grand-
sons of Edward Tiffin, Ohio's first
governor, an autograph commission
by Governor Tiffin issued the 10th day
of December, 1806, and appoint-
ing one Mathew Nimmo, Esq., an agent to
enforce certain laws enacted
for the peace to the commonwealth, etc.
Also autograph letters from the
Governor to Mathew Nimmo concerning the
performance of the duties
of his office, and an autograph letter
of Secretary H. Dearborn of the
War Department to Governor Tiffin. These
documents will be securely
placed in the archives of the Society as
valuable historical acquisitions to
the Society's library.
COMMERCIAL VS. SCIENTIFIC COLLECTING.
In the January number of the Society's
Quarterly there appeared
an article from the distinguished
archaeologist, Warren K. Moorehead,
on the subject of commercial and
scientific collecting; "a plea for art
for art's sake." The author
vigorously deprecated the vandal system
564 Ohio Arch. and
Hist. Society Publications.
of destroying archaeological mounds and
remains, and the disposing of
archaeological artifacts by collectors
as a mere matter of barter and sale.
The article attracted the wide notice of
archaeologists throughout the
country, and Mr. Moorehead has been the
recipient of commendatory
communications from many of the leading
scholars in archaeology, from
which we select the following:
MAY 30, 1904, ST. LOUIS, Mo.
MY DEAR PROF. MOOREHEAD:- I have read
with interest your
recent article on "Commercial vs.
Scientific Collecting" and am pleased to
note that your views on the subject are
so fully in accord with my own and
those of many of my co-laborers in the
Wisconsin field. But few other
states in the Union have suffered more
severely at the hands of commer-
cially inclined persons than has our own
and it is by this means that
many of our choicest archaeological
treasures which should have remained
at home have gone to enrich distant
collections and institutions, and are
at present inaccessible to the local
student for whom they must possess
the greatest value. In the past,
professional relic hunters and others
have traversed the length and breadth of
our state offering fancy prices for
desirable artifacts and thus forever
placing beyond the reach of local
institutions and students these and any
similar objects which might be
brought to light in the future. These
long continued raids upon our
antiquities have done much to encourage
the plundering and destruction
of our mounds and there is no question
but that they are also responsible
for the extent to which the manufacture
of and traffic in fraudulent im-
plements has grown in late years. This
spirit of commercialism has also
been the means of introducing into local
collections a large number of
artifacts from other regions which might
to all intents and purposes
far better have been retained at home.
That the commercial evil is a
growing one cannot be denied. For
several years past the Wisconsin
Archaeological Society recognizing the
disastrous effects of a continuation
of such practices has been doing its
best to secure the retention of desir-
able archaeological material by local
institutions. We are pleased to
note that this plan has met with some
success. If we were to under-
take to point out those whom we consider
responsible or in part respon-
sible for such local conditions as now
exist it might occasion some
surprise. Yours sincerely,
CHAS. E. BROWN,
Secretary Wisconsin Archaeological
Society.
PEABODY MUSEUM, CAMBRIDGE, MASS., March
22, 1904.
MY DEAR MR. MOOREHEAD:--I have read your
paper "Commercial
vs. Scientific Collecting" with
much interest. Irreparable harm has been
done the science of American archaeology
by amateur as well as commer-
cial explorers of mounds, burial places
and village sites. In fact very
little archaeological work has been done
in the United States in a thor-
oughly competent manner, until within
the last few years, even by
professionals.
As to commercial explorers, their work
should be discouraged in
every way. Competent amateurs should be
encouraged to do better work.
A study of the reports of the best work
that has been accomplished will
greatly help those who usually destroy what they would
record. Careful
maps, photographs, measurements and
notes should always be made as
the work progresses. Officers of
archaeological museums are usually glad
to give advice as to the best methods of
exploring. All specimens should
Editorialana. 565
be marked in a permanent manner with
small gummed labels, for cata-
logues of amateur collections are sure
to be lost sooner or later.
Sincerely yours,
CHARLES C. WILLOUGHBY,
Assistant Curator Peabody Museum,
Harvard.
WASHINGTON, D. C., March 21, 1904.
MY DEAR MOOREHEAD: -There are two kinds
of commercial collec-
tors of archaeological objects-the one
who collects in a systematic
manner, keeping notes of excavations and
all the circumstances con-
nected with the finding of the objects,
thus giving the collection a value
far beyond that possessed by the objects
alone, and that abomination
who spoils everything for the purpose of
gathering specimens for sale
to anyone who will purchase them,
regardless of whether the story they
tell is forthcoming or not. The former
class I have heard of but never
seen; the latter can be discouraged in a
measure at least, if every respec-
table scientific institution or
individual will refuse to have dealings with
him. There is urgent need of agitation
to prevent the further despoliation
of the public ruins and other
antiquities in the far West and to place
their excavation under scientific
control for the sole benefit of institutions
of learning. Within a week I have seen
in an American archaeological
journal that has recently made an appeal
for the protection of our anti-
quities, an advertisement of a dealer
who makes a specialty of pre-
historic pottery "direct from the
ruins"! If the vandalism continues
much longer, the means for real
scientific study of our western antiqui-
ties will be no more. Sincerely yours,
F. W. HODGE,
Editor American Anthropologist.
TORONTO, CANADA, March 19, 1904.
DEAR SIR:-I carefully read the article when it
originally appeared
in the Ohio State Archaeological and
Historical Quarterly.
In this country we are not very much
troubled with a class of
people to whom you refer, otherwise than as their advertisements
may
happen to reach us from the United States. No one can doubt the
truthfulness of the remarks you make respecting the
collection of archae-
ological material for mercenary or
commercial purposes, and while in
the interests of science the carrying on
of such a business is something
to be deplored, I am afraid that very
little can be done to put a stop
to it. Thousands of people of the tourist type,
patronize dealers in curio-
sities to be carried away as souvenirs
without any discrimination as to
where the things were found, or even
whether they were ever found.
As a result of this thoughtless method
of purchasing, it is only natural
for an ingenious person to supply the
demand as a result of his own
skill, for the purpose of earning a few
dollars. If we could only con-
vince dealers, into whose hands most
undoubtedly much highly valuable
material sometimes falls, to exercise
judgment in the disposal of the
goods, i. e. as to whether he is selling
to a souvenir customer, or for
scientific purposes, a good deal of the
trouble will be avoided. I don't
think it is possible to enact any law
that would prevent carrying on this
trade, and although it might be well for
responsible institutions to refrain
from making any purchases from
establishments where relics are sold,
it would be somewhat difficult at times
to avoid temptation.
Would it be of any use, or would it be
practicable for State, Uni-
versity, Museum or Historical Society
authorities to supply reputable
566 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
dealers of the kind in question with
something of the nature of a cer-
tificate from year to year? Yours respectfully,
DAVID BOYLE,
Superintendent Provincial Museum.
PAGE HALL, COLUMBUS, O., March 25, 1904.
MY DEAR PROF. MOOREHEAD:- I feel that
the dealers and so-called
commercially inclined collectors are a
great menace to our scientific
museums in very many ways. Many dealers
collect specimens giving
little or no attention to authentic data
and offer same for sale. When
called upon to give the necessary data,
they are able to furnish a complete
history of each specimen? For instance,
I know a collector who has
in his cabinet a number of specimens
labeled "Found in Montgomery
County, Ohio"; these he procured
from a dealer. The specimens are
clearly not Ohio specimens and are
typical Georgia finds.
Further, the country has been flooded
with spurious artifacts "with
complete records," furnished by
dealers throughout the country. The
commercially inclined collector destroys
the mounds and village sites
merely for the relics they find,
blotting out forever what might be of
great importance to the archaeologist
who will sooner or later make an
examination of this work. Of the two,
the commercially inclined collector
is the one to be avoided. He is very
often unscrupulous in procuring speci-
mens and many fall into his hands
through false pretenses. Many so-called
collectors travel through the country,
preying upon farmers and small
collectors by telling them that they are
collecting for some museum, or
collecting specimens to photograph, or
make drawings for some book on
archaeology, and when completed the
specimens will be returned, with
a fine copy of the book gratis. The book
is never published, consequently
the specimens are never returned.
We are prevailed upon many times during
the year to purchase
specimens from parties who have
"just opened a mound," or "found on
grandfather's farm," and I am happy
to say that they have never made
a sale here. I feel that it is the duty
of every museum curator never to
purchase specimens of any kind from
dealers or commercially inclined
collectors. Very truly yours,
W. C. MILLS,
Curator Ohio State Archaeological and
Historical Society.
SHAKERS AND THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
In the January number of the current
volume was made mention
of valuable MSS. and articles of
industry secured from the Shakers
through the agency of Dr. J. P. MacLean.
During the months of June,
July and August of this year, Dr.
MacLean made a tour of all the
Eastern Shaker communities, and wherever
he went, the Historical So-
ciety's interests were not neglected.
The result was a donation of
nineteen cases of books and relics now
within the Library and Museum.
amounting in value to many hundred
dollars. For these valuable ac-
quisitions the Society is indebted to
Elder Timothy Rayson, Alonzo G.
Hollister, Eldress Anna White, Eldress
Sarah Burger, Eldress Julia
Scott, Eldress Clarissa Jacobs, Eldress
Sarah Collins, Sisters Catherine
Allen, Sadie and Emma J. Neale and
Eunice Cantrell of Mt. Lebanon,
N. Y.; Eldress Sophia Helfrich, Eldress
Catherine Piper and Sister
Martha Johnson, of the Hancock Society;
Elder Joseph Holden and
Eldress Mary Ellston of the Shirley
Society; Eldress Margaret O. Eggles-
Editorialana. 567
ton of the Harvard Society; Eldress
Miriam Offord and Sister Angelina
Brown, of the Enfield, Conn., Society;
Sister Rosetta Cummings of the
Enfield, N. H., Society; Elder Henry C.
Blinn and Eldress Mary A.
Wilson, of the Canterbury Society;
Eldress Fannie Casey, of the Alfred
Society, and Sisters Aurelia G. Mace and
Sarah Fletcher of the Sabbath-
day Lake Society.
Besides the Shaker books received, there
were several hundred
others, of a miscellaneous variety, all
of which are valuable, besides over
thirty bound volumes of newspapers and
journals, mostly published in
New York. These latter came from Elder
Timothy Rayson and Eldress
Anna White.
Among the Shaker relics were the hat,
knife, thimble, basket and
part of dress of Mother Ann Lee; china
mug and dress of Mother Lucy
Wright; hats once worn by Elders F. W.
Evans, Daniel Boler and
Richard Bushnell; wine cup of Eldress
Olive Spencer (first eldress of
Mt. Lebanon); saddle-bags of Elder
Eleazer Rand (over 100 years old);
one full suit of Brother's clothes;
shoes of Eldress Antoinette Doolittle;
under jacket of F. W. Evans; large
spinning wheel, bed warming pan;
reel, canes, razors, looking glasses;
wash bowl of Elder James Whittaker;
tailor's compas; suit of boy's dolls
clothes, made by Eldress Sarah Bur-
ger; one very large doll dressed in
Shaker Sister's suit of the present, by
Sister Sadie Neale; another in Sister's
old style, dressed by Eldress
Clarissa Jacobs; trunk of Eldress Eliza
Babbitt; fancy box made by Elder
Richard Bushnell; fourteen samples of
Shaker cloth, etc., etc. One of
the canes had belonged to Elder Benjamin
Dunlavy of Pleasant Hill, Ky.;
thence to Elder Harvey L. Eads of South
Union, Ky., and finally to
John Bradford of Enfield, N. H. The
latter died at an advanced age,
while Dr. MacLean was addressing the
Society on Early Shakerism in
the West. Dr. MacLean made eleven
different addresses at Mt. Lebanon,
one each at Enfield, Conn., Enfield, N.
H., Harvard and Sabbathday Lake.
He was made a member of North Family,
Enfield, Conn., and also of
the Church Family of Harvard. He had
previously been made a mem-
ber of the North Family at Union Village
and of the North Family at
Mt. Lebanon. The Shakers report that
privileges were accorded to Dr.
MacLean that never were bestowed upon
any other non-member. They
were drawn to him by the fairness of his
writings concerning them, claim-
ing that he is more just and discerning
than any other author. Dr. Mac-
Lean in due time, will give a full
account of his life among the Shaker
communities, which will be published. He
is now at work preparing a
bibliography of Shakerism.
The Historical Society now rejoices in
having the largest Shaker
collection of books and relics of any
public institution in the world. A
further very large donation is promised
from James H. Fennessey,
manager of Union Village, Eldress
Clymena Miner and Sister Susannah
C. Liddell. The North Family of Mt.
Lebanon has become a life member
of the Historical Society.
EDITORIALANA. |
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PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY. On August 19, 1904, a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Trustees of the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society was held in the conference room of the Public Library, with the following members present: Mr. Geo. F. Bareis, Col. John W. Harper, Prof. B. F. Prince, Hon. D. J. Ryan, Secretary E. O. Randall and Mr. E. F. Wood representing Mr. S. S. Rickly. Letters of regret on account of inability to attend were received from Mr. W. H. Hunter, Chillicothe; Hon. M. S. Greenough, Cleveland; Prof. C. L. Martzolff, New Lexington and Prof. G. F. Wright, Oberlin. Mr. E. F. Wood made a verbal report of his visit to Ft. Ancient on July 4th and 5th, when he held a conference with Mr. Warren Cowen, the custodian, and also made a careful inspection of the Fort, and study of contemplated improvements on the property. Mr. Wood's statement was one exceedingly satisfactory to the committee and complimentary to Mr. Warren Cowen. The latter has been most loyal and faithful in his labors in the care of the Fort and in looking after the interests of the Society. Mr. Cowen has also been most efficient and painstaking in carrying out all instructions of the Trustees in their supervision of the property. After hearing the report of Mr. Wood the Secretary was instructed to renew the present contract, with some slight changes, which the Society has had with Mr. Cowen the past two years, the new con- tract to be effective from August 1, 1904, and continue for two years, until August 1, 1906. Standing committees for the ensuing year were decided upon as follows: Finance, Rickly, Ryan, Bareis; Ft. Ancient, Prince, Harper, Bareis; Serpent Mound, Martzolff, Hunter, Randall; Museum and Li- brary, Wright, Greenough and Brinkerhoff; Publications, Ryan, Keifer and Randall. The Secretary reported an account of his visit to the St. Louis Exposition on June 15th and 16th, at which time he carefully inspected the exhibit being made by the Society in its quarters in the Anthropolo- gical Building. This is one of the permanent and therefore most desirable buildings on the grounds, it being one of the main structures recently erected for the Jefferson University, to be occupied by the University after the Exposition has closed. In the same building is the Egyptian (558) |