Ohio History Journal

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Editorialana

Editorialana.                       221

 

Society Wednesday evening, and a reception Thursday afternoon by Presi-

dent and Mrs. Harper, at their residence, corner of Fifty-ninth street and

Lexington avenue. President Harper is an Ohio man, and was formerly

connected with Muskingum College, at New Concord. His wife is also

a Buckeye, and when a girl lived in Mansfield. She is the daughter of the

Rev. David Paul, who was the pastor of the Mansfield United Presbyterian

Church from 1858 until 1864, when he resigned to accept the presidency of

the Muskingum college.

The American Political Science Association and the American Eco-

nomic Association held their annual meetings at the same time, in the

halls of the Chicago University buildings.

 

 

NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY BUILDING.

Apropos of the need for a building for the Ohio State Archaeological

and Historical Society, we note with much interest and not a little envy

the announcement that the New York Historical Society is erecting a

building for its future home on Seventy-sixth Street, opposite Central

Park, New York. The site of the building was bought in June, 1891, at a

cost of $300,000. Some difficulty was experienced in raising the additional

money necessary to begin the work of the construction. Dean Hoffman,

father of the present president of the society, was the leader and director

of this undertaking. He induced several prominent New Yorkers-among

them Archer M. Huntington, Miss Matilda Wolf Bruce, J. P. Morgan,

F. Robert Schell, the late John Alsop King, Cornelius and George W.

Vanderbilt-to contribute large amounts.

The building committee was appointed in June, 1901, to receive and

report upon plans for the proposed building. This committee decided to

erect the central portion, 135 x 115 feet, on the lines of American colonial

architecture, from the plans of Messrs. York & Sawyer, at an estimated

cost of $400,000. The cornerstone was laid by ex-Mayor Seth Low,

November 17, 1903. The work has been going on with more or less inter-

ruption, but it is expected that the building will be completed as far as the

first story this spring. The building when completed will be the finest

of its kind in the country. It will be of pink Milford granite, three stories

high, affording ample shelf space for nearly 500,000 volumes and several

special rooms for exhibits of various sorts, and will contain an auditorium

on the main floor, capable of seating 400 persons, a lecture room, reception,

lounging and committee rooms. On the second floor will be a large

museum, two large lecture galleries and a reading room. The plan of this

central portion of the building is so drawn that at some future time exten-

sive wings of the same general style of architecture may be added.

The New York Historical Society was founded on November 20,

1804, on which date Egbert Benson, De Witt Clinton, Rev. Dr. William

Linn, Rev. Dr. John N. Abeel, Rev. Dr. John M. Mason, Dr. David Hoo--