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HONORABLE JAMES E. CAMPBELL, (468)President of Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society. Former Governor of Ohio |
TRIBUTE TO JAMES EDWIN CAMPBELL*
BY DR. WILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON
HONORABLE JAMES EDWIN CAMPBELL:
The present opportunity is taken by the
University
to extend to you most cordial greetings
in recognition
of your distinguished citizenship and
of the approaching
anniversary of your birthday. The
University, unable
to be in session on July seventh,
anticipates the exact
date and assures you of its warmest
felicitations upon
the noble public career to which we all
turn with a gen-
uine and patriotic pride. Ohio your
birthplace has had
many distinguished public citizens
whose character and
achievements have been a continual
inspiration to their
children from generation to generation.
The University
congratulates you today that your name
has been writ-
ten indelibly upon that scroll of honor
and service. The
zeal of youth that carried you into the
struggle for the
life of the Nation and later with
unusual brilliancy into
the active field of politics has
ripened in these later
years into a strength and dignity of
character, a breadth
of horizon, a generosity of spirit and
a refinement of
intellect that have made you the most
beloved neighbor
and citizen in our great commonwealth.
The University recognizes with profound
gratitude
the important service you rendered to
the cause of
higher education in 1889-1891, when
Governor of Ohio,
* From an address delivered by Doctor
William Oxley Thompson,
President of the Ohio State University,
on the occasion of the annual
commencement of that institution, June
2, 1923. Governor James E
Campbell was born July 7, 1843.
(469)
470
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
and later, in 1895-1896, when you
served as a member
of the Board of Trustees. The passage
of the Hysell
bill, providing the first state levy
for the maintenance
of the University, was possible because
of your active
support of the measure. This was the
most important
legislation of your administration and
will, we trust,
perpetuate your memory as the friend of
higher educa-
tion and in a most vital hour the
devoted friend of the
Ohio State University. From
your message to the
General Assembly, January 6, 1891, we
direct attention
to these significant statements:
The Ohio State University is worthy of
your fostering care.
The University has made notable
progress, and through your
generous, although somewhat fitful aid,
it has become a credit to
the State. Many persons are of the
opinion that a small special
tax for the benefit of this University
is a burden which the people
would bear cheerfully for the sake of
education and advance-
ment. You might, therefore, very
properly inquire whether the
national gift ought not to be
supplemented by a permanent fund
of such a character.
The University recognizes gratefully
that your at-
titude in contrast with that of five
predecessors who did
not even mention the University became
a clarion call
to others to urge a more liberal
provision for the Uni-
versity. That day was the dawn of the
modern progress
now so happily achieved in which we all
rejoice.
The University finds genuine
satisfaction in contem-
plating the patriotic ancestry from
which you sprang.
Your grandfather -- Samuel Campbell --
served in the
war of 1812. Your grandmother -- Mary
Small Camp-
bell -- was the daughter of a
Revolutionary soldier.
From this ancestry sprang a son --
Lewis D. Campbell
-- who served with distinction in both
civil and military
life as did his brother-in-law -- Robert
Reily -- who
made the supreme sacrifice at Chancellorsville
in 1863.
Tribute to James Edwin Campbell 471 Then follows a list of grandchildren among whom you stand the sole survivor -- who served in the Civil War. The later generation of great grandchildren, not fewer than eighteen in number, among whom your own daughter is numbered with a brilliant record in France, and your son, James Edwin Campbell, Jr., with the rank of Captain and overseas service, presents a military service in the World War rarely equalled. Standing as you do amid five generations alike patriotic in their devotion to the democratic government under which we live, the University greets you as one of Ohio's most be- loved sons honored alike in war, in peace and in public life. The Trustees and Faculty of the University join to- day in this testimonial, as we believe all good citizens of Ohio would have us do, to give expression to our affection and to place in your hands a record of the high esteem in which thousands of our grateful alumni hold you. We greet you as citizen, soldier, patriot, public servant, patron of education and lover of humanity. Long may you live to enjoy the honors cheerfully awarded, and to be happy in the affection of your friends and fellow citizens. |
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HONORABLE JAMES E. CAMPBELL, (468)President of Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society. Former Governor of Ohio |