Ohio History Journal

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WILLIAM CORTENUS SCHENCK, PIONEER AND

WILLIAM CORTENUS SCHENCK, PIONEER AND

STATESMAN OF OHIO

By FRED B. JOYNER

 

It is the purpose of this sketch to resurrect from oblivion a

pioneer and statesman of early Ohio, William Cortenus Schenck.

For some time I have been studying the life of Robert Cumming

Schenck, the illustrious son of this early pioneer. Through a

study of the Schenck papers, now in my possession through the

courtesy of Mrs. J. Sprigg McMahon of New York City, I have

become convinced that the father deserves more consideration

than he has received for his contributions to the state of

Ohio. A careful search reveals that he is not mentioned in the

encyclopedias, nor in the more recent Dictionary of American

Biography.

William C. Schenck was born near Freehold, Monmouth

County, New   Jersey, January 11, 1773.   Although of Dutch

ancestry, his forbears had resided in America for more than 200

years.1 His father, a Presbyterian minister, gave him such educa-

tion as the times afforded. For a time he resided in Newark,

New Jersey, with his maternal uncle, General John N. Cumming;

under whose guidance he completed his education. There is a

tradition in the Schenck family that he graduated from Prince-

ton College either in 1793 or 1794, but it is impossible to verify

this.2 Young Schenck proved himself to be versatile and am-

bitious. Unable to decide for a time what career to follow, he

studied both law and medicine; actually acquiring some of the

fundamentals of each, which knowledge later served him well on

the frontier. Ultimately, of course, he chose neither profession.

 

1 Rev. William Schenck, His Ancestry and His Descendants (Washington,

1883), 56. I have made use of such information as this little book contains through-

out this article.

2 Biographical Encyclopedia of Ohio (Cincinnati, 1876), 59.

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