Ohio History Journal

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ANNUAL ADDRESS OF F

ANNUAL ADDRESS OF F. C. SESSIONS, PRESI-

DENT OF THE SOCIETY.

Read in the Senate Chamber, at the Fourth Annual Meeting, Thurs-

day Evening, January 31, 1889.

ALMOST one year ago, this Society went to Marietta, O.,

to celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of the settle-

ment, by Americans, of the Northwest Territory, of which

Ohio is an integral part, and of which she is the oldest

State, and one of the most powerful of American common-

wealths. The settlement was hence the first by Americans

in Ohio. The year has been one prolific in events. We

have enjoyed the somewhat anomalous distinction of hold-

ing four centennials commemorative of a great, distinct

epoch in our history. Still these celebrations, though unlike

in ideas and in detail, have been to commemorate a

distinctive feature growing out of that settlement, and the

principle under which it was planted that April morning

in 1778.

These celebrations have borne good fruit. They have

been beneficial in many ways. They have aroused an

interest in our early history, and hence a closer study into

the causes that led to the founding of this nation, to its

struggles for national existence, to its ultimate triumph,

and to the planting in what was then the remote regions

of the West, of a colony under a system of laws, such as

the world had never before seen, and which it never can

forget. Nor has this commemorative work been confined

to mature intellects. The children in the public schools

have begun to ask the same questions, and to search for

the same answers. Thus there has been instilled into

the minds of thousands of Ohio youths, a wholesome re-

gard, and a desire for the truths of history. It is by a study

of the past that we learn how to shape our course in the

future. Hence the lesson and its solution by the pulpit,

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