Ohio History Journal

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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED

PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.

 

HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS OF OHIO.      In two volumes.

Illustrated by about 500 engravings, contrasting the

Ohio of 1846 with 1886-88; from drawings by the

author in 1846 and photographs taken in 1886, 1887

and 1888 of cities and chief towns, public buildings

historic localities, monuments, curiosities, antiquities,

portraits, maps, etc. By HENRY HOWE, author of "His-

torical Collections of Virginia," and other works. Colum-

bus: Henry Howe & Son, 1889.

The following communication upon this work and its

author will interest everyone.

"Tacitus wrote a history of the Romans, Josephus of the

Jews, Macaulay of the English; but how little, after all,

do we learn from their writings about the people of whom

they wrote. They have given us grand processions of

kings, queens, emperors and generals, but little or nothing

of the vast area of underlying life of which these crowned

and bedizened puppets were the outgrowth. A lord may.

be created in an hour, and then may not be worth the

labor expended in his creation. A king may owe his crown

and kingdom to the accident of birth, or the favor of fortune;

but a great people is the product of centuries of careful

nursing, discipline and cultivation.

What the readers of this age want to know is how this

great people lived, and for what they lived. This Henry

Howe in his Historical Collections tells us with respect to

the people of Ohio. He puts us face to face with the

founders, builders and beautifiers of a commonwealth; with

the sturdy fighters against adversity, the rugged subduers

of wild men and wild beasts, the hardy pioneers, who in less

than half a century converted a wilderness into a fruitful

garden.

The material for the pioneer portion of his history Mr.

Howe gathered when he was a young man of thirty, as he

traveled from county to county on the back of "Old Pomp,"

a slow-going, old white horse.

It was on that now famed historic tour he saw our

fathers and grandfathers, and in his genial and laughing

way swapped jokes with them, thus ascertaining just

what manner of folk they were, and what good stories of

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