Ohio History Journal

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ADDRESSES BEFORE THE OHIO STATE

ADDRESSES BEFORE THE OHIO STATE

ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY.

The public meeting of the Ohio State Archaeological and

Historical Society was held in the House of Representatives, Co-

lumbus Ohio, at eight o'clock p. m., March 3, 1898, General

Brinkerhoff presiding.

 

 

ADDRESS OF GENERAL BRINKERHOFF.

LADIES AND GENTLEMEN:-Before introducing the speakers

of the evening it is proper for me, as chairman, perhaps, to say

a few words in regard to the origin and purpose of the Ohio State

Archaeological and Historical Society.

We all know, who live in Ohio, that Ohio is a great State; the

most of us believe that it is the greatest State in the Union, and

some of us who have traveled widely and visited all of the states

of this Union, and in all countries upon this continent-we know

there is no block of land on the earth the size of Ohio so admir-

ably fitted for the habitation of man.

Now, this fact is not of recent knowledge. It was known

doubtless thousands of years before Ohio was known to the white

man. Of all the states in the Union Ohio, judging from the

records that we have in the relics that were left, and memorials,

Ohio was appreciated as we now appreciate it by the peoples who

lived thousands of years ago.

There is no State in which there are so many memorials of

those ancient people as in the State of Ohio.

Now, twenty-three years ago a number of gentlemen-I think

there were fifty perhaps-assembled together at Mansfield, Ohio,

for the purpose of considering the subject of the preservation of

the memorials of those ancient people, and at that time we organ-

ized what was then known as the Archaeological Society of Ohio.

The next year, in 1876, the Ohio General Assembly gave us

twenty-five hundred dollars to make an exhibit of Ohio archae-

ology at the World's Fair in Philadelphia. Many of you, doubt-

less, saw this exhibit.

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