Ohio History Journal

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GEORGE CROGHAN

GEORGE CROGHAN.

 

BY CHARLES RICHARD WILLIAMS, PH. D., LL. D.

 

[Address delivered at Spiegel Grove, Fremont, O., August 1, 1903,

before the George Croghan Chapter Daughters of the American Revolu-

tion, on the occasion of the celebration of the ninetieth anniversary of

the battle of Ft. Stephenson. Mr. Williams is editor of The Indianapolis

News.- E. O. R.]

I.

"Happy the country that has no history" is an old, old saying.

It falls trippingly on the tongue. It passes current at unques-

tioned value in the conversation of men. Hardly ever does one

stop to doubt its validity or to test its quality. Like most popular

proverbs it does assuredly voice a common conviction of men;

it does express an accepted opinion. History busies itself most

with the great concerns of life; with the emergence and struggle

for recognition of new and strange forces, with the clash of sys-

tem with system, of class with class, with the overthrow of gov-

ernments and the setting up of new forms of polity, with the

disasters of pestilence and earthquake, of drought and flood, and

with the horrors and glories, the devastation and triumphs of

marching cohorts and of warring hosts. When all these things

are absent, when a country's life goes on unquickened by new

emotions, unstirred by large events, dull, monotonous, common-

place, it is making no history, and it may indeed be happy in a life-

less and spiritless sort of way. The seasons may give their in-

crease, men may have corn in the bin and cattle in the byre; but

if they have no outlook beyond their own contracted horizon, if

they have no sense of participation in the larger life that was

before they began to be and that shall grow, with their help or

without, into "the fuller day," what a poor thing their happiness

is!

"Happy the country that has no history." Yes, if you will.

But happier far the country whose history is rich, and full and

glorious. We live not only in our day and in our deeds. But we

live also in the glorious deeds of our worthy ancestors. They

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