Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  

Editorialana

Editorialana.                       221

 

manding why Rogers and his men had come thither without his per-

mission and what was their errand. Up to this time, the shrewd and

ambitious chieftain had been the firm ally of the French, but when Rogers

informed him that Canada had been surrendered to the English and that

he was on his way to take possession of Detroit; the calumet was smoked

and harmony seemed established." Then follow the details of the Pontiac

conspiracy. Pontiac, the great Ottawa Chief, may be regarded as an Ohio

Indian. It is claimed with good authority, and so far as we can learn

without contradiction, that he was born at the mouth of the Ottawa river,

now Auglaize, where it empties into the Maumee, the present site of

Defiance. Thus Ohio history begins. Mr. Avery's Fourth Volume, like all the

others, is profusely illustrated with portraits of the personages of whom it

treats, with diagrams of the geography of the respective events, and fac-

similes of the historic documents pertaining thereto. No work to our

knowledge has been so lavishly adorned with valuable and illuminating

illustrations. Many of them in colors are works of art. We continue

to commend this work to the readers of American history.

 

 

 

 

DIARY   OF MANASSEH        CUTLER.

In a recent publication, William E. Curtis, the distinguished

journalist and author, gives excerpts from  the journal and letters

of Manasseh Cutler. Much of his article deserves a place in the pages

of the Quarterly. Mr. Curtis says:

Charles Gates Dawes of Chicago has the diary of his ancestor,

Manasseh Cutler, the founder of Ohio, the real author of the Ordinance

of '87, a member of Congress for many years from     Massachusetts,

clergyman, merchant, teacher, scientist, surveyor, explorer and pa-

triot-one of the ablest and most versatile characters in American

history.

In his journal and his letters to his family and friends at home

Mr. Cutler wrote many interesting accounts of his experiences in

Washington, as a member of Congress during the administration of

Thomas Jefferson. On January 1, 1802, he tells of the ceremonies at

the White House:

"Although the President has no levees, a number of federalists

agreed to go from the Capitol in coaches to the President's house and

wait upon him with the compliments of the season. We were received

with politeness, entertained with cake and wine. The mammoth cheese

having been presented this morning, the President invited us to go,

as he expressed it to the mammoth room to see the mammoth cheese.

There we viewed this monument of human weakness and folly as long

as we pleased and then returned."