Ohio History Journal

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Editorialana

Editorialana.                       299

 

known as Campus Martius and shall hold the same and the property

thereon subject to such use as the General Assembly may direct.

E. J. HOPPLE,

Speaker of the House of Representatives.

EARL D. BLOOM,

President of the Senate.

Passed March 21, 1917.

Approved March 29, 1917.

JAMES M. Cox, Governor.

Filed in office of Secretary of State, April 2, 1917.

 

 

STEPHEN D. PEET.

 

IN MEMORIAM.

It was in one of the early months of the year 1875 that Isaac

Smucker, of Newark, and Stephen D. Peet, then resident of Ashtabula,

met at the home of Roeliff Brinkerhoff in Mansfield, for the purpose

of organizing the Ohio Archaeological Association. This triumvirate of

kindred scholarly spirits recognized the great field and opportunity in

Ohio for an organization, the object of which should be the study and

preservation of the remains of the pre-historic race, commonly called

the Mound Builders; a race shrouded in mystery, that populously occu-

pied Ohio before the invasion of the European people; yes, before the

historic Indian, possibly before the red man had existed in the Ohio or

Mississippi Valley. It was the opportune moment for the institution of

such a society, and its immediate intention was the gathering of a

suitable collection of the relics of this vanished empire, and its display

as an "Ohio exhibit" in the National Centennial Exhibit to be held at

Philadelphia in the year 1876. To the purpose of the illustrious trio,

Brinkerhoff, Peet and Smucker, there rallied with sympathy and en-

thusiasm Rutherford B. Hayes, Governor of the state; John H. Klip-

pert, the distinguished state geologist; C. C. Baldwin and Charles Whit-

tlesey, respectively president and secretary of the Western Reserve His-

torical Society, and Professor M. C. Read, a distinguished writer on

Ohio archaeology. General Brinkerhoff was made president of the "Ohio

Archaeological Association," and Professor John T. Short of the Agri-

cultural and Mechanical College, now the Ohio State University, a most

noted scholar and author of "Prehistoric Man in America," was made

secretary. The legislature made an appropriation of $2,500.00 to the

association for the promotion of its exhibit at Philadelphia, which ex-

hibit remarkably fulfilled its mission, ranking only second in extent and

scholarly value to the archaeological display of the Smithsonian Insti-

tute. The Ohio Archaeological Association under the guidance of its

protagonists, continued its work, under adverse circumstances, until