Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  

346 Ohio Arch

346      Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.

became captain of Company C of that regiment.      He

served with distinction through the Civil War and at-

tained the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was again

in the Legislature in 1867-1868 and was Speaker in the

latter year.  In 1876 he was elected United States sen-

ator and twice afterward re-elected.  He died in 1891

before the close of his third term.

His life history, as presented by Connelley in this

volume, is an inspiration to every healthy, ambitious

American boy who desires to rise through his own effort

to honorable distinction in the service of his country.

 

 

COLONEL S. K. DONAVAN.

Colonel Simpson K. Donavan was born at Shippens-

burg, Pennsylvania, in March, 1831, and died after a

brief illness in Columbus August 12, 1902. His parents

were from Virginia and sympathized with the people of

their native state and the institution of slavery.  He

early learned the printing trade, afterwards taught

school for a time and then entered upon a journalistic

career in the city of Baltimore.  He was there at the

time of the John Brown raid at Harper's Ferry.      In

conversation with the writer a few years before his

death he said in substance:

"I was the first correspondent on the ground after the raid at

Harper's Ferry began. I went there in thorough sympathy with

the attitude of the people of Virginia and Maryland in their hos-

tility to the raiders. I was startled at the news of the attack

and puzzled at the mystery which for a time clouded its purpose.

Soon after the capture of the engine house I learned from the

lips of John Brown that it was a movement against the institution

of slavery.

"I was in Harper's Ferry until the prisoners were moved to

Charlestown and from that place I reported the news for my