Ohio History Journal

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OHIO AND WESTERN EXPANSION

OHIO AND WESTERN EXPANSION

 

BY PROFESSOR WILLIS ARDEN CHAMBERLIN,

DENISON UNIVERSITY

Wonderful opportunity, matched by daring enter-

prise, - that is the formula to account for the mar-

velous development of the Buckeye State. The growth

of Ohio is the epitome of national expansion.  Its

transformation from the wilderness, in which roamed

savage Redmen and wild beasts prowled, to the present

well-ordered commonwealth, is the epic of American

civilization.

Ohio was the first orderly step in the "winning of

the west."  Though Kentucky and Tennessee were

settled earlier by the adventurous backwoodsmen, that

movement was spontaneous and unorganized. The oc-

cupation of the territory north of the Ohio, however,

was by arrangement of Congress.   Principles of or-

ganization were laid down, which have been followed

in the opening of all subsequent territory. The rise of

Ohio is typical in many respects of the expansion of

the middle west. The same difficulties faced the early

colonists; similar agencies and forces were operative

in all of these young communities. Ohio had the start

of the others in time. It possessed also great natural

advantages in location and varied resources, which have

given it precedence in many ways.  The pioneers of

Ohio solved the problems that confronted them and

devised policies that have served as examples to the

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