Ohio History Journal

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656 Ohio Arch

656       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

tees to go forward with the completion of this building,

and it has been decided to ask the Legislature at its next

session for an appropriation sufficient to carry out that

policy. That having been decided, the next step in the

project is to prepare a tentative plan upon which to base

estimates in asking for the necessary appropriation.

General Orton, having done such a remarkable piece of

work for this organization as Chairman of the Building

Committee for this Memorial Wing, was designated to

continue at the head of the Building Committee, to go

forward with this plan. He has a tentative plan in hand,

which he will now explain to the Society at large.

 

GENERAL EDWARD ORTON, JR.,

spoke as follows:

Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen: While the folders

explaining this project for completing the building are being

passed among you, I may say that you will perhaps wonder

how a photograph of a building not in existence could be shown

as is the case in the folder. If you will look at the upper pic-

ture on page 2, you will see a life-like view of just how the

Museum and Library building will look when that south wing

is completed. It was made from a photograph of the north

wing reversed and retouched to get rid of the entrance, steps

etc. I had the fun of mystifying our good Director, Mr. Mills,

for a moment, as to how such a thing could be done. He was

somewhat like the farmer when he first saw the giraffe in the

New York Zoological Gardens -- he watched it walking about for

quite a long time, speechless, but finally ejaculated, "There ain't

no such animal."

As President Johnson has told you, the Trustees have for-

mally committed themselves to the policy of completing this

building. He has asked me not only to explain the plan to you,

but also to present some ideas about the best way to proceed to

get the necessary funds. It will get us nowhere to make drawings

of the building we would like to erect, unless we are equally

skilful and persistent about finding ways and means to turn our

drawings into brick and steel and stone.