Ohio History Journal

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REVIEWS, NOTES AND COMMENTS

REVIEWS, NOTES AND COMMENTS

 

 

BY THE EDITOR

 

SOLDIERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION BURIED

IN OHIO

This is the title of a book which has long been in

demand by citizens of Ohio and many beyond the bor-

ders of that state, who have learned through tradition

or otherwise that their Revolutionary ancestors came to

this state and are probably buried here. The arduous

work of collecting material for this volume was under-

taken by the Daughters of the American Revolution,

under the direction of Mrs. Eugene Kennedy of Dayton,

Ohio, who was State Chairman of Historical Sites and

Revolutionary Graves Committee from 1920 to 1923,

and continued by Mrs. Jane Frances Dowd Dailey of

Albany, Ohio, who had been Chairman of this commit-

tee from 1923 to the present time.

This book contains 447 pages and lists over 3,000

soldiers of the American Revolution buried in Ohio.

This comparatively large number of burials within the

border of our state, which was not admitted into the

Union until twenty years after the Revolution, is ex-

plained in the following paragraph from the Foreword

to the volume by Mrs. Dailey:

Lest the reader should wonder at the large number of Revo-

lutionary soldiers buried in Ohio, it should be recalled that the

present boundaries of Ohio were nearest the original colonies,

and when land grants were given to the soldiers thither came the

hardy New Englanders to the Western Reserve and the region

(220)