Ohio History Journal

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RESCUE HEADQUARTERS HOUSE AT CAMP

RESCUE HEADQUARTERS HOUSE AT CAMP

SHERMAN

 

Mr. Louis H. Warner, Chairman of the Pueblo

Lands Board, in a contribution to the February issue

of the National Republic writes:

Did you ever consider how closely we associate men and

events with certain buildings and structures? To think of one is

to recall the other. This seems always to have been so. Can you

think of the temples of Old Jerusalem, the Parthenon of Ancient

Greece or the Roman Forum without at once being reminded of

the men and events of these periods? Before the World War the

Kremlin suggested the Czar; the Mosques of Constantinople, the

Sultan, and the Palace of Potsdam, the Kaiser.

So long as Ohio history shall endure the site of

Camp Sherman and the few structures that remain upon

it will recall the thousands of men who were marshalled

here for service in the World War and the "cultured

gentleman and soldier, General Edwin F. Glenn," who

directed the military training at this point and led the

83rd Division overseas to the far-flung battle line of

France.  The   old  headquarters   building  that  he

occupied while in this camp has a history extending back

almost to the admission of Ohio into the Union. It is

now abandoned to the elements and unless something

is promptly done its massive brick walls will soon be

reduced to ruin.

Within recent years much interest has developed in

the marking of the places of scenic and historic im-

portance in Ohio. Imposing monuments have been

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