Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  
  • 5
  •  
  • 6
  •  
  • 7
  •  
  • 8
  •  
  • 9
  •  
  • 10
  •  
  • 11
  •  

MARIETTA COLLEGE AND THE OHIO COMPANY

MARIETTA COLLEGE AND THE OHIO COMPANY

 

A Review of Professor Arthur G. Beach's History

 

 

BY WAYNE JORDAN

A college history that is also an outstanding contribution to

the general historical literature of Ohio has been published in

connection with "the 100th anniversary of the present charter of

Marietta College and the 138th of the founding of Muskingum

Academy." The book is entitled A Pioneer College--The Story

of Marietta,1 and was written by Arthur G. Beach, professor of

English literature at Marietta College from 1913 until his death

in 1934.

Observing that the history of Marietta College is inseparable

from that of the town of Marietta, Beach starts with the story

of the Ohio Company of Associates and its colony, the first per-

manent American settlement in the Northwest Territory. Re-

viewing the educational aspects of the Ordinance of 1787, he

tells how Dr. Manasseh Cutler, while visiting Marietta in the

summer of 1788, recorded in his journal that he and General

Rufus Putnam "climbed the high hill northwest of Fort Har-

mar and proposed that the university should be on this hill."

Cutler and Putnam encountered delays, however, in founding

their university, and when it was finally established in 1804, it

was at Athens and not at Marietta. Meanwhile classical instruc-

tion in the Northwest Territory had its actual beginning at Ma-

rietta in the founding of a Greek and Latin school, the Muskin-

gum Academy, which, like Ohio University, was a product of the

efforts of Cutler, Putnam and their associates.

The Muskingum Academy, out of which Marietta College

 

1 Privately printed; distribution conducted by the alumni secretary of Marietta

College.

(290)