Ohio History Journal

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PROCEEDINGS 375

PROCEEDINGS                           375

 

Mr. Sherman, a musical program of three numbers was given by

Mr. Franklin Price, of Circleville. He sang "Until," by Sander-

son; "Lift Thine Eyes," by Logan; and "To Horse, to Horse,"

by Stephens.

Following the musical program, Mr. John F. Carlisle gave

the following address appropriate to the occasion, his subject

being "The Society--a Half Century of Progress."

 

There are doubtless persons in this audience who have gathered here

as to their father's house. They salute their Society on its Fiftieth Anni-

versary with the prayer and confident hope that the life which now com-

pletes its half century may be as immortal as the aspirations of its founders.

History furnishes countless examples in every age of heroic achieve-

ment and great enterprise, in war and peace, wisely conducted to successful

issue, but the successes and accomplishments which we today remember and

celebrate are those which resurrect, preserve and make understandable the

past, and interpret, compare and evaluate for those of the present and future.

There are many names that rise to the lips this day. They are not

here, but their descendants are. Those who knew them, or have heard their

story from others who knew them, are here. Our hearts are full of their

memories and their works. Nor are we unmindful of those of the present

who continue to strive so nobly to preserve the legacies bequeathed to us

and carry on as of old the aims and purposes of our beloved Society.

We meet to celebrate the birth

Of her whose hand redeems the earth.

Her age today--half-hundred years,

As measured by the rolling spheres,

As measured by her works sublime

She grandly runs abreast of time.

The purpose declared by the founders March thirteenth, 1885, remains

at the end of fifty years exactly the same without change as at the begin-

ning. Section three of the Articles of Incorporation of the Ohio State

Archaeological and Historical Society is as follows:

Said Society is formed for the purpose of promoting a knowledge

of Archaeology and History, especially of Ohio, by establishing and main-

taining a library of books, manuscripts, maps, charts, etc., properly per-

taining thereto; a museum of pre-historic relics and natural or other

curiosities or specimens of art or nature promotive of the objects of the

Association -- said library and museum to be open to the public on rea-

sonable terms -- and by courses of lectures and publications of books,

papers and documents touching the subjects so specified, with power to

receive and hold gifts and devices of real and personal estate for the

benefit of such Society, and generally to exercise all the powers legally

and properly pertaining thereto.

Let us record the names of the Charter Members, the twenty-eight,

that signed the Incorporation Articles fifty years ago: