Ohio History Journal

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BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEWS

Frontier Ohio, 1788-1803. By Randolph Chandler Downes. Ohio

Historical Collections, III. (Columbus, Ohio, The Ohio State

Archaeological and Historical Society, 1935. 280p. maps.

$2.50.)

Students of Ohio history will be grateful to the author for

presenting this vivid and accurate account of the origins of the

Commonwealth. Professor Randolph Chandler Downes has ex-

amined and cited, in a wealth of footnotes, a great variety of

widely scattered manuscript collections, as well as the available

printed records; unique documents, long hidden from public

view, are frequently disclosed.

The significant topics which receive detailed treatment relate

to the conquest of the land from the Indians, the origins and

character of the people, the problem of trade, the character of the

administrations of Governor Arthur St. Clair and Acting Gov-

ernor Winthrop Sargent, the movement for political reform, the

statehood contest, and the final establishment of the State.

The policy of the United States Government towards the

Indians of the Ohio Valley and the Northwest was exemplified by

a series of steps which finally opened the greater portion of the

present State of Ohio to white settlement. The question of a

boundary line, an old problem which vexed British and colonial

statesmen, settlers and Indians in an earlier day, was the primary

issue which both the Confederation and the National Government

sought to settle by negotiations, backed by force. Whether the

Ohio River or the Muskingum, which the Indians demanded, or

a more northerly one should be fixed upon was ultimately de-

termined by the arbitrament of war. The Treaties of Fort Har-

mar, forced upon a minority of Indian representatives, proved

unacceptable to the mass of the Indians. The failure of subse-

quent conferences to procure a treaty favorable to the American

(397)