Ohio History Journal

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THE WOODBRIDGE-GALLAHER COLLECTION

THE WOODBRIDGE-GALLAHER COLLECTION

 

BY HARLOW LINDLEY

Introductory.

The Library of the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical

Society recently secured a very unusual collection of material

consisting of letters, manuscripts, journals, account books, maps,

pamphlets and books. The manuscript collection consists of about

1,100 items, the most notable of which is the Woodbridge-Blen-

nerhassett collection of approximately 600 items.

A word of explanation concerning the collection and those

associated with it will be of interest.

To understand how a collection of such seeming diversity and

yet of such basic unity and continuity has come to be, it is neces-

sary to understand the family back of it. This was no ordinary

collector's offering, with an accession from this celebrity and an

accession from that, an autograph here and another there. Almost

without exception the manuscripts in this collection have come

together artlessly and naturally, so that it is possible to trace today

the reason for the presence of each one. This unity, in fact, is one

of the most unique features of the collection.

In the early eighteenth century, Samuel Backus was a "quiet,

enterprising farmer" of Norwich, Connecticut. He had eleven

children who grew to maturity, and as further evidence of his

enterprise it is known that he operated a grist mill and an iron

works in addition to his farm. His fifth child was Elijah, born

in 1726, and it is this Elijah whose name appears on the earliest

papers of the Woodbridge-Gallaher Collection.

Dudley Woodbridge, Sr., after being graduated at Yale,

opened a law office and import shop in Norwich, where he met

and married Lucy Backus. Her father, Elijah Backus, Sr., fur-

nished many supplies to the Continental army from his iron

foundry in Norwich, Connecticut, and was a man of considerable

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