Ohio History Journal

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OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE: PROCEEDINGS 241

OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE: PROCEEDINGS                 241

 

item of which was a diary (1821-1826) of Charles Willing Byrd, the last

Secretary of the Northwest Territory.

The Clark County Historical Society, under the direction of Mr.

Arthur R. Altick, sent in a most interesting report of the year's activities,

giving an account of additions to their collections and a summary of ex-

ploration and field work. Mr. Altick feels that the major accomplishment

during the past year was the inauguration of an educational program in

connection with the public schools.

The Allen County Historical and Archaeological Society's activities

are summarized in a very attractive and model report submitted by the

Secretary, Mrs. Harry B. Longsworth. Compiling historical records; com-

pleting data on Allen County's ninety-eight cemeteries, on family records,

on Civil War diaries and Allen County's incorporated societies have been

accomplished in addition to enlarging and rearranging the society's mu-

seum.

A number of the local historical societies had official representatives at

the annual meeting and it is hoped that the representation will be in-

creased from year to year.

 

The next item   on the program    was a paper by Dr. William

D. Overman, Curator of History.

 

 

THE RELATION OF A STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TO

LOCAL HISTORICAL SOCIETIES

By WILLIAM D. OVERMAN

 

Fifty years ago the president of the Western Reserve Historical

Society addressed that organization on the subject "New Methods of His-

tory".1 He praised the work of the Johns Hopkins graduate school for

applying the scientific method to the writing of monographs on American

history and government, and although history is not an exact science, this

method has been pursued by American historians for over half a century.

Original sources have been re-interpreted in the light of new evidence and

views cherished by former generations have been changed in the light of

modern research. But "each age interprets the past to suit its own pur-

poses",2 and whether we continue to write so-called "objective history" by

the scientific method, or whether we adopt a philosophy of history, and it

appears that we are tending in the latter direction, we must retain the

 

1 Charles C. Baldwin, "New Methods of History," Western Reserve Historical

Society, Tracts, No. 78 (Cleveland, 1891), 209-13.

2 Carl Becker, Everyman His Own Historian (New York, 1935), 169-70.