Ohio History Journal

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JOEL WRIGHT, CITY PLANNER

JOEL WRIGHT, CITY PLANNER

 

by ALFRED J. WRIGHT

Associate Professor of Geography, Ohio State University

 

The original plan for Columbus, "laid off by order of the Gen-

eral Assembly for the seat of Government for the State of Ohio,"

was prepared by Joel Wright of Warren County. This was in

1812, fifteen years after the founding of Franklinton whose sesqui-

centennial Columbus is celebrating in 1947. Events of this year

cause us to turn attention to this Warren County citizen who was

called out of retirement to plan the new state capital.

 

THE PIONEER

Joel Wright's career as a surveyor coincides with the pioneer

period of Ohio history. He made surveys in the Ohio Country the

year following the enactment of the famed Ordinance of 1787. As

a Marylander, he heard about the conflict in claims upon the

Northwest Territory by certain eastern states; Maryland had no

such claim upon this land.

English forces were still in control of Detroit when Wright

first camped with his chainmen in the unbroken forest of what is

now Ohio. Thomas Hutchins, first Geographer of the United

States, had established his "Geographer's Line" with its western

meridian as the base for all future surveys. Competent surveyors

were needed to bring order and form out of the wilderness. With

theodolite, compass, chain, ax, and notebook these pioneer survey-

ors for the first time used the rectangular system of survey in lay-

ing out the foundations of the new State. Wright was one of these

pioneers.

On his surveying trips to the Ohio Country, Wright visited

the first territorial capital at Marietta, the second state capital at

Zanesville, and from the third state capital at Chillicothe (which

had been also the first) received authority to lay out the fourth and

final seat of state government at Columbus. By that time he had

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