Ohio History Journal

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BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEWS

 

James Wickes Taylor, "A Choice Nook of Memory": The Diary of a

Cincinnati Law Clerk, 1842-1844. Edited by James Taylor Dunn. (Co-

lumbus, Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, 1950. xi +

85p. Paper, $1.50.)

James Wickes Taylor, lawyer, author, journalist, librarian, consular

officer, was an interesting figure in the early history of Ohio, Minnesota,

and the Canadian Northwest. For fourteen years Taylor lived in Ohio;

then he moved to Minnesota where he resided a similar length of time;

and then for twenty-three years he was American Consul at Winnipeg,

Manitoba. In each of these localities Taylor took an active part in the

cultural and political life of the community. In Ohio, he became a mem-

ber of the law firm of Salmon P. Chase; an editor and a free-lance jour-

nalist; a member of the second Ohio constitutional convention; state

librarian; the author of a good history of Ohio; and helped to reform

and simplify the state's judicial code. In Minnesota, Taylor became sec-

retary of the Minnesota and Pacific Railway; clerk of the United States

District Court for Minnesota; and took an active part in the discussions

preceding the first constitutional convention of that state. From 1870

until his death in 1893, Taylor was American Consul at Winnipeg, Mani-

toba, where he played an important part in opening up the Northwest

and in improving the relations between the United States and Canada.

There is a large portrait of him in the city hall at Winnipeg.

This is the diary of young Taylor, then twenty-three years old, of

his residence in Cincinnati in the years 1842 to 1844. It was kept at the

suggestion of his fiancee and was to be perused by "her alone." It gives

an account of his travel westward from New York to Ohio and his expe-

riences in the bustling metropolis of the "Queen City of the West."

Taylor records his impressions of Cleveland, which "equalled" his ex-

pectations, and of Columbus, which he considered "not striking in ap-

pearance." Cincinnati disappointed him with its narrow, dirty streets,

shabby public buildings, and sooty atmosphere. He was shocked by the

display of French corsets revealing the mysteries of the feminine form

in shop windows; but he critically scrutinized such windows. He was

thrilled with Cincinnati's novel market houses and the beauty of its sur-

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