Ohio History Journal

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The OHIO HISTORICAL Quarterly

The OHIO HISTORICAL Quarterly

 

VOLUME 64 * NUMBER 3 * JULY                                    1955

 

 

 

The Correspondence of George A. Myers

and James Ford Rhodes, 1910-1923-III

Edited by JOHN A. GARRATY

 

 

 

MYERS TO RHODES, Cleveland, March 16, 1917.*

My Dear Mr Rhodes: I was awful glad to receive your favor of the

5th.1 It is indeed a source of much pleasure to receive a letter from

you and its very considerate for you to write me as you do. I know

that you are a very busy man and the demands upon you from a

social standpoint something great. Yet amidst it all, you find time

to remember your old true and tried friend. You speak of being

social standpoint something great. Yet amidst it all, you find time

I was 58 on the day your letter was written and aside from the

effects of my accident2 I feel and am as good as I was at 40. In

the words of Rip Van Winkle-"May you live long and prosper."

Upon the topics which you write I can truly say "That these

are the times that tries [sic] men's souls," and further add that no

one can tell what tomorrow will bring forth. Tonight Cleveland is

staggered by the U. S. Supreme Court holding the infamous

 

*This is the third installment of the Myers-Rhodes correspondence, the first having

appeared in the January issue, pages 1-29, and the second in the April issue, pages

125-167. An extended introduction by the editor of the letters was published with

the first installment.

1 This letter is not in the Myers papers.

2 In the spring of 1904 Myers fell down an elevator shaft in the home of W. P.

Southworth, one of his customers. His right leg was broken in sixteen places and

his left foot was badly smashed. He was unable to get around freely for two years

after this accident, and his leg was never very straight in later years. He was able

to walk without a limp, however. The "effects" of which he writes consisted of con-

siderable stiffness and discomfort whenever the weather changed. I am indebted for

this information to Mrs. Dorothy Myers Grantham.

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