Ohio History Journal




Note - Historical

Note - Historical.                   443

 

Adieu to the roads which for many a year

I traveled each Sabbath the gospel to hear,

The news was so joyful and pleased me so,

From hence where I heard it, it grieves me to go.

 

Farewell my white friends who first taught me to pray

And worship my Savior and Maker each day.

Pray for the poor native whose eyes overflow,

With tears at our parting, Alas! I must go.

 

 

 

 

NOTE.- HISTORICAL.

 

In the excellent article "On the Origin of Ohio Place Names,"

printed in the July issue of the Quarterly, there were a few slips

which should be noted for correction.

On page 277, "Loramie's store was a noted landmark and

appeared in all the treaties after 1769." The store was burned

in 1782 by General Clark's men, and was never replaced. Subse-

quent to 1769, three general treaties were made with the Indians;

one at Fort McIntosh, in Western Pennsylvania, January 21st,

1785; one at Fort Harmar, near Marietta, January 9th, 1789; one

at Greenville, August 3, 1795.   Only the last treaty mentions

"Loramie's." The following is a part of the boundary named

in that treaty: "Thence westerly to a fork of that branch of the

Great Miami river running into the Ohio at or near which fork

stood Loramie's store." The store "was fifteen miles up Lora-

mie's Creek, a branch of the Big Miami. The stream, the post-

office at the mouth, and the Reservoir Shelby County, still bear

his name" - so the article continues.  There is no post-office

within several miles of the mouth of the stream. The post-office

"Loramie" is about 15 miles from the mouth of the stream, and

is at the village of New Berlin, in the northwest corner of Shelby

County. The position of Fort Laramie was fully discussed in

this Quarterly about five years ago. It follows that the passage

on page 279, wherein it is stated that the line from the Tuscar-

awas runs "west to Loramie's Store," is wholly wrong.



444 Ohio Arch

444       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.

Again, page 279. The French settlers did not locate at the

mouth of the Scioto, but at Gallipolis. See Laws of the U. S.,

Vol. 2, page 503.

On page 276 it is stated that Mount Logan is on Paint Creek.

Mount Logan is on the east side of the Scioto, nearly two miles

northeast of the Court House in Chillicothe, and is miles away

from Paint Creek, which is west of the Scioto.

Page 286. "College Hill is named from two colleges. Col-

lege Corner with similar educational advantages has one Indiana

and two Ohio counties cornering in it." College Corner has no

college at all, and it was given its name because it was located

in the corner of the township which was given for the founding

of Miami University. No Indiana county has a corner at this

village.

R. W. McFARLAND.

 

 

 

ORIGIN OF THE PHRASE, "KEEP THE BALL

ROLLING."

 

 

THOMAS J. BROWN, WAYNESVILLE.

[I had the following article in contemplation for a year or more,

but it was crowded aside by other matters until midsummer last, some

time before the January (1905) number of the Archaeological and His-

torical Quarterly was printed when I wrote it down with a pencil in my

note book, and herewith give it with very slight change or correction.

Some allusion is made in the latest issue of the Quarterly to the ball fad,

but I had no knowledge of the article or inspiration of Mr. C. B. Gal-

breath until I saw it there.-T. J. B.]

Many words and phrases have come into common use whose

origin has been forgotten. In many cases, perhaps the origin

never was generally known, or has not been passed on from one

generation to another, as others have been.

The phrase, "Keep the ball rolling," was years ago more

generally used than it is now, but it is still used; if a man has

an enterprise on hand which he wishes to carry to a successful

termination and has no intention of dropping or neglecting it,