Ohio History Journal




HISTORICAL NEWS

HISTORICAL NEWS

Historical Societies

ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF NEGRO LIFE AND HISTORY, Columbus

William F. Savoy, State Director

The Columbus branch of the association observed the 23d an-

nual celebration of Negro History Week during the second week in

February. Radio speakers were Dr. James H. Rodabaugh, Mrs.

Julia Burrell, Charles Allen, Dr. William Utterbeck, Dr. John Ben-

nett, Dr. Allen Griffen, Chester Gray, and William F. Savoy, state

director of the association. Dr. Rodabaugh and Mr. Savoy spoke

at the Lockbourne Air Base at the Officers' Wives Club. Mr. Savoy

also spoke at the First Baptist Church. Miss Ormay Pate spoke at

the Pilgrim School.

 

BUTLER COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Hamilton

Elmer Kessling, President

Plans are being made for the conversion of the home of the late

Pauline Benninghofen to the use of the society. The property was

bequeathed to the society by Miss Benninghofen as a meeting place

and museum to be maintained in memory of the Benninghofen

family.

CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, Cleveland

Kenneth B. Desher, Director

Miss Jean Baxter, M.A. in anthropology from the University of

Michigan, who has been assisting in the reorganization of the North

American Indian Room and was in charge of the recent exhibition

on the Navaho, has resigned to accept a position with the Episcopal

Mission on the Navaho in Arizona.

 

FIRELANDS HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Norwalk

Homer M. Beattie, President

The present officers of the society are Homer M. Beattie, presi-

dent; Charles Frohman, vice president; Esther Gibbs Powers, secre-

197



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tary; James Wood, treasurer; James E. Dixon, curator. The society

is now cataloging, rearranging, and redisplaying all its exhibits.

 

HAYES MEMORIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM, Fremont

Watt P. Marchman, Director of Research

The library has added to its manuscript collections fifteen orig-

inal letters written by President Rutherford B. Hayes to: Dr. Francis

H. Brown, Boston, July 22, 1868; Columbus Delano, May 14, 22,

and August 7, 1873; B. R. Cowen, Washington, D. C., May 1, 1873;

William E. Chandler, June 30 and December 31, 1876; William C.

Howells, July 15, 1876; A. T. Britton, police commissioner, Wash-

ington, D. C., July 20, 1877; George Bancroft, November 23, 1880;

E. C. Brown, New York City, May 17, 1884, enclosing an autograph

transcript of his letter to William Henry Smith, August 24, 1864;

E. Rosewater, editor, Omaha Bee, Omaha, Nebraska, August 20,

1891; and Walter H. Page, editor, the Forum, November 30, 1891.

The original document appointing William Ware Peck of New York

an associate justice of the supreme court of the Territory of Wyom-

ing, December 14, 1877, was presented by R. Colcord, office manager,

Pan American World Airways System, Atlantic Division, Long

Island City, N. Y.

Photostat copies of 24 letters and 7 documents written and

signed by Rutherford B. Hayes and copies of other manuscripts

were also added to the collections of the library: three Hayes let-

ters to V. B. Horton, January 18, 1877, George W. Jones, June 11,

1880, and Edward W. Bok, October 26, 1891, by courtesy of Judge

Curtis Bok and Cary W. Bok of Philadelphia; twelve Hayes letters

to Warner M. Bateman, Cincinnati, 1865-78, two letters of A. T.

Wikoff, Columbus, 1875, to Bateman, and eleven letters of W. K.

Rogers (private secretary of President Hayes) to Bateman, by cour-

tesy of Bateman's son, W. M. Bateman of Cleveland; one letter to

Gen. B. F. Potts, Helena, Montana, March 6, 1876, by courtesy of

Dr. R. W. G. Vail, director, New York Historical Society; eight

Hayes letters and seven documents, by courtesy of Russell H. Ander-

son, director, Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland.

Microfilm copies (4 reels) of the executive correspondence of

Governor Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio, 1868-72, 1876-77, taken



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from original papers in the library of the Ohio State Archaeological

and Historical Society, Columbus, by courtesy of Erwin C. Zepp,

director, and John O. Marsh, librarian, were added to the Hayes

papers of the Hayes Memorial Library.

Miscellaneous manuscripts acquired recently include: a tele-

gram from H. C. Corbin to R. B. Hayes, September 17, 1881, report-

ing the condition of President Garfield; 26 Civil War letters,

1862-64, to Annie F. Howells, from R. Williams, Willis D. Maier,

and J. W. Walkins; a letter from Stanley Matthews to James A.

Garfield, April 10, 1878; a letter from John Sherman to William C.

Howells, January 26, 1882; and a letter from William Henry Smith

to William C. Howells, May 13, 1864. Photostat copies of four

letters to or about R. B. Hayes have also been acquired: Hamilton

Harris and George Dawson, Albany, New York, December 10, 1880,

to Hayes; John C. New, Indianapolis, Indiana, February 2, 1878,

to Hayes; John Pope, Leavenworth, Kansas, October 6, 1872, to

Hayes; Roscoe Conkling, Washington, D. C., January 25, 1881, to

J. Schuyler. The library has acquired a microfilm copy of Abram

S. Hewitt's "Narrative of facts in connection with the Presidential

Campaign of 1876 and action of the Electoral Commission," by

courtesy of Dr. R. W. G. Vail, director, New York Historical

Society.

A copy of the index to the Lincoln papers in the Library of

Congress on microfilm has been purchased by the library.

 

HISTORICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY OF OHIO, Cincinnati

Virginius C. Hall, Director-Librarian

The annual spring exhibit will open at the Taft Museum the

evening of April 30. Life on the Ohio River and its tributaries from

the earliest times to the present will be portrayed in woodcuts, photo-

graphs, manuscripts, printed documents, and museum objects. There

will be a gala opening for members and invited guests. Thereafter

the exhibit will be open to the public for a period of three weeks.

Virginius C. Hall, director-librarian of the society, recently

addressed the Monday Lecture Class on the subject "America As

She Was-Currier and Ives."



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The Bulletin for March, in anticipation of the spring exhibit,

is devoted to the Ohio River, with articles by Clark Firestone, Harry

B. Muckoy, Carl Vitz, and G. Anderson Espy. The Bulletin, edited

by Lee Shepard, has a new format and has been enlarged to 48

pages.

Biographical-genealogical forms have been mailed to all mem-

bers of the society. These records are being filed as a permanent

source of information. They are held for restricted or unlimited use

in accordance with the desire of the member.

Membership in the society now numbers 465 annual paying

members.

 

HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF NORTHWESTERN OHIO, Toledo

Randolph C. Downes, Director

The society has recently published the first volume of the

Lucas County Historical Series which will be a six-volume work on

the history of Lucas County. The book is by Randolph C. Downes,

director of the society, and is entitled The Conquest.

Articles in the January 1948 number of the Northwest Ohio

Quarterly, the publication of the society, are "David Ross Locke:

Civil War Propagandist," by Jack Clifford Ransome; "Sherwood

Anderson: The Spanish-American War Years," by William A. Sut-

ton; and "The Battle of Fallen Timbers As Told by Chief Kin-jo-

i-no," by Dresden W. H. Howard.

 

KIRTLAND ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB, Cleveland

Jean Baxter, President

The following officers of the club were elected in December

1947: Jean Baxter, president; Mildred Nixon, vice president; Robert

Smith, secretary; George E. Tower, treasurer.

The primary interest of the club is local archaeology. Its cur-

rent project is the construction of a map of Cuyahoga County show-

ing spots where artifacts have been found, recognized sites of burials,

cemeteries, villages, "forts," and mounds, and trails.

The membership of the club is made up largely of amateurs.

It is sponsored by the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.



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MEDINA COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Medina

Florence Phillips, President

The Medina County history to be published by the society is

now in the hands of the printers. The history will be composed of

the histories of the county's townships. They were collected and

edited by Mrs. C. L. Griesinger.

 

OHIO ACADEMY OF HISTORY

William D. Overman, Secretary-Treasurer

The spring meeting of the Ohio Academy of History will be

held Friday, April 9, at the Deshler-Wallick Hotel, Columbus. Fol-

lowing is the program:

Morning Session-10 A.M.

Presiding-CLAYTON S. ELLSWORTH, College of Wooster

"The Name of the Holy Roman Empire"

RICHARD G. SALOMON, Kenyon College

"The Good Neighbor Policy"

ARVID T. JOHNSON, University of Toledo

Luncheon Conference-12:30 P.M.

Presiding-HASTING EELLS, President of the Academy

"German Historiography during the Nazi Regime"

HAROLD J. GRIMM, Ohio State University

Afternoon Session-2:30 P.M.

Presiding-HASTING EELLS, Ohio Wesleyan University

"History in the General Education Course"

BENJAMIN H. PERSHING, Wittenberg College

"Publications in Ohio History"

JAMES H. RODABAUGH, Ohio State Archaeological

and Historical Society

Business Meeting: Election of Officers, Awards.

The present officers of the Academy are Hastings Eells, presi-

dent; George F. Howe, vice president; William D. Overman, secre-

tary-treasurer.



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OHIO PRESBYTERIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

U. L. Mackey, President

The officers of the society are Dr. U. L. Mackey, president;

Dr. William J. Hail, vice president; Dr. Clarence S. Gee, librarian.

The society expects to carry on a somewhat more active program

in the future than it has in the past few years.

OTTAWA COUNTY HISTORICAL MUSEUM, Port Clinton

May Hesselbart, Curator

The sixteenth annual report of the Ottawa County Historical

Museum was read by May Hesselbart, curator, before the village

council on the evening of February 10.

Miss Hesselbart reported that the museum had 354 new visitors

and 811 repeat callers during the year covered by the report. Visi-

tors came from 41 different localities within the state and from fif-

teen other states. The greatest number of visitors from states out-

side Ohio were from California. Michigan ranked second.

 

SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF PIONEER RIVERMEN

Frederick Way, Jr., President

A large, brass, ship's clock has been presented to the Greene

Line's new tourist steamer the Delta Queen. As a gesture of appre-

ciation, Captain Tom Greene gave the River Museum at Marietta the

original log kept at sea while the Delta Queen was en route from

San Francisco to New Orleans in April and May of 1947. This

was the first such trip made by a river steamer.

Scale models of the following steamboats will be added to the

collection in the museum as soon as cases are built: the Kate Adams,

the Helen E., the Alice Brown, and the Iron Age.

Frederick Way, Jr., has been named Inland Rivers Editor of

Steamboat Bill of Facts, the quarterly publication of the Steamship

Historical Society of America.

STARK COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Canton

E. T. Heald, Secretary-Treasurer

The annual dinner meeting of the society was held on January

22 in the parish house of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Canton, with



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HISTORICAL NEWS                    203

 

an attendance of 125. W. F. McArtor of Canton gave an illustrated

lecture on "The Arts and Industries of the Zoarites." At the meet-

ing, Paul B. Belden, Sr., was re-elected president of the society,

H. T. O. Blue, vice president, and E. T. Heald, secretary-treasurer.

More than 2,500 copies have been sold of A Century of Educa-

tion, Being One Hundred Years of the Massillon, Ohio, Public

Schools, a publication sponsored in part by the society. The author

is Mary Jane Richeimer.

"Documents: Petrograd, March-July 1917: The Letters of

Edward T. Heald," edited by Warren B. Walsh, was published in

the American Slavic and East European Review, volume VI (1947).

The letters were written while Mr. Heald was in Petrograd in

Y.M.C.A. service for war prisoners during World War I.

 

WARREN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Lebanon

Gardner Townsley, President

New officers of the society are Gardner Townsley, president;

Harry Schwartz, vice president; Mary Lincoln, secretary; Helen

Lamb, treasurer; Marion Snyder, historian.

 

WESTERVILLE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Westerville

Mrs. Robert Wilson, President

The annual meeting for the election of officers of the Wester-

ville Historical Society was held on January 16. Following the

business meeting, Dr. Robert Price, professor of English at Otter-

bein College, gave a talk on John Chapman (Johnny Appleseed).

Officers elected were as follows: Mrs. Robert Wilson, president;

E. D. Meedham, first vice president; Charles R. Bennett, second vice

president; Ila Grindell, secretary; Dr. E. W. E. Schear, E. L. Wiel-

land, and Mrs. Hanby R. Jones, members of the council.

 

About Historians

Dr. Charles Morley, assistant professor of history at Ohio State

University, has been appointed Slavic Fellow in the Hoover Insti-

tute and Library on War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford Uni-

versity where he will continue work on his book entitled An Intro-



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204    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

duction to Research in Russian History. The appointment is for

the spring and summer quarters and carries a stipend of $2,000.

Dr. Foster Rhea Dulles will begin a year's leave of absence this

spring to write a two-volume history of the American Red Cross.

 

Sir Humphrey Mildmay, Royalist Gentleman, by Dr. Philip

Lee Ralph, chairman of the department of history at Lake Erie

College, was published by the Rutgers University Press during the

past year.

 

The Academy of History of Cuba has elected to membership

Dr. B. H. Pershing, chairman of the department of history at Wit-

tenberg College.

 

Dr. Carl Wittke has resigned as professor of history and dean

of the college of arts and sciences at Oberlin College to become

dean of the graduate school and professor of history at Western

Reserve University. The appointment is effective May 1.

Robert S. Fletcher will be on leave of absence from Oberlin

during 1948 and 1949.

 

Dr. Donald G. Barnes, chairman of the department of history

at Western Reserve University, is on a sabbatical leave for research

and travel in Europe during the second semester.

Dr. Harvey Wish will be visiting professor in American history

for the summer session at the University of Southern California.

 

At Capital University, Dr. Hilmar G. Grimm has been ap-

pointed chairman of the department of history and advanced to

the rank of associate professor.

 

The staff of the department of history at Otterbein College now

consists of A. P. Rosselot, chairman, L. William Sleek, and Harold

Hancock. Professor Hancock is at present studying in England.

 

John H. Cramer has been appointed associate professor of his-

tory at Youngstown College.